Monday, October 14, 2024

Fighting the world [Trinity 20]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Isaiah 55:1-9

  • Ephesians 5:15-21

  • St. Matthew 22:1-14
 


Grace, mercy, and peace will be with us, from God the Father and from Jesus Christ the Father's Son, in truth and love.
 
Who speaks to you today, only through His Gospel, saying,
“‘Friend, how did you get in here without a wedding garment?’ And he was speechless.”
 
Thus far from God’s Word, caused to be written that we may hear of the wedding garment Christ provides to us. For in exchange, He took on our sinful garments and ascended the cross. Likewise, it is only in the preached Gospel that God offers the free forgiveness of sins, both to you and to your neighbor and the world rages against this.
 
“Let the fighting men stop fighting this inhuman earth for one hour and [we] will learn how much security there is”. That is none, except in the Word of God. A quote from Rose Wilder Lane, daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder of Little House on the Prairie fame. What she means is that security is not promised in this life or on this earth, unless its found in the promises of Christ.
 
For the world is full of tragedy and disaster. You only have to look a couple states away to find flooding and damage that no amount of preparation could have stopped. These are the death throes of a world stained by sin.
 
Though I would disagree that the earth is inhuman, in its sinful corruption, it is rejecting life more and more until Jesus ends it. That means that today, just as it was in the 1800s, life is a fight. And I have quoted Ms Rose, because it is pretty near the mark of being the Martyr’s Motto.
 
The martyrs might have taken it a step further and say of this world that there is nothing left for God’s Children. Since Eden closed its doors, there is no garden to return to, no garden to walk alone in. The world has no use for a loving God, thus the Christian is in a fight.
 
This is our Gospel today. The Friend without a wedding garment is a martyr, though for the other side, seemingly. He stands up for what he believes in. He does not change what he thinks. He even goes so far as to bring himself in front of the opposition.
 
Though that is where he went wrong. “You will be brought in front of governors and kings”, as in passive, says the Lord. You do not seek your own martyrdom. Martyrdom finds you on the basis of the confession of faith. We believe this, not to scare us, but to put martyrdom in its place. It is what happens, but it is not what determines who is or isn't a Christian.
 
“You will be brought”. This Word of God leads us to our next Reformation martyrs, the very first to die for the Evangelical message preached by the Reformers: Jonny Esschen and Hank Vos. These two were young monks, of the same order as Dr. Luther, Augustinian, and therefore were known by Luther. 
 
One day in 1523, Professor Luther stopped teaching his class in Wittenberg for a moment to receive news from a messenger. “He began to cry silently,” one of his students said later. The news concerned the two young monks.
 
Their Augustinian monastery was in Antwerp in the Netherlands and though Brothers John and Henry were still in the monastery, they followed Luther’s teaching and taught it publicly. They had preaching duties, and they preached the pure Gospel of justification by faith alone apart from works, along with others from that monastery. The city’s people had been coming in overflowing crowds to the monastery to hear their preaching.
 
That drew the attention of Jerome Aleander, who led the opposition to Luther after the 95 Theses, and who wrote the condemnation of Luther after his trial at Worms. Aleander then went to the Netherlands and instigated the persecution of these monks who had turned Lutheran. No matter what pressure was brought upon the monks, like the apostles in Acts 3 and 4, they continued to preach Jesus with joy.
 
Soon their monastery was closed, then burned down, and all the monks put into prison. Some escaped; Brothers John and Henry went into hiding and eventually were found, arrested, brought to Brussels in chains, and put on trial. “Trial”
 
They went to the inquisitors. They were given a chance to live by denying the teachings of Luther. They said, “No, we will not retract anything, we will not deny the word of God.” Their judges said, “We declare you to be heretics, deserving to be burned alive.”
 
John and Henry were taken to the governing council and then the executioner. When they were first bound to the stake, the executioners waited half an hour, hoping their fear of death would make them retract the faith they had preached. They responded by singing psalms. Their judges said, “Become converted, or you shall die in the name of the devil.” – “No,” they said, “we will die like Christians, for the truth of the Gospel.”
 
The fire was lit and the flames rose toward them. One of them declared he felt at peace, “as if on a bed of roses.” The two said together, “O Lord Jesus, Son of David, have mercy upon us!” The flames burned through their ropes; but rather than run free, one of them threw himself on the fire, folded his hands and cried out, “Lord Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on us!” They sang the Te Deum and the Apostles’ Creed, still confessing their faith, until the smoke choked their voices. After four hours, they died. 
 
It was July 1, 1523. They were the first Lutheran martyrs: the first to be killed for refusing to deny Jesus’s Scriptural teaching of justification by faith alone. That is, they refused to don the cloak and tunic of the mad, sinful world and were ejected from it the only way sinful man knows how: murder.
 
In response to God bringing new life to this dying world, bodily, sin , death and the power of the devil reject it. They reject it because it is not how we do things around here. They reject it because it hasn’t been approved by the brass. They reject it, because if they accept, then they have to confess their own sins of being wrong up till now.
 
Of course we sympathize with the persecutors and we must repent of this sin. We become so inflexible and unloving that we believe what will fix everyone, excluding me, is a good old fashioned crusade. You believe with hard hearts and believe that persecution and suppression extends the kingdom of God.
 
But take heed lest ye fall! Acts 5 says it beautifully, “…if this plan or this undertaking is of man, it will fail; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them. You might even be found opposing God!… So the Apostles left the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the Name (Acts 5:38-41).
 
This is first said of the persecution and murder of Jesus. The world was quick to condemn Jesus, because He offered hope and solutions, but at the cost of Confession. He offered joy and peace, but at the cost of your inflated social status. He offered salvation, but you first had to believe that you needed to be saved from a world that rages against the faith.
 
And to prove that to you, Jesus wore your body. He was like you in everyway, except without sin. He so pleased God that all grew jealous, because they thought God was pleased with them. But, in His Body, God revealed the price of truly Loving God: crucifixion.
 
And everyone could tell that Jesus was clothed differently. He was not fearful, He was not concerned with being honored by the mighty, and He did not pay attention to man-made rules. Jesus was concerned about Justification by Faith alone, wore it on His sleeve, and that’s how He was caught. 
 
