16 September 2018
Text: Luke 7:11-17
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
Why
are you a Christian?
Father
Duddleswell, the lovable character from the BBC TV show: “Bless Me, Father” once
quipped, “‘Why’ is an ugly Protestant word.” I’m inclined to agree with him if the “why?”
is directed at God. For unless God
reveals something to us, it must remain a mystery. But we do well to ask “Why?” when it comes to
ourselves.
So,
dear brothers and sisters, why are you Christians? Why are you here today? Why do you belong to this, or some other
church?
If
the answer is because we’re trying to please our parents or honor our ethnic
heritage, or because we like the parishioners or we like the pastor, or we like
the music, or we want to learn how to become better people, or we want to train
our children to be virtuous, or it just seems like the right social thing to do
in our community – those are all wrong answers.
The
key to why we are here and why we are Christians is in our Gospel reading. We are dying.
We are surrounded by death. We
are stalked by death. Our life on this
side of the grave will end. We are all
suffering from a terminal disease, and we are immersed in it, like fish
swimming around in the sea.
In
our Gospel reading, our Lord Jesus Christ, who has broken into our dying world,
stumbles upon, of all things, a funeral. And tragically, the dead man’s mother has
outlived him. He was her only son. Moreover, she is a widow. She has outlived her husband. Death is everywhere. The entire town, it seems, is mourning.
This
is why we are here, dear friends.
For
we all confessed together that we are “poor, miserable sinners.” We know from St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans
that “the wages of sin is death.” We
know what happened in the Garden of Eden.
We call it to mind each Ash Wednesday, “Remember, O man….” And we are reminded of our own mortality every
time we go to a funeral – like the funeral that Jesus attended at Nain.
For
what happens at this funeral is also why Jesus is here, dear friends. He came into our sinful world to exchange our
sin for His righteousness. He came to our
dying world to die in our place, so that we might live. He came to shed His blood in order to share
His blood with us. He came to receive
what we deserve, and give us what we don’t.
In
short, Jesus came to raise us from the dead!
And
in light of this, how silly are all other reasons people may give for being Christians
and for coming to church. We are
Christians, dear friends, because we have been received by Christ through
baptism. We have been cleansed and born
again, born that the old, sinful, mortal Adam may die, and in his place, a new
man might arise. Not merely a “better”
or “nicer” person” but rather an
immortal and transformed person, who bears the unblemished image and likeness
of God, thanks to our Lord Jesus Christ, who has compassion on us in our mortal
state.
For
what does our Lord do concerning this widow whose only son had died? First, he has “compassion on her.” He invites her to cease her weeping. For he is taking away the cause of her
mourning. He stops the funeral, literally.
He halts the pallbearers. He interrupts the usual march to the grave. He disrupts this unnatural order of death that
we are so warped as to believe is normal and natural. Jesus touches the coffin, which is itself an
unnatural use of wood. And then the most
natural thing in the world happens: in response to the touch and the command of
Jesus, who says, “I say to you, arise,” the “dead man sat up and began to
speak.” For that is what death does in
the presence of Christ: it ceases to exist, being crowded out by life upon the
will and Word of God in the flesh. And
what else can we do but testify and confess what the Lord has done for us?
This
is why we are here, dear friends. For
death cannot abide the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ, whose own death
destroyed death, and whose resurrection points the way to our own resurrection.
Jesus will, in due time, likewise touch
our lifeless bodies and command them to arise. For he conquered death while himself died on
another unnatural use of wood: the cross.
The
people who witnessed this most wondrous and glorious and joyful miracle announced
“God has visited His people.” And this
visitation is no social call. Rather it
is the coming of the Lord to conquer death, and to offer eternal forgiveness, life,
and salvation to all. And by grace, we receive
this glorious gift through faith, that is, by believing in His promise, by
trusting in His name, by receiving His compassion and mercy, and by being
raised from the dead to die no more.
This
is indeed why we are here! And this is
why Jesus is here! He came as the only
son of a mother who seems to have become a widow herself.
Jesus
has come into the world to abolish widowhood and to end the suffering caused by
the death of loved ones. For Jesus
destroys the underlying cause of death: sin.
He has come not to condemn, but to save.
Jesus
has come to restore the perfection of the Garden of Eden, where mothers were
never to bury their sons, and where children were never to bury their parents,
where wood was never to be fashioned into a cross or a coffin, and where nobody
would even know what a funeral is.
Jesus
comes to say, “I say to you, arise,” even as He Himself rose from the grave,
and was reunited to His mother and to all whom He has come to save.
And
this is what it means that God has visited His people. It is why He is here, dear friends. And is why we are here, dear brothers and
sisters.
Remember
these words of Jesus, for you will hear them at your own glorious resurrection:
“I say to you, arise.” Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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