9 April 2014
Text: Ps 43
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
The
world has a message for the church: “Don’t judge me!” And the world often reminds the church of our
Lord’s words: “Judge not.” And so the
church is often bullied into silence.
For according to the world, the church is to have nothing to say to
matters of good and evil, of ethics and morality, as though there is no
difference between the ethical systems of Adolph Hitler and Mother Teresa.
“Don’t judge me!” we are told. And sometimes we are told such things by judges in black robes.
But here we are in the church’s week of “Judica” – from the first words of the Psalm in Latin: “Judica me (judge me).” Indeed, the church has a very different command than the world’s “Don’t judge me!”
“Don’t judge me!” we are told. And sometimes we are told such things by judges in black robes.
But here we are in the church’s week of “Judica” – from the first words of the Psalm in Latin: “Judica me (judge me).” Indeed, the church has a very different command than the world’s “Don’t judge me!”
And
yet, dear friends, in our sins, we are like the world. For we are all poor miserable sinners in
thought, word, and deed. How can we cry
out to a righteous God: “Judica me!”? It
sounds foolhardy and presumptuous. For
let’s take a brief tour through the Ten Commandments.
Do
we fear, love, and trust in other things above God? Do we misuse the Lord’s name by vulgarity or
by failing to call upon Him in every trouble?
Do we do violence to the Sabbath by despising preaching and the
Word? Do we dishonor our parents and
other authorities? Do we kill, commit
adultery, and steal in thought, word, or deed?
Do we gossip and fail to explain our neighbor’s actions in the kindest
possible way? Do we mope and daydream
about our neighbor’s lifestyle, his spouse or job or circumstances or
possessions?
Are
we in the position to chant the antiphon: “Judica me” or should we join the
world’s chorus of “Don’t judge me!”? Do
the guilty normally seek out a judge to have his case heard, or is it the
innocent that seek judicial vindication?
You’ll
note that our English translations don’t say “Judge me,” but are actually more
bold to say: “Vindicate me.” For we
Christians are boldly, if not recklessly, demanding a verdict of “Not guilty” –
and so we do not cry out “Don’t judge me.”
How
can this be, dear friends, dear fellow sinners?
It can only be through Christ that we can pray this Psalm, for it is
only through Christ, by Christ, and in Christ, that we poor miserable sinners
are indeed vindicated, and judged to be innocent, adjudicated to be saints, and
rewarded with eternal life – only
by
Christ’s atoning blood sacrificed on the cross.
And this is why the church gathers around the Lamb that “takest away the
sin of the world,” and this is why we sing together: “Lord, have mercy upon
us.” This is why we assemble here in
this holy house to hear the words authorized by our judge: “I forgive you all
your sins.” It is in this gospel, this
good news, this forgiveness, that we, the church, voice our “Judica me” and cry
out for vindication from Him who judges all.
We
are vindicated because of the “holy hill” spoken of in the Psalm: “Oh, send out
Your light and Your truth! Let them lead
me; let them bring me to your holy hill.”
That holy hill is Calvary, the place of the skull, the very plot of
sacred ground that became the final altar of blood sacrifice, once for all, not
by the blood of bulls and goats, but the blood of Christ Himself, shed for you
for the forgiveness of sins. “Then” sings
the church, “Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy.” For this is where we see God, even our Judge,
with joy, knowing that by the Lord’s sacrificial and atoning blood, we have
been vindicated, joyfully declared “not guilty” by our judge in the very
presence of our vicious enemies, in the face of a hostile world, even in the
very jaws of the devil. We go to the
altar with exceeding joy in our vindication, participating in that body and
blood, wrapped in the white robe of baptism, having put all need for
self-justification and fear of being judged behind us.
And
so dear brothers and sisters, even as the Lord has a message for the church,
the church has a message for the world: “Judica me!” Let us all examine ourselves according to the
Ten Commandments and to the reality of our sin and inability to vindicate
ourselves. Let us throw ourselves upon
the mercy of the court, upon the mercy of God, “God my exceeding joy.” Let us be judged, let us be vindicated
according to the blood of Christ shed upon the holy hill, blood distributed to those who are baptized and who
believe, at joyful altars of God here and all around the world. Let the church not be bullied into silence,
but let her joyfully and boldly proclaim right and wrong, law and gospel, and
especially Christ’s vindication to a world that fears judgment more than
anything.
And
let the world join the church in being vindicated, in being forgiven, in having
the courage to confess clearly right and wrong, and in spite of our sins, to
remain steadfast and assured by the vindication that has come to us by grace,
through faith, as revealed in the scriptures, in Christ alone!
Vindicate
me, O God…. Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy!” Amen.
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