You see, since the days of Noah, there has been a party going on. Sure, God would show up every now and then, but it was not our days and it was not in front of us. So, “they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage…and…were unaware“ (Mt 24:37-39). There has been a worldly wedding feast going on.
 
Thus it was at the coming of the Son of Man, Jesus. He found His creation celebrating and when He entered to join, He found they were celebrating the death of God and their overcoming of Him by reason. When Jesus shows up, it is a surprise. Is it true? Is He really God? 
 
They cowered a bit, but realized nothing was happening. No smiting, no thunder, no fire. Not only that, but Jesus was a man. Jesus was wearing a godly garment to an ungodly party. He was clothed in God’s own Righteousness and was therefore ruining the party. They bound Him, took Him outside of the city, and crucified Him.
 
This seemingly heroic act, on the part of sinful humanity, only proved one thing: that God’s Word is True and all men are liars and we should distrust them wholly. This was also the greatest fault of Johnny and Hank, to trust in God solely, such that now the act of murder hangs over the oppressor’s heads, instead of the faith they thought they flaunted. 
 
Dr. Luther wrote a ballad, so moved he was, called “A new song now shall be begun”, as in the Gospel has begun to bear fruit once again. In it, he sang, “Out from this world they both have trod;
Their heav’nly crowns they cherished; Like any pious child of God, For His Word have they perished.”
 
In our Old Testament reading, verse 5, Isaiah prophesies, “Behold, you shall call a nation that you do not know, and a nation that did not know you shall run to you, because of the Lord your God, and of the Holy One of Israel, for he has glorified you.” That is, the religious establishment may be comfortable, but God is calling those established by His faith, not by money or vote.
 
On top of that, if you find yourself sinning to keep God’s church on earth in order, then maybe you should step back and re-think your life’s endeavors. What glory is there in creating martyrs? What glory is there in having to resort to murder because you could not convince someone with your “better ideas”? 
 
There is none. But for Jesus and His Gospel, there is no end to His glory, even in the grave. Not only has He given clear and bold confessions of Faith on earth, but He has taken His godly garments into the grave and back out again. He has run rough-shod through all the embattlements of death and hell, defeating them at their own game.
 
Thus, the way to Life is open. Whether it is reached by Jesus returning and taking us there directly, or through the Christian’s grave, now sanctified by the Tomb of Christ. 
 
“Do not get drunk on the wine of this world” but be filled by the Spirit. This world will chew you up and spit you out without a second thought. Best to be filled with the Gospel, Body and Blood, so that when you are confronted with it, you recognize it immediately. And when you don’t find it around you, the freedom from the guilt and condemnation of sin for Christ’s sake, is the first thing off your lips.
 
The world is not idle in its corruption, but neither is Christ. For you will be brought in front of the Judge’s seat, clothed in Christ, and will live with Him by His side for all eternity. This, no raging of the world, physical or spiritual, can take away.
 

Monday, October 7, 2024

Martyrdom is real [Trinity 19]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Genesis 28:10-17

  • Ephesians 4:22-28

  • St. Matthew 9:1-8

 

Grace, mercy, and peace will be with us, from God the Father and from Jesus Christ the Father's Son, in truth and love.

Who speaks to you today, only through His Gospel, saying,

“And behold, some of the scribes said to themselves, ’This man is blaspheming’”
 
Thus far from our Gospel reading, important enough to be mentioned, because this charge of blasphemy is what sends Jesus to His death. It is no small accusation. It is in God’s Word so that we realize martyrdom is real, not just for Jesus, but for all who bear His cross. This belief that we too are martyrs, strengthens our faith and let’s us see the world and our neighbor in pity and forgiveness. 
 
Maybe the joke goes, “In mother Russia, you do not comprehend sermon, sermon comprehends you.”
Perhaps, then, we can make the statement: “You do not prepare for martyrdom, martyrdom prepares you.” Or similar: in order to teach that though you may feel you need to prepare to die for the faith, endure some apocalypse situation, or even share your faith in an aggressive way, you will not be able. Only the Holy Spirit does this, as our ancient Christian martyrs teach us.
 
That is, even though they were put in such audacious situations and condemned by such outrageous and unjust accusations and demands, they knew the right way to act and the right things to say. Now you could chalk this up to someone adding those details into the legend, writing it down after the fact, but we have a promise for just such a thing.
 
In Luke 12:12, Jesus promises, “…the Holy Spirit will teach you in that very hour what you ought to say.” That is, the Spirit of Jesus will prepare us for martyrdom or to speak in front the super-spiritual, who are closer to God than we are, allegedly. The words we are to say and the strength needed to see it through, will be a gift no preparation can produce.
 
We confess this faith: the Christian is a martyr. Martyrdom is a real thing and it is a noble thing. Those who suffer through it are the Christian heroes, showing us just how heroic and courageous faith is. They treasure their confession of the one, true God such that they would rather suffer and die than fall away from the faith.
 
Our October Reformation hero today is Jan Hus. From Bohemia, he was ordained a priest and began preaching and teaching his people in the common language, which was Czech, in Prague. Until 1409, he was teaching that Scripture alone was the only authority in the Church, which led to him teaching against Roman practices such as simony (the act of selling church offices or roles), the sale of indulgences (granting remission of sins in purgatory for a price), and pilgrimages to view relics.
 
In 1412, he was excommunicated by Pope Alexander and forced to leave Prague, when he refused to stop preaching. Under the false pretense of safe passage, Hus was coaxed out of exile to attend a Church Council meeting in Constance, Germany, where they thoroughly condemned him and turned him over to local authorities to be burned at the stake July 6, 1415 for no other reason than “he was preaching the Word”.
 
Turned over to a secular court because, you know, God has that whole thing about “you shall not murder”. But if we hand him over to someone else and they murder him for us, then our hands are clean, right God? Sound familiar. 
 
“Pilate said to them, ‘Take [Jesus] yourselves and judge him by your own law.’ The Jews said to him, ‘It is not lawful for us to put anyone to death.’” (John 18:31). As in, we don’t have a good enough case so we must kill him. God will understand. It isn’t us doing the actual killing, so we’re not responsible. 
 
