Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Sermon - The Last Sunday of the Church Year - Luke 23:27-43

 


The Last Sunday of the Church Year.  Sometimes called, “The Sunday of the Fulfillment” or “Christ the King Sunday”.  We come to the climax of our readings from Luke’s Gospel, and we find ourselves at the cross.  It’s a good place to be, with Jesus, on Good Friday.  It is Christ the King in the fullest and deepest and most profound sense, enthroned as he is on the cross.  The King of the Jews.  The Savior.  The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.  If you want to end your church year on a good note – you end it with Jesus, and his cross.

Of course we have 2 of Jesus’ 7 words from the cross in this reading – and we will take them up shortly.  But even before that, some precious red letter words of Jesus as he speaks while carrying his cross.  To the women that followed him, he redirects their mourning.  “Don’t weep for me, weep for your yourselves and children.”  Even in his suffering, with death looming over him, its hot breath down his neck, Jesus thinks of others.  The man of sorrows laments Jerusalem, and the destruction he knew would come to his beloved people who rejected him.  If they do this now how much worse will it be that day?  If the cruelty of the Romans is on display with Jesus and two thieves who are crucified, how much worse will it be when God’s wrath is poured out by the Romans on the entire city?

The Jewish historian Josephus tells us about that day.  When the Romans finally had enough of Jewish rebellion, and decided to destroy Jerusalem and its temple, they encamped around the city.  In 70 AD, as the siege wore on, hunger gripped the people.  Josephus writes:

Throughout the city people were dying of hunger in large numbers, and enduring unspeakable sufferings. In every house the merest hint of food sparked violence, and close relatives fell to blows, snatching from one another the pitiful supports of life. No respect was paid even to the dying; the ruffians [anti-Roman zealots] searched them, in case they were concealing food somewhere in their clothes, or just pretending to be near death. Gaping with hunger, like mad dogs, lawless gangs went staggering and reeling through the streets, battering upon the doors like drunkards, and so bewildered that they broke into the same house two or three times in an hour. Need drove the starving to gnaw at anything. Refuse which even animals would reject was collected and turned into food. In the end they were eating belts and shoes, and the leather stripped off their shields. Tufts of withered grass were devoured, and sold in little bundles for four drachmas.

He goes on to tell of a woman who even cannibalized her own son.  Over a million Jews were slaughtered.  The city was burned.  The temple was plundered and destroyed. 

And Jesus, knowing it would happen, grieved.  He mourned for his people.  Even on the road to his own death, his own cross bearing down its weight upon him, he cares not for himself.  And that’s the whole point, isn’t it?

As vicar said last week, the destruction of Jerusalem, as bad as it was, was only a shadow of the wrath of God that will be revealed against all the nations who despise him and reject his Son.  We might add, that all the physical and earthly terrors of the end are also themselves a shadow of the true suffering and torment that waits in eternity for those who are finally and forever separated from God.

And that would be you and me, too, were it not for Jesus. 

His first word from the cross is shocking.  For one, that he even has the strength to speak at all.  But that his word is not a word of wrath, but of love.  No condemnation of his foes, no shriek of terror for his own life.  None of that.  But a kind plea to the Father:  forgive them.  They don’t know what they’re doing.  They don’t know they’re putting to death the Lord of Life.  They don’t know they’re trying to extinguish the Light of the World.  They don’t know their own hand in this divine plan.  This is God’s gracious purpose unfolding.

And so, Jesus’ words drip with mercy for others, even as he himself is doomed.  What a contrast, what a joy, what a blessing.  In the midst of a horror show of blood and sweat and jeering enemies, as the earth shook and the sun failed, Good Friday shows us that glimmer of purest hope in the words of Jesus which give meaning to it all.  Father, forgive them.  And the Father does.

“If you are the king of the Jews….” They mocked.  The sign written by Pilate echoed the same, “This is the King of the Jews”.  But he is more king than they can fathom.  And not just of the Jews, but king of kings.  And his kingdom of power and grace and glory will have no end. 

