28 October 2018
Text: Matt 11:12-19 (Rev 14:6-7, Rom 3:19-28)
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
“But
to what shall I compare this generation?” asks our Lord. For what does “this generation” do? It mocks John the Baptist because he doesn’t
drink, and then mocks Jesus because He does. “This generation” is not concerned with the
truth, but only with adopting a narrative and then using it to arrive at a
pre-conceived conclusion.
Why
do they do this?
Power. The “powers that be” like being in charge. John the Baptist, the final prophet, is a
disrupter, a disturber of the peace, that peace that the king enjoys because of
society’s looking the other way regarding his immorality and corruption. But like the boy in “The Emperor’s New
Clothes,” John refuses to play along with the narrative. John tells the truth. The powers that be cannot have that. John has to be killed.
And
this is how many of John’s the Forerunner’s own forerunners in the office of
prophet were treated in centuries past. For as Lord Acton would famously put it: “Power
corrupts. And absolute power corrupts
absolutely.”
And
if John was considered a disruption, they haven’t seen anything yet. For John has come to usher in the
manifestation of God in human flesh, who comes to turn the universe upside
down, to fill the valleys and make the mountains low, to straighten the crooked
and level the rough places. Our Lord
Jesus Christ defies the narrative because He is the True Narrative, the Word of
God made flesh. The story of Jesus is
the story of the universe, and His story is not just a convenient narrative to
be exploited politically, His story is the story of the redemption of mankind. His Narrative is the truth. For He is the truth. The powers that be cannot have that. Jesus also has to be killed.
But
of course, that is the very Narrative that our Lord has in mind. It is why He takes flesh in the first place. He comes to die, and He dies to rise. He rises to give us life. And we rise to the glory of God, according to
His will, which He carries out at the cross, in love for us and for all of His
creation. That is the one Narrative that
is both true and eternal. And Jesus is
the One who does indeed have absolute power, and yet, as the Psalmist says, “You
will not… let Your Holy One see corruption.”
In
order to hold fast to the narrative opposing Jesus, they must cling to a lie: that
he is “a glutton and a drunkard.” But
the rest of their narrative is true, for our Blessed Lord is indeed a “friend
of tax collectors and sinners.” He is
the sinner’s greatest friend. For He is
the sinner’s Savior!
And
“this generation” continues on throughout history. The mighty and powerful lie about the
disrupter, the whistle-blower, the boy who points out the Emperor’s nakedness. And in order to hold on to power, they will
lie, they will kill, they will destroy.
Martin
Luther grew up among “this generation.” For when the church of his day, reeking with
corruption and wielding power that staggers the imagination, pushed a narrative
that conflicted with the Holy Scriptures, a narrative that salvation was a
commodity to be purchased, in the words of the preacher John Tetzel: “When the
coin in the coffer rings, the soul from Purgatory springs.” This narrative stands against the clear Word
of God: “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are
justified by His grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,
whom God put forward as a propitiation by His blood, to be received in faith.”
Once
again, we are all “justified by His grace as a gift.” How many of you pay for your gifts, dear
friends? Do your children anxiously run
to the Christmas tree with their wallets in hand looking to make purchases? How many husbands buy flowers for their wives
and attach a bill? What did the pope and
the cardinals and the bishops think the word “gift” meant?
On
October 31, 1517, Father Martin published an academic paper that we now call “Ninety
Five Theses” that includes this question (number 82): “Why does not the pope
empty purgatory for the sake of holy love and the dire need of the souls that
are there if he redeems an infinite number of souls for the sake of miserable
money with which to build a church?”
The
good doctor was also a disrupter, also one who challenged the narrative of the
one wielding power, and so Doctor Luther must also die. He was condemned by pope and emperor.
But
in His infinite mercy, the Lord God would not permit Luther to be tied to a
post and burned alive – which is how Dearest Mother Church dealt with
whistleblowers in those days. God had
other plans at that time of Reformation.
For there is an “eternal Gospel to proclaim to those who dwell on the
earth.” And there were others who would
not buy the narrative. There were other
men in power, faithful men, who sought the truth rather than the lie, who
wanted to know what Scripture taught rather than simply silence the one who
preached it.
Thirteen
years after Luther’s “Ninety Five Theses,” the emperor would command the German
princes to reject their churches’ reforms and return to loyalty to the pope. These princes bared their necks and dared the
Emperor to behead them, for they were prepared to die rather than surrender the
faith that they had come to know, the faith that Scripture teaches: that God is
“just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.”
For
these men had finally heard that “eternal gospel” to be proclaimed to “those
who dwell on earth” – that “one is justified by faith apart from works of the
law.” The princes saw through the
narrative that Luther was a heretic, that the pope is above scripture, that
salvation is not by grace alone, that the common people could not have the
Bible in their own language, and that the blood of Christ is not sufficient as
a “propitiation… to be received by faith.” They knew that this narrative was ultimately
about power: power to control the people by means of fear, power to control the
princes by means of taxation, and power to amass fortunes by prostituting the
faith in exchange for secular power.
“This
generation” continues today, dear friends. For if you uphold the Scriptures, you might
find yourself out of a job, unable to attend a university, hounded out of
polite society, or perhaps even in a jail cell.
For
the powerful continue to push an unbiblical narrative, one that calls good
evil, and evil good. We need to follow in
the footsteps of St. John and Blessed Martin, and most of all, our Lord Jesus
Christ, in believing, teaching, and confessing the truth of the “eternal gospel”
– even in the face of the mighty who push a narrative grounded in the lie for their
own retention of power. God may allow us to die in that confession, or He may
permit us to live: but whether we live or die, we must confess that which is
true.
As
St. Paul also teaches us by the power of the Holy Spirit, “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.” The world mocks us just
as they did John. The world seeks to gag
us just as they tried to do with Luther. The world
seeks to crucify us just as they did our Blessed Lord. But as our Lord has said, dear friends, “If
the world hates you, know that it has hated Me before it hated you.”
Let
us not be swayed by the narrative of the corrupt. Let us “worship Him,” the incorruptible, “who
made the heaven and earth, the sea and the springs of water,” and do so without
concern for what “this generation” will do next. Let us “fear God and give Him glory” – now, and
even unto eternity! Amen!
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
1 comment:
Thank you, Rev. Beane, for a wonderful sermon. I was particularly touched by the fact that you did not attribute just "truth" to John, our Lord Jesus, and to Martin Luther, but "the truth of the eternal Gospel." It is a fine, but important distinction, which some fail to make.
Peace and Joy!
George A. Marquart
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