For Jesus and for the martyrs in Him, He says, “They will put you out of the synagogues. Indeed, the hour is coming when whoever kills you will think he is offering service to God” (Jn 16:2). So it will be persecution coming from the so-called “God’s chosen people”, because they are concerned with pleasing Him and making sure He is still almighty.
 
In our sin, we find that we are not willing to side with the martyrs. They are troublesome for us and extreme. If they just go along, they will get along. If they just spoke nicer and acted more Christ-like, then they would not have gotten arrested. If they have nothing to hide, they have nothing to worry about.
 
This is the timid, false faith which sin, death, and the devil produce in us and want in us. It stagnates us and makes us indecisive. We waffle back and forth between “I have nothing new to learn about the faith” and “if I just keep my head down, martyrdom won’t find me”. 
 
Soon, it will be impossible to forget Jesus’s words, “If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you…But the word that is written in their Law must be fulfilled: ‘They hated me without a cause.’” (Jn 15:18, 25)
 
There was no cause to hate Jesus. For which work do you condemn me, Jesus asked. Was it the good deeds? Was it the compassion on the poor? Was it love of neighbor? No. And this is the frustrating part. It is not for any logic or reasonable argument to be made in court and found sound. It is simply because Jesus is not like you.
 
Once, you were of the world, hating the things of God without reason and despising His Word. Once you were on the devil’s side. What would I have done, as an apostle, at the time of Jesus’s arrest? Probably the same thing they did. I would have been a coward. 
 
That would have been for the salvation of the world, though. Had Jesus been prevented from going to the cross, He would not have completed His work. And, if He had not completed His work, Abraham, Jan Hus, and all the patriarchs and martyrs would have died in their sins. Nothing heroic about it as we can all accomplish such a feat.
 
But in the martyrdom of Jesus Christ, death is swallowed up. In the martyrdom of Christ, the Way is made to gain heaven. In the martyrdom of Christ, the Word of God is given proper authority over all, even the decrees and decisions of kings, presidents, and councils. For when the Pharisees condemn Jesus for blasphemy, they are merely revealing their own sin.
 
Their blasphemy is that God has not promised to forgive sins through men. Their blasphemy is that God has not said to all of creation “obey me alone” so that a paralytic might regain his legs through the Word. Their blasphemy is to accuse Jesus of lying about the very thing God had come to accomplish for all eternity, since the beginning: the free forgiveness of sins.
 
Jesus is not lying. He is not lying about the lovingkindness of God, He is not lying about the martyrdom of God, and He is not lying about the eternal life of God. What is death? It is nothing compared to the Life God possesses, which is the same life given to you, in Christ. “For it is not I who lives, but Christ Who lives in me. I am crucified with Christ” (Gal 2:20).
 
This love is what God declares. Just as He declared the heavens and the earth to spring into being, that same word is spoken to you who face death. Jesus goes ahead of you. He shows, with His own life, what the conclusion of this world is: martyrdom. But He goes on and shows what the conclusion of life in Him is: none. There is no end to His life, therefore there is no end to your life, Dear Christian.
 
It is the Word alone, in the flesh, Who gives such authority to men, to have faith in His Word of life over the word of death. Readiness to die is a gift of the Holy Spirit, and that the Lord will give it at the right time, when it is needed. The martyrs are not examples of superhuman faith; they are examples of the power of God and the work of the Holy Spirit. Cheerfulness in the face of death is not accomplished by our own strength, but by the Word of God.
 
Adam knew this. Though he faced his own death, a Savior was promised to him, through the Word. Job knew this. He even had the audacity to declare that even “after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in my flesh I shall see God” (Job 19:26). And every person that died in the faith. They knew and believed and so received Faith, which also possesses the eternal life of Jesus.
 
The gift of bearing the cross is the gift of the Holy Spirit. It may be that we live out a life of relative comfort, yet steadfastly support our church, and that is our martyrdom. Yet, we do not forget that the day of the Lord is coming, like a furnace. 
 
And in that day, we will indeed have to live through it, but it will go just as it did for the 3 young men in Babylon. They were in the fire, but the fire did not touch them, because they were in the fire with Jesus. They did not plan that beforehand. But Jesus endures forever, and they will be made like Him, so we will endure forever in Him. 


Monday, September 23, 2024

Worthy [The Feast of St. Matthew]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Ezekiel 1:10-14

  • Ephesians 4:7-16

  • St. Matthew 9:9-13
 


Grace to you all and Peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus, the Christ.
 
Who speaks to you today as always, only through His Gospel saying,
“Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick.”
 
In our Lord’s words to us today, we hear it, at His bidding, to see God’s desire for mercy, fully accomplished and given in Jesus Christ, true God and true man. This should point us to the lack of merit and worthiness in ourselves, not just in a negative way, but a positive. Negative being poor, miserable sinners. Positive being, my worth depends on Christ and not myself. We apply this to life by giving and speaking to others about this worthiness Jesus offers to all.
 
Speaking of unworthiness, St. Matthew writes after the events in his gospel. Why is that important? It is important because he consciously chose to include the words heard today. Embarrassing words. Shameful words about himself. Anyone writing for posterity would not include these words, unless they added a caveat.
 
The caveat usually goes like this: yeah, I was bad and made bad choices, but when I turned my life around, I did good-er and am thankful for it. We quickly add the “good-er” part, because we want to make excuses for the bad parts and not be judged, essentially saying, “I wasn’t that bad”. And by doing so, we hope to fool God into looking past the sins of our youth, and agreeing with us.
 
St. Matthew had no such fantasies, no such caveats. He lays his life out there in the open and the horrid sins he committed before he was called, as he was recalling and writing about Jesus. He allows the words of the Pharisees to stand which place St. Matthew squarely in the party of the sinners.
 
The same sinners of whom the Lord spoke in Genesis 13, “Now the men of Sodom were wicked, great sinners against the Lord” (Gen 13:13). The same sinners of which Samuel was told to prophesy, “And the Lord sent you on a mission and said, ‘Go, devote to destruction the sinners’” (1 Sam 15:18). And from Psalm 104:35, “Let sinners be consumed from the earth, and let the wicked be no more!”
 
Hearing it directly from God’s mouth, of course the Pharisees would have that same opinion in Jesus’s time. It is simply a matter of justice and God is a God of Justice. If the sinner and his lawlessness were allowed into heaven for eternity, it would be hell. 
 
