Showing posts with label Lenten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lenten. Show all posts

Sunday, April 05, 2026

Do Not Be Amazed!

 Mark 16:1-8

And when the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, bought spices, that they might come and anoint Him.  And very early on the first day of the week, they came to the tomb when the sun had risen.  And they were saying to one another, ‘Who will roll away the stone for us from the entrance of the tomb?"  And looking up, they saw that the stone had been rolled away, although it was extremely large.  And entering the tomb, they saw a young man sitting at the right, wearing a white robe; and they were amazed.  And he said to them, "Do not be amazed; you are looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who has been crucified.  He has risen; He is not here; behold, here is the place where they laid Him.  But go, tell His disciples and Peter, ‘He is going before you into Galilee; there you will see Him, just as He said lo you.'"  And they went out and fled from the tomb, for trembling and astonishment had gripped them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.

Sermon for Easter Sunday                                                     04/05/26

Do Not Be Amazed!

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

He is Risen! He is risen indeed! Hallelujah!

How exciting that first Easter must have been!  And yet the women were filled with fear -- so much fear that they did not tell anyone what they saw, at least not right away.  They did not do as the angel told them.  They were confused - such a quick trip from the deep grief to the excitement of the resurrection.  And they saw the angel, and they were amazed!

Amazement is always the response of humanity when it sees God at work!  The angel told them not to be amazed - not that this was not God at work among us, but that this is what Jesus came for, and this is what Jesus promised would happen, and this is what we ought to have expected.  But we did not, and they did not.

It seems a little silly telling twenty-first century Christians not to be amazed on Easter.  I mean, who is?  We have seen this day come and go for years - and our families, often, for centuries.  What is there to amaze us?

That is a good question, and one that we will answer this morning.  It should amaze us that all of this Gospel stuff is true.  God is not like mankind always pictures Him, when they depart from the book.  He is not a God who demands human sacrifice.  He is not the sort of God that wants to make man miserable.  He is not a God of caprice, like the ancient Gods of the Romans and the Greeks, who came to earth with human lusts and human weaknesses and overweening pride.  Nor is He distant from us and disinterested in us.

These are the evil things man imagines about God, depending on whether his experience of life is good at the moment or pain-filled and frustrating.  We should stand in utter amazement at God, He is loving.  He is just.  He has granted us nearly perfect autonomy of action, even though we are totally dependent on Him and His blessings.  He is intimately involved in our lives.  And He balances all of these seemingly contradictory attributes while blessing us and protecting us.

We abused our autonomy in order to reject Him who is life and well-being.  We sinned.  We need to understand that we have no way to comprehend the depth of the offense of sin against His holiness, and we sinned by direct rebellion and rejection of Him even though we need and depend upon Him daily. That rejection is called sin, and it is evident in our gossip, in our easy and unprovoked angers, in our lies, and in our wickedness toward one another, all of which should have brought us immediate and eternal death.  We had spurned and rejected Him who gives us life and all things.

But God loves us.  We should be amazed at that, all by itself.  He loves us not only so much, but in such a way that He found the way to punish our sins with death and so maintain His perfect justice, and yet still preserve and save us.  That is what Jesus accomplished.  In point of fact, God did require human sacrifice, because He had declared that the soul that sins shall die.  And, to accomplish both His justice, and our salvation, God laid upon Jesus the sins of us all, and put Him to death in our place.

On Easter morning, the one we celebrate today, and every Sunday, Jesus rose from the dead.  His rising was God the Father s declaration for all who would see it that Jesus was the perfect substitute, and that the payment was accepted, and that our sins were forgiven, and that God was freely bestowing the gift of salvation and eternal life on all who would take Him at His Word, believe what He proclaimed about Jesus and promised in connection with Him and His life and His death and His resurrection and trust Him.

We should be amazed at the love of God.  What a price He paid to redeem us from our own sin and rebellion!  What a marvelous and incontrovertible sign of His love He has given to us. What glorious evidence of forgiveness and life everlasting He has provided in the resurrection.

We should be amazed that it is true!  Who has ever seen a resurrection? Ordinarily, the dead stay dead!  But the message of the resurrection of Jesus is that they will not stay dead forever.  These all will rise body and soul, just as Jesus did.  We, too, shall rise!  Jesus rose - all the scoffing of the skeptics aside.  Jesus rose, teeth, hair, bones and all!  He rose to show us what rising from the dead will be like, and to demonstrate the truth of the promises.

We shall rise one day, body and soul reunited.  We shall be whole and well and alive for eternity, on that day.  We shall be ourselves and recognizably so.  Christians often celebrate Easter in a cemetery because the cemetery looks to be our final and utter defeat, and yet it shall be the field of our victory in Jesus Christ on that last day.

The world has long denied that Jesus rose.  The Jews said the body was stolen, just as the Bible reports they did.  Unbelievers inside the church and outside of her have said that it never happened.  But we have the eyewitness reports.  We have the testimony of hundreds, encapsulated here on the pages of Scripture.  We have the reluctant testimony of the Jews - the grave was empty and they did not have the body! We should be amazed that it is true!

We should be amazed that we can look at the details of the most exciting story in human history and not cry aloud with joy and praise to God for all that He has worked for us!  Or perhaps we should be ashamed that we can look at such wonderful gifts and promises, so clearly witnessed and proven, and yet we are often not brought to shouting our joy and triumph!  Our sins are paid for and forgiven – taken away, and nailed forever to the cross in the body of Jesus.  We have evidence of eternal life beyond death.  We have the promise of God that we too shall rise.  We should be amazed, and thrilled, and shouting for joy, He is risen!

Do not be amazed, the angel said.  What he meant was, You should have known.  You should have expected this.  He told you Himself.  Those words apply to us too.  We should not be surprised.  We should, however, be delighted and rejoice this morning.  Jesus Christ has risen from the dead, first-fruits of those who believe.  We too shall rise!

Let us rejoice this Easter morning!  He is Risen!  He is risen Indeed!!  Hallelujah!

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.

(Let the people say Amen)

Saturday, April 04, 2026

The Passover Is Here

 Exodus 12:1-14

Now the LORD said to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, "This month shall be the beginning of months for you; it is to be the first month of the year to you. Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying, ‘On the tenth of this month they are each one to take a lamb for themselves, according to their fathers  households, a lamb for each household. Now if the household is too small for a lamb, then he and his neighbor nearest to his house are to take one according to the number of persons in them; according to what each man should eat, you are to divide the lamb. Your lamb shall be an unblemished male a year old; you may take it from the sheep or from the goats. And you shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month, then the whole assembly of the congregation of Israelis to kill it at twilight. Moreover, they shall take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses in which they eat it. And they shall eat the flesh that same night, roasted with fire, and they shall eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. Do not eat any of it raw or boiled at all with water, but rather roasted with fire, both its head and its legs along with its entrails. And you shall not leave any of it over until morning, but whatever is left of it until morning, you shall burn with fire. 

Now you shall eat it in this manner: with your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it in haste-- it is the LORD S Passover. For I will go through the land of Egypt on that night, and will strike down all the first-born in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgments – I am the LORD. And the blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you live; and when I see the blood I will pass over you, and no plague will befall you to destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt. Now this day will be a memorial to you, and you shall celebrate it as a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations you are to celebrate it as a permanent ordinance.

Maundy Thursday 4/02/2026

The Passover Is Here

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

This evening we commemorate and celebrate one of the most often remembered, and most often disregarded days of the life of Christ.  We mention it, although we rarely think about this day, even when we speak of it, every time we speak the Words of Institution in preparation for receiving the gift of God in the Sacrament.  We say, "Our Lord Jesus Christ, on the same night on which He was betrayed, . . .".  That night was tonight, what we now call Maundy Thursday.  It was the night that the Lord left us His last will and testament in this supper.

We often ignore the fact that this holy supper took place in the context of the celebration of the Passover.  I mean, we know it happened that way, but unless a pastor preaches about it, we tend to ignore that fact.  The Passover was Jewish.  We are Christians.  End of story.

But the Passover is here! Jesus did not intend to end or supersede the Passover celebration.  He intended to fulfill it and to fill it with even deeper significance.  He established the Passover as a memorial to be celebrated as a feast to the Lord as a permanent ordinance.  Those words are all from verse 14 of our text.  Jesus did not intend to end the Passover, but to fulfill the type and give it greater meaning and to allow His people to celebrate the fullness of the true Passover.

Our text lays out the first Passover.  It tells Moses how to instruct the Children of Israel to prepare for the night when the Angel of Death would visit Egypt and end the life of the first-born of every womb – man or beast, except those who were in dwellings marked with lamb s blood on the door frames.  Those he would "pass over" and spare the lives of the first-born within.

Moses was to instruct them on how to prepare the lamb (they cooked it whole, with head and fur, and guts inside -- roasting it over an open fire).  They were to be careful not to break any of its bones.  They were to eat it dressed for travel – with cloak on their back and staff in hand, and sandal on their feet, for it was a meal of haste.  They were to have unleavened bread, because they would not have time for bread to rise.  They were to eat it with bitter herbs (today they often use horseradish) to symbolize the bitterness of their bondage in slavery in Egypt.

