Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Sermon: St. Augustine – 2024

28 August 2024

Text: Matt 5:13-18 (Mic 2:7-13, 2 Tim 4:1-8)

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

St. Augustine lived in the fourth and fifth centuries, but he was quite a modern man.  In fact, young Augustine would be right at home today, with his parents cheering him on.  For he was an  intelligent kid, he hit the books, he was a remarkably successful student who studied at university, and became a successful professor himself while still young.

Parents today dream of such happiness and success for their children.  Augustine was not hindered by getting married young and having a large family.  He had a girlfriend, and one child – but they didn’t get in the way of his success in his career.  He followed a religion that didn’t interfere with his success.  Augustine was the kind of modern man that most parents dream of.  He was most certainly going to be rich and famous. 

But Augustine’s mother, whose name was Monica, wasn’t happy.  She was a pious Christian.  She did not approve of his live-in girlfriend.  She wanted him to join her church.  Our culture today would see her as narrow-minded and backward.  I imagine there were those in her own day who saw her that same way.  But still she prayed every day for her son’s conversion.

Monica’s prayers were answered when Augustine became a Christian, thanks to the preaching and teaching and pastoral care of her own pastor, Bishop Ambrose, the famous pastor of Milan, Italy, where Augustine was working as a teacher.  In time, St. Augustine himself became a pastor and preacher and bishop and theologian, who became even more famous and beloved to the church than St. Ambrose. 

We could go on and on singing the praises of Augustine, calling to mind his debates against heretics, his massive output of writing, his brilliant sermons, and his insights into the Scriptures.  But what made St. Augustine great was not his abilities in and of themselves.  It was rather his confession of Christ, no matter what was happening in the world.  Augustine lived in a time of great change, as the Roman Empire was crumbling, and ordinary people were afraid of the future.  But we Christians have assurances of the future in Christ, no matter what happens in the cities and countries of men, no matter what is happening politically.

Augustine took seriously our Lord’s words: “You are the salt of the earth.”  For Augustine salted his words with the Gospel, preaching the words of the Bible concerning God’s grace in Jesus, who also said, “You are the light of the world.”  For in Augustine’s day, things were becoming dark for the people of Northern Africa – and in the entire empire – as barbaric tribes were invading and overwhelming the empire and threatening their way of life.  But as Augustine pointed out, the City of Man is temporary, but the City of God endures forever.  He let the light of Christ “shine before others” and implored the people under his pastoral care to give the barbarians good works to see, that they might “give glory to your Father who is in heaven.”

Augustine stood firm for the doctrines of the faith that were under attack, especially the Holy Trinity, and the divinity of Jesus.  Augustine fought against the belief that salvation is by works rather than by grace.  He preached Paul’s words that we Lutherans hold dear, such as this: “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”  A thousand years after Augustine defeated the heretic Pelagius on this point, an Augustinian monk named Martin Luther would make the same argument to a church that had distanced itself from Augustine and from Paul.  We Lutherans could just as easily be called “Augustinians.”

Augustine took seriously what St. Paul wrote to St. Timothy in our epistle reading: “Preach the Word, be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.  For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths.”

Indeed, this was happening in Augustine’s day, and it is happening today, dear friends.  People want to hear only things that make them feel good, things that affirm them, things that are not true, but are rather ear-itching myths.  Augustine’s pious mother Monica rejected all of those things.  It didn’t matter that her son was rich and successful.  It didn’t matter that he was educated.  She did not tell him, “I just want you to be happy.”  She did not tell him to “pick whatever religion tickles your ears, because we all worship the same God anyway.”  She did not tell him to follow his heart in matters of sexuality.  Instead, Monica prayed for her son to come to faith and see the light.  And God heard her prayer.

St. Augustine pointed out that following our heart is foolish, for “our hearts are restless, until they find their rest” in the one true God of biblical Christianity.  St. Augustine was a brilliant defender of our Christian faith because he had earlier opposed Christianity.  He was a defender of biblical morality because he lived without it as a young man, and saw how shallow such a life was.  He used his skills at rhetoric and debate to defend the biblical faith against those who would turn grace into works of the Law, and focus on the self instead of on Christ alone.

St. Augustine taught us Christians about original sin.  He knew it not only from Scripture, but from his own life.  His writings shape our Christian thought to this very day.  He taught us Christians about how to properly wage war in such a way as not to dehumanize our enemies or ourselves.  He also wrote about natural law, and the relationship between the church and the state. 

