Deuteronomy 10:12-22 We
are saved by God’s grace alone. That is
the central teaching of Holy Scripture- and that is the rallying cry of the
Reformation- and that is the confession of our church. Our life with God, from beginning to end, is
a gift that he gives.
But God’s people have always
struggled with what that means in their day-to-day lives—how to live that out. The problem is not with God and his gracious
gifts. The problem is with our flesh
that wants to turn grace and forgiveness and God’s saving work on our behalf-- into
license and sin and going our own way.
That is what we see in God’s Word
today. The people of Israel had been
rescued from slavery. Their enemies were
drowned in the waters of the Red Sea.
They possessed the riches of Egypt.
They were led into God’s presence.
But there in the sight of God at Sinai they abandoned their Savior
God and made an idol and worshiped it in the place of the LORD and committed
the worst kinds of sins.
Let me tell you the story of another people—a people who have been rescued
from slavery to sin and death, a people whose enemies have been drowned in the
waters of holy baptism, a people who possess the eternal riches of forgiveness
and life, and yet a people who continue to sin in the sight of their Savior God
and show with their lives that there are other things that come before him. We know those people, don’t we?
The words that we have before us today are spoken to all of God’s
people, in every place and time (including us here today!) about what it means
in our day to day lives, in how we live our lives, that we are the saved people
of God. The Bible says:
What does the Lord your God require of you, but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to keep the
commandments and statutes of the Lord, which I am
commanding you today for your good?
It
is critically important to understanding and applying this text to our lives that
we know WHEN these words were
spoken.
God’s people had been saved.
Their enemies had been destroyed.
They had been given riches beyond measure. They had been provided for on their journey
and led along the way into the presence of God.
All of this was the accomplished facts of salvation history-- and so it
is for us. This is what our Savior God
has done for his people.
It is in that context of God’s saving work and his gracious gifts
that these words are spoken to God’s people so that we might understand what
God desires from us—not to earn our salvation—but to live out that identity.
We are to fear the LORD—to stand in awe of him and glorify him and
magnify him. We are to walks in his
ways—to value and treasure what he says as important and to go in the direction
he leads. We are to love him—not because
a command can make us love him--but simply because of who he is and what he has
done for us. We are to serve him with
everything we have, in all we do. And we
are to keep his commandments.
And we are to do this for our good—for OUR good. You
see dear friends in Christ, God does not need our love. God does not need our obedience. God does not need our service.
He has created us and redeemed us for OUR good --not only with the gift of salvation he gives, but so
it is with the life of the saved that he calls us to live—it is for our good because
he loves us and knows what will truly bless us because he is our Creator. The Bible says that:
to the Lord your God belong heaven and
the heaven of heavens, the earth with all that is in it. Yet the Lord set his heart in love on your fathers and chose their offspring
after them, you above all peoples, as you are this day.
Here is what the Holy Spirit wants
you to understand—here is the love that will empower you to fear, love and
trust in God above all things and serve him in every way all your days.
The one, true and living God of the universe, the One who is before
and after all things, the One who called all things into being by his almighty,
powerful word and sustains them in the same way today—that almighty, eternal,
righteous, holy God-- loves you.
And he has always loved you- and always known you- and has chosen
you in Christ to be his own and has done everything necessary in time and
eternity to make it so.
Out of all the wonders of the universe, out of all the mighty works
of his hands, out of everything he has done in the past and will do in the days
to come, the LORD has set his heart on you.
That was the promise of everlasting love that God made to his
ancient people and that is the promise of everlasting love that God makes to
you sitting here today and the content of that love and the shape of that love
and the source of that love is Jesus.
That was true for God’s ancient people and that is true for us: the promise to come for the Israelites and
the promised fulfilled for us. For all
of God’s people in every place and time, Jesus is the only reason for us to be
counted as those loved by God. And it is
that love- and only that love-- which has the power to change us. The Bible says:
Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your
heart, and be no longer stubborn. For the Lord your God is
God of gods and Lord of lords, the great, the mighty, and the awesome God, who
is not partial and takes no bribe.
There is no way to fear love and
trust in God above all things-- and there is no way to serve God all our days
in all our ways-- until our hearts are changed.
Our
lives of faith and obedience and service do not make our place with God and
they do not earn our salvation. Our
lives of faith and obedience and service do not come first when it comes to
having a life with God-- but follow God’s saving work for us-- and come from a
change of heart within us.
That
is what the Holy Spirit means when he says that we are to “circumcise” our
hearts—heartfelt repentance and faith. It
is not enough to merely go through the motions with God—to regard our faith and
life with God as something external to us—to think that God is pleased with
acts that are merely religious—or
with people who think that they can make a deal with him.
That
is what the Holy Spirit is talking about when he says that God takes no bribes
and shows no partiality. Instead, we are
to have a genuine change of heart and mind and direction in life and turn away
from sins and turn towards our Savior God.
Here’s the thing…
We
will always see God’s call to live changed lives as a burdensome imposition—always
as something that is outside of us--until our hearts are changed through
repentance and faith that understands the holiness and righteousness of God to
be sure-- but also the greatness of his love for us who do not deserve, and
could never earn, his love. The Bible
says:
He executes justice for the fatherless and
the widow, and loves the sojourner, giving him food and clothing. Love the sojourner, therefore, for you were
sojourners in the land of Egypt.
The great act of the Lord’s salvation
in the Old Testament is the deliverance of God’s people from slavery in
Egypt. They did not deserve it. They could not earn it. They could not do it on their own. They were poor and weak and far from
home. All they could do was cry out to
the LORD for his mercy. And that is what
they received.
So
it is for us. What we could not earn,
what we did not deserve, what we could never accomplish by our own strength and
resources God has done for us in his mercy, sending his Son into this world as
our great Redeemer who has purchased our freedom by his own blood and set us
free from sin and death.
The
story of our life with God is one of love and mercy and grace and forgiveness
and so that is to be the story of our life with others, a reflection of our
life with God: we love because he first
loved us and has shown us that love in his Son.
The Bible says:
You shall fear the Lord your God. You shall serve him and hold fast to him, and by his name
you shall swear. He is your praise. He is your God, who has done for you these great
and terrifying things that your eyes have seen.
I can’t imagine that there is anyone
sitting here today who would not have loved to have been there with God’s
people as they walked cross the Red Sea on dry land and then to be guided by
his presence every step of the way in the wilderness. How could anyone who had seen and heard these
things not offer to God their entire lives for all that the LORD had done?
And
yet, what they saw and heard pales in comparison to what we see and hear in
Jesus Christ. God’s own Son come to die
for his people! God’s own Son defeating sin
and death and the power of the devil!
God’s own Son feeding his people with his own body and blood and God’s
own Son leading his people to the Promised Land of heaven!
Our
service and our praise and our worship is very little indeed compared to what God
has done for us in Jesus and promises to do
for us in the days to come. The
Bible says;
Your fathers went down to Egypt seventy
persons, and now the Lord your God has made you as
numerous as the stars of heaven.
There is not a person in
the world who would have said that this small group desert tribesmen would have
ever survived in Egypt. But the Lord was
with them and even after centuries of oppression they were hundreds of
thousands. Only the LORD could have
accomplished that!
Today those hundreds of
thousands who knew the LORD as their Savior God are now numbered in the
billions and we are part of that multitude through faith in Jesus. That is why we can give ourselves
wholeheartedly in the Lord’s service and trust that he stands ready to bless us
with his gifts—because he has always done that for his people and always
will! Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment