2 August 2020
Text: Matt 7:15-23 (Jer 23:16-29,
Rom 8:12-17)
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
The
prophet Jeremiah warns us not to believe so-called prophets who are “filling
you with vain hopes.” For “they speak
visions of their own minds, not from the mouth of the Lord.” He goes on to point out that false prophets
tell us what we want to hear, that everything is great, that nothing bad will
happen to us. Meanwhile, Jeremiah warns
us of “the storm of the Lord,” of His wrath and judgment.
Needless
to say, Jeremiah was not a popular prophet. He made people angry. He didn’t just tell people what they wanted
to hear. But he told them what the Lord
wanted them to hear.
The
prophet is often like John the Baptist, a “voice crying in the wilderness.” And Jeremiah points out that had the false
prophets actually proclaimed the Word of God to His people, “they would have
turned them from their evil way and the evil of their deeds."
For
this is the calling of the prophet and the preacher of the prophetic Word – to call
people to repent, to renounce evil, to turn from their wicked ways, to leave
what the early church fathers called the way that leads to death, and instead
follow the path that leads to life.
We
have more false prophets today than in Jeremiah’s day. We have false prophets in the church, in
politics, in sports, in entertainment, in science, in medicine, in schools and
universities, in the media – all repeating the same lies, all repudiating the Word
of God. When things are fine, they tell
us they are not. When things are bad,
they tell us “No disaster will come upon you.”
Our false prophets of today lead us away from the design of God’s
creation for men and women, for families and children, for the proper role of
authority, they drag us into ugly fights over identity politics, they lie about
what Scripture teaches about right and wrong, they lead us to follow our
feelings instead of the prophetic Word, and worst of all, they lie about our Lord
Jesus Christ, trying to create Him in their own image.
“I
did not send the prophets,” says the Lord, “yet they ran. I did not speak to them, yet they prophesied.”
Our
Lord Jesus Himself also warns us: “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in
sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.”
A
false prophet is not just misleading. A false
prophet is a wolf who seeks your destruction. He is a liar, and Satan is the father of lies.
Be very careful, dear friends, whom you
listen to, whom you believe, whom you entrust your body and your soul to. Be wise and discerning. But most of all, know what the Word of God
is, so that you can spot and expose the false prophets instead of falling for
them. There is no substitute for knowing
the Scriptures inside and out. For this
is the infallible revelation of the Word of God that will enable you, by the power
of the Holy Spirit, to see through the wolf’s sheep-clothing. For liars and conmen talk a good talk. They quote Scripture. They make a lot of
sense. And most of all, they tell us
what we want to hear.
Jesus
says that if you want to know if a tree is good or bad, examine the fruit. The fruit doesn’t lie. The fruit exposes the condition of the tree,
be it good or diseased. And the diseased
tree “is cut down and thrown into the fire.”
Our
Lord is very clear that false prophets are so clever that their works can
deceive us into thinking they are bearing good fruit, “Did we not prophesy in Your
name, and cast out demons in Your name, and do many mighty works in Your name?”
they ask Jesus on the final day. And our
Lord replies, “I never knew you; depart from me you workers of lawlessness.”
Lawlessness. That sounds a lot like what we are seeing all
around us. Lawlessness. For the prophet proclaims the Law, calling
people to repent of their sins, but they want to be affirmed and celebrated. They are lawless. They do not see the blessings of the prophet
who proclaims the Law before declaring the Gospel. We live in a day and age where people see no
need to repent. Everyone has an
excuse. People are protesting in the
streets to abolish law and order, to legitimize violence, to destroy freedom of
speech and the right to worship God.
Workers
of lawlessness are not prophets. Jesus
does not know them – even if they invoke His name and claim to work miracles. If a so-called miracle-worker, in the words of
our catechism, “teaches or lives contrary to God’s Word profanes the name of God
among us.” And we pray, “Protect us from
this, heavenly Father!”
We
are called to both teach and live according to the Word. We are called to teach rightly concerning our
sinfulness, our need to repent, our Lord’s mercy, His atoning death on the
cross, His glorious resurrection, and the promise of eternal life to those who
are baptized and who believe. We are
called to confess this truth of God’s Word, and we are also called to live our
lives as we would expect if we actually believe that this is indeed most
certainly true.
If
we truly believe that Jesus is physically and miraculously present in His Holy Supper,
then our lives should be centered around the weekly Divine Service. If we truly believe that the Scriptures are
life-giving, supernatural words, then our lives should likewise be centered
around the Word of God in daily reflection.
If we truly believe that God hears our prayers, then our lives should be
ordered by praying as a matter of course during the day and during the week.
But
what if it isn’t? What if “the cares and
riches and pleasures of life” choke out the seed of God’s Word and your “fruit
does not mature,” as our Lord teaches in the parable of the sower? Then the prophets call us to repentance. They tell us what we don’t want to hear. They warn us like watchmen along the wall,
telling us that our days are short, and the kingdom of God is at hand. The true prophet loves us enough not to
whisper comfort in our ears, but rather jolt us out of our comfortable reality
in order to save us from the path of destruction that the false prophets have
placed us on: the way that leads to death.
The
prophets point us to the Word of God – the Word that is the Scripture and the Word
that is Christ. The prophets tell us
that not all is well, that our world is fallen, that our flesh is sinful, and that
we need to repent. St. Paul says, “If
you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to
death the deeds of the body, you will live.”
Our flesh is not evil, but it is corrupted. Our thoughts and desires are not necessarily God’s
will. But we do have the Scriptures to
guide us, and the love of Christ who has redeemed us, and the Holy Spirit’s
enlightenment calling us to heed the word of the prophets “to guide our feet
into the way of peace.”
So
do not follow false prophets, dear friends, whether they claim to speak for
church or society. Test everything
according to the Word of God, which is always true. Your emotions can deceive you. Visions can be misleading. Your own desires can masquerade as prophecy. The claims that “I have dreamed, I have
dreamed” are often “lies” as Jeremiah warns us.
Let us rather look to the Word of God, praying with the poet:
Thy strong Word did cleave
the darkness;
At Thy speaking it was
done.
For created light we thank Thee,
While Thine ordered seasons
run.
Give us lips to sing Thy
glory.
Tongues Thy mercy to
proclaim,
Throats that shout the hope
that fills us,
Mouths to speak Thy holy
name.
Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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