We could, of course, go on and on.  But the point is that the church goes on and on: she goes on no matter what empires rise or fall, no matter who wins elections, no matter how popular or unpopular Christianity is. She goes on no matter what divisions exist within her, no matter what heresies re-emerge.  The church goes on because, as is engraved above the tabernacle containing Christ’s true body and blood in this Augustinian church: “Verbum Dei manet in aeternum” – “the Word of the Lord endures forever,” just as the Word of the Lord itself, as penned by St. Peter in his first epistle, teaches us.

And first and foremost Augustine was a preacher of the Word, of Christ, of the cross, and of grace.  We remember him because he caused us to remember Christ.  All Christian pastors are sent out with these words of St. Paul: “Preach the Word.”  We preachers preach, dear friends, and you confessors confess.  We preach and confess in season and out of season, whether people like it or not, whether their itching ears want something else, or if they are ready to hear the Word of God and be transformed by it, or not.  We pray like Monica for the unconverted.

“As for you,” says the Lord, “always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.”  Bishop St. Augustine is a saintly role model for the clergy and the laity alike, for he preached the Word, and did not waver.  Like St. Paul, Augustine “fought the good fight,” “finished the race,” and “kept the faith.” 

Let us praise God for the witness of St. Augustine, and may the Lord continue to raise up men of his caliber to preach and teach and lead the flock of God until the Lord returns, until the City of Man gives way to the City of God, and the prophecy of Micah is fulfilled as Augustine and all Christian preachers have proclaimed: “I will surely assemble all of you, O Jacob; I will gather the remnant of Israel; I will set them together like sheep in a fold.”  Let us give thanks to the Lord of the flock for raising shepherds like Augustine to lead us to Jesus and His grace.  Amen.

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

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Sermon: Trinity 13 – 2024

25 August 2024

Text: Luke 10:23-37 (2 Chron 28:8-15)

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

One of our Lord’s most famous parables began with a question from the audience: “Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”  It was posed by a lawyer and was asked dishonestly, “to put Him to the test.”  In spite of the bad motivation question, it is an important question.  We could rephrase it in a way that a lot of people today might say it: “What do I have to do to get to heaven?” 

Jesus the Teacher asks the lawyer to recite the Law.  The lawyer correctly sums up the Ten Commandments: to love God and love the neighbor.  Jesus replies, “You have answered correctly; do this and you will live.” 

At this point, the correct answer is to say, “But I can’t do that.  I always try to keep the Law but I fail.  I don’t love God with all my heart, soul, strength, and mind when I serve other gods, when I misuse His name, and when I do not honor the Sabbath day.  I don’t love God when I love myself instead, and when I commit any sin, it really is a sin against God.  And I am terrible at loving my neighbor.  Even when I was a child, I didn’t honor my parents.  I wish harm on others, I have impure thoughts, I think I’m entitled to others’ things, I think and speak ill of others, I covet things and people that God has not given to me.  What do I do about this, Teacher?”

But this was not the lawyer’s response.  For he was “desiring to justify himself.”  He needed to find a loophole: some way to make the law manageable.  And his attempt was really pretty weak: “And who is my neighbor?”  For think about it, dear friends, if we only have to keep the commandments with a very few people, that might make easier.  After all, it is easier to love people we already love than total strangers, or even our enemies.  Our lawyer – as lawyers often do – is seeking to focus on the definition of a word to limit the scope of the law, to make it easier somehow (as if that were even possible). 

So who is my neighbor?  We use the word to mean different things in different contexts.  Is it the person living on your left and your right?  Is it someone in your neighborhood?  Someone who is of your same ethnicity or tribe?  Is it your countryman?  Is it someone who has the same citizenship as you, even if that person lives in a foreign country? 

Jesus connects the idea of showing love as a way of keeping the Ten Commandments to the idea of mercy.  For when we are merciful in our minds, our acts of love will follow.  And, of course, it is easier to show mercy to someone we have a connection with than to a stranger, or even an enemy. 

We see this in our everyday lives.  When our own family members suffer, it consumes our lives: an elderly parent, a sick child, a handicapped brother or sister, a spouse that is suddenly in distress.  The closer our connection, the greater our mercy.  Our best friend is in need of help.  A co-worker falls on hard times.  We notice that the homeless person claims to be a military veteran of our country.  There is a crime victim who looks like us.  One of our countrymen is traveling abroad and is arrested by a corrupt foreign government official.  If we have something in common with another person, we are more likely to have a soft spot for him or her. 

But what about a random person who has no connection to us?  Or worse yet, what about someone that I consider to be an enemy? 

