Sunday, July 30, 2017
Saturday, July 29, 2017
Slaves to Righteousness
Romans 6:19-23 Out
of the night that covers me, Black as the pit from pole to pole, I
thank whatever gods may be For my unconquerable soul. In the fell
clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud. Under the
bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody, but unbowed. Beyond this
place of wrath and tears Looms but the Horror of the shade, And yet
the menace of the years Finds and shall find me unafraid. It matters
not how strait the gate, How charged with punishments the scroll, I
am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.
The poem is Invictus
by William Ernest Henley and while it is a great poem—it really is terrible
theology. “I am the master of my fate. I
am the captain of my soul.”
There is much in
those words that appeal to us—particularly as Americans—but they simply do not
tell us the truth about ourselves.
Far, far from
being the masters of our fate and the captains of our souls, the Bible says
that everyone in this world—without exception-- is a slave.
You either belong
to sin and death OR you belong to righteousness and God. You either serve sin and death OR you serve
God and righteousness. Sin and death is your
master OR God and his righteousness is your master.
We may love the
illusion of autonomy and freedom that is found in the poem Invictus, but it is the Bible that tells us the truth about ourselves
and who we truly serve. Under the power
and inspiration of the Holy Spirit, St. Paul wrote:
I am speaking in
human terms, because of your natural limitations. For just as you once
presented your members as slaves to impurity and to lawlessness leading to more
lawlessness, so now present your members as slaves to righteousness
leading to sanctification.
Jesus
told the Pharisees that everyone who sins is a slave to sin. Peter said
that the false teachers of the early church were slaves to corruption.
Throughout his epistles Paul uses this slave imagery to describe our
spiritual condition—either as slaves to sin and death OR slaves to God and his
righteousness.
It was a vivid
image, immediately recognizable and understandable by people in the ancient
world, and he used this word picture so that this biblical teaching would be
perfectly clear in our mind-- such is its importance to understanding our life
with God.
Far, far from
being the autonomous, independent, free people we imagine ourselves to be—every
person in this world has a master they serve.
Everyone! And that master is
revealed in the actions of our members, that is, the parts of our bodies.
It’s like we
learned in the old Sunday School song:
be careful little eyes what you see—be careful little ears what you
hear—be careful little feet where you go—be careful little lips what you say. Be careful:
because the members of our
body reveal the master of our soul.
For those who are
slaves to impurity and lawlessness, their master is revealed in the words they
say, the images they rest their eyes upon, the places their feet take them, and
the things their hands do.
So it is for those
whose Master is God and his righteousness, that their members also reveal a
slavery—not to lawlessness and death—but to sanctification and finally, to eternal
life.
That is why we are
to be careful about the members of our body because they reveal (not only the
identity of our master) but also the direction of our life and our destination
in eternity. There is no such thing as
just a little sin because lawlessness leads to more lawlessness and eventually
that journey ends in death. The Bible
says that:
When you were
slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness. But what fruit were you getting at that time from the things of
which you are now ashamed? For the end of those things is death.
When Paul
says that those who are slaves to sin are “free” regarding righteousness, he
does not mean that they are free to do righteousness or abstain from righteousness
as they see fit, and as suits them, in a particular moment.
No!
What Paul is saying is that the person who is a slave to impurity and
lawlessness is free FROM righteousness altogether! There is NOTHING in their life that pleases
God—NOTHING in their life that God looks upon with favor—and certainly NOTHING in
their life that he counts for salvation.
Those who
are enslaved to sin and death do not have God as their Master and so their
lives are completely free from ANY spiritual fruit whatsoever.
That person who is a slave to
impurity and lawlessness may look like they have the world by the tail—they may
view their sexual sins as conquests—they may see their money and status as
security for the future-- but God says that it all leads to death and because
of that-- sin is not something to take pride in-- but something of which to be
ashamed.
The Roman Christians understood
that. They could see the deadly direction
they were headed. They recognized the
destination of a life’s journey marked by slavery to impurity and lawlessness. They realized just exactly who their master
had been-- because Christ, their new mater, had set them free. And so should we! The Bible says:
Now that
you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of
God, the fruit you get leads to sanctification and its end, eternal
life.
What was
true of the Roman Christians in Paul’s day is also true of us in our day: Jesus Christ has set us free from slavery to
impurity and lawlessness. He has
redeemed us with his own life’s blood as the purchase price to set us
free. We HAVE been set free from sin!