The Passover meal was to be the reminder for them of the saving acts of God, rescuing them from bondage and giving them their homeland.  It was a reminder of His power, and of how suddenly He accomplished what had seemed impossible just days before.  It was a reminder of what they had left behind so that they would not desire to go back.  It was part of what made them a people of the covenant.  If they did not participate, they were not Israel.  If they were not Israel, they were also not allowed to participate.

Over the centuries, a ritual arose and evolved around the Seder.  It evolved into a much more elaborate meal with symbolism to instruct the young and remind the older ones of the great truths of their faith.  They stopped eating the Seder standing, and reclined at table.  They developed the ritual of the Afikomen - or "after meal" – a dessert type ritual dealing with broken and hidden Matzoth.  They developed the custom of the four cups of the Seder.  But the essence remained – the bread of haste, the sacrificed lamb and the message of the great saving work of God.

Jesus celebrated the Passover with His disciples on the same night in which He was betrayed.  He did more than celebrate it, however, He changed it.  With His coming, and with the events of the next seventy-two hours, the foreshadowing function of the Passover would be complete.  The Passover Lamb would be replaced by the Paschal Lamb.  Instead of the lamb of the Passover shedding his blood for the lives and safety of the Children of Israel, as God worked their salvation from slavery in Egypt, the Lamb of God would shed His own blood for the sins of the world and to redeem and save all men from bondage to sin and captivity to death and hell.  The Passover meal would never again require a lamb to die.  The symbol was superseded by the reality.

Jesus took the unleavened bread of the seder, and gave it new significance.  Some suspect that it was the afikomen, the piece of Matzoth broken and hidden early in the meal, only to be found and enjoyed later.  Jews who have become Christians see the death of Jesus in the breaking of the afikomen, and the burial of our Lord in the hiding of the afikomen, and the resurrection in the "finding" of the afikomen at the end of the meal.  Jesus took the sacred bread of haste, and proclaimed that it was His body, and commanded His disciples to "Do This" – often – in remembrance of Him.

Jesus then took the third cup of the Seder.  We know it was the third cup because it is placed after the meal – when He had supped (in the King James s English).  St.  Paul called the third cup "the cup of blessing." That is because they spoke a special blessing over the third cup at the traditional Seder.  The third cup was known as the "Cup of Redemption."  It had come to symbolize the blood of the Passover Lamb, and commemorated God s saving acts, and His will to save.  This is the cup which Jesus declared was now His blood – blood shed for each of us for the remission of sin.  Then Jesus commanded that we do this also – often – in remembrance of Him.

This Holy Meal we receive, of which we commemorate the establishment particularly on this evening, is the Passover.  It is not the Passover of the Angel of Death in Egypt which we commemorate, however.  It is the Passover of the angel of death and eternal damnation which we celebrate.  In Jesus Christ, the death which we have earned in sin has been passed over, and we have been redeemed and rescued.  The bondage to sin and Satan and Hell has been broken and ended for all who believe.  The bread of haste has become a koinonia – a participation together in the very body of Christ and in all that Christ has won for us.  It establishes our unity and oneness, and our eating of it declares to all the world that we are united in this faith and in this salvation.

The Cup of blessing which we bless is no longer merely wine, but it is also filled with the blood of Jesus Christ, shed on the cross for our blessing and salvation.  The cup of redemption of the Seder has become more than a mere symbol, it is the cup of redemption, filled with forgiveness of sins and salvation for those who drink of it knowing what it truly is and trusting in the promises of God in connection with it.  This cup is also a communion– a participation together in the blood of Jesus Christ and in what that blood has done and can do.

This is the Passover.  We no longer need to kill a lamb for it, for the Lamb of God is here, in, with, and under the bread and the wine with His true body and blood for us and for our salvation.  We still eat the Lamb, but in and under the form of the elements of this holy meal.  It still reminds us of our rescue, and it works in us the rescue of which we are reminded.  It still points to the promised land – only ours is the new heavens and the new earth of eternal life.  It still makes us part of the people of God.  Paul writes, 1 Corinthians 10:17 "Since there is one bread, we who are many are one body; for we all partake of the one bread."  It is our sharing in this one bread that establishes our unity in Christ.  

This is the truly ecumenical meal, for all who believe share in it, and only those who share in our faith are welcome to it.   As with the Passover of ancient Israel, the outsider who partakes incurs the judgment of God, Therefore whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner, shall be guilty of the body and the blood of the Lord.  But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of the bread and drink of the cup.  For he who eats and drinks, eats and drinks judgment to himself, if he does not judge the body rightly.

Modern Christians sometimes say that this is "What is left of the Passover." I say that it is the whole of the Passover and more.  It has been called the "Medicine of Immortality," for by receiving it we are healed of sin and death, and prepared for everlasting life and glory.  It is the cure for sin, for it brings forgiveness of sins to the believer, and in so doing heals him from death, and imparts even to his flesh the power of the resurrection to glory.

The Passover is here! It continues as a memorial and a feast to the Lord.  It defines who we are, and marks us as the people of God.  It serves to hold before our eyes the saving acts of God, For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup.  you proclaim the Lord s death until He comes.   It is, in every respect, the Passover meal of the true Israel of God, the children of the promise.  Come, eat and drink and celebrate the Passover with your Lord!

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.

(Let the people say "Amen.")


The Nature of Sin

 1 John 1:8-10

If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in us.  If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.  If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.

Good Friday                                               4/03/2026

The Nature of Sin

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ;

Tonight we close our series of sermons on the Seven Deadly Sins, also called the Seven Cardinal Sins.  We close it by discussing the nature of Sin.  But first, we might ask, "why the seven deadly sins?"  Where did they come from?  Why did anyone come up with a list like this?  It is never mentioned in Scripture.  

Well, over the centuries, the people of God had noticed that most sins fed on other sins, and that our sinfulness feeds on the doing of sins and grows stronger in the presence of sin.  There are countless stories where evil runs amok until it burns itself out where there is no other evil to feed on.  I have even seen a movie in which the evil protagonist was finally isolated in a sphere of pure goodness (something you can only do in a movie!)  and died screaming because it was alone.

All fiction aside, sin feeds on sin.  One evil makes the sinner bold to commit an even greater evil.  The story is common, even in our newspapers, of the murderer who also commits other senseless acts of evil, simply because it is his nature.  Evil feeds on evil and breeds evil.

And certain evils seem to underlie all other evils.  Pride seems to be an element of most sins.  Greed can be often found in many sins.  Envy, or gluttony, or sloth, or anger: they all join together in strange and exotic combinations to make up the component parts and the causes of other sins, such as murder, rape, or theft.  So these most common – and generally least objected to sins – came to be focused on as the deadly sins.  Its not that the other sins are any less deadly, but these were the ones fewest were on guard for.  These seven are "only human."  Except in their grossest forms, we rarely hear anyone object to them.  They are rarely thought of as sinful, let alone described as great sins.  Some Psychologists will call them the necessary components of a healthy personality.  Sometimes we even hear them described as though they were virtues!

But the problem is Sin.  Sin is that strange, inexplicable yet omnipresent "thing" that spoils life, sours relationships, and wreaks havoc in our societies.  Sin is the enemy.  But we don't naturally tend to treat it as such.

Instead, people try to joke about sin.  They try to make it out to be fun, or at least funny.  Whee!!  Aren't we having a good time sinning!?  Oh, isn't that man's Lust funny?  Will you look at that comical pride!  Our comedies and our comedians overflow with the joy and the jokes of Sin.  We have watched "Will and Grace," which told us about a wonderful, platonic relationship between a homosexual lawyer and his ditsy, straight female friend, who occasionally live together, once in a while find themselves in bed together, and neither one of them can get sex often enough to be satisfied.  Then there's "The Practice" which let us watch a crew of lawyers whose ethics are questionable, whose sex lives are played out on screen for us, and who seem to tolerate anything except morality.  Then we still have reruns of  "The Golden Girls" for geriatric sin, lust, greed, and so forth.

I confess, certain sins often do seem to have their comic aspects.  Some so-called "dirty jokes" are hilarious, if you can overlook the gross immorality involved.  And certain sins are temporarily fun.  That is the drawing card sin so often uses.  It promises fun, or pleasure, or profit.  But it doesn't have the surgeon general's warning label telling you in advance that the fun is only short-lived, and is followed by a long period of emptiness and defeated-ness.  As fun or funny as Sin may appear from the outside, viewed from inside it is deadly, and depressing, and destructive.

But we are talking tonight, not about sins, but about Sin (with a capital "S").  We are not focusing on the specific acts and attitudes we call sins, which come in a variety of shapes and sizes, but on that grand, singular reality called Sin, which underlies every specific instance of sin.  And Sin is deadly destructive.  Sin is hurt.  Sin is loneliness.  Sin is alienation from others and from yourself.  It destroys relationships, and robs one of their own estimate of their own worth.  What we hear joked about is a deadly, destructive force in our lives–and our world.

Now, you would think something as sinister as I have described Sin to be would be readily identifiable as such, wouldn't you?  But the reality is that Sin is not so clearly seen to be the enemy.  The reality is that Sin can only be seen as sinful from the vantage point of revelation of the Will of God.