It would be no better than where we are at today, where the wicked fill their bellies and get away with murder, theft, and wars. There would be no point in promising heaven, no one would want to go, and God would be labelled a false god, not worthy, Himself.
 
There would also be no point in following or paying attention to anything St. Matthew wrote. How could you trust a man to claim to have written a gospel book with a past like his? Did you hear what he tweeted back in college?!
 
Repent. The United States’ favorite pastime is no longer baseball, but character assassination. Breaking the Eighth Command is your favorite hobby. You love to call into question the past of your opponents, especially when it has nothing to do with the issues at hand. Because if you can break their public image, you can break them. 
 
If you can call attention to them, then no one will pay attention to you.
 
If you point your finger, three point back at you…so just point with five and you’ll be golden. 
If Christianity were up to us, to build, to maintain, and to increase, there would be no Christianity. If our worthiness were up to us, we would forever remain unworthy. If Church were based on how well we portrayed it to others, no one would be Christian.
 
St. Matthew knew this and wrote his gospel book thus in order to teach just such a thing. We are disciples at St. Matthew’s feet and he preaches to us saying, “Look. If I were making it up, why would I character assassinate myself? Why wouldn’t I want you thinking so highly of me so that you say, ‘truly he was a righteous man, worthy of God’s pen’”? How am I going to fleece you of your cash, if I made a living fleecing others and you knew it?!
 
And Jesus knows it. Therefore, He teaches, “He who through faith is righteous shall live” (Rom 1:17). Jesus doesn’t want you to believe in yourself. Jesus doesn’t want you to believe in St. Matthew. Jesus wants you to believe in Him and His Worthiness. 
 
St. Matthew wants your faith squarely on the crucified shoulders of Jesus Christ, so he retains his sinful past to show that it was at the Word of Jesus that he left his lucrative, comfy lifestyle, to pick up his cross, and be hated and martyred for the Truth.
 
What the Lord did for St. Matthew, He can do for you for just 30 easy installments of 99.99. 
Or as St. Matthew actually said it, “the sick have need of a physician; the sinners have need of a Savior.” 
 
But a Savior cannot be worthy Who dirties Himself with sin, Who stands in the way of sinners (Ps 1:1), as the more-righteous-than-you Pharisees conclude. A proper Savior and Son of God does not enter in the path of the wicked (Prov 4:14). But Jesus does. And He does so in two ways.
 
First, He does not commit sin. We usually read those verses as speaking about us, not Jesus. And we have underlined them in our Bibles, in order to come back and do them…later in life, because its all about me! Jesus stands in the way of sinners by standing with sinners. That is, next to them, with them in their life, going to where they are. That is how we should read those verses.
 
He enters the path of the wicked in order to reach the wicked, to talk with them, to reason with them. To discuss with them all that should be done about justice. What should God do with all these sinners?
 
Therefore, secondly, Jesus stands in the way of sinners and enters the path of the wicked in order to become sin and wickedness that He would be condemned, suffer and die with all sin of all time and regenerate us as righteous before God (2 Cor 5:21). He dives into the greatest and most wretched hives of scum and villainy in order to rescue those who need rescuing.
 
How else is He supposed to remain good and upright? As Psalm 25 says, “Good and upright is the Lord; therefore he instructs sinners in the way (Ps 25:8). If He cannot talk to sinners, touch sinners, be with sinners, then they will be lost.
 
This is the love of the cross, born of the cross, which turns in the direction where it does not find good that it may enjoy, but where it may confer good upon the bad and needy person. "It is more blessed to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35), Jesus says. (AE 31:57)
 
This is the love of the Word Made Flesh; of the Lamb of God Who takes away the sin of the world. That He Who was Most Worthy (Ps 145:3), Who is above all, and through all, and in all (Eph 4:6) was emptied, made Himself nothing (Phil 2:7) in order that you be full and complete and overflowing (Jn 15:11).
 
St. Matthew’s worth, then, was not based on his ability to keep up the appearance of a righteous, holy man. His worth was found, as Abraham’s was found: he “believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness” (Gen 15:6).
 
Dr. Luther said, “He is not righteous who works much, but he who, without work, believes much in Christ” (AE 31:55). In other words, the righteous live by faith. Faith is the lifeblood which justifies and makes right with God. And faith is a gift to those made worthy by the Blood of the Lamb.
 
The words "without work" should be understood in the following manner: Not that the righteous person does nothing, but that his works do not make him righteous, rather that his righteousness creates works. For grace and faith are infused without our works. After they have been imparted, the works follow. (AE 31:55-56)
 
Christ is our righteousness. Christ is St. Matthew’s righteousness and in Whom we are to believe, if we have faith in St. Matthew’s gospel. 
 
Christ is our worth. Our Confessions state it this way:
“worthiness does not depend upon great or small weakness or strength of faith, but upon the merit of Christ, which the distressed father of little faith (Mark 9:24) enjoyed as well as Abraham, Paul, and others who have a joyful and strong faith” (SD vii:71 ).
 
“For Christians who are of weak faith…troubled, and heartily terrified because of the greatness and number of their sins, and think that in this their great impurity they are not worthy of this precious treasure and the benefits of Christ, and who feel and lament their weakness of faith, and from their hearts desire that they may serve God with stronger, more joyful faith and pure obedience, they are the truly worthy guests for whom this highly venerable Sacrament [and sacred feast] has been especially instituted and appointed; as Christ says…”They that be whole need not a physician, but they that be sick”. Also “Him that is weak in the faith receives”…(Rom 14:3), for God has received [you]. For whosoever believes in the Son of God, be it with a strong or a weak faith, has eternal life (John 3:15)” (SD vii:69-70)
 
 

Monday, September 16, 2024

The Exaltation of the Holy Cross


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Numbers 21:4-9

  • Philippians 2:5-11

  • St. John 12:20-36


Grace to you all and Peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus, the Christ.
 
Who, once again speaks to you today, saying:
"While you have the light, believe in the light, that you may become sons of light. ' These things Jesus spoke, and departed, and was hidden from them."
 