But it is absolutely critical that
we understand that we have not only been set free FROM something—we have been
set free FOR something—and that is to serve God as slaves of righteousness. He is now our Master!
Right here in these verses is one
of the most critically important concepts in the Bible and yet is widely
misunderstood and too often ignored to the eternal peril of God’s people: that the freedom we have in Christ finds its
true purpose in the whole-hearted service we offer to God as slaves of
righteousness. Christian freedom and the
fruit of good works go together without fail.
The Bible says: You were
called to freedom, only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the
flesh, but through love serve one another.
The Bible says: It is 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. For we are God’s workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus FOR good works.
God has not set us free from sin
and death at the cost of his own Son’s life so that we can turn around and go
right back to living in lawlessness and impurity! Who would voluntarily enslave themselves to
sin and set out on a journey that would, without question, lead to hell?! No one would do that!
Instead, we have been set free so
that we can become what God has created us and redeemed us to be: people whose only desire is to know and do
his will: slaves of God and slaves of
righteousness.
That we are free in Christ and that
we are slaves to God is certainly paradoxical-- but these two teachings are not
opposed to one another because the true purpose and meaning and value of our
lives can only be found in our connection to God—a connection that is always
fruitful unto good works.
Jesus said, I am the vine and you are the branches and in me you will bear much
fruit. And so it is that as we walk
with Jesus- and as we are filled with his Spirit- and as we are fed with Word
and Sacrament--our lives begin to take on the shape they were meant to have—no
longer turned in on ourselves—no longer focused on satisfying the desires of
the flesh—but now turned towards our neighbor who needs our care—now growing in
Christ-likeness as we receive his gracious gifts—now desiring to make God’s
will, our will.
This is the life on earth that
leads to eternal life---not because we have earned it by doing God’s will or
walking in his ways—but because it has been given to us as a gift. The Bible says:
The wages of sin
is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
It
is in this verse that we see a profound difference in human slavery and in
spiritual slavery—whether to sin or to God.
Earthly slaves earn nothing—they are paid no wage for their service--but
those who are spiritually enslaved to sin and impurity earn, for themselves, eternal
death.
Everything they
have lived for—everything they have devoted themselves to: their much vaunted autonomy and independence
is torn away as they enter into hell to be tormented forever with the one who
has truly been their master.
Earthly slaves are
given no gifts—they are unloved by their masters—they are regarded as property. And yet, slaves to God and his righteousness
are given the status as God’s children- and are counted as heirs of the living
God- and are given eternal life as a gift through faith in Jesus.
We have to admit that the words, “I am the master
of my fate. I am the captain of my soul” appeal to our flesh but the Bible says
that there is a way that seems right to
men but in the end leads to death and that is it.
Instead, the way
to true and lasting riches—the way to a life of meaning and purpose—and most
importantly, the way to eternal life is the way of slavery to God and his
righteousness. Amen.
Monday, July 24, 2017
Saturday, July 22, 2017
The Righteousness Needed for Heaven
There was a man in the early church
named Marcion who taught that the God revealed in the Old Testament (the God
who spoke from Mt.
Sinai and gave the Law to
Moses) was incompatible with the God of the New Testament who forgave those who
broke the Law. He believed that they
were opposed to one another—the God of the Old Testament being a harsh,
demanding God of wrath-- and the God of the New Testament, Jesus, being kind
and merciful and forgiving.
His teaching was
condemned as heresy and he was excommunicated-- but his ideas are still around.
You hear people
saying that because Jesus never specifically addressed abortion that it must be
acceptable to him. You hear people
saying that what Jesus really cares about is not who you are intimate with-- but that you love that person. You hear people saying that the Holy Spirit
is leading the church away from the old morality contained in the Ten
Commandments-- to a new way of approval and acceptance.
And these modern
followers of that ancient heretic appeal to Jesus as their authority—they tell
us that surely if Jesus were still here on earth he would agree with them. But he would not! Jesus upheld the Law as the unchanging will
of God for mankind and he bound all of us to that Law until the end of
time. Jesus said:
“Do not think that I
have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them
but to fulfill them.