We can see that this is true from the Greek theater.  The Greeks knew about the problem of evil.   But they didn't understand it.  They saw evils as just one of the two great realities of this life, and accepted it as such.  They saw themselves as hopelessly caught up in a mechanistic world–and they might be caught by good, or they might get crushed by evil.  It was all in the fates, and they were helpless to do anything about it.  So, it really didn't matter which.  And it really didn't matter what they did or said.  You can see it in their drama.  The stories make no qualitative distinction between good and evil.  Their heroes were equally good and evil.  They would usually suffer heroically through evil circumstances, sometimes winning and sometimes losing.  It really made no difference to the play.

But the coming of Christian theology, and the Christian definition of Sin as destructive and life destroying changed things.  Man was no longer a worthless pawn, but a person , engaged in a cosmic battle!  Suddenly what one did, and what happened to the individual was significant!  The individual was important.  The individual had intrinsic value and worth.  Choices really mattered.  You could see this change even in drama.  In Shakespeare, Sin was what destroyed a life.  Sin stole a person's nobility.  Sin robbed and Sin killed.  Sin took the personal worth away from the sinner.

And now in our modern times, we have gone back to the machine.  In an era which titles itself the "post-Christian Era" the individual has again lost his value.  Our philosophies cannot see any difference between doing the right and the doing the wrong–only between getting away with it or getting caught.  Sin doesn't matter to our society.  That's why we can let pornography and prostitution flourish freely in the same neighborhood as a church, or gamble, even illegally, and justify it by saying that everyone does it.  It just doesn't matter!

And our drama shows it.  Watch the movies.  The monster kills thousands, eating, stepping on them, spraying them with radioactive breath.  In movies today the good guy loses.  He doesn't make any lasting mark.  It doesn't matter that he was good.  In some movies, we end up rooting for the bad guys, or the criminals.   If so-called good people don't come off as secretly wicked, hypocrites, or imbeciles, then there is no real difference between good and evil.  We have the Charles Bronson-esque hero.  This is the kind that we have to know in advance is the good guy because the methods and behaviors, the language and violence of the good guy is the same as the bad guy, only more so.

Our casual acceptance of Sin shows itself in the psychologies of today.  We accept the abnormal and twisted as an alternative lifestyle.  We treat one another as behavior groupings and not as people.  We find ourselves helpless to improve our situations because we don't recognize what is wrong with them to begin with.  We try to cure the disease by treating the symptoms, and it isn't working!  We have come to view ourselves as accidents, as products of evolution.  So we can abort or euthanize the unwanted and inconvenient.  We see ourselves as biochemical data-banks, conditioned by life and experience just as surely as a computer is programmed by a programmer.  We can no longer recognize our own value or purpose, and we have no idea what to do about it.

And the problem is Sin.  Sin is destructive.  Sin is when and why we strike out at others in pain, or greed, or pride.  Sin is violence toward others . . . intentional violence!  Sin is also striking at ourselves.  We strike at ourselves in anger, frustration, fear, and helplessness.  Sin robs us of control of ourselves, and we begin to feel cheaper, and less human, and less worth the effort, any effort.  In one way or another, we destroy life – or the value of life – by sinning.  And it is this destruction of ourselves that we perceive so clearly, and punish so severely by sinning all the more, and thereby destroying ourselves and others all the more to punish our wickedness.

Sin is perversion.  Sin twists everything until black is not black, and white is not white, and until we prefer the comforting shades of grey.  Sin makes us tell one another in song and story, in play and movie, that the one who remains moral, the one who clings to the faith and to what is right is sick.  The brave and healthy one abandons all morality and curses God!  Our philosophers have said that God is a crutch for those who are not able to face life on their own.  And what teen-age boy hasn't suggested that immorality is the best way for his girl to show her love?

Our age tells us that the radical and the revolutionary, the demonstrator is the one who has been faithful, who has kept the faith.  But history, even modern world history, shows us just how faithless these have been when they have been granted power.  Psychology shows us how their commitment is more to the rebelling than it is to the cause they choose.  Our age also tells us that to be free means to be free from any restraint to evil.  Freedom from morality, freedom from goodness is called true freedom.  But why not freedom from evil?  Why is it that true freedom is seen only as an escape from what is good and wholesome, and the pressures to be good, if Sin does not pervert?

And Sin is slavery.  Freedom requires choices.  And choice requires more than one option.  But when we define freedom as being without one of the two possible alternatives, we have only one choice, and that makes us slaves.  We may be slaves to ourselves, to our lusts, our passions, our whims and impulses, but we are slaves none the less.  We become slaves to lust, slaves to our egos, and slaves to sin, just as the Bible describes us.

And Sin is godlessness.  When a Christian repents, he or she doesn't just repent getting caught.  If we really repent, we aren't just sorry about the coming punishment, or the possibility of punishment, we are sorry for sinning.  We are sorry for cheapening our lives, and we are committed to not doing again that something to be sorry about!

And when we repent, we don't just repent to ourselves, or to others, but to God.  Even the atheist is "sorry to God" for his mistakes.  But for the Christian the Bible paints an even clearer repentance.  "Against Thee, Thee only, have I sinned, and done what is evil in Thy sight!"  Joseph, tempted by Potiphar's wife does not reckon the sin as evil against his master, or the wife, or even himself, but cries out in horror, "How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God!?"  If we look at Sin honestly and ourselves realistically, we will have to find ourselves in the same position as the Apostle Paul in Romans 7, where he writes, "Wretched man that I am!  Who will set me free from this body of death?"

But the cure is here, in Scriptures.  Here in 1 John1:8-10:  If we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in us.  If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.  If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.

This is the cure for our lost and impoverished condition in sin.  It begins, as they all have throughout Lent, with recognizing honestly that we have sinned.  Yes, even we Christians have "daily sinned much and indeed deserved nothing but punishment."  To assert that you have not sinned is a lie.  It is either intentional lying, or it is evidence that you have lost contact with reality.  Everyone sins, and so says the Bible.  Good or bad, as we may judge the individual, everyone has sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.

Then, when we have seen our sins, the next step is to confess them to God, against whom we have sinned.  We must admit them, be sorry for them, and resolve in our secret and earnest intentions not to sin again.  We call that repenting.  When we repent, God forgives.  John writes that when we repent, God is faithful.  That means He will forgive us each time we repent.  But be clear on this.  God will not even hear the kind of repenting which knows that it wants to sin the same way again, and plans to sin again.  But sincere repentance which resolves to improve God forgives each time, for He is faithful.

And John tells us that God is righteous to do so.  The King James Version says that God is "just" to forgive us.  He is just because He is not simply wiping the slate clean and kindly forgetting that we did anything wrong.  No, God punishes every sin, in Jesus.  The debt has already been paid.  We celebrate that payment today, and we will gather Sunday to celebrate the declaration of God that the payment was sufficient and was accepted.

God is just in forgiving our sins because the penalty for Sin has already been meted out, and all that is lacking is our receiving of the ledger receipt marked "paid in full", which we receive through faith.  He is just to forgive all of us for all of our sins for Sin is the offense, not just the specific sins, and all Sin has been met by the complete wrath of God in Christ Jesus.  Now all can be justly forgiven, both those whom we see as good, and those whom we see as bad, for all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, being justified as a gift by His grace through redemption which is in Christ Jesus.

And God does forgive us!  John writes that He cleanses us.  He forgives and wipes us clean from all past unrighteousness.  Then He cleanses our hearts and our desires, and enables us to begin to serve Him, and to do His will, and to perform righteousness here in this life, to some extent.

The last verse of our "cure" tells us that either you are a sinner, or a saint.  Strangely enough, that means that either you confess your sins openly before God, and are forgiven and made holy through Jesus Christ, and become thereby a saint, or you are a sinner, and an enemy of God.  Impenitence is an attack on God.  Denying your sinfulness – whether you do it publicly, or just privately in your secret, inner thoughts – is calling God a liar, and making yourself His enemy.  You can be a sinner, and never admit it, and never be a saint.  But you have to know that you are a sinner, and confess it and repent before you can be made a saint.  And you must never lose sight that even us saints are still sinners and in need of forgiveness daily – or you will immediately cease to be a saint at all!

Well, there it is.  Finally we are finished.  The Seven Deadly Sins.  And it is a fitting night to finish with it, for it was on this night, almost two thousand years ago, that God finished with Sin for us forever.  He died on a cross to lift its burden off of us.  It was a Friday then, too.  At first they called it God's Friday.  Then they called it Good Friday.  Although that was a mispronunciation of God's Friday, it is true none-the-less.  The anniversary of the death of our Lord Jesus is a Good Friday, for it is also the anniversary of the end of the reign of sin, and the beginning of the victory of our Lord Jesus – and our victory over these Seven Deadly and all other Sins.

 In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.    

 (Let the people say "Amen".)


Sunday, March 29, 2026

"Only Jesus Would Take Our Place in Hell"

 Matthew 27:45, 46

Now from the sixth hour darkness fell upon all the land until the ninth hour.  And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, "ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?" that is, "MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAST THOU FORSAKEN ME?"

Palm Sunday                         3/29/26

"Only Jesus Would Take Our Place in Hell"

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

This morning we come to the foot of Golgotha.  This morning we look at the cross, not empty in victory, nor empty to declare the completed work of Christ.  This morning we want to look at the crucifix — the cross with the broken body of our Savior hanging on it.  We want to consider what our Lord did for us.  We want to measure its depth and severity.  We want to understand our sins in all of their horrible power and evil, and come to know the true riches of forgiveness and life.  To do that we need to meditate on the sufferings — called the Passion of our Lord.