Thus far from our Gospel reading, included in God's Word to tell us exactly where Jesus is hiding. It is important for Jesus to hide, because if He were among us as He was with the Apostles, we would simply take advantage of Him and turn Him into a figurehead for what we believe to be true. For this reason, God hides Himself on the cross in order that we find Him as the Crucified and Risen Savior.
 
Now, I know you know, because if you encounter anyone calling themselves "Christian" in the wild, they will speak about the cross, the cross, the cross. And although many "churches" are taking down crosses from their artwork and sanctuaries, it has always been understood as central to the Christian Faith.
 
From Pentecost on, the cross was both a revered symbol and a pejorative for believers and non-believers respectively. To not have the cross is to not have Jesus. So, we must ask the question: what does it mean to have the cross?
 
On this day, we especially bring focus on exalting the cross of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Not that we don’t every other day, but lets just say that if, today, you were to visit the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, in Jerusalem, or Rome’s Basilica of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem, you would probably get to see a piece of the one, true cross. Possibly. Maybe. And that's the best explanation you'll get from them that believe it.
 
Allegedly discovered around 327 AD by St. Helena, mother of Constantine the Great of Roman Emperor fame, newly converted to Christianity, she proved the truth of the true cross being found by letting a sick woman touch it. There were two other crosses as control variables. The woman touched the two fakes, and remained sick, but having touched the "real" one, she was healed. Thus far, the origin of today feast day.
 
In the ensuing years, basilicas and chapels were built to house other pieces of the true cross so they could be venerated and their true powers offered to the faithful that kiss and touch them, all quite apart from Jesus of course. They are under lock and key and guard so that no one steals them!
 
But why? If they have the power to heal, why are they not in constant motion around the world, healing those in hospitals and war-torn countries? Why are they not free and available? Not that such things mattered to medieval parishioners, because they trusted their pastors. They trusted them to teach that, relics?, why not? God can do anything He wants, right? Even imbue whatever He wants with His holiness anytime.
So what are we doing in Church, today? Why aren't we all relic hunters, trying to piece together God in this world in order that we have His Real Presence? We need to run after God, apparently. Where is He going this time? Maybe a phone booth in San Dimas, CA? We need to jump after Him. Maybe He's surfing the Jet Stream?
 
Regardless of my due or undue sarcasm, for the Christian the cross is central to faith and we get that from the faithful in the Old Testament. For the faithful in the Old Testament, God was not just everywhere doing anything He wanted. He promised to be somewhere in order that those who were there would encounter Him.
 
The promise was to leave a sign, or mark, to show where the Lord would be doing His work and continuing that work to the end of the age. It was not going to be a mark that would perish such as something made of wood that decomposes over time. The Lord says to Noah that the sign He gives will be forever, to all future generations. If Jesus wanted His actual cross to be that sign, we would have the whole thing, now. He is not weak.
 
The promise was the Sign and yet we look for signs and wonders elsewhere. The difference being that one sign is the Lord's Sign and the others are things we play with in the dirt, the relics, whether they are Apostles' finger bones or enough slivers of wood to build an Ark. We find it easier to trust in those things we can handle and touch, than in the promises of God.
 
We are so weak in sin, that we are like the Israelites and the serpents. Once bitten, we'd look to the sign of the bronze serpent, be healed, and go off to get bit again and love every minute of it. We'd feel as if we really are part of God's plan. If God wants to heal me, then I'll just go out and make myself sick. If God wants to forgive me, I should go out and gather as much sin as I can in my life, so He can forgive me bunches.
 
Dear Christians, you do not have to go far in life to find sin crouching at the door. But at that same door knocks the true, promised sign sent to rescue from such a deadly predicament.
 
At the start of this sermon, though I quoted Jesus hiding Himself, our clue is to where Jesus will show Himself. In verse 33 of the Gospel today, Jesus speaks to show us where He will be, that is what kind of death He was going to die.
 
In showing, He gives us the sign and Moses foretells it. The "pole" on which the bronze serpent was hung, was literally a sign. The sign of the bronze serpent is, not just that it hangs on a sign, but that the very thing that poisoned and threatened death, was the cure.
 
When the people looked upon their poison, they were reminded of their sin. The snakes were only there to punish according to the Law they had broken, that is despising the Lord's Supper that He had given to them in the desert.
 
Though looking at their punishment, they are saved by grace, made well again by looking at the very fate that should have been theirs. That is, suffering the consequences for their own sinful actions.
 
But they didn't. And they wouldn't. Instead, the stiff-necked people that the Lord brought out of Egypt would continue to be favored and blessed, only out of Fatherly divine goodness and mercy.
 
Continuing with the sign, Jesus also showed us the sign. The bronze serpent was just the pre-game, for no creature, great or small, nor any man redeem the life of another or give to God a ransom for him (Ps 49:7). And yet, the poison of the bronze serpent was taken into Jesus.
 
That is, the poison that leads to death: sin. With His life, Jesus became sin Who knew no sin. That is, He took all the poison that was killing His creatures into Himself, "they will look on Him Whom they have pierced" (Jn 19:37), and be saved. Not by the person, word, and work of the wood, but by the Person Who ordained that wood to hold Him up at His last breath.
 
The mark, the sign, for Cain was the cross. The sign for Noah was the cross. Every other sign and image was forbidden to Moses except this one: the cross on which hung the sins of the world. No other mark was given to the Chosen People of God, in the Old Testament, which signified the covenant between God and man.
 
Because no other mark is up to the task of signifying the reconciliation of God and man. The cross is, at once, the sign of our condemnation and the sign of our redemption. At the same time we see Jesus, unjustly condemned to death because of our sin, we also see the definite plan and foreknowledge of God at work (Acts 2:23).
 