Those
who look to Jesus for their authority to cast away the moral Law of God cannot
appeal to his words or to his life. They
will find no support from him for their heresy that denies the moral Law as
being from God. Jesus said of himself
again and again: I came to do my
Father’s will. I speak my Father’s
words. The command I give you was from
the beginning.
Jesus’ entire life
was lived—not in opposition to the Law of God—but in perfect fulfillment of the
Law of God. In thought, word and deed he
was careful to do his Father’s will and keep his Father’s words and live in
holiness like his Father—and he called people to leave their sins-- rather than
leave them in those sins.
Jesus cannot and
must not be pitted against his heavenly Father when it comes to the moral Law
because he and his Father share the same divine nature and have exactly the
same divine holiness. And Jesus and his
Father are also perfectly united in their expectation of how we are to live until the end of
days. Jesus says:
Truly I tell you,
until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke
of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is
accomplished.
Besides appealing
to Jesus for a new understanding of morality, you will hear people say that
times have changed-- and we Christians have to change along with them when it
comes to what is right and wrong and accept what has always been a sin.
Well, they are
right in that times have changed—but what is right and wrong in God’s sight cannot
change -because it is grounded in the unchangeable will of God. God’s will, expressed in the Law, flows from
his own holiness --not from what we think is right and wrong at some given
moment in human history.
The Law comes from
God—it is written on the human heart and it was written on tablets of stone on Mt. Sinai and people can try to ignore their
consciences- and they can break stone tablets- and they can enact legislation
that goes against God’s law-- but not for one moment can they change God’s law.
God has not
changed his mind about the necessity of worship or the sanctity of life or the
definition of marriage-- and he stands opposed to those who claim to speak in
his name to set aside his commandments—and so does Jesus. Jesus said:
Anyone who sets aside
one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be
called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these
commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.
Throughout
more and more places in the church today there is a wholesale apostasy from the
faith and morals of Christianity that sets aside the Law of God and teaches others
to do the same.
The unbelieving world,
of course, looks on with glowing approval.
Look how loving they are! Look
how accepting they are! Look how open
and welcoming they are!
And by contrast of
course the world judges those who hold fast to God’s word as unloving,
judgmental, and angry.
But what matters,
is not what the world says-- but what God says-- and he says that those who
hold fast to his commands will be called great in his kingdom.
And so why does
Jesus put such a high priority on upholding God’s Law and making sure that it
is not diminished in the least but taught faithfully? It is because, only through the rigorous
preaching of the demands of the Law, can we know of our need for God’s
salvation in Christ.
To tell someone that
their sin is not a sin is the most loveless thing that anyone can possibly do
to another person because it leaves them in their sin and condemns them to hell
and to do this- from the church- in the name of Christ is an outrage!
Rather than
diminishing the law, the church needs to uphold it in all its moral rigor so we
can see our need for a righteousness that lies outside of us. Jesus says:
I tell you that
unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of
the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven. “You
have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder, and
anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.’ But I tell you that anyone who
is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone
who says to a brother or sister, ‘Raca,’ is answerable to the court. And anyone
who says, ‘You fool!’ will be in danger of the fire of hell.
Jesus in no way, shape or form diminished the requirements of the law like so many do today in his
name. Instead, he pointed out that the
righteousness requirements of the Law (what God expects of you and me) go far
beyond what most of us think.
The law doesn’t
just demand of us that we never commit adultery so that we can pat ourselves on
the back if we have never been divorced or have never had an affair—the law
demands of us that we have never, not even once lusted in our heart.
The law doesn’t
just demand of us that we do not bow down before idols or worship a false god--
but that we have never, not even once failed to trust God perfectly by
worrying.
And the law
doesn’t just demand of us that we not murder so that we can congratulate
ourselves on not being thugs--but the law demands of us that we have never, not
even once been angry or called someone a bad name.
The fact of the
matter is, that, according to Jesus-- just one of these sins against God’s law will
keep us out of the kingdom of heaven and make us subject to the eternal fires
of hell!
That is the way
that Jesus wants the Law upheld and taught among his people for this
reason: that we would see our great need
for a righteousness that is far beyond what even the most devout and decent
people can offer up in their lives.
The righteousness that
God counts as salvation is found in only one place and that is Jesus Christ who
came into this world—not to do away with the law---but to suffer our punishment
on the cross and fulfill the Law for us, in our place-- so that through faith
in him, his righteousness can become our own.