The tongues that now mock will one day be silenced.  The subjects that have been scattered will be gathered.  Books will be opened.  The king will judge the living and the dead.  Here, at Calvary he’s about as far from kingly glory as the world can imagine. 

But here, crowned even with thorns, our king is precisely glorified, his power made perfect in weakness, his shame for our honor, his pain for our joy.  His death for our life.  He saved others, indeed, he saved us.  But though he could, he would not save himself.

Then there’s the thieves.  Two criminals who are crucified with him. There had to be others to fulfill the Scripture:  he was numbered with the transgressors.  But those two stand for us all.  We deserve our condemnation.  Here’s a picture of what our deeds deserve. 

But they also serve to show the contrast of the righteous and the wicked. 

Some, encounter Jesus like the one thief – they mock and jeer, even with death looming.  Some, today, do the same.  Impudent and defiant till the end, some cannot help but spit at the one who could save them from death, and instead go down swinging fists of rage at God and never giving a thought to repentance. 

But that other thief.  He sees it.  Death has gotten his attention.  He rebukes the other one.  Don’t you fear God?  We’re under the same sentence.  We are getting what we deserve. Soon we’ll face the judge.  This thief knows his sin, and confesses it.  He agrees with the just sentence of death he has earned.  He despairs of his own devices, but he does not despair fully. Because there’s Jesus.  And where Jesus is, there is always hope.

He turns and says, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom”.  What a prayer!  He acknowledges that Jesus truly is a king.  Against all outward appearances at the moment.  But for the one who has faith, the deeper reality can be seen.  The outward appearance isn’t what matters most. 

He calls Jesus’ name!  We, too, call upon that name – the only name given under heaven by which we must be saved.  The name at which, at the last, every knee will bow and every tongue will confess him as Lord.  The name that means, “God Saves” and so succinctly tells what he is all about.  He’s the savior sent from God.  He’s the way God saves us.

And his request is beautifully stated, too.  “Remember me”.  A humble petition.  Not asking to be spared from death on this cross.  Not asking to be vindicated and made victorious.  Nothing fancy or over the top.  A simple, “remember me”.  Implicit in this cry is that Jesus knows best how to help.  Jesus knows best what to do.  And as long as you remember me, Jesus, I know it will all be ok, because I trust you, even in this dark hour.  This is the prayer of faith.  Similar to the prayer of so many, “have mercy on me”, he prays, and we can pray, “Jesus, remember me”.

And then, the Lord’s loving and beautiful response.  An immediate and direct answer of yes that goes far beyond what the thief could have hoped for.  A promise.  A sure and certain promise he could cling to as his life slipped away:  Today you will be with me in paradise. 

No waiting around, wondering.  The time for that is over.  Today, Jesus says.  This thief’s time was short, but he didn’t need to wait for his salvation. 

You will be with me, Jesus says.  He’s with Jesus now, and he will be with Jesus then.  Jesus is Immanuel, God with us, after all.  And he is right alongside that thief who suffers just as he’s with us in all our suffering, trial, and trouble.  He’s the God who gets down and dirty.  He’s the Creator who dies with and for his creatures. And so to be with him is always a good thing for the faithful.  So he promises to us all.  I will be with you always.  I will take you to be with me where I am going.

And paradise.  Paradise the blest!  The reward for those who die in Christ.  The nearer presence of God.  The place of peace and rest in his loving care.  In Christ, we, too, can commit our Spirit into the Father’s hands.  In Christ, we know when we die, we rest in peace.  In Christ, we know death is not the end of us, but a slumber from which we will rise in a resurrection like his.  But until that day – for us – and for the thief – it’s paradise. 

An opposite picture from the terrors of a world under judgment.  Paradise.  A throwback to that day when Adam and Eve had not yet sullied the earth with sin and death.  A perfect existence with nature and each other and our Creator.  Paradise it is for those who are in Christ, peace and rest, until that day when ever more glory shines forth in the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.

