Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Sermon: Thanksgiving Eve – 2024


27 November 2024

Text: Luke 17:11-19

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

Ten men were suffering from a horrible disease called “leprosy.”  There was no cure, and it was eventually fatal.  It is a cruel disease in which your body dies bit by bit.  It is disfiguring, and also highly contagious.  And in Jewish law, it made a person unclean.  Therefore, someone suffering from leprosy – a leper – had to survive on his own or as part of a colony of others with leprosy.

Even though there was no cure for leprosy, the Law provided a way to be declared clean if some kind of miracle were to happen and someone were to be cured of leprosy.  It is as though those parts of the Old Testament were written just for Jesus, because He did cure lepers as part of His ministry of proclaiming the Good News of the kingdom.

Leprosy – like all diseases, like everything that leads to death – exists because of sin, because of Adam and Eve’s fall in the garden.  And leprosy is a terrible reminder of how ugly sin is, how it causes such pain, and leads ultimately to death.  By declaring lepers to be ceremonially unclean, Jewish law recognized the connection between physical sickness and spiritual decay. 

But on this one day, as Jesus entered a village “between Samaria and Galilee,” our Lord was “met by ten lepers.”  As the Law required, they stood at a distance and make their condition known.  But they also did something else: they prayed to Jesus for help.  In fact, we still pray their prayer in our liturgy: “Lord, have mercy upon us!” 

Jesus heard their prayer.  He had mercy.  He cured those ten lepers.  He restored them to life.  And so that they could leave the leper colony, so that they could comply with the law of clean and unclean, so that they could return home to their families – Jesus told them: “Go and show yourselves to the priests.”  And as soon as they obeyed His Word in faith, “as they went, they were cleansed.”

But one of the ten did not go immediately to the priests.  For “when he saw that he was healed,” he first “turned back.”  He returned to where Jesus was to be found.  He praised God.  He worshiped Jesus.  He gave Him thanks.

Interestingly, this man was a Samaritan – a member of an ethnic group that was at odds with the Jews.  Their relationship was not unlike the Palestinians today.  And he was the only one out of the ten who came back to thank Jesus, to praise and worship God by his presence.  Jesus was amazed, and not in a good way.  “Were not ten cleansed?  Where are the nine?  Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?”

In a sense, we are all these lepers, dear friends.  We have all been infected and disfigured by sin.  There is nothing that doctors can do.  There is no pill to cure us.  But there is a cure for the leprosy of sin, and it is just what Jesus told the Samaritan: “Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well.”

Notice the connection between being grateful and having faith.  If we really believe that Jesus saves us from sin, death, and the devil, if we really believe that Jesus has redeemed us from the fires of hell – how could we not be grateful?  And how do we express this gratitude other than doing what the Samaritan did, dear friends: by turning back again and again to where Jesus is to be found, by praising and worshiping God.  That is a demonstration of the faith that saves you. 

For you are here in this place today because you believe Jesus has saved you, and you believe Jesus is here: in His Word, and in His body and blood.  We have all turned back and have fallen on our faces at Jesus’ feet.  We are all crying out: “Lord, have mercy upon us.  Christ, have mercy upon us.  Lord, have mercy upon us.”  For that is the only cure for sin: the sin that leads to death.  Christ’s mercy that we access by faith is how we are cured and made whole.  And you can only get it here: where Jesus is.

Maybe the nine were so excited about being cured that they forgot about Jesus.  Maybe they took His blessing for granted.  Maybe they were just ungrateful: taking what Jesus offered them without a thought toward being thankful.  We don’t know what happened to the nine, but Jesus points out that they were nowhere to be found.

