Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Sermon: Martyrdom of St. John the Baptist - 2018


29 August 2018

Text: Mark 6:14-29 (Rev 6:9, Rom 6:1-5)

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

In our fallen world, evil wins.  If you hold fast to your Christian faith and confession, you will be hated, abused, mocked, sued, fired, your life ruined, your reputation trashed, and in some places, you will be arrested, tortured, and put to death.

But if you celebrate evil, you will be loved.  You might become a celebrity.  You may well become wealthy.  You will have opportunities for pleasure beyond your wildest dreams.  You will be able to take from others, and not even have a twinge of conscience about it.  You can put children to death for convenience, use people for sexual pleasure, and destroy anyone that gets in your way – while claiming to be virtuous as you lead a life equivalent to an open sewer.

Is it any wonder that our churches are becoming increasingly empty, and our movies, magazines, and music, our television and internet programming on demand, our sports and their heroes, our politicians and barons of business are ever more course, vulgar, hateful, sexually deviant, self-serving, pro-death, antichristian, and dedicated to pleasure without boundaries, without consequences, and without criticism?  Is it any wonder that those who disapprove are silenced by force?

While we have seen things in our culture degrade ferociously, this isn’t anything new.

John the Baptist was called to usher in the Messiah in a day and age when those who believed in God were a tiny, persecuted minority, when the nation’s rulers worshiped pagan gods, and when even within the people of God, their rulers were sexual deviants, political collaborators with their enemies, and ambitious hustlers who rode the backs of their own people.  Sexual deviancy and preying upon minors was a badge of honor.  Children were aborted and killed after their births for frivolous reason.  Public entertainment included death-sports, live torture, and open and perverse sexuality on stage. 

And of course it was all justified, because, after all, might makes right.  Those who didn’t approve were the “barbarians.”  If you were a believer in the true God, you better just keep your religion to yourself and play along.

This is the world Jesus came into, dear friends.  And St. John the Baptist announced His arrival to a world obsessed with debauchery, violence, deviancy, and death. 

John was called directly by God to preach the Word of God: to proclaim the Gospel, but to also proclaim the Law.  He preached and implored the people to repent.  And he did not spare the rich and powerful, not even the king.

The king was a half-breed pretender to the throne, a vile collaborator with the Romans, and a sexual pervert to boot.  And John’s message – which was actually God’s message – was “repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand!”  And as Luther said, when one throws a stick into a pack of dogs, the one that howls is the one that got hit.  The Law hit the amoral Herod.  Not in the sense of guilt, but in the sense of his perceived entitlement to be beyond criticism, to be above reproach.  Who did this bizarre, miserable preacher think he was, anyway?  How dare he call the king out for sin!  Of course, John the Baptist’s and Jesus’s ancestor was Israel’s greatest king, David, who when called to repent, confessed his guilt and became repentant.  We sing King David’s very words again and again: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me….  Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation, and uphold me with Thy free Spirit.”  Instead, the unrepentant King Herod “seized John and bound him in prison for the sake of Herodias, his brother Philip's wife, because he had married her.”

And it was the amoral self-serving Herodias and her daughter who manipulated Herod into ordering John’s execution.  For they wanted to carry out their perversions with the approval of everyone.  The fact that John had no power other than the words he preached (he had no standing in government, no army to prohibit evil behavior) didn’t matter.  Then, as now, is it any wonder that those who disapprove are silenced by force?

For everyone knows right from wrong.  The Law is written on our hearts.  The preaching of John pricked the consciences of Herod and his clan of perverts.  The testimony of the saints in our reading from the Book of Revelation caused the Roman government to behead them, feed them to lions, and use them as props in their vile death-sports.  They knew it was wrong to kill babies and use people – including minors of both sexes – for sexual gratification.  They knew it was wrong to torture people and to be titillated and entertained by their fear and their pain.

Today, our brothers and sisters from the ages of ages continue to await the Lord’s return and their vindication, having prayed: “O Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long before you will judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell on the earth?” “Then they were each given a white robe and told to rest a little longer, until the number of their fellow servants and their brothers should be complete," who were to be killed as they themselves had been.  They continue to rest as Christians in countries ruled by Muslims are imprisoned and tortured and beheaded.  They continue to rest as Christians in Communist countries are imprisoned and executed.  They continue to rest, as Christians in even supposedly free countries are silenced on social media, are marginalized in the popular culture, are sued and crushed by the state for refusing to play along with the current lie that marriage is anything other than what God made it to be.

And of course it is all justified, because, after all, might makes right.  Those who don’t approve are the “barbarians.”  If you are  a believer in the true God, you better just keep your religion to yourself and play along.  The more things change…

But ultimately, dear friends, what is the message of John, then and now?  What did he really preach to Herod and his family?  He told the truth.  He confessed God’s Word.  He preached the Gospel in its beauty.  For this is John’s proclamation, the Church’s proclamation, our proclamation – to a world that has lost its way: “repent and believe the Gospel!”

The kingdom of God is at hand, not to condemn you, but to forgive you.  Jesus has come not to imprison you and behead you, but to change you and glorify you.  Jesus paid the price of your iniquity.  He took all the violence and hatred and deviancy and lust for domination upon Himself, dying in your place, exchanging your guilt for His righteousness!  Jesus has come not to condemn but to save, not to put to death but to give life!  

Jesus invites all of us to repent and believe the Gospel, and John invites all of us to follow Jesus.

For in the long term, evil does not win.  If you hold fast to your Christian faith and confession, you will be saved, vindicated, given the gift of eternal life, and dwell with God and man and all creation forever in glory, happiness, joy, and riches beyond the wildest imaginations of any king or celebrity.

For as St. Paul, another murderer who repented upon hearing the Law, preached and wrote: “How can we who died to sin still live in it?  Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.”

John does not call us to repent to shame us, but to glorify us.  For that is what Jesus does.  The martyrs of the Church staked their souls upon it.  And we all rest with them, hearing the unsilenced Word preached by John, even as that Word shapes us and saves us, transforming us from the ugliness of sin to the beauty of the eternal.

And the very thing that Herod feared will come true, as John the Baptist will be raised from the dead, those who gave their lives for the sake of the Word will be avenged, and our confession of Jesus Christ will continue to bring those who repent to everlasting life and glory.  Amen.

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

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