And because this
righteousness of Christ is ours by
faith, Jesus expects us to show it in how we live—not returning to sin, but
living in holy obedience to the Law. He
said:
“If you are offering
your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother or sister has
something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go
and be reconciled to them; then come and offer your gift.
Jesus’
expectation for you and me is that we would take seriously what God has to say
in his Law and live our lives according to it—and that we ought to be careful
that we do not fool ourselves into believing that things can be right between
us and God while we are living in unrepentant sin.
The example he gave
is one of interpersonal conflict. Maybe
harsh words were spoken between these people—maybe there was an angry
disagreement—maybe there was some kind of business deal that was not on the
up-and-up—but whatever happened--there was conflict and he says that before
there can be worship --there needs to be repentance and reconciliation.
Jesus used the
example of interpersonal conflict as a sin that comes between us and God but he
could have used any of the Ten Commandments.
When we are living in unrepentant sin, actively, purposefully going
against God’s will—we must not believe that things are right between us and God
(because they are not!) until we repent and receive Christ’s forgiveness.
God promises the
blessings of forgiveness for those who love him and keep his commandments. But he also warns us that there are curses
and consequences that come with disobedience.
Jesus said:
“Settle matters
quickly with your adversary who is taking you to court. Do it while you are
still together on the way, or your adversary may hand you over to the judge, and
the judge may hand you over to the officer, and you may be thrown into prison.
Truly I tell you, you will not get out until you have paid the last penny.
There
are consequences to sin—God has built it into his Law: abusing drugs and alcohol wrecks your
health—sexual immorality ruins marriages—constantly bad-mouthing others makes
others keep you at arms-length and anger and bitterness destroys families and
friendships.
A lack of
repentance hurts us and those around us and it also hurts our relationship with
God. The man in Jesus’ example had every
chance to be reconciled --but if he wouldn’t- he faced jail. We have an opportunity today to repent—to
change the direction of our lives, be reconciled to God, and to go a new
way. To turn our backs on this moment of
grace is not to face a lifetime in jail but an eternity in hell.
Jesus has fulfilled
the law’s demands and he has paid, with his life’s blood, every last penny that
we owe on account of our sins. There is
no reason for anyone to go to hell when he has paid to set us free.
As the free
children of God we live our life like that of Jesus: upholding the Law and fulfilling God’s
commands and walking in newness of life.
Amen.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
Thursday, July 13, 2017
The Word of the Cross Is the Power of God
1 Corinthians 1:18-31 Many Christians have
had the experience of feeling like strangers to the world we live in. We discover that the things we value- and the
God we believe in- are rejected by more and more people. We can’t figure out why everyone does not believe
what seems so obvious and important to us.
But they don’t. The Bible
says: The word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing…
What is this “word
of the cross” that Paul is referring to?
It is the basic proclamation of the Christian church: that Jesus of Nazareth was God in human flesh
and his life, death, and resurrection are the only way for sinners to have a
life with God.
So why does the
world around us reject this “word of the cross” as foolishness? It is because this “word of the cross” cannot
be seen in nature- and it cannot be discerned by our intellect- and it cannot
be measured scientifically.
It cannot be known
in any way except by revelation from God—and that is the height of foolishness to
the unbelieving world around us. And yet
for us Christians, the “word of the cross” defines: who we are- and why we’re here- and where we
are going when this life is over. For
us, the “word of the cross” is the power
of God.
The Gospel of
Jesus Christ has rescued us from sin and death and made us God’s children.
How can there not
be a division between those who believe this message--and those who reject it? The truth of the matter is that God has
ordained this very thing: that man
cannot “think” or “reason” his way into heaven.
God says:
I will destroy the
wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the discerning I will thwart.”
These words are a
quote from the prophet Isaiah and Paul uses them to make the point that God has
ordained that our human intellect is an insufficient means of knowing him as he
desires to be known—as a God of love and mercy.
You see, not only
has sin rendered us incapable of having a life with God on our own terms—but
our Creator has placed limits on our intellect so that we can never “think” our
way into heaven.
The human mind is
a great gift from God. The breadth of
human knowledge is vast. The
technological achievements of mankind are staggering. But all of it together still cannot bring us
to God. And that has been proved true
again and again down through history. Paul writes:
Where is the one who
is wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age? Has not God
made foolish the wisdom of the world?