This is a little but like coming to churches that are largely empty, where we know there are many other baptized people who could have turned back to worship God out of gratitude for what He has done for them.  But for whatever reason, they are not here.  And sometimes we are of the nine, being more into the things of this world, taking the Lord’s grace for granted, and distancing ourselves from Him and from His church.  It’s important that when we do come to grips with God’s goodness and mercy and grace, when we do realize what He has done for us, we need to turn back.  We need to drop whatever else we are doing and run to where Jesus is.  He has saved us by His grace, and we receive this grace by faith: by believing that it is truly a cure.  And what we believe is shown by what we choose to do with our time.

Giving thanks at this time of year is a very old tradition.  It is because this is the time of year when farmers harvest their crops.  For there’s no guarantee that there will be a harvest.  Sometimes diseases wipe out whole crops.  Sometimes enemies come and burn down our fields and storehouses.  Sometimes the weather itself ruins the yield.  And then we will have to struggle until the next season.  But when the crops mature, when they bear fruit, when they grow large and await the harvest, we have much to be thankful for.  It is fitting for us to have a fall feast, celebrating with the first-fruits of the harvest, gathering our families together to celebrate and thank God for His mercy.  There is no better way to do this than by means of a meal.

And we Christians likewise have a very old tradition.  It was begun by Jesus and passed along to the apostles – who passed it down to us.  It is also a meal, and it is also a giving of thanks to God for His mercy.  In Greek, it’s called the “Eucharist,” that is, “the Thanksgiving.”  We also call it the Lord’s Supper.  For when Jesus took the bread and wine that are His body and blood, He blessed them and gave thanks.  How much more, dear friends, should we give thanks when we eat this bread and drink this cup, proclaiming the Lord’s death until He comes?

For as an ordinary meal sustains our lives and strengthens our bodies, this Holy Supper sustains us unto eternal life and strengthens our souls.  And by going to where Jesus is, and by receiving Jesus as Jesus taught us to do – we are not only demonstrating faith in His words, we are receiving faith in His Word as a gift, as a means of grace.  And we are grateful.

This Holy Supper, this Thanksgiving, is our “turning back.”  For we come to the Lord’s Supper praising God with voices of prayer, praise, and giving thanks.  We fall on our knees at Jesus’ feet, and we drop everything else that we could be doing right now to be here. 

As for the nine, dear friends, let’s not become one of them.  And equally important, let us pray for them, that they too may turn back and give thanks for what Jesus has done for them on the cross and in the empty tomb, and for what He does for us as the altar, the font, and the pulpit.

“Rise and go your way.  Your faith has made you well.”

Amen.

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

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Sermon: Wittenberg Academy - Nov 12, 2024

12 Nov 2024

Text: Matt 26:1-19

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

As we approach the end of Matthew’s account of the life of our Lord, we are rapidly moving to the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus.  Things are coming together quickly, and in two days time, the world will be changed forever.  At this point, the only one who knows this is our Lord: “After two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of Man will be delivered up to be crucified.”  And as our Lord is saying this, “the chief priests and the elders… plotted together” along with Caiaphas, the corrupt high priest, “in order to arrest Jesus by stealth and kill Him.”  But they had to be politically sensitive, for, as Jesus said, “The Passover is coming.”

Indeed, the Passover is coming: the one final Passover to end all Passovers.  This is the one actual Passover for which the fifteen hundred or so previous Passovers were nothing more than previews or rehearsals.  “The Passover is coming,” says Jesus.  The Passover is the cross, dear friends, when the body of the sacrificial Lamb will be slain, and the people will be delivered from death by means of the protective blood poured out by God’s grace and mercy.

Some Christians want to go back to the rehearsals by having so-called “seder meals.”  It is almost pretending that Jesus hasn’t yet come.  But Jesus changed everything – and for the better.  There is no going back.  Jesus said, “The Passover is coming.”  And the Passover is the Eucharist.  Jesus is the Lamb.  The blood on the doorway leading to heaven is the blood of Jesus being poured out on the beams of the altar and doorway of the cross.  And this holy, sacrificial blood is poured from the chalice into your very body as the “medicine of immortality” as it was described by St. Ignatius of Antioch, who was a disciple of the apostle John.