And so we close the book on another church year.  We’ve followed the life of Jesus – from his Advent to his birth and his epiphany.  We’ve observed the fast of Lent and the poignant days of Holy Week.  We’ve marked his Ascension.  Celebrated his Pentecost.  And sat at his feet through the time of the Church.  We’ve sung our Reformation hymns, honored and given thanks for all the saints.  And now we end as we began, with Jesus. 

May our Lord, our king, who holds our days and years and moments in his hands, ever keep us.  Through whatever turmoil this world makes us endure, let us grieve and repent, knowing how much worse we truly deserve.

May he forgive us, for we know not what we do.  May he remember us in his kingdom, and bring us, with him, to paradise, and finally to the full measure of joyful resurrection. 

And may we be ever assured of his promises, even as he is with us today in his meal.  A meal which, today, brings us a taste of paradise. A meal which brings us Jesus, and his forgiveness.

 

 

Monday, November 07, 2022

Sermon - All Saints' Day (Observed) - 1 John 3:1-3

 


A Blessed All Saints Day to you.  As one of my pastor friends put it, this is the Day of Pentecost in the Fall.  And I think what he means by that is here, today, we have an emphasis on the church, the people of God. All who belong to Christ are, properly speaking, saints.  They are the holy ones of God.  Holy, not because of anything we bring to the table, and merits or worthiness.  But holy, only because the Holy One of God, Jesus Christ, makes us holy by his blood.  So even though it is a day highlighting the people of God, the saints, it is always first and foremost about Jesus.

Over the years I have preached on the reading from Revelation 7 more than a few times – focusing us on that picture of the church in glory – a multitude robed in white, washed in the blood of the Lamb.  It’s a beautiful picture of the saints in their heavenly splendor.

And then there’s also our Gospel reading, in which Jesus sets forth some beautiful and profound poetry in the Beatitudes.  Blessed are the saints, in so many ways, in Jesus Christ our Lord.

But today let us look at the Epistle.  I don’t believe I’ve preached this text before, and if so, not in a while.  From John’s first letter, it’s a short reading, and it certainly appropriate for All Saints’ Day.  But instead of describing the people of God as saints, or as holy and blessed ones, or picturing them as a multitude robed in white: John takes another approach.  Those who are loved by God in Jesus Christ are called “children of God”.  Let this be our theme today.  Children of God.

Here's one of these Christian expressions that the secular world seems to have picked up on.  It’s not uncommon to hear someone with little to no connection to the church, and certainly with very little grounding in the theology of Holy Scripture make a statement like this:  “We’re all God’s children!”  But consider the source of such a statement and consider the context.  What does a worldly person mean when they say such a thing?

It's often not because they’re trying to confess the truth of Scripture, but sometimes quite the opposite.  “We’re all God’s Children” is true in one sense – that all humans are created by God.  We all bear the image of God, though marred by sin.  We all have a certain dignity and value as humans, by virtue of this fact, that God made us, and even that Jesus died for us.  And if that’s what that person means, then, so far, so good.

But just as often, “We’re all God’s children” is a slogan used to wash away distinctions that really do matter.  It is used to silence those who would call for moral standards or doctrinal truth.  Far be it from you, Christian, to say that anything or anyone is ever wrong – dontchaknow we’re all God’s children!  It becomes a little saying to propound a sort of universalism and to wash away biblical standards and distinctions.  And nothing could be further from the truth.

In fact John makes it crystal clear that there really are two kinds of people  there are children of God, and those that are not – he calls them “the world”.  And he does not have nice things to say about the world.  Sinners, unrighteous.  Haters of God and of his church.  Anti-Christ.  He minces no words in his letters, and in his Gospel.  St. John is no peddler of feel-good bumper sticker theology.  He is a preacher of the truth.