There is a division
between those who believe the message of the cross and those who don’t and that
dividing line cuts across human religions and human philosophies.
Hinduism and Islam
and Judaism look very different from one another-- but at their heart they are
exactly the same: they are religions
that tell their followers that they can have a life with God-apart from Christ-
based upon their own efforts.
The various moral
philosophies of mankind have the same message.
And they leave their followers in exactly the same place—alienated from
God—incapable of knowing God as he desires to be known.
No matter how
pious these religions might be—no matter how earnest the followers of some
human philosophy—no matter how subtle and sophisticated their arguments: God counts it all as foolishness because they
cannot do what he has done through the cross—and that is to reveal himself as
the God who loves us. Paul writes:
Since, in the wisdom
of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, it pleased God through the
folly of what we preach to save those who believe.
That there is a
division between those who believe the message of the cross and those who
don’t—that it is impossible for mankind to come to God on the basis of his own
works or intellect—is not an accident. God
in his wisdom has made sure that we cannot have a life with him on the basis of
human wisdom.
Certainly we can
know some things about God: we can know
that he exists by looking at the creation around us—we can know that he loves
good and hates evil by the testimony of our conscience to our actions.
But we cannot know
him as he truly is-- and desires to be known.
That has to be revealed to us in what Paul calls “the folly of what we preach.”
When Paul calls
the word of the cross “folly’ he is talking about the judgment of the world about the message of the cross. He recognized the same thing that we
recognize as we interact with the unbelieving world around us: that what we regard as the highest wisdom--the
world regards as the worst kind of foolishness.
And yet… believing that message is the only way
to salvation. Right there is the great dilemma
and difficulty for mankind—the human roadblocks to faith. Paul writes:
Jews demand signs and
Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews
and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks,
Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.
The dividing line
between Christians and the world is nothing new--Paul experienced it also. Jews didn’t believe in Jesus because they
wanted some indisputable sign that he was the Messiah. And even though he did miraculous sign after miraculous
sign—they weren’t the signs they wanted.
They wanted the Romans overthrown and Israel restored.
For Greeks it was
unimaginable that God would take on human flesh and die. They believed in the immortality of the soul,
but a bodily, physical resurrection was seen as ridiculous. And so the “word of the cross” was a
stumbling block to the Jews and folly to the Gentiles.
But it was also
true that the Christian congregation at Corinth was full of both Jew and
Gentile believers. As great an
impediment to faith as was the demand for signs and the human intellect—the
wisdom and power of God to save them was even greater. Paul writes that:
The foolishness of
God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.
In the years since
these words were written, mankind has plumbed the depth of the atom and unraveled
the building blocks of life and stood upon the moon. The wisdom and strength of mankind is great
indeed!
And yet, in all
those years, no one has come to God in any other way than by the cross. What we cannot do in our wisdom-- and what we
cannot do in our own strength—the foolishness and weakness of Christ crucified
can do, and has done, in bestowing the title “child of God’ upon the lowliness
of men. Paul writes:
Consider your
calling, brothers: not many of you were wise according to worldly
standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth. But God
chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what
is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and
despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things
that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God.
The true power and
wisdom of God that is found in the weakness and foolishness of a crucified Jew
could be clearly seen in the members of the Corinthian congregation. Very few of them were wealthy or powerful. They were just regular folks God had chosen
to make his children through faith in Jesus.
So it is today. Those who have great wealth and great power
and great intellect are more often found outside the church than within. There are exceptions of course and those
folks have the ability to do great things for the cause of Christ. But by and large-- power and wealth and great
intellect are hurdles that have to be
overcome to have a life with God-- rather than helps to faith in Christ.
That is because
power and wealth and intellect lift us up rather than bring us low and that is
what God has to do to save us. So long as: we are trying to come to God on our own
terms—based on our own knowledge and strength, we still don’t know the way of
salvation that comes as a free gift of God’s grace through faith in Jesus. Paul writes:
Because of him you
are in Christ Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and
sanctification and redemption, so that, as it is written, “Let the one who
boasts, boast in the Lord.”
God the Father has
chosen us form eternity to be his own.
He has sent his Son Jesus Christ to be the atoning sacrifice for our
sins. And his Holy Spirit has worked
faith in our heart through the Gospel so that we can believe in Jesus and be
saved.