Our Old Testament reading is a passage from Second Chronicles.  It was during a time of civil war when the northern ten tribes of Israel won a military victory over the two southern tribes.  The victorious Israelites captured 200,000 of their enemy relatives.  They were enslaving them and taking their property as the spoils of war.  But the prophet Oded spoke God’s Word to them, and ordered them to show mercy: to return the captives, to feed them, to clothe them, and even to use donkeys to convey the weak to their “kinsfolk at Jericho.”

For though these people were their enemies, they were also their neighbors.  And they justified their murder and enslavement and theft of their neighbors because they had been at war.  But God now commanded them to show mercy.

So knowing this Word of God, Jesus tells the lawyer a story about a man who shows mercy to an enemy.  Our Lord even cleverly points the lawyer’s mind to this passage by making the hero a Samaritan – a descendant of those northern tribes of Israel and an enemy of the descendants of Judah.  And Jesus also mentions Jericho in the story.  This was designed to trigger the lawyer’s memory, as it should trigger ours.  For we just heard this reading about showing mercy even to our enemies.

In Jesus’ story, a man “fell among robbers” on the way to Jericho.  He is beaten up and robbed.  He is bleeding out on the side of the road.  And nobody shows him mercy: not even his countrymen: not a priest, not even a Levite.  They both pretend not to notice.  For they have important religious matters to attend to under the Law.  “But a Samaritan” shows up: a natural enemy of this man.  And he had “compassion” even on this stranger whom he isn’t supposed to associate with, let alone get involved with.  He applies first aid.  And like our Old Testament lesson, he places the enfeebled victim on his own donkey and transports him to where he can get help.

The Samaritan even goes out of pocket to help this enemy stranger whom he treats as his neighbor.  Jesus then stops the story and asks the lawyer to go ahead and define the word “neighbor” now.  The neighbor was not the priest, nor the Levite, but rather “the one who showed him mercy.” 

So God teaches us what a neighbor is.  The Samaritan came upon this victim, and this victim was his neighbor.  The neighbor is someone God places before you.  It doesn’t matter where the person lives or even if the person is of your tribe or nationality.  The person might even be your enemy.  The point is that the person is in distress, and has crossed paths with you.  If you are merciful, if you love God and your neighbor as the Law commands, you will be merciful.

Jesus is teaching us how to apply the Law, dear friends.  But He is also teaching us about Himself, about God’s mercy.  For in His mercy, God comes to all of us who have rebelled against Him.  All of us poor, miserable sinners have essentially rejected God.  We don’t want to live by the Ten Commandments.  And even if we know them, we find excuses and loopholes and workarounds to justify ourselves.  We divide our neighbors up into those we love and those we hate, those on our side and those on the other side, those of our tribe and those of the other tribe.  Our compassion is conditional, and we justify ourselves based on defining someone as not being our neighbor.

But in spite of our rebellion against God, God is still merciful to us.  He sends us prophets.  He gives us His Word.  He guides us to show mercy to our neighbors, and for them to show us mercy.  And He even takes the form of a man, suffering the evil of every sort of enemy, teaching us the Word of God, and keeping the Law for us.  And instead of being shown mercy, Jesus is stripped and beaten and left for dead upon the cross.  He is attacked and killed by His own people, His own relatives, His own neighbors: by the very people He came to save, to bind up their wounds, to show them mercy, and to transport them to heaven.

Jesus is the Good Samaritan, whose mercy to His enemies even extends to the cross: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  Jesus comes to forgive us when we do not love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, strength, and mind, and when we don’t love our neighbors as ourselves.  He comes to forgive us when we try to justify ourselves.  He comes to give us forgiveness when we are attacked and beaten and left half dead by the devil.

And indeed, Jesus tells us, “You go, and do likewise.”  He calls us to repent of our self-justification and our lack of love and mercy.  For we also need to hear the Law.  That little lawyer in each of us wants to justify himself.  So let us repent, dear friends.  Let us imitate the Good Samaritan.  And the only way to live a life of mercy to our neighbors is to receive the mercy of Jesus, knowing that we cannot justify ourselves, knowing that we fail, but also knowing that Jesus has come to bind up our wounds by means of His wounds, to clothe us with His righteousness, to pay our debt with His own blood as a ransom, and to transport us to heaven even though we are too weak to get there on our own.

The priest and the Levite can’t save us, that is, the law and our twisted interpretations and self-justifications won’t heal us and save us from death.  Only the Good Samaritan, the God who shows us mercy, can do that.  And He does it, dear friends.  He is here for you today with the bread to revive you and wine to cleanse your wounds.  He offers you His true body and blood. 

Instead of asking “who is my neighbor?” in order to justify ourselves, we should be asking “Who is my Good Samaritan?” in order to be justified by grace through faith.  And the answer, dear friends, is “Jesus.”  Lord, have mercy!  Amen.

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