I cannot imagine what it is like to have nails driven through the palms of my hands.  I can only imagine that it hurt a great deal.  I have had someone stomp on my foot, on the instep, that tender part above the arch.  The pain was blinding.  Still I cannot conceive of what it must have felt like to have a huge spike driven through His feet and into that cross.

 It is just within my imagination to guess what it might have been like when they covered His face and punched Him.  Then they laughed and asked Him to tell them who hit Him.  I think I can conjure up what it is to have someone make fun of you, mocking you in your time of pain and helplessness.  I have never experienced it to anywhere near the degree that Jesus did.  But I can kind of imagine.  

I have been lashed, although nothing in my experience has prepared me to conceive of what the thirty-nine lashes with a cat-o-nine-tails might have felt like.  Historians tell me that men often died during the beating from the shock and pain of it.  The scourge had bits of rock and metal and bone tied into the lashes to bruise and cut and tear the flesh as the victim was beaten.  What a horrible thing, and then, at the end of a day of other beatings and torture and no sleep such as Jesus had.  But what our text today describes goes way beyond anything I can even begin to imagine. "Only Jesus Would Take Our Place in Hell"

That is what our text describes, you know.  Jesus took our place in the torments of Hell.  The agonies of Hell are more than just the burning pain of the body.  I suspect that those pains alone would be enough to drive a sane man out of His mind.  Imagine being on fire, fully conscious and aware of every sensation.  You have probably burned yourself.  Picture that pain, all over your body, growing more intense as the moments pass, as burns do.  Imagine a pain everywhere, inside and out, eyes and nose and mouth.  Your fingers, your legs, your back, pain everywhere, so that it hurts to touch and it hurts not to touch.  I have tried to imagine it at times and it makes me shiver with horror.

Now try to understand that all of that torment is not the worst part of hell.  It is there, and real, and unrelenting, but it is not the worst of it.  The worst of it is the separation from God.  You see, even on our worst days, we live and move and have our being in the presence of God.  He is the source of life, and hope, and health, and every good thing.  We are not fully conscious of Him, and yet we utterly depend on Him.  It is just as we are not conscious of the air we breathe, unless it gets cold or too hot, or begins to disappear.  Our lives are filled with goodness and comfort and peace by Him.  Every form and experience of well-being is from Him.

Although we cannot begin to imagine what it would mean or how it might even be possible, Hell's greatest torment is separation from God.  That torment is coupled with the gnawing certainty that we could have avoided it, that our presence in Hell is our fault.  That is what Jesus referred to so often when he said, There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.

Jesus endured that torment for us.   He bore the cruelest pains -- physically and mentally and spiritually.  And He bore pains that He alone is equipped to feel.  We cannot imagine them, but He is God.  He is fully aware and fully in tune with what those benefits are.  He endured their loss for us, for our sake, for our salvation.  He endured their loss in eternity, since He is both True God and True Man and therefore not only a creature of time and of this world, but also the One who exits in eternity.  Whatever He endured, He endured in eternity, where there is no time and no limit.

Jesus bore the pains of hell for you for eternity.  Only Jesus would do such a thing.  But even more remarkable and striking is the fact that He who IS God was forsaken by God.  So as Jesus endured the unimaginable for us, He was forsaken by God the Father to bear His torments -- our torments -- alone.  His earthly friends and disciples had deserted Him and now His heavenly Father abandoned Him, leaving  Him utterly alone.  I cannot imagine what that sort of pain that is, what that sort of identity crisis must be like.  But Jesus bore it for you and for me because of our sins.

That is why we call that day Good Friday.   It is good for us that Jesus bore this torment and not us.  He saved us from it all.  And  only Jesus would take our place in hell.  St. Paul talks about this in Romans, chapter 5, For one will hardly die for a righteous man; though perhaps for the good man someone would dare even to die.  But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.

Jesus said it this way, Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.  How much greater must that love need be to die in this way, and to bear our sins and their punishments on the cross?  And while He was suffering torments that you and I cannot imagine, and which, because of Him, we, who believe, will never experience, He was careful to fulfill Scriptures and to point our attention to the Scriptures so that we might not miss what was really happening there.

The cry of Jesus from the cross was genuine and heart-felt.  It had to be.  The physical pain was enormous.  He had just come through a night of torture and beatings.  He hung by nails driven through His hands.  He had nails driven through the most sensitive part of His feet.  He dared not put any pressure on those feet, except when His weight had so stretched the chest muscles that He could not exhale to take a fresh breath of air.  Then He had to stand up on that brutal nail.  He would pant and breathe, and try to ease the pain in shoulders that had borne His weight and hands that burned with infection and with the pain of a spike, maybe a half an inch in diameter driven through them.

When the pain in His feet became too great again, he would fall back onto His arms to begin the tormenting process over again.  That was the Physical agony He endured when He cried out those famous words.  There was the sorrow and the loneliness of the cross, and His abandonment by God to bear our pains  and the just punishment of our sins.  But He chose His words from Scripture, to express that awful agony.  He chose the words which begin Psalm 22, My God, My God, Why hast Thou forsaken Me?  He chose those words so that those who stood around could clearly see that all that had been prophesied by David nearly a thousand years before was unfolding before them in this tortured man.

He cried out in Hebrew, so that the youngest son of the Commandments — that is the meaning of the words bar Mitzvah  —   so that from the newest young man to the faith of his fathers unto the eldest of the children of Israel could identify what was happening on that cross.  He cried out for you, too.  Psalm 22 also says,   You who fear the LORD, praise Him; All you descendants of Jacob, glorify Him, And stand in awe of Him, all you descendants of Israel.  For He has not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted; Neither has He hidden His face from him; But when he cried to Him for help, He heard.

We are the descendants of Israel, spiritually.  We are the ones of whom Jesus did not despise the afflictions.  He did not hide His face from us, although we deserved it and our plight was due to our own sins, but Jesus went to the cross to suffer not only cruel torture, but all that we by our sins have deserved.  When we cried to the Lord, He heard.  And even before we cried.  

Many religions claim saviors, but none have a Savior like Jesus Christ.  Almost every religion has a God of some sort.  But none has a God who humbles Himself to bear the pains of His people; pains brought on them by His own justice, which fell upon His people because of their own conduct, pains He endured in order to save them.  None of them have a Savior who endures such torment with such grace and humility.  He did not cry out.  He did not curse.  He did not rumble and threaten and lecture.  He simply suffered -- enduring everything we have earned by our sins.  None of them has a Savior who died for the life of those who hate Him so that He can offer to them peace and forgiveness and eternal life -- and claim them as His own by grace.  No one else knows a God of grace who takes their place.  Only Jesus would take our place in Hell.  

Only Jesus.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.

(Let the people say "Amen".)

Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Twin Sisters: Gluttony and Lust

 Romans 6:8-14

Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him, knowing that Christ, having been raised from the dead, is never to die again; death no longer is master over Him.  For the death that He died, He died to sin, once for all; but the life that He lives, He lives to God.  Even so consider yourselves to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.

Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body that you should obey its lusts, and do not go on presenting the members of your body to sin as instruments of unrighteousness; but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God.  For sin shall not be master over you, for you are not under law, but under grace.

The Sixth Wednesday of Lent                                             3/25/2026

The Twin Sisters of Gluttony and Lust

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ;

This evening I would like to introduce you to a pair of ladies, twins, and really all-American girls!  To some of you, they will be total strangers, and this will be the first time you have ever met.  Some of you will find them strangely familiar, perhaps, although you have never been properly introduced before.  Still there may be others of you who are quite well acquainted with them.

Let me introduce you to the twin sisters of Gluttony and Lust.   If you find them a little disgusting, don't let it bother you.  They have no sensitivity to what others think, and you're right, they are disgusting.  They are also deadly murderers.  They murder souls.

Now, before I have any women's groups upset, let me explain.  I call these two sins "twins" because they are so much alike, and I call them "sisters" not because they are feminine – or particularly the sin of women – but because they are so seductive and alluring to the unwary, and, let's face it, a woman is the symbol of all that is seductive and alluring and attractive.  When I imagine gluttony and lust, however, I see two aged and over-painted flirts trying to look seductive and desirable, but looking totally disgusting instead.

Let me introduce you to gluttony first.  Ms. Gluttony is known for her consumption.  Gluttony is usually equated with consuming great quantities.  But gluttony doesn't consume for the sake of getting the food, or whatever, eaten.  There is no need to consume anything specific in gluttony, nor any great desire for whatever it is that is being consumed.  It is just consumption itself.  It is not even consuming for the sake of getting full, for Ms. Gluttony cannot get full.  She doesn't taste, particularly, or admire the quality of that which she consumes.  She just consumes.  And gluttony doesn't just consume other things.  The glutton consumes him or herself as well, in his or her gluttony.

The consuming is actually an escape.  The glutton is in flight from life.  Often people view gluttony as one of the more sociable and companionable sins.  Sometimes it masquerades as a fun time for a group, but gluttony is a very solitary sin.  Gluttony is focusing on the thing consumed and on self getting that consumable thing and consuming it.  In eating, the glutton escapes thought and purpose and interaction with others, and focuses on eating.  She doesn't focus on taste, color, smell, the sensation of being filled, or anything else.  The glutton focuses on consuming.

