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Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Thanksgiving



Psalm 100- Thanksgiving - November 24, 2011 
  O Give Thanks unto the Lord, for He is Good


Last Sunday was the Last Sunday of the Church Year.  Next Sunday is the First Sunday in Advent, which marks the beginning of the Church Year.  Today is Thanksgiving Day.  But you won’t find this day in the liturgical calendar, because Thanksgiving is not a Church holiday.  It’s a national holiday invented by Americans.  Of all national holidays this is the most appropriate one for us to celebrate in church.  After all, God commands us to give Him thanks every day for all that He has done for us.  GOD TEACHES US HOW TO THANK HIM BY TEACHING US WHAT HE HAS DONE. 

Trinity 27



Matthew 25:1-13- Trinity 27- November 20, 2011 
  While We Wait, We Watch with Joy


The marriage of a man and a woman is a common image in the Bible for the relationship between Christ and the Church.  St. Paul writes in his letter to the Ephesians, “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her, that He might sanctify and cleanse her with the washing of water by the word, [that’s Baptism] that He might present her to Himself a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that she should be holy and without blemish.”  The Church is not beautiful on her own.  Christ makes His bride so beautiful by forgiving her her sins. 

When a husband and wife are married, they become one flesh.  So also we, who by faith are members of the Church, are also members of Christ Himself.  By loving us, Jesus teaches us what true marriage is.  This one-flesh relationship between the Church and her Lord is a mystery that we will not fully understand until the Day when Christ returns.  Then He will welcome all believers – both those who have died, and those who will yet be living – into the heavenly banquet hall to celebrate the wedding feast of the Lamb that has no end.  Christ is returning for His Church.  It is His love for His holy bride that compels Him.  The parable that we just heard about the Ten Virgins describes this future event. 

Trinity 26



Matthew 25:31-46- Trinity 26- November 13, 2011 
  We Shall Be Judged by Our Works


“When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him, then He will sit on the throne of His glory.”  The Son of Man is a title that Jesus frequently uses for Himself that puts especial emphasis on His human nature as true man born of the Virgin Mary.  As Jesus said, e.g. “The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”  During His earthly life, Jesus hid His glory as the Son of God behind a lowly appearance, so that, besides the occasional miracle, all people could see was His humanity – a man like anyone else.  Yet while Jesus hid from the world His divine nature, He nonetheless remained fully God.  By hiding His glory, and submitting Himself to the law, Jesus served sinners as only God is able to do, all the way to the cross where He suffered and died in our place.  It is this man who is going to return to judge all the living and the dead for all eyes to see. 

Jesus was glorified when He was raised from the dead, but He continues now to hide His glory.  In fact, today Jesus hides not only His divine nature, but also His human nature.  Think about it.  We can’t see Him.  We can’t touch Him.  Just as He once hid His eternal glory in humility as a man, so He now hides both His divine and His human natures under even humbler appearances.  He comes to serve you through the words of sinful men like me.  But these words have God’s promise and power to forgive you your sins.  We see simple water, but through the promise of Christ, it is a washing of regeneration and a renewing of the Holy Spirit – It is a Holy Baptism that washes our sin away and gives us eternal life.  We see mere bread and wine.  That’s all we taste too.  But in it and through it the Son of Man comes to serve us with His own body and blood that bore our sin on the cross.  There is no greater glory in either heaven or on earth than where the incarnate Son of God forgives sinners their sins. 

When He was born, Jesus hid from the world His divinity.  When He ascended, Jesus hid from the world His humanity as well.  But when Jesus comes again, He will unhide both.  He will reveal to the world that He is both God and Man.  But that is not all He will unhide and reveal.  Every heart, every righteous deed ever done, and every sin ever committed will be publicly shown for what it has been.  And so, WE SHALL BE JUDGED BY OUR WORKS. 

All Saints'



Matthew 5:1-12- All Saints Sunday - November 6, 2011 
  The Blessedness of the Christian Life


November 1st was All Saints’ Day.  But we celebrate this holiday today in order to remember those saints who have gone before us.  But what exactly is a saint?  To be a saint is to be sinless, and perfectly holy.  Our Epistle reading from Revelation 7 provides the most excellent definition: “These are the ones who come out of the great tribulation, and washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.”  Even in heaven, a saint’s identity continues to be found, not in his or her own good works, but in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  A saint is one who is blessed by God. 

Although saints certainly do good works on earth, and they are indeed rewarded in heaven, a saint is a saint not because of his own righteousness that he earned by obeying the law.  A saint is a saint because he receives Christ’s righteousness that Jesus earned by obeying the law in our place.  God calls them saints who have been baptized into the death of Christ and share in His resurrection victory over sin and the grave.  A saint is one who while yet living on earth reasoned accordingly: Jesus is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world; I am a sinner; therefore Jesus took away my sin too.  That’s what a saint believes.  And God counts this faith to him as righteousness and calls him holy.  A saint is one who has washed his robe in Jesus’ blood, and it has come out spotless, and it remains spotless forever.  That’s what a saint is. 

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Trinity 12



Mark 7:31-37 - Trinity Twelve - August 14, 2016
 Personal Faith & Christian Love
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Consider those kind people in our Gospel lesson this morning.  There was a man who could not hear and who could not speak – at least he did so with difficulty and unintelligibly.  He was deaf and mute, or as they used to say, dumb.  It’s not like he couldn’t speak at all.  He could make sounds, but his tongue couldn’t move right and his noises made no sense.  That’s why the word dumb eventually came to be synonymous with stupid.  Deaf and mute people, as much as they might groan for what they want, don’t sound very clever.  This man had no way to communicate his need.  He relied on the kindness of others to express his desires and to request the help he hoped for. 

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Trinity 11



Luke 18:9-14 - Trinity Eleven - August 7, 2016
 A Meditation on Divine Mercy
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Last week while I was gone, the appointed Gospel lesson gave a stirring image of God’s wrath as our Lord Jesus overturned the tables in the temple court and drove out those who bought and sold.  Divine zeal had consumed him.  If that wasn’t divine wrath nothing is.  In fact, last year the title for my sermon on last Sunday’s lesson was, “A Meditation on Divine Wrath.”  Since God’s wrath is real, it’s important that we know what makes God angry.  God demonstrates his wrath and teaches us to fear it not only in order that we might obey him, but also so that we might see our need for him to have mercy.  Even as Jesus wept for Jerusalem right before these events, we already learned the purpose of his wrath.  God’s wrath always serves his mercy.  Today’s sermon is therefore titled, “A Meditation on Divine Mercy.”  

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

4th Commandment



4th Commandment - July 6, 2016

Honor thy father and thy mother that it may be well with thee, and thou mayest live long on the earth.
What does this mean?
We should fear and love God that we may not despise our parents and masters, nor provoke them to anger, but give them honor, serve and obey them, and hold them in love and esteem.
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As we see in the 10 Commandments, God’s law is divided into two tables.  The first table teaches us our duty to love God.  The second table teaches us our duty to love our neighbor.  To love God requires that we fear him and trust him.  To fear him is to acknowledge that he made us and that he is right to hold us to his holy standards.  To trust him is to have confidence toward him that he will deal with us as he has promised in his word.  This is what it means to love God.  It is both to fear and to trust him so that we have no other god, so that we call upon him in all trouble, and so that we gladly hear his word.