But he also brings great comfort in that truth.  From his Gospel, chapter 1:

He came to his own, and his own peopl] did not receive him. But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

Here’s the good news, friends.  We are children of God!  Not born of the flesh, but of the will of God.  Born of God in holy baptism.  Born of God in the faith that comes by hearing the good news of Jesus.  Born anew – and set apart from the wicked world that is doomed for destruction.  We are born of faith, and we live by faith in Jesus Christ alone.  That’s what it means to be a child of God, and a saint!

But the picture of children is a strong one.  Children are dependent on their parents – a human baby cannot survive long without that care and nurture.  Wild animals are born, and often can walk right away and survive fairly well.  But humans are particularly dependent.  For all our powers in this world – we are vulnerable.  And perhaps this is a lesson for us.  That as children of God, we depend entirely on him.  Our life, our righteousness, our daily bread, and our hope for the future – all depend on his love for us, his dear children.

And what kind of love is a match for the love of a parent for his or her child!  So primal and instinctual.  Parents will go to the greatest lengths for their own children.  Of course, this, too, is by design.  That even unbelievers love their children.  Even you who are wicked, Jesus said, know how to give good gifts to your children.  How much more the love of the Father for us, his children in Christ.  See what kind of love!

And one more thing about the picture of children…. It implies also that we are a family, not only with God, our Father, and our brother Jesus Christ, but with all the saints who also share in the Father’s love.  We are the family of God. This is why we Christians not only call each other “brothers and sisters” in Christ, but we love each other like a family, for that is what we are. 

And all the more true in this local expression of the church, this congregation called Messiah.  Every family has its quirks, its personalities, its crazy uncle and such.  So too, we at Messiah have our own ways, our own struggles, our own unique flavor.  But we are a church family.  And God has called us together in this place as His children.  We ought to consider well the implications.  This isn’t just another customer in the same business, a diner at the next table in the same restaurant.  Look around you and see the people who are united with you by blood – not human bloodlines – but the blood of Christ.  A strong family tie indeed.

We are children of God, right here and now, John says.  But that’s not the end of the story.  Children of God have a future.  We have a hope.  We are children now, but we will be something quite more in the kingdom that is to come:  “and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is.”

Jesus has died and is risen and is glorified.  Death has no more sway over him, but is an enemy long defeated.  And because Christ lives and is glorified, we too have a resurrection to look forward to.  We too will rise from the grave into a glorified body that will be, somehow, like his.  Death will have no more sway over us, either.  For we will be ever with Christ, sharing his victory, enjoying eternal communion with him and with all of God’s children.  An everlasting family reunion full of peace and joy and love.

And everyone who thus hopes in him purifies himself as he is pure. Everyone who has hope in Christ, that is sure and certain hope.  And everyone who has this hope in Christ stands purified in him.

As great as it is to be a child of God, John teaches us that even better things are yet to come.  For we are children now, but what we will be is yet to be revealed.  One day, when Christ appears again, at the Second Coming, it will be made clear.  We will be like him, for we shall see him as he is. 

In other words, we children of God look forward to the glory that we will share at Christ’s glorious return.  Whether we are raised from the dead in glorified bodies on that day – or if we are still alive at his coming – Paul tells us we will be changed in a moment, in a twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.  Either way we will receive a body and soul free from sin and never subject to death again.  We will be like him, Jesus, who ha conquered death.  We will be like him, for we will see him as he is.

What a blessed reunion that will be – a family reunion of all the children of God.  A gathering of all the saints from all times and places, from every tribe, nation and language. We will be together with our Lord Jesus Christ, and with each other, forever.

In a few moments, we will get a foretaste of all that in the Holy Supper of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Here we gather, not just with our church family, not just will all Christians everywhere, but with angels and archangels and all the company of heaven, in a foretaste of the feast to come.  A little slice of heaven, here and now.  And one day, we will see it in all its fullness. 

See what kind of love the Father has given to us?  You children of God, you saints of God, in Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.