The glutton doesn't escape into enjoyment, but from it.  The glutton is incapable of real appreciation of beauty, taste, or fun, because the glutton is fleeing from the pressures of reality, and therefore the qualities of it, in favor of non-demanding bowl of swill.

Therefore, Ms. Gluttony is also devoid of gratitude.  She can never give thanks because it is either just swill, and not worthy of thanks, or she is ignoring it and fleeing from it.  In this lack of thanksgiving, gluttony is like the other sins.  Pride is offended by beauty or worth in anything but itself, and so gives no thanks.  Envy cannot bear the sight of beauty in another, and cannot see it in itself.  Anger will destroy it if it cannot possess it.  Greed sees the beauty in others only if they are reflecting his.  Sloth doesn't have the spirit or energy to enjoy or appreciate beauty.  Lust seeks beauty, but doesn't know how to enjoy it.  And gluttony doesn't see beauty, but reduces everything to the level of swill.  Therefore, none of the sins can, or wants to, give thanks.

Ms. Gluttony is usually identified with overeating.  It is a common sort of gluttony which overeats, although eating too much is not necessarily gluttony, but there are other sorts of gluttony.  One popular form today is dieting.  The focus is the same, on the consumable items, and on the self, but this gluttony expresses itself in denial of food instead of over-use of it.  It is still self-consuming, and it is still escape from the pressures of reality into one's stomach.

Another form of gluttony is drug abuse.  What else is a "high" but an escape?  And everyone knows that if you are "into" drugs, then talking about them, or the high, or getting the drug, or preparing to use it, or using the drug is the entire life of the glutton for drugs.  Almost the same gluttony is the alcohol gluttony, which is most graphically illustrated on skid row, but is no less present in the Bloody-Mary breakfast, the six martini lunch, and the dinner wines and after-dinner drunk of the social drunk.  Much that is simple gluttony is passed off as helpless  alcoholism.  And then there is more than just a symbol in the phrase "a glutton for punishment," or for work, or for youth, or life.

But enough "flattery" for this sister, Lust is every bit as charming as her twin.  So, let me introduce you to Lust.

First of all, I can say that everything I have said about gluttony applies to Ms. Lust.  She deals with consuming, she, also, is an escape from life, and she is thankless too.  But Ms. Lust deals primarily in sex.

Actually, Lust deals in sex and in self-love.  Lust is pure craving.  Lust has no concern with partners, quality, morals, or anything, only with satisfying the craving.  Lust is very lonely, although she has a lot of company and is often found mingling in a crowd.  But she is not interested in the crowd, or the mingling, only in the craving.  And she is empty, because there is no time for joy or beauty, or love  or anything, only the craving which refuses to be satisfied, and which demands more and different every day.

It is a common thought that lust stirs up sex, excites it.  Nothing could be farther from the truth.  Lust kills it, Lust dries it up, it empties it of meaning and enjoyment.  Lust actually takes what is free and natural and good, and makes an onerous task of it.  It makes a work ethic of it, and tells the lustful one to work at it, work harder!, to satisfy that craving.

Lust offers nothing to another; no permanence, no obligations, no relationship, no responsibility, no involvement.  And lust receives just as little.  When all is said and done lust walks away with nothing, not even satisfaction.  Nothing has been added to ease the pain, or the loneliness.

Lust, like gluttony, feeds on other sins.  It feeds on envy that wants to have what everyone else has, and claims the right to have it.  It feeds on greed which wants to have, or possess without purpose to the possessing , and while taking no joy in having, other than simply having. It feeds on sloth, lacking the desire or the energy to get involved or to take any responsibility. It is like gluttony in this too, it is mindless, and sense-less.  It thinks nothing, and it feels, sees, tastes, and hears nothing.  Only the craving.  And it escapes a world full of reality by contemplating its craving like Buddha's navel.

As ugly, as over-painted and disgusting as these two sisters are, they have a peculiar seductiveness to them, and they draw many unawares under their spell.  But there is an escape from them.  There is a way to say, "No!"

The first step is self examination.  Look carefully and honestly at yourself and see if the description fits you.  Are you a glutton?  Are you lustful?

The second step is faith.  That involves repenting, and trusting God for forgiveness.  It also involves commitment to Christ and a desire to live in accord with His will.

The third step, which can only be used if you have already accomplished the first two, is our text tonight.  Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him, knowing that Christ, having been raised from the dead, is never to die again; death no longer is master over Him.  For the death that He died, He died to sin, once for all; but the life that He lives, He lives to God.  Even so consider yourselves to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.

Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body that you should obey its lusts, and do not go on presenting the members of your body to sin as instruments of unrighteousness; but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God.  For sin shall not be master over you, for you are not under law, but under grace.

If we believe, we have been buried with Christ in our Baptism, into His death.  And the one who has died is no longer under sin, for verse 7 says that he who has died is freed from sin.  Having died with Christ, we believe we shall also live with Him – both in eternity and now.  For the death that Jesus died He died to sin once and for all – for all people and for all time.  Having died, there is no more death for Him, or for us who have shared in His death by Baptism.  The life He now lives, He lives to God, and so must we.  So, St.  Paul tells us to consider ourselves dead to sin.

We are, now, dead to sin – and we ought to reckon ourselves, to consider ourselves to be so.  Many times this feels contrary to fact because our sinful nature still lives and still hungers after sin and corruption, but the truth expressed in God's Word is that we are truly spiritually dead to sin, and alive to God, in Christ Jesus.  With that fact in mind it is clear that sin is unnatural for us spiritually, and that we must stop it, by the power which God gives us, wherever we can.

Our text says, "Do not let sin reign in your mortal body, that you should obey its lusts."  Instead of using our bodies as tools of Satan and sin we are to present them in daily living to God as tools of His will and service for Him.  And we are even given God's promise that when we recognize that we are no longer spiritually alive to sin and no longer need to serve it, with God's help, sin shall not be master over us!  We are not under the control of sin any longer, but of God.  We are no longer under the law which spurs sin on in us, but under the grace of God which forgives our sins and promises to release us from the doing of sin as well as the guilt.

lf we so consider ourselves, and live with God's help, we can escape our twin sisters of gluttony and lust.  We can live as His people and serve Him as tools of righteousness.  We may not be able to stop sinning entirely in this life, but we can escape the control of sin, and the soul-murdering plots of these two aged and over-painted flirts, the twin sisters of Gluttony and Lust.  God grant you the faith and the strength to escape all of the snares of these and all other sins, for the sake of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.

(Let the people say "Amen".)

Sunday, March 15, 2026

More than You Will Ever Need

 John 6:1-15

After these things Jesus went away to the other side of the Sea of Galilee (or Tiberias).  And a great multitude was following Him, because they were seeing the signs which He was performing on those who were sick.  And Jesus went up on the mountain, and there He sat with His disciples.  Now the Passover, the feast of the Jews, was at hand.  Jesus therefore lifting up His eyes, and seeing that a great multitude was coming to Him, said to Philip, "Where are we to buy bread, that these may eat?"  And this He was saying to test him; for He Himself knew what He was intending to do.  Philip answered Him, "Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, for everyone to receive a little."

One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, said to Him, "There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what are these for so many people?"  Jesus said, "Have the people sit down."  Now there was much grass in the place.  So the men sat down, in number about five thousand.

Jesus therefore took the loaves; and having given thanks, He distributed to those who were seated; likewise also of the fish as much as they wanted.  And when they were filled, He said to His disciples, "Gather up the leftover fragments that nothing may be lost."  And so they gathered them up, and filled twelve baskets with fragments from the five barley loaves, which were left over by those who had eaten.  When therefore the people saw the sign which He had performed, they said, "This is of a truth the Prophet who is to come into the world."  Jesus therefore perceiving that they were intending to come and take Him by force, to make Him king, withdrew again to the mountain by Himself alone.

Sermon for Laetare Sunday                                               03/15/26

More Than You Will Ever Need

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

One of the challenges of this time in history is that, as a Christian, we have trouble understanding what we can trust in God for, and how much we dare to trust in Him.  It has always been a challenge, I suppose, but, in our day and age, we are far removed from the magical and mystical and miraculous.  We have centuries of "modern" men telling us that the miraculous is not possible and cannot touch our lives.  When people talk earnestly about trusting God they usually mean for something ephemeral and distant, like salvation after death.  Most of the time, we tend to make that shift in meaning in our own minds too.

Our Gospel lesson stands as a testimony against such thinking.  It means to tell us what we can trust God for and how much we can trust God.  The answer is, of course, everything - we can trust God for everything He has promised which is everything we need.  Add to that thought that we can trust Him absolutely – as long as we are trusting Him and not trying to make Him be our concierge.   When you trust in God, our text illustrates for us that you will have more than you will ever need.  And that is our theme this morning.

The Gospel tells us that Jesus was healing - and we might presume teaching, as well.  A great crowd was following Him.  Some probably wanted to be healed, or have a relative healed.  Some probably came to see Jesus do miracles.  Others followed Him to hear Him teach, and believed that He was someone worth listening to.  