Two days before the Passover came, we see the alignment of the conspirators.  We see Jesus anointed at Bethany, and we see the treasurer (and thief) Judas complaining about the expense.  And it was at this moment that he “went to the chief priests and said, ‘What will you give me if I deliver Him over to you?’”  The price of the Lamb was thirty pieces of silver, paid by the priests of Satan to the traitor.  Never before or after has the monetary cost of a King’s ransom been the price of a slave.

Jesus makes arrangements to eat the final Passover meal with His disciples to prepare for this final Passover: the moment for which all of human history has led.  Jesus will forever change the meal from mere symbolic seder ceremony to the miracle of the Mass: His ongoing Real Presence with us in the Divine Service, the Sacrament of the Altar.  For His Word – the same Word that created the entire universe – the Word Made Flesh and Blood will forever fulfill the Passover by establishing the Lord’s Supper of His flesh and blood.  And the ransomed people of God will eat the flesh of the Lamb and drink His blood – and the Lamb’s blood will cry out to heaven for redemption.  God will use the wicked conspirators even as he used hard-hearted Pharaoh to lead His beloved people away from the bondage of sin, death, and the devil into the promised land of forgiveness, life, and salvation.  

Indeed, the Passover is coming.

Amen.

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

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Sermon: Wittenberg Academy – Nov 5, 2024

5 Nov 2024

Text: Matt 23:1-12

In the name of + Jesus.  Amen.

The scribes and the Pharisees were the social elites of the day.  They were not the rulers of the government (though they were represented in the Jewish council).  They were not the priests of the temple (though they were considered to be the religious experts).  Their real power was in the way ordinary people looked up to them, and trusted them.  Their opinions became public opinions, as they held sway over all those who admired them – much like our celebrity class today.

But their motivation wasn’t the truth.  Their motivation wasn’t to submit to God’s Word.  Their motivation was to maintain their status and the status quo, “to be seen by others,” as our Lord observes.  They did so by interpreting the Scriptures in such a way as to affirm themselves.  They made themselves immune from any criticism, and instead, applied the Law to everyone except themselves.  Their manmade religious system was based on laws and regulations of their own making, “heavy burdens, hard to bear,” as our Lord said, and they would “lay them on people’s shoulders, but they themselves [were] not willing to move them with their finger.”

They routinely distorted Scripture.  One ridiculous example is how they treat Moses telling the people to figuratively place the Word of God “as frontlets between your eyes” (Deut 6:8).  Instead of interpreting this to be a matter of the primacy of God’s Word in the heart and mind, they insisted, as a matter of law, on wearing literal little boxes, called “phylacteries,” tied to their heads with little scrolls inside as proof of their righteousness.  They had similar rules and regulations with “fringes” on their garments.  And, of course, they had all the best seats at banquets reserved for themselves.  They lived for being called by various titles and being bowed and scraped to. 

They lived for the respect of others – respect that was not returned.  Their religion became a distorted and legalistic parody of what God called them to be, and to do, as children of Israel, as the people of the Covenant, as the custodians of the Word of God.  And this self-obsession led them to be blinded to the reality that the God they claimed to worship was standing right in front of them, speaking to them even more intimately than He spoke to Moses, and was the fulfillment of all the Scriptures they claimed were guiding their lives.

Once people saw how phony the Pharisees were, they could not unsee it.

Their problem, according to Jesus, is their lack of humility – in other words, their pride.  Jesus corrects them, largely to no avail – although two of the Pharisees, who secretly followed Jesus, will act courageously and publicly at His crucifixion (John 19:38-39).  But in spite of the hardness of heart of the scribes and Pharisees, our Lord continues to proclaim the Law to them, to show how they misinterpret Scripture, and to use them as warning to all of us of how not to be.  For “the greatest among you shall be your servant.  Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”

Amen.

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