From Pastor Gerhard of 17th c. fame: "We should interpret that fact that Christ was willing to give up His spirit on the wood of the cross as an announcement of His intention to restore what Adam had broken on the wood of the forbidden tree. For the first Adam has stretched out his arm to the forbidden tree-trunk, thereby bringing death upon all his descendants. Here the second Adam stretches out His arms on the timber-trunk of the cross and brings to us life and salvation. Here the fathers draw upon the fact that Noah, along with his [family], was sustained in the ark during the time of the flood (Gen. 7), and the Wisdom of God had thus helped him by means of an ordinary wood timber (Wisdom of Solomon 10). Thus this wood of the cross given to us as a secure little ship in which we can be preserved from the flood of divine wrath. The Lord God directed Moses (Ex. 15) to take a tree or timber and place it in the bitter water so that it might become sweet. Thereby it is signified that Christ's cross is able to take away the bitterness of death and every misfortune. (2 Kings 6) As the children of prophets wanted to fell some trees, the iron [head of the ax] fell into the water. Then Elisha cut off a piece of wood and plunged it into the water; thereupon, the iron floated to the top. The entire human race had fallen into deep, eternal damnation and was unable to rescue itself. Christ, the heavenly Elisha, came with the wood of His cross and lifted us up again. In Ex. 14, Moses struck the Red Sea with his staff so that it would divide and the Israelites could escape from Pharaoh. With the wood of His cross, Christ made it possible for the spiritual Israelites to travel through the Sea of Tribulation and to be rescued from the hand of the hellish Pharaoh." (Johann Gerhard. An Explanation of the History of the Suffering and Death of our Lord Jesus Christ. 239-240)
 
When we hide Jesus in our churches, we lose Him. He is an afterthought to our reason and experiences. When Jesus hides in our churches, it is in plain sight and He hides in order that we find Him doing His own work, speaking His own words, and being His own person.
 
Jesus hides on the cross so that we cannot take Him off, meaning, now all our faith and belief must deal with and center on His work there. We must flee to His crucifix when we wish to see Jesus, we must flee to His excruciating and humiliating crucifixion if we wish to be exalted, and we must flee to His sacrifice there if we wish to live with Him.
 
Jesus has already made His suffering and death on the cross the crux of the matter. We receive His service offered to us there. Not as we interpret it, but as He ordained it. And He has ordained that we find Him, Word and Sacrament, just as Moses, all the prophets, and all the saints found Him: lowly, granting rest, and lying in our hands.
 
In this way, we are given the Light. To have the cross is to be crucified with Christ. That our puffed-up sins are crucified in this life. That our entire life is cruciform, taking up our cross, daily dying to sin and rising to new life, and following Him, having to find Jesus in Word and Sacrament.
What the super-spiritualists hope for in superstitions, the Word made flesh gives in Word, water, bread, and wine.
 

Monday, September 9, 2024

God's Kingdom, today [Trinity 15]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • 1 Kings 17:8-16

  • Galatians 5:25-6:10

  • St. Matthew 6:24-34
 


Grace to you all and Peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus, the Christ.
 
Who, once again speaks to you today, saying: 
“seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you”
 
Thus far our word of the Lord, spoken to us that we may hear of His Kingdom come. He reveals His Kingdom to us to know and believe that Jesus is all in all, that the kingdom has already come, and is already doing its own work. Thus, us finding it and leading others to it is as easy as “going to church”.
 
Of utmost importance, it must be made very clear to you, that to seek the Kingdom of God is to seek death. For, if Jesus inaugurates the kingdom with His own suffering and death, then you are at least chasing after the death of Jesus Christ, if not becoming more Christ-like. As we are commanded to seek the Kingdom, so also are we commanded to proclaim the Lord’s death until He returns.
 
This doesn’t mean that we have to go to our graves in order to seek the kingdom. We can find it just fine in this life, as the Lord says “Seek the Lord while He may be found” (Is 55:6). That’s our first comfort: that the Kingdom can be found. It sounds funny to mention that, but if the Kingdom is not available, no amount of searching will yield results.
 
So what is this kingdom we are to search for? You can do a quick Google search and gain thousands of videos and essays on the subject. And just about most of them will want you to look for a physical kingdom on earth. They will teach that there is a future king, Jesus, Who will rule it. They say that there will be territory, the new earth. That there will be laws, but they will just be the old laws, the Lord’s Commands and that there will be subjects.
 
But please note: it will be a future king, it will be tomorrow's world, it will be eternal laws, and it will be subjects to be determined, maybe not us. All in the future. Nothing for today because there is no way to know, right? There is no way to know who is God’s elect and who is not. There is no way to know when the new heavens and the new earth will arrive. There is no telling when Jesus will come back.
 
So what makes a kingdom to the devil, the world, and our sinful flesh? Uncertainty. Uncertainty and forever chasing after a carrot on a stick. Always tomorrow. Always a promised reward, but never delivered. 
 
Besides, Jesus has already told us what an earthly kingdom is like anyway. When Israel first wanted a king for sinful reasons, the Lord said this:
“These will be the ways of the king who will reign over you: he will take your sons and appoint them to his chariots and to be his horsemen and to run before his chariots.  And he will appoint for himself commanders of thousands and commanders of fifties, and some to plow his ground and to reap his harvest, and to make his implements of war and the equipment of his chariots.  He will take your daughters to be perfumers and cooks and bakers.  He will take the best of your fields and vineyards and olive orchards and give them to his servants.  He will take the tenth of your grain and of your vineyards and give it to his officers and to his servants. He will take your male servants and female servants and the best of your young men and your donkeys, and put them to his work. He will take the tenth of your flocks, and you shall be his slaves. And in that day you will cry out because of your king, whom you have chosen for yourselves, but the Lord will not answer you in that day.” (1 Sam 8:11-18)
 
Hmmm. That sounds familiar…
 
In any case, this is the result of kingdoms on earth and this will be the result were Jesus to return and, instead of ending it all, decides to hang out on earth for a thousand years or so. But that's a human kingdom, you say. That would never happen if Jesus were king of it. 
 
Have you ever asked Jesus if He wanted to be king? Some wanted Jesus to be king. First it was a large crowd in John 6 and this happened, “Perceiving then that they were about to come and take him by force to make him king, Jesus withdrew again to the mountain by himself” (v.15). Jesus said, “Nope”.
 
It also happened again in Acts 1, as Jesus Ascends to the Right Hand of the Father. The Apostles say, “Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” (v.6), and Jesus is like, “Nuh-uh” (v.7)
 
Jesus appears to avoid the kingdom and yet we have this Kingdom of God spoken about and promised by Jesus in the Old Testament, “When your days are fulfilled and you lie down with your fathers, I will raise up your seed after you, who shall come from your body, and I will establish His kingdom [forever]” (2 Sam 7:12) and “Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people producing its fruits”, from St. Matthew 21:43.
 