Our text tells us that it was the season of the Passover, not so much to tell us what time of year it was, but to connect the events of this account to the Passover theologically.  Passover was, of course, the great rescue by God from slavery in Egypt.  He rescued His people with signs and miracles and great power.  God brought them out of Egypt into the wilderness and provided for them - for forty years, but the time factor isn't significant here.  God fed His people with Manna - and He demonstrated Himself to the nation, Israel, as their God, the One whom they could trust.  He made a covenant with them in the wilderness, and it all began with the Passover.  And it is this connection with caring for the people, and feeding them miraculously, and showing Himself to be their God and giving evidence that they could trust Him and depend on Him, that probably warranted mentioning that "the Passover, the feast of the Jews, was at hand." 

Anyway, Jesus feeds the crowd, much to everyone's amazement, with five loaves and two fish.  The loaves were probably about the size of a small tortilla, and about an inch or less thick.  Matthew give us no information on the size of the fish, but I am guessing that the young boy was not carrying a pair of twenty-pound carp or eighty-pound catfish with him.  Even if he had been, they would have been woefully insufficient to feed the roughly five thousand people who were fed that day.

Jesus probably began with less food than it would have taken to satisfy the Twelve disciples.  And when they were all done, the disciple gathered up the leftover pieces - the ones big enough to bother saving, and they ended up with twelve full baskets of bread pieces.  The baskets were, according to the Greek word used, somewhere between the size of a five quart ice-cream pail and a five gallon bucket, but the point is that when everyone had eaten all that they wanted, and were satisfied, they had several times more in left overs than when they started in the first place.

The people there were so impressed by what Jesus did, that they decided to seize Jesus and force Him to be their king.   They knew a good thing when they saw it, and they reacted to free food the same way we do - get it while the getting's good.  Jesus perceived that they were planning this action, and He slipped away without them noticing His departure, and went up on the mountain alone to pray.

Now we know the details, we have to ask ourselves, what does this tell us?  I imagine that depends on how much you want  to see.  Jesus was facing an insurmountable task.  He was going to feed five thousand people with little or no food.  The situation was huge and the resources for it were extremely limited, and yet Jesus did it.  He fed those five thousand people and He had more left over - many times more - than He had when He started.

What needs or troubles can we imagine that Jesus cannot handle for us?  

What tasks are we facing that we feel we lack the resources to accomplish?  

How much of our doing what Jesus gives us to do actually depends on us?

These are the sorts of questions you have to ask yourself.  It would probably be helpful if you were honest with yourselves when you answered, too.  The trouble we often have is that we don't really expect Jesus to really help.  We don't start things until we have a sense that we can succeed.  We don't really expect divine intervention at any point.  And when we finish, and have succeeded, we feel like we accomplished it, but we church-types often piously say that this is the thing that the Lord has made, while thinking that we actually did it.

The truth is that we tend not to start anything, even as a congregation, we don't think we can finish.  It isn't that we don't think we should do it, it is just that we want to be confident we have the resources to do it before we begin.  Well, with Jesus, we have the resources.  We have more than you will ever need.  If Jesus give us the task, He will see it through to completion.

Does that mean that we don't count the cost, or plan, or try to be wise about what we do and how we do it?  No.  We have to think, and Jesus calls on us to act - you know, do the things that need to be done.  We are to do what we believe we have been given to do, and approach it with confidence that Jesus will bring us through to success, if what we are doing is what He wants done.  The disciples were asked to prepare the people for food.  They did not have food, nor did they know how they would feed all those people - and yet Jesus did it.

This miracle is not the only time Jesus did the impossible.  It is surely not the most impressive time.  The most impressive example of that is when He rescued us from our own sins.  The verdict of God from the very beginning was that when one sinned, that one died.  "The soul that sins, it shall die."  That was the judgment of God.  Sin simply earned death - and that death was more than just physical.  It included eternal torment and suffering.  That was what God wanted to rescue us from.  He couldn't just ignore our sins and pretend that they did not happen, however.  That would have made God unjust and an accessory to our sins.  He had to punish them, and punish them with death, as stipulated originally.  But His goal was to preserve us alive and rescue us from our condemnation.

He did that by sending Jesus.  He sent the Second Person of the Trinity, true God and yet, not the Father.  He was incarnate - that is He took on flesh and blood, and became a man as Mary heard the Word of God with faith and bowed her head and said, "Behold, I am the handmaiden of the Lord, Let it happen to me just as you have said it would."  With that, Mary became pregnant, conceiving in her womb the child who would be born nine months later and be named "Savior", or literally "God is Salvation" - Jesus.

He kept the Law which man failed and refused to keep.  He lived without sin, just as He required of Adam and Eve and all of their children.  They did not obey, but Jesus did.  He obeyed God, as Scripture puts it, even to the point of death on a cross.  Having fulfilled all righteousness, He deliberately gave up what He had earned and now deserved - life without end in the favor of God the Father - and took in exchange our guilt, our shame, and our condemnation, and our death.  

Every step of the way He endured the taunting and tempting of the devil, and resisted.  When a word would have set Him free He kept silent.  When silence would have served Him, He spoke.  Everything He said was true, but it was also spoken with the full consciousness that it would ignite their anger and cause them to continue to march Him to the cross.

He died deliberately for us.  Because He is God He is of greater value than all of us combined, so His one death redeemed us all.  Because He has taken our death, He now has the right to give to us the life eternal which He has earned.  And He pours that treasure out upon all people everywhere, without consideration of their worthiness or holiness.  He has appointed faith as the means by which we receive and hang onto this treasure of grace.  He that believes and is baptized shall be saved.

Further, He knows that we are, by nature, not able to trust Him or love Him by virtue of our own corruption in sin, so He sends His Holy Spirit out through the preaching of His Word to work faith in the hearts of those that hear the good news of this Gospel.  Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.  Now, all who hear have the Holy Spirit at work in them.  Many reject that work, and deny God's goodness, grace, and mercy.  They are those represented in the parable of the Sower by soil of the hard-trodden path upon which the seed falls, and the birds of the air eat the seed up.  They had the treasure delivered to them, but they rejected it for something or someone else.  But anyone that believes, which is accomplished only by the very work of the Holy Spirit within them, has life everlasting, and resurrection from their graves to come, and God is with them even now, day by day.

The feeding of the five thousand reminds us that we can trust God in Jesus Christ in all things, and that He will provide abundantly.  That provision isn't just for in the sky, bye and bye.  He provides for us now, each according to His good plan for our service for Him.  He provides food and clothing and the needs of this life, and lots of our wants as well.  He feeds us with His holy body and precious blood in this Sacrament, to strengthen us, and to cleanse us, and to teach us to trust in Him and in His love for us individually, personally.

He also cares for us in our day to day pressures, desires, passions, and temptations.  He does not always give us what we desire, and surely not what we expect, any more than those five thousand who were fed followed Jesus expecting a meal out there in the wilderness.  He provides what we need, and then some, so that we may accomplish what He has planned for us.

So, let us look to the future and work while it is still day, as we say in that old prayer, before the night comes when no man can work.  Let us do what we believe the Lord would have us do with faith and confidence and trusting that we will have more than you will ever need.  As it is true for salvation, it is true for all that God would have us to do in Jesus Christ. He feeds us, and He will guide us and grant us everything we need to serve Him faithfully, and more than you will ever need.

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.  

(Let the people say Amen)

Sunday, January 25, 2026

What Did They See?

 Matthew 17:1-9

And six days later Jesus took with Him Peter and James and John his brother, and brought them up to a high mountain by themselves.  And He was transfigured before them; and His face shone like the sun, and His garments became as white as light.  And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Him.  And Peter answered and said to Jesus, "Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, I will make three tabernacles here, one for You, and one for Moses, and one for Elijah."

While he was still speaking, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them; and behold, a voice out of the cloud, saying, "This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased; listen to Him!"  And when the disciples heard this, they fell on their faces and were much afraid.  And Jesus came to them and touched them and said, "Arise, and do not be afraid."  And lifting up their eyes, they saw no one, except Jesus Himself alone.  And as they were coming down from the mountain, Jesus commanded them, saying, "Tell the vision to no one until the Son of Man has risen from the dead."

Sermon for Transfiguration Sunday                                1/25/26

What Did They See?

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

One of the reasons that the Christian faith is so unpopular these days is that it flies in the face of human wisdom.  When you discuss the faith with unbelievers -- and all too often with others who claim to be believers -- they respond with comments like, That just doesn't make sense.  They might say that they simply cannot believe this or that.  Then there is the cry that we should not become too religious, or let this "God-stuff" go to our heads.  I was once told that I should be careful not to become so heavenly minded that I was no earthly good.

I called the Christian faith unpopular because even so-called Christian churches are abandoning it.  There are congregations in our own Synod that have stopped using the Apostles' and the Nicene Creed.  Some have quit doing the confession of sins, saying it makes people feel "uncomfortable".  Many congregations, particularly mission congregations, don't want to identify themselves as Missouri Synod because they think that the name carries with it a connotation of being narrow-minded and rigid and strict.  I don't disagree with those judgments, except I choose to sum up all of those negative sounding attributes with the single word "faithful."

