1 Peter 1:22-25 New Year’s Eve (as
we are celebrating tonight--the passing of one year into the next) is not a
church festival per se-- but I do think that there is great value for the child
of God in attending worship services on this occasion.
We gather together
as God’s people to remind ourselves of the fleeting nature of our lives in this
world (that time does indeed pass us by!) and with each passing moment, we draw
closer and closer to our own passing from this world into eternity.
With that sober
reminder at the forefront of our minds, we gather together to recommit our
lives and our purposes and our goals in the year to come-- to that which does
not pass away: God and his Word. The Bible says that:
All flesh is like grass
and all its glory like the flower of grass; the grass withers and the flower
fall, but the word of the Lord remains forever.”
Not the most
flattering analogy in the world is it?
That our lives in this world are no more lasting, no more enduring, than
the grass of the field which is, as Jesus says, here today and tomorrow cut
down and thrown into the fire.
Satan tempts us to
believe that the world revolves around us.
The world tells us that we need to put ourselves first and look out for
our own self-interests. At the very
least, we like to believe that we will make our mark on the world: that our accomplishments–our name–our place
in this world will endure. But the Bible
has a very different view of humanity.
James tells us
that our lives are a mist that is present in the morning but is quickly
dissipated by the rising sun. And here
in First Peter, our lives are compared to the spring grass that is alive and
green at the beginning of the summer but by the end of the season is dry and
withered and dead.
We get God’s
point, don’t we? Our lives, even when
they are long by human standards--are almost nothing when compared to the
length of human history-- to say nothing of their brevity in the light of
eternity.
The end of 2019 and
the beginning of 2020 should be a sobering reminder to each of us of this
inescapable reality: that time marches
on-- and for a while we march along with it.
But unless the Lord comes first, there
will come a new year into which we will not enter-- because our earthly lives
will be no more.
That is true for
us all. No matter how great or important
or influential or loved we are--the Bible says:
“ALL men are like
grass”. Yes, there are
accomplishments and there are successes while we live–there are joys and
victories.
The bible says about
these high points: “their GLORY is like the flowers of the field.” There ARE
wonderful things that we can accomplish that enrich and beautify the lives of
others around us--but just for a time.
I think about the
wild-flowers of the hill country: glorious,
vibrant, bursting with more colors than the rainbow each spring. It is a joy and delight to see each new
variety as they flower and beautify the countryside.
And yet within
just a two or three week period, they are gone again–those individual flowers
never to be seen again on this earth. So
it will be for our lives—and so it will be for all tht we have accomplished.
The Bible says
that: “the grass withers and the flowers fall.” We must come to that hard realization (as
uncomfortable as it is!), that our earthly lives as we know them now will not
endure if we are to number our days aright so that we can apply our hearts to
what truly matters and what will endure past this life–and that is God and his
Word.
The Bible
says: “The Word of the Lord remains forever.” In contrast to our fleeting, transitory
lives, the Lord and his Word endure forever.
In the beginning,
God spoke this world into existence by the power of the eternal Word, and by
that same eternal Word the heavens and the earth are preserved—right up until he
lifts his voice and this world will be no more.
Countless
generations have come and gone. Billions
of people have lived and died. Empires
have risen and fallen. But the Word of
God has endured through it all and will
endure forever.
During the
Christmas season we learn that, the Word of God which was in the beginning,
through whom all things were created, is the second person of the Holy Trinity
who took on human flesh and became man–the Incarnate Word of God. The bible says that:
“In the beginning was
the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. The Word became flesh and made his dwelling
among us.”
Jesus Christ, the
incarnate Word of God, spoke the word of God throughout his earthly ministry,
calling people to repent and put their trust in him. And from the rough cross of Calvary, he spoke
the most important words the world has ever heard: “Father
forgive them” and “It is finished”.
Jesus Christ is
the final Word of God to all of humanity.
On Christmas morning we heard that, in
many and various ways God spoke to his people of old but now in these last days
he has spoken to us by his Son”. God
has spoken words of forgiveness and peace and reconciliation and new life that
has no end in His Son Jesus.
It is appropriate
that we remember and take note of the passing of time. But on this New Year’s Eve it is even more
important for us to remember that just because our life on this earth
doesn’t endure forever, that doesn’t mean that we won’t live forever–because
through faith in the Risen Christ–we will.
The Bible assures us that we
“…have been born
again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable, the living and abiding Word
of God.”
Each and every
person born of human parents, dies–it is inescapable. Adam’s sin has cursed every one of his
children. The bible says that, “sin entered the world through one man and
death through sin and in this way death came to all men.” Not one of us–young or old, rich or poor, male
or female–is immune from the deadly effects of Adam’s sin. We will die.
Because of this,
if we are to live beyond this life, if our lives are to be more than a mist
that is gone with the rising of the sun or grass that is cut down from one day
to the next, we must be born again.
Jesus said:
“I tell you the
truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again. No one can enter the kingdom of God unless he
is born of water and the Spirit. Flesh
give birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to the Spirit.”
The Good News for
us tonight (we who stare into the grim realities of the passing of time) is
that we have been born again of an imperishable seed–a seed that
cannot die–and that is the Word of God.
That Word of
promise, along with the power of the Holy Spirit, has been spoken to us in Word
and Sacrament—at the font and pulpit and altar.
It is this Word of Good News that has
been preached in Christian churches week after week since the time of the
apostles that–that has been given with the body and blood of Christ in Holy Communion–that
gives new life again and again–a life that has no end.
And because this
is who we are, born again believers through Spirit-worked faith in the Lord
Jesus Christ, we approach the new year with confidence and joy–knowing that
each day is a day to live for God’s glory until that day we enter into his
glory.
Because this is
who we are, we have a different set of priorities and goals and resolutions for
the new year, and for the rest of our life, than the sinful world around us. The Bible says that:
Having purified your
souls by your obedience to the truth for a sincere brotherly love, love one
another earnestly from a pure heart.
Let the world around us resolve to: lose weight–to get the upper hand on their
finances– to get organized. Let our
resolve as the people of God be to love one another more and more–to obey God’s
Word-- and to keep ourselves unstained by the world.
Countless millions
around us at this very moment lives in fear and dread at the passing of
time. They attempt to cover that fear
with a foolish facade of substance abuse and sensuality, but make no mistake
about it, it is always there–this fear and dread at the passing of time.
For us who are born again into a living faith
in Christ, that fear has been removed.
We don’t have to worry about what the future holds because we know who
holds the future. We don’t have to worry about
getting ahead, about having more this new year than last year, about achieving
greater and greater heights in our career.
Instead, our lives
as God’s people are focused on things eternal: caring for one another in loving
ways–submitting our lives in obedience to God’s direction–and drawing ever
closer to the One with whom we will spend eternity. God grant us this life in the year to come
and eternal life in the end! Amen.
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