We begin to understand the Kingdom when we quit trying to take center stage in it. Oh we want the Kingdom, but only if we have a special seat. In our sin, we want Jesus to rule an earthly kingdom, because then we’re the chosen ones and get to wage God’s holy war against our neighbor to make sure they submit, or else.
 
Seeking the kingdom and God’s righteousness is not the new holy Crusade against the people you don’t like or who don’t look like you. In fact, you would make God’s kingdom to be so holy and so righteous, that not even Jesus would be welcome. That’s how sin works. “Come let us kill the Son and take His inheritance” (Mt 21:38)
 
“Behold, the eyes of the Lord God are upon the sinful kingdom, and I will destroy it from the surface of the ground”, says Amos 9:8, “except that I will not utterly destroy the house of Jacob;”
Even if there were an earthly kingdom, it would not help you. In fact, we are living in the days of our earthly kingdom and this current year is what it has wrought.
 
No, no. When the Lord speaks of His True Kingdom, He speaks in prophesies such as “Repent! The Kingdom of God is at hand, the Kingdom has come upon you, and is in you”, as in already present, at least in Jesus’s presence, when He was saying those things. 
 
When we turn to the Old Testament, funny enough, He is even more blunt. Psalm 103:19 says that His kingdom rules over all. Now, a kingdom can’t rule, the King rules. Why is He playing? Finally, Obadiah speaks truth and says, “The Kingdom is the Lord” (1:21).
 
The Sabbath is not greater than Jesus, in order that we hold His own creation against Him and falsely condemn Him to death. The Law is not greater nor is the Kingdom greater than Jesus. When Jesus comes to preach the Kingdom, He is doing nothing else but preaching Himself. 
 
Thus, the work of the Kingdom is death. Death and Resurrection. When we seek the Kingdom, we seek these things, because this is what the Kingdom has suffered and died for. The Kingdom was made man in order to be found by men. Any other kingdom would remain lost and out of touch, for it would be spiritual and we are far from that, in our sin.
 
And in order to find that Kingdom on earth, we find the work of the Kingdom. Or rather, we need to find where the Kingdom is working. Where He is calming anxiety. Where He is clothing the poor and giving daily bread. Where He His toiling to make you valuable and add eternal hours to your span of life.
 
In Christ, the work of the Kingdom is taken out of our hands and exchanged for rest. Though we are a part of the work, the True Work of the Kingdom is so much more than enforcing laws. For one, we cannot bring the Kingdom of God down to earth because it is already here. It came, it saw, it conquered before we knew it. Christ is victorious from the grave.
 
And another thing, the true work of the Kingdom is belief. St John has told us, “these things are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God” (20:31). The sinner cannot make himself believe any more than he can cause himself to be born, born again, or raise himself from the dead. 
 
Jesus, by grace, through faith, for His sake, gives us His Holy Spirit. If you are praying for the Holy Spirit to come into your life, you already have the Holy Spirit. The natural man does not love the things of God (1 Cor 2:14). But, the man who is born again, by grace, loves the Kingdom, hears His voice, and follows. And the man who is born again has died in Christ and been raised in Christ.
 
So, you seek death in order to seek the kingdom? You have been baptized. You seek new life in the kingdom? You have been baptized, raised with Christ. You seek holiness, peace, and purity in the Kingdom? Then you seek Christ and His Word and Sacrament, which is that godly life that we lead, here in time. And it is the godly life, lived in Word and Sacrament, that prepares us for eternal godly life, which is fully ours in Christ Jesus, today. 
 
Now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law” (Rom 3:21)
Now we have been justified by his blood” (Rom 5:9)
Now We are God's children” (1 jn 3:2)
Now is the day of salvation!” (2 Cor 6:2)
 
Now, today, we are in the Kingdom, for Jesus is the Kingdom and what He says, goes. And what He says and what goes is the forgiveness of sins received in His Church.
 
 

Monday, August 12, 2024

Found in contempt [Trinity 11]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Genesis 4:1-15

  • 1 Corinthians 15:1-10

  • St. Luke 18:9-14
 


Grace to you all and Peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus, the Christ.
 
Today, we once again hear Christ speak to us, saying,
“He also told this parable to some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and treated others with contempt:”
 
In God’s Word today, you are to find that your repentance and your life of Faith in Church, is not to be used as a weapon against your neighbor. Otherwise, you will find yourself in contempt. Though we have enemies and though we can see God’s enemies in life, that is for God, not us. Our job is mercy and atonement found only in Jesus Christ.
 
As is usual in our current age, we are losing information even though we are in the Golden Age of information with every library, paper, and newscast being at the tips of our fingers. One such piece of information lost is the word contempt, as Jesus used it in the Gospel reading. No one uses that word to describe anything anymore and the only reason we know it is because we watch court dramas on TV and the judges always threaten with finding you in contempt of court.
 
Used then, all we know about it is that we’re in more trouble, not necessarily what it means. Its true meaning is interesting and relevant to what Jesus says today. Being held in contempt of court means you are guilty of “disrupting court proceedings, interfering with attempts to obtain evidence, destroying evidence, disobeying a court order, or intimidating witnesses.” 
Punishments can range from fines to years in a state prison, maybe giving you new insight to Jesus and the Unrighteous Manager going to jail until you pay the last penny, which we heard a couple weeks ago.
 
For the Pharisee, he holds the tax collector in contempt, not of court nor even of the Temple, but of his own gain. For what he prays for is himself, to himself. He doesn’t need God to do anything for him. God has already made all things for him and he’s doing just fine. He’s following all the rules and doing great and has all his churchy things lined up, just like he’s supposed to. If only these tax collector-sinner types would leave the congregation, this would be a great church.
 
The Pharisee wants the walls white-washed. In his temple, there is no room for the dirt and mud of sinful life. There is no way the sinner’s life is equal to his, so he must rise up, as his God does. “Arise, O God, judge the earth”, says Psalm 82:8, “for you shall inherit all the nations!” And, “yet a little while and the sinner shall be not!” (Ps 37:10)
 
In this same spirit, Cain rose up against his brother, in the name of the Lord, and murdered him. Murdered him in the name of justice, in the name of holiness, in the name of love. God’s justice is punishment for the sinner, is it not? God’s holiness destroys all unrighteousness, right? And God’s love purifies the unbeliever, even if it means annihilation. 
 