He is our
wisdom—the only way that we can truly know who God is. His holy life is our righteousness before
God. He is our sanctification—his
resurrection life within us that is the ongoing power to live a holy life. And he is our redemption—the one who has paid
the price, in his own blood, to set us free from sin, death, and the devil.
There simply is no
room in God’s salvation for the boasting of mankind. But there
is a place for boasting in the Lord!
The rest of our earthly life and all of eternity is not enough time to
sufficiently thank God for the power and wisdom of Christ crucified for us—but
we can begin today to serve him and praise him as he deserves. Amen.
Sunday, July 9, 2017
Saturday, July 8, 2017
A Merciful Father and His Merciful Children
Luke 6:36-42 In the words that
Jesus speaks to us today we hear one of the funniest and most familiar images
in the Bible—the person with the log in their own eye trying to get a speck out
of someone else’s eye---Jesus’ point being that we are often times blind to our
own faults but have perfect 20/20 vision when it comes to the faults of others.
That log in our
eye (which is really self-righteousness) blinds us to our own sins—blinds us to
our need for God’s mercy—it blinds us to the truth about others. What Jesus wants to do for us today is to
take that log out of our eye so that we can see our own need for God’s great
mercy but also see that others need the same mercy from us.
In other words,
God wants us to know and believe that we have in him a merciful Father and that
he expects us to be his merciful children.
Jesus says: Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.
What do you want
from your life with God? What do you
want your relationship with God to be based upon? Justice or mercy? We may not phrase it as justice, but isn’t justice
what we really want from God?
That God would recognize
what a great person I am, much better than the rest of the folks around me, and
reward me accordingly for being such a fine fellow. That God would take a little bit closer look
at those around me and punish them for their failures.
The fact of the
matter is, we wish God were a little bit more exacting in his judgments because
surely then we would be lifted up above those around us. So says our sinful flesh that does not
recognize the depth of our sinfulness or the height of God’s holiness.
We may want
justice from God-- but Jesus tells us that what we really need is mercy. He says:
Your Father is merciful. Those words tell us something about
ourselves—that we need his mercy. And they
tell us something about God—that we can count on his mercy.
The fact of the
matter is, we have an elevated view of how good we are because we measure ourselves
against the standard of other men. But
that is not God’s standard. God’s
standard for us (what we think and how we live and the things we say) is
himself-his holiness and goodness. And
by that standard none of us can stand under God’s justice—all we can do is cast
ourselves upon his mercy.
And he has had
mercy on us in his Son. Jesus was the
One who met God’s standard in all that he said and did -and what was in his
heart- and how he lived his life. And
yet the justice of almighty God fell upon because he came into this world to
take our place under God’s judgment at the cross so that all we would know is
God’s mercy.
We are God’s
children because of his mercy Jesus Christ and because of that mercy we are
called to be merciful towards other people—to have compassion on them-to take
pity on them—to empathize with their plight—and reach out to them with
forgiveness and love. Jesus said:
“Judge not, and you
will not be judged; condemn not, and you will not be condemned; forgive, and
you will be forgiven; give, and it will be given to you.
So
far we’ve asked: what do we want from
God for ourselves? And now the question
is what God does want from us when it comes to others? The answer is very simple: as his sons and daughters he wants us to be
like him: merciful and generous and
forgiving.
The verse that we
have before us about not judging is one of the most often quoted and yet
misused and misinterpreted verses in the Bible.
When Jesus says that we are not to judge he is not contradicting himself
and the rest of the Bible when it comes to spiritual discernment and the moral
judgment of the church. When we measure
behavior against the standard of the Bible we are not judging—God is.
But what Jesus is talking about- and what is absolutely
forbidden to the child of God- is the self-righteous, self-exalting judgment of
those who make themselves the
standard for everyone else—the kind of judging that always seems to acquit us while
condemning others.
This kind of
judgment and condemnation ALWAYS earns God’s condemnation because it removes God
from the judgment seat and places us upon it.
Instead of being
judgmental and harsh, we are to be forgiving and generous towards others just
like the Father has been forgiving and generous to us--with the promise of
Jesus that we will receive his abundant grace.
Jesus says we can expect that:
[A] Good measure,
pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For
with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.”
This
picture comes from the ancient marketplace.