For decades churches have been running away from Biblical morality.  In recent years it became stylish in the Christian community to run away from doctrine.  There always have been some denominations that would not stand on the truth of the Word of God, but today almost no so-called Christian denomination considers sound doctrine to be vital.  Even the Missouri Synod, which does formally confess the truth of God's Word, regularly tolerates defections from the sound doctrine.  Today, many congregations are fleeing from sound and historic practice.  The result is that our Synod's public stance is a mere paper-confession with no consistent teaching or church-practice behind it.

Christianity is not popular -- and it has never been popular.  That is at least part of what Jesus was referring to when He said in Luke 10 that God had hidden things from the wise and the intelligent.  This morning, Transfiguration Sunday, we want to talk about What the disciples really saw on that mountain.  Our theme is What Did They See?

  In some ways, the Transfiguration is about God hiding things.  God tends to disguise much of what He is doing in this world.  That is because it is, as Jesus said, well-pleasing in the sight of God to hide certain things from the wise and the so-called clever people of the world.  It is a fact that except for works of nature, almost nothing that is commonly called a work of God in our society is.  Sadly, even the great and awesome work of God in nature is being described more and more frequently as nothing more than a natural phenomenon -- Evolution -- and as not requiring the presence of a deity whatsoever.

God is pleased to work on earth without being observed or credited.  It isn't that He doesn't want the credit -- the glory -- for His work, but He only wants it from people who honestly know Him as God and trust in Him.  God is pleased to hide what He does and where He is working and even His own presence from people, so that they might believe -- or not.  The glory of God was hidden in Jesus Christ, for example.  He did not look like God.  He was singularly unimpressive.  The prophets had said He would be.  He looked like a normal guy.  Not so pretty.  Not so powerful.  Not so much anything that the world would say, "Why, that man must be God."  Not even "That man must be special."  Jesus was God hidden in the disguise of human flesh, and for most people the disguise was perfect.

His power was hidden in weakness.  Jesus was at His best when He seemed to be at His worst.  He was actually working out our salvation when He appeared to be completely losing control, even of His own life.  The naked injustice of His conviction and sentencing by the legal standards of the Jews and of the Romans was clearly an outward reflection of the inward truth that this One was innocent, and that what He faced, and what He suffered, and the death He died on the cross, was not His . . . but ours.

His victory was hidden in defeat.  Just when it looked like Jesus' enemies had finally won, they actually suffered total defeat.  Just when it seemed that it was all over for Jesus and His followers, it was just beginning.  Jesus was not put to death on the cross helplessly.  He deliberately laid down His life at the time and in the way of His own choosing.  Jesus said,  "I lay down My life that I may take it again.  No one has taken it away from Me, but I lay it down on My own initiative. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again."  He chose the moment of His own death and sacrificed His life for us.  

When Satan crowed in what he thought was victory, and when the Jewish leaders dusted their hands off and said, finally, the trouble-maker is silenced -- at that moment Jesus claimed total victory.  It is finished!.  That was what He said, and it was, at that very moment, for all men and for all women and for all time.  Our sins were paid for, forgiven.  Our death served up in His body and taken out of the way.  Our eternal salvation purchased and won.

But that is not what it looked like.  No one saw God at work.  No one recognized His glory -- except the Roman Centurion, and even that was belatedly.  The Transfiguration was about God, who hides things, peeking through the veil of the humanity of Jesus for just a moment, revealing His true Glory where no one was able to see it before.

Transfiguration Sunday is about God giving us a glimpse of what our sinful nature simply cannot see -- does not want to see.  God revealed Himself in Jesus, and in Jesus He demonstrated that God is not where we think, necessarily.  He is not necessarily doing what we think He is doing.  And He is often at work in situations we would never choose and frequently forget to look at to find His purposes.  He holds us to values we would many times sooner discard as old-fashioned and out of date.  He makes things necessary that some might consider expendable, like truth and confession, or trust in God in impossible seeming circumstances and faithfulness to what we know is true and right, or suffering for a time, and love for other people, especially for one another.

Here is an example: only through Jesus can we know God.  Who would know that?  Most people think that all religions lead to God.  Most people think that all Gods are really the same God under different labels.  Most Christians, so called, believe God and Jesus are separate and distinct for our religious purposes.  Jesus says NOT SO.  He tells us that you cannot actually worship God unless you are worshiping Jesus as well, and Peter says, in Acts 4:12, "And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men, by which we must be saved."  As John wrote in His Gospel, No man has seen God at any time; the only begotten God, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has explained Him.

It is pleasing to God that simple ‘faith' trumps worldly wisdom.  It pleases God to have us trust in Him, and that it is only through such faith that we stand as God's own people.  It pleases God that those who are too smart to be religious, or good, or faithful lose out, while us poor babes in the woods, us simple souls who are just foolish enough believe the Bible and to trust God have the forgiveness of sins and eternal life though Jesus Christ.

Why did Jesus take three men, Peter, James, and John, with Him into the Mountains?  Because of the Law of God and justice of Old Testament Israel required the eye-witness account of more than a single witness.  They required the witness of two or three.  Three was the ideal number - when you had three independent witnesses to an event, their report became fact before Law.  The New Testament also accepts this standard, when in 1 Timothy 5, Paul writes, "Do not accept an accusation against an elder except on the basis of two or three witnesses." In other words, the presence of Peter and James and John are your assurance that this event actually took place.  It is the legal witness required to establish this account as fact.

But, What did they see?

The word "transfiguration" literally means "being changed or transformed from one figure, body, shape, or appearance, into another."  What happened with Jesus was not a change of shape or body - those apparently remained the same.  It was a change of appearance, in that Jesus began to glow - or shine with an unearthly light.  What was actually occurring was that the glory of God was shining through the veil of flesh and human stuff of Jesus.  It was not obliterating it, or changing it substantially, but it was simply shining through.  That Glory was so powerful that it altered the appearance of the clothing that Jesus wore, for the moment.  His face was shining like the sun - I would imagine that it was too bright to stare directly at, and His clothing became as white as light - and we can imagine that much, even if you have not personally seen it.  It was spotless white.  It looked lit-up like a Christmas Santa's clothing - the white parts - when you place a bright light inside the figure.  They do this effect well in movies and on TV these days.  Jesus did it by mere glory - no technology assisting Him.

What was shining through was the purity and holiness of God, and His great love for mankind.  That is, after all, the glory of God.  God's glory is not in His power.  It isn't really in His sovereignty.  It isn't merely in the fact that He is God and Creator – as glorious as those things are.  His glory is chiefly in the fact that while He is God and above all in power and value and importance and such things, He loved us so richly and deeply that He sent His Son to live for us, to fulfill the never-before-fulfilled Law and will of God - for us - and then to die when He did not deserve it.  He earned life everlasting and then traded it for death.  He is God - but became man.  He earned life - and willingly tasted death.  God announced our condemnation before sin happened - and then He rescued us from what we have so richly deserved.  His love is so profound that He became sin, who knew no sin, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him!  That love, and that grace, and those actions, and His profound self-sacrificing for our sakes and our benefit is the light of the glory of God in the face of Jesus!

In other words, His glory is our salvation - and that was what was shining through on that mountain top.

Okay, then, ‘What did they see, when Moses and Elijah appeared, talking to Jesus?'  Moses is the great Law-giver.  Elijah the prophet among prophets in the mind of ancient Israel.  Each man represented their portion of Scripture.  Each one recognizes Jesus and points to Him as the Savior.  Luke even tells us that they were talking with Jesus about "His departure which He was about to accomplish at Jerusalem."  The Law and the prophets are summed up in Christ.  In this moment captured by the Evangelist here, we catch a glimpse of heaven.   Here are Moses and Elijah, and although no one introduced them, they were instantly recognized.  That is how it is in heaven; you are God's chosen child, and you are recognized as being who you are without introduction.  It is also interesting to note that the conversation, even in heaven, is about the Gospel.

What did they see, when the ‘bright cloud' overshadowed them?  Luke indicates that they entered the cloud.  It wasn't merely above them, as one might suspect, but it was all around them.  It "overshadowed them" according to Matthew, but Luke tells us what that means - it engulfed them.  They were permitted into intimate fellowship with God the Father, as they observed this transfiguration.  God tells us in the Psalms that He is shrouded in a dark cloud and heavy mists.  He appears on Sinai in the dark cloud with the lightning and thunder raging through it.  But here, He envelopes them in His cloud and speaks to them, sharing with them the mystery of Christ - true Son of God, and He who is perfectly pleasing to His Father.  The cloud, then is the symbol of the presence of God Almighty, El Shaddai.

Then they heard the voice.  What they heard meant not just that Jesus Christ is God's Son, but also that He is fit to take up the work of our salvation.  God spoke these words about Jesus at His Baptism.  At that time He was announcing who Jesus was and that He was fit to take up the holy work of His ministry.  Here, three years later, God spoke these words again, sealing the ministry of Jesus, as it were, and telling us that He is still perfect, fit to undertake the great work of the passion which lies before Him. So these words comfort us by reminding us that Jesus has that judgment of God on Him, that He may share it with us, and we may receive that Peace on Earth of which the angels sang.

Matthew tells us about what Peter said in response to these things. "Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, I will make three tabernacles here, one for You, and one for Moses, and one for Elijah."  Luke tells us that Peter did not know what he was saying.  I think Matthew and the other Evangelists tell us the whole story - Peter was so shaken by what He was witnessing that He began to speak with out thinking - a problem common in today's world.  What is true, however, is that it is good that the three were there to see it for us, and to report it for us.  And Peter's response is so natural, it demonstrates that this is an account of a real event, and not some fable made up later.  If it were a fiction, the Apostles would have sanitized their own mistakes out of it.

