4 October 2019
Text: Luke 2:25-32 (Job 19:23-27a, Phil 1:21-23)
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
Dear
Ruth, Margaret, Richard, Mark, family, friends, brothers and sisters in Christ,
and honored guests: Peace be with you! This
word “peace” is the first word that Jesus spoke to His disciples after His
resurrection.
When
a person has been an integral part of your life for nearly a century – as Myra
has been to you, Ruth, in your case, inseparable –the sense of loss is beyond
words. To lose a dear mother, grandmother,
aunt, friend, parishioner, colleague, or a beloved teacher who changed the
course of one’s life – to lose someone of that importance to death is truly a
profound sense of loss. It is common to
console people with the words, “I’m sorry for your loss.”
Indeed,
upon the death of a person with a footprint as large as Myra’s on our entire
community, the sense of loss is immeasurable.
We Christians experience this loss, though in a different way than the unbelieving world. St. Paul says that we grieve, but not as unbelievers – because we have “hope.” And that hope is grounded in the cross and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.
We Christians experience this loss, though in a different way than the unbelieving world. St. Paul says that we grieve, but not as unbelievers – because we have “hope.” And that hope is grounded in the cross and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.
This
is why St. Paul says to us in our epistle lesson: “For to me, to live is
Christ, and to die is gain.” The word
Paul uses here, translated as “gain,” is literally the opposite of “loss.” It’s actually a business word that can be
translated as “profit.”
But
we Christians see a Christian death as “gain” far differently than the world
sees death, dear friends. Our degraded
culture treats death as a solution. Twenty-five
years ago, Pope John Paul said that we live in a culture of death. The unbelieving world sees death as a solution
to everything from an unexpected pregnancy, to political dissent, to curbing
healthcare costs, to saving the environment. Our popular culture has a strange fascination
with death because the world does not appreciate what it means to be human, to
be created in God’s image, and to have a divine purpose.
But
Myra understood this, dear friends, and she wants her funeral to be about that.
If you came here for a celebration of
Myra’s life, or a tribute to her and her works – you have come to the wrong
place. Myra’s handwritten instructions
said, “No eulogy… Praise to God only.”
Myra was well-catechized, for according to our faith, a funeral is not
about what she has done in her life, but rather what Christ has done for her by
His life, death, and resurrection.
Myra’s
specific and beautiful instructions for her funeral also say that people should
sit quietly in place, and no loud talking. We teachers understand. You can take the teacher out of the
classroom, but you cannot take the classroom out of the teacher. And boy, does Myra still have much to teach us,
dear friends!
Myra
was well-catechized and well-prepared for her death – starting when she was just
25 days old, and was baptized by Pastor Eugene Schmid in that very baptismal
font 92 years ago. She was taught the
faith and confirmed by Pastor Schmid in 1940. Her confirmation verse is Romans 6:23, in
which the Apostle Paul says: “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift
of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
This,
dear friends, is why we have funerals. It
is because of sin. It goes back to the
garden of Eden, to opposition from the devil, the world, and our sinful flesh. This is why Myra chose the hymn: “Chief of
sinners though I be” as the opening hymn of her funeral.
Our
sister in Christ Myra would return week after week to this church, to this holy
place, in the presence of this font, this pulpit, and this altar, where she was
absolved of her sins, where she heard the Scriptures read and the Good News
preached, and where she took the Lord’s very body and blood from Pastor Schmid
and from eight of his successors in the office of the holy ministry here in
this parish.
And
this is precisely why Myra wants you to hear about Jesus. She understood what death is: it is the enemy.
It is not a solution to a problem, but
is rather a symptom of the problem. But
it is also a symptom that goes away when the ailment is cured. Sin is the ailment, dear friends, and the
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ is the cure. His death atones for the world. And as our Lord said, “Whoever believes and
is baptized will be saved.” Our Lord
also said, “I am the bread of life.... I am the living bread that came down
from heaven. If anyone eats of this
bread, he will live forever… Whoever feeds on My flesh and drinks My blood has
eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day.” That offended a lot of people at the time, and
still does, but this is what Jesus says.
This is Myra’s confession.
Myra
received the true body and blood of Christ her whole life long. This is why she was prepared last Friday when
she breathed her last on this side of glory. She was prepared, for to her, to live is
Christ and to die is gain. Not because
death is good, but rather because death has been conquered. Death has been defanged and declawed and
defeated – by Christ. As the ancient
prayer of the church says, “By His death, He has destroyed the power of death,
and by His resurrection, He opened the kingdom of heaven to all believers.” We Christians can even mock death with St.
Paul, saying, “O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” We can say that because Christ defeated
death.
Myra,
ever the teacher, wants you to know that.
I
prayed our Gospel reading with Myra last Friday – which is the canticle we
Lutherans sing week in and week out after receiving the body and blood of our
Lord: “Lord, now you are letting Your servant depart in peace, according to
Your Word.” Note that word “peace.” Again, this is the first word Jesus spoke to
His disciples after His resurrection. Myra
departed peacefully last Friday in the comfort of Good Friday, knowing the joy
that is to come on Easter Sunday. We who
believe and are baptized, who eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ, we
are prepared to depart in peace, waiting with joyful anticipation of Myra’s
resurrection, and the resurrection of all who die covered by the blood of the
Lamb. She is with our Lord, and she
waits – with us and with all of creation – for the glorious “resurrection of
the body and the life everlasting.”
For
Myra knows that her redeemer lives – even as blessed Job in our Old Testament
lesson confessed: “For I know that my redeemer lives, and at the last, He will
stand upon the earth. And after my skin
has been thus destroyed, yet in my flesh I shall see God, whom I shall see for
myself, and my eyes shall behold, and not another.”
Yes,
dear friends, this is Job’s confession of Christ. It is the church’s confession, and it is Myra’s
confession. And it is why though we Christians
do grieve and feel loss, we Christians are also comforted – even to the point
of defiance, of seeing death as “gain” – for we are with Christ.
Myra, the teacher, the Christian, the beloved and redeemed of Jesus – wants you all to know all of this. She wants me to preach this Good News to you. She wants you to know that she loves you, and more importantly, that Christ loves you, that He died to destroy death, and that He lives so that you too might have eternal life in His name. We will see blessed Myra again, in the flesh, and we will behold her and her Lord for ourselves, with our own eyes. “For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”
Myra, the teacher, the Christian, the beloved and redeemed of Jesus – wants you all to know all of this. She wants me to preach this Good News to you. She wants you to know that she loves you, and more importantly, that Christ loves you, that He died to destroy death, and that He lives so that you too might have eternal life in His name. We will see blessed Myra again, in the flesh, and we will behold her and her Lord for ourselves, with our own eyes. “For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”
“For
the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ
Jesus our Lord.” Peace be with you. Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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