A woman goes to the market place and makes her purchase of grain. But a generous merchant refuses to use an
exacting scale and instead fills her order with an overflowing abundance—far
beyond anything that she had any right to expect—far beyond what was merely
just.
That’s the way God
has dealt with us. His overflowing grace
has been poured into our lives. Not only
has he given us life—not only has he provided for our material needs—but he has
forgiven our sins and given us a place in his family and promised that we will
live with him forever.
Unexpected,
overflowing gracious generosity—that is what we have received from our heavenly
Father. And because we are his
children—he expects us to use the same generous measure in our dealings with
others.
Our forgiveness is
not to be grudging. Our giving is not to
be pinched. We are gracious, generous,
forgiving people because we have a heavenly Father who is gracious and generous
and forgiving and Jesus is the one who puts flesh and bone on what that kind of
life looks like:
Jesus also told them
a parable: “Can a blind man lead a blind man? Will they not both fall into a
pit? A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained
will be like his teacher.
When
Jesus calls us to be merciful as our heavenly Father is merciful-- and to be as
forgiving and generous to others as God has been to us--he is calling to live a
life for which there are no earthly parallels or analogies.
While the world
may know something of mercy-- it knows nothing of mercy that reaches out again
and again to lift up those who are avowed enemies. While the world may know something of
forgiveness and generosity-- it knows nothing of forgiveness without limits and
generosity that extends to the giving of one’s own life.
But this is the
mercy and forgiveness and generosity that we are called to live out in our
lives as children of the heavenly Father and the only place to learn of it—the
only place to see it in action-- is in the life of Jesus Christ.
Jesus called the
religious leaders of that day “blind guides” because they knew nothing of the
true nature of God-- and all of those who followed them could expect the same
fiery judgment that they would receive in the pit of hell.
But Jesus came to
open the eyes of the blind—to give us the ability to see God for who he really
is through his own life. And so Jesus is
the God-given teacher who leads us in the ways of mercy and forgiveness and
generosity.
We come to him
with our sins and he forgives us. We
come to him for assurance that we are really his people and he feeds us with
his body and blood. We come to him
needing guidance and direction for our lives and he speaks to us in his
Word. And though his word and through
the sacraments he is forming and shaping our lives to be like his own.
This training in
Christ-likeness doesn’t take place overnight—all of us are growing in our faith
and we need his ongoing help—but day-by-day we are becoming more like Jesus until
that day we stand in his presence with the burden of sin and selfishness cast
away and we will be like him for we will see him as he is.
Until that day we
need to recognize the limits of our own righteousness while we do everything in
our power to be merciful and forgiving and generous to those around us when
they don’t quite measure up to our standards.
Jesus said:
Why do you see the
speck that is in your brother's eye, but do not notice the log that is in your
own eye? How can you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me take out the speck
that is in your eye,’ when you yourself do not see the log that is in your own
eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will
see clearly to take out the speck that is in your brother's eye.
Occasionally
Caroline or I will get an eyelash in our eye and we will get the other one to
help us out--which is like a Three Stooges skit because neither one of us can
see all that well.
“Can you see
it?” “No, I don’t see anything!” “Well, I feel something.” “Look up--now look down!” “There I think I got it!” It’s hilarious! But imagine how ridiculous—how absurd it
would be if one of us was trying to help the other with an eyelash in their eye
while we had a wooden fence post sticking out of our own eye! There’s something not quite right with that
picture.
But Jesus says that’s
the way it is when we look with judgment on the shortcomings of
others—constantly focused on their little failures-- all the while we are blind
to the big problems in our own lives that need to be recognized and confessed
and forgiven by Jesus.
Jesus doesn’t say
that we are not to help our friends and family and fellow believers with the
problems in their lives anymore than Caroline or I would not try to get an
eyelash out of the other’s eye. But we
begin, not with the failures of our loved ones, but with our own
failures—asking God to help us see what our sins and shortcomings are so that
we can get rid of them through repentance and faith.
It’s only that
person who recognizes how good God is to take those fatal logs of sin out of their
eyes, who can clearly and compassionately see what needs to be done in the
lives of those around them. Then the
help that we give to others doesn’t come from a place of self-righteousness and
judgment--but from the mercy that was first given to us.
And so let us turn
away from self-righteousness and hard-heartedness and rejoice in the Good News
that in the Lord we have a merciful Father who calls us to be his merciful
children. Amen.
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)