Why did Jesus instruct them not to tell anyone what they had seen or heard until after His death and resurrection?  Jesus did not want people chasing signs and miracles and following Him for the wrong reasons.  He wanted them to see this so that they could bear witness of it, and tell others who He was and what they and seen, but afterwards, when they faced the death and  resurrection of Jesus and wondered how it could be real, or why didn't they see it coming.  When people would ask, how can you believe such things?, the Apostles could point back to these events and say, how can you deny them?

Finally, What did the three disciples really see?

This is the point at which Jesus set His face toward Jerusalem and began to descend into the valley of the shadow of death on our behalf.  The Transfiguration shows us that He was ready.  It make is clear for us that He was fit for the job.  It teaches us that Jesus knew who He was and where He was going when He walked into Jerusalem to be crucified, that year.  And it reminds us that in Christ we are truly well-pleasing to God, for your sins have been forgiven; atoned for and punished already, and so forgiven. 

What did they see?  The glory of God.  The miracle of the Transfiguration.  The whole of the Gospel depicted in living pictures.  The proof we need to follow them in faith.  That is what they saw.

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.

(Let the people say Amen)

Saturday, March 30, 2024

The Servant Saves By Suffering in Our Place

 Isaiah 53:4-10

Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him
stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He
was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His
scourging we are healed. All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own
way; But the LORD has caused the iniquity of us all To fall on Him. He was oppressed and He
was afflicted, Yet He did not open His mouth; Like a lamb that is led to slaughter, And like a
sheep that is silent before its shearers, So He did not open His mouth. By oppression and
judgment He was taken away; And as for His generation, who considered That He was cut off
out of the land of the living, For the transgression of my people to whom the stroke was due?
His grave was assigned with wicked men, Yet He was with a rich man in His death, Because He
had done no violence, Nor was there any deceit in His mouth. But the LORD was pleased To
crush Him, putting Him to grief; If He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see His
offspring, He will prolong His days, And the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand.


Sermon for Good Friday 04/18/14

The Servant of Isaiah
The Servant Saves By Suffering in Our Place

My Brothers and Sisters in Christ:

Today we come to the heart of it. Today we celebrate the suffering and death of our Savior, the
Suffering Servant of Isaiah. And yes, we celebrate it! We don't celebrate pain or death, as such,
nor the need for such a sacrifice. Sin is our shame. We celebrate that God's Servant, His Son
Jesus Christ, did it on our behalf. We celebrate the love it took love for His Father and love for
us. We celebrate His obedience. We celebrate the result, that we have been redeemed! Our
theme tonight is "The Servant Saves by Suffering in Our Place."

The whole story of Good Friday is told by Isaiah eight hundred years before it happened. By
oppression and judgment, He was taken away.
Jesus was arrested although innocent. Today we
would cry out about our rights, but He had none. A kangaroo court convicted Him and
sentenced Him to die. They could not come up with one legitimate charge against Him, so they
asked Him who is the Truth itself if He were the Son of God, and when He told them, they called
Him a liar and a blasphemer and sentenced Him to die.

They had no legitimate charge, but God did. All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has
turned to his own way; But the LORD has caused the iniquity of us all To fall on Him.
He was
utterly innocent, personally, but He took our place and bore our sin. Isaiah even notes that He
was innocent, He had done no violence, Nor was there any deceit in His mouth. But the LORD
was pleased To crush Him, putting Him to grief; If He would render Himself as a guilt offering.

The guilt He suffered for was ours. Note, too, that we are not the only ones celebrating. The
Lord was pleased to crush Him.
He was not pleased to cause Him pain, but pleased to crush Him
on our behalf, in our place, and for our salvation. That was the will of God for us!

Because of our sin, the Servant had to suffer or we did, and our Heavenly Father chose to pour
out His wrath upon His Son instead. Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He
carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted. But He was
pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for
our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed.


Listen to those words: He bore our grief and carried our sorrows. The pains of Hell were His, but
He felt them even before the cross. In the garden, in the midst of His prayers, Jesus told the
disciples, "My soul is deeply grieved, to the point of death." Many translations use the word
"sorrowful" whereas ours uses the word "grieved". The horror of what He faced for us, all by
itself, was nearly enough to kill Him.

But then they mocked Jesus, just as the devil had during the temptations following His Baptism.
The devil said, "if you are the Son of God . . .", and the crowd around His cross would cry out,
"HE TRUSTS IN GOD; LET HIM DELIVER Him now, IF HE TAKES PLEASURE IN HIM; for He said, 'I
am the Son of God.'
" People today, oftentimes from within the church as we see it in our world
today, reject the notion that Jesus was truly God or His Son. They deny His resurrection. They
accuse Jesus of being a failed teacher or a ruined revolutionary put to death for His politically
incorrect ideas. They say He was a good man, perhaps, but they do not see Him as their God.
Isaiah's words fit, we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted.

In the midst of this, the Servant never cried out or called for justice, or His rights, as so many do
nowadays. He was convicted by an illegal court, for the Sanhedrin could not legally meet, as
they did that night, by their own rules! They could not legitimately convict without three
witnesses who agreed, or at least two who agreed clearly. But they did! When they dragged
Him before Pilate, the Governor sent from Rome had to confess that he found no guilt in Jesus,
nothing that deserved this uproar, much less death. The Bible tells us in Matthew 27:18 and
Mark 15:10 that Pilate knew that the Priests had sent Jesus before him because of envy, and
yet Pilate condemned Him, an innocent man, to death on the cross. Yet, in all of this, Jesus
remained remarkably silent. Yet He did not open His mouth; Like a lamb that is led to slaughter,
And like a sheep that is silent before its shearers, So He did not open His mouth.


The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed. Although
innocent, Pilate had Jesus scourged to try to appease the priests. Pilate said he would teach
Him a lesson. What lesson was Jesus supposed to learn from being scourged as an innocent
man? That was our scourging! Those were our stripes He bore. He did it for us because we had
it all coming. We are healed from the disease of sin and the just wrath of God due to sin
because there is no more wrath to pour out. Jesus bore it all, for us.

He was pierced through. The prophecy speaks those words without telling us if they are to refer
to the nails that pierced His hands and feet, or to the spear which pierced His side. I suspect
that they refer to both. The nails, which Jesus felt, and the spear which He did not feel, because
He was already dead. The blood and water that John speaks of coming out of the spear wound
are evidence that He was already dead. The plasma and the red blood cells had already
separated, as they do when the heart stops, a fact even the ancients knew about.

And it happened, as Isaiah prophesied, among the wicked. His grave was assigned with wicked
men.
He was crucified with true criminals, one on either side of Him. They were convicted, too,
but guilty as the one malefactor said. I like that word, malefactor. It means "evil doer". He
confessed the truth of the situation, "We are receiving what we deserve for our deeds; but this
man has done nothing wrong
." They were truly criminals robbers, according to Matthew.

All of this is on account of sin, our sin. The next time you are tempted to ignore what you know
is the will of God and do or say something just because it suits you or gives you an advantage,
or profits you in some small way, think about this. Jesus endured all of this because sin is the
deadly serious thing it is. The crucifixion, and the hours of torment leading up to it, illustrate
the true nature of sin. It is not simply the deeds that we do against our better knowledge, but
the state of being in rebellion against God. The acts, the words, and even the thoughts done,
spoken, or conceived in sin merit death by themselves, but it is us and our very nature that
Jesus died to atone for. He died this grisly death because we are corrupt, twisted, weak, and
enemies of God by nature. The Servant saves by Suffering.

Even His burial was part of the prophecy, Yet He was with a rich man in His death. And Joseph
of Arimathea, a wealthy man, whose wealth was evident in the carving of a new tomb in the
nearby garden, came and took the dead body and placed it in his new tomb. Every part of the
passion and death of our Lord is clearly prophesied by Isaiah. The Suffering Servant who was to
come and save us by His suffering was Jesus.

If that were the whole story, it would be a sad story. It would be the noble tale of a good man
who died on behalf of others. Stirring and exemplary, but hardly worth all of this fuss two
thousand years later. But, as you know, this is not the whole story. Isaiah even knew that truth.
He ended this section of his prophecy like this, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His
days, And the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand
.

Of course, Jesus had no children in the ordinary way. We are His offspring. In Baptism we have
each been adopted into the household of God! His days are prolonged, as Isaiah described it,
because He rose from the dead and lives eternally! And the good pleasure of the Lord? That
phrase means, "the will of God". And what is the will of God? Our Salvation! That is the will of
God, that the one who knows and believes and trusts in God to do all that He has promised in
connection with Jesus Christ and the crucifixion and the resurrection, shall be saved! There
have been thousands of thousands throughout the centuries, and there exists that Church of
those that believe today. The good pleasure of the Lord has prospered and shall continue to
prosper in the hands of this Servant of the Lord until it shall please the Lord to bring it to an end
and bring us all to live in His glory. Isaiah's Prophecies of the Servant have shown it to us, and to
all that believe since before the time of Jesus Himself. "The Servant Saves by Suffering in Our
Place."

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
(Let the people say Amen)