Repent. Such is the sick and twisted world our sin creates for us, where we are the right hand of God who has begged God, “Here am I! Send me! Send Me!” (Isa 6:8), in order to slay our brothers and sisters. We believe that God’s Kingdom comes to earth and the earth will be cleansed, by murder, and as long as we add the name of Jesus onto the end, it will have been justified.
 
In holding the sinner in contempt, the Pharisee holds God in contempt. He disrupts the heavenly court proceedings of atonement. He interferes with the evidence, preferring sins to grace. And he disobeys the court order of “mercy, rather than sacrifice”. 
 
In attempting to hold Abel in contempt, Cain found himself up against the Lord Himself. In rising up against his brother, Cain encountered his Savior. In murdering Abel, Cain took the Blood of God. Cain's spirit is then passed down, not to pagans, but to those who are super-spiritual and do not need sacrifice made on their behalf. Cain holds God in contempt and is ultimately shown mercy.
 
Our only hope in our lives is to leave it to God. This person may not worship like me or act like me now, but maybe he will in the future. Such is the limit of the spirit of the Pharisees, which we possess. The contempt of man does not create the righteousness of God.
 
But God’s contempt does.
 
The contempt of God creates His own righteousness. And you would think, as the Pharisee, that it will be in the form of punishment and divine judgement. And it is, just not in the direction we, in our sin, want it to be. 
 
God’s own righteousness is His own. His own to create and His own to give out, if, where, and how He chooses. Don’t think you can hold him to some certain magical formula you have found, that, if you follow the recipe correctly, and say the words right, God will just have to give you His righteousness. 
 
Unless you are Jesus, you obeying God’s commands will not gain you this righteousness because of your sin. Unless you are Jesus, you holding your fellow men in contempt will not gain you purity or worthiness. Unless you are Jesus, you will not be able to take the contempt of man and turn it into the righteousness of God.
 
And yet here we are and “Herod with his soldiers treated him with contempt and mocked him. Then, arraying him in splendid clothing, he sent him back to Pilate” to be crucified (Lk 23:11). “Elijah does come first”, Jesus says, “to restore all things. And how is it written of the Son of Man that he should suffer many things and be treated with contempt?” (Lk 23:1)
 
How is it written? Because, “now You have cast off and rejected; You are full of wrath against your Christ”, saith the Lord in Psalm 89:38. Of you, the Lord says, “Why do you pass judgment on your brother? Or you, why do you hold your brother in contempt? For we will all stand before the judgment seat of God” (Romans 14:10). 
 
And even though we have rejected God from being king over us, in this way, He still declares, “let your hand be on the man of your right hand, the son of man whom you have made strong for yourself” (Psalm 80:17), “For he has not despised or abhorred the affliction of the afflicted, and he has not hidden his face from him, but has heard, when he cried to him” (Psalm 22:24)
 
Jesus is held in contempt, is treated with contempt, and is crucified in contempt. He rises again from the grave and there is no more contempt with Him. As Psalm 22 said, He has no contempt, He has no abboration, only grace, only mercy, only atonement. 
 
We have despised the Lord’s Sabbath (Ex 22:8) and have not put His holy things first in our lives and hearts, but Jesus regenerates us as worthy. We hold the Lord’s Table in contempt (Mal. 1:7), but that rejected Table, that rejected Stone, is the Cornerstone. Though He had created all things, especially His Church, in the beginning, His Blood repurchases them such that they become God’s House and the gate of heaven.
 
“Worthy is the Lamb Who was slain” (Rev 5:12), not just to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing, but to receive those things as the Crucified. As the God Who Died for contemptable sinners in order that they become the Righteousness of God. 
 
In Jesus, we are not held in contempt. The Father has had enough of contempt (Ps 123:3) and empties it upon the Son. In the contempt of the Father, Jesus is murdered by sinners. In Christ’s murder, He purchases Mercy, Atonement, not for Himself but for those in need of it: those who hold others in contempt, know not what they are doing, and need forgiveness.
 
There is no contempt in the Lord’s House. For one, the Court proceedings have been dismissed. The trial is over. Jesus declared guilty; sinners declared innocent, in Him. There is no more to obstruct. God is no longer holding court, on Sundays, but holding a feast. Sirach 34:31 says, “Rebuke not your neighbor at wine, and hold him not in contempt in his celebration: give him no despiteful words, and press not upon him”
 
At the Lamb’s High Feast, which is brought forward to you today there is only mercy and forgiveness. At the Temple at prayer, there was the same thing, just in a different form. The Pharisee did not believe God’s goodness extended to all or that it could even redeem all. But Christ has come for all. He has no desire for the death of the sinner nor the death of the self-righteous man. 
 
He wants us to live. Jesus wants you turned from your wicked ways of despising Him, in order that you are baptized alive towards God. Dead in sin is the only way to approach God. Eyes covered in the Blood is the only way to see God and to see your fellow man. 
 
Our justice, holiness, and love is Christ alone. His Blood and Body cry out for us, on our behalf, proclaiming innocence. In Him, we judge ourselves and find no guilt. In Him we find mercy and atonement for our sin and also His Church. In Him, the not-guilty festival is already ready.
 
 

Monday, August 5, 2024

Formal Material [Trinity 10]


READINGS FROM HOLY SCRIPTURE:
  • Jeremiah 8:4-12

  • 1 Corinthians 12:1-11

  • St. Luke 19:41-48
 


Grace to you all and Peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus, the Christ.
 
Who speaks to you today, from His Gospel heard in His Church, saying: 
“And he entered the temple and began to drive out those who sold”
 
What right did Jesus have to throw out all these people from the Temple? Weren’t they doing God’s work?
This is the conundrum we will think about today and it has to do with Authority in the Church. Whatever the Church’s authority is determines what is taught. God want’s us to hear this, because there are many who would lead us away from His Church and want to exert their own authority over us. We must understand this in order to guard ourselves against false prophets.
 
What we have here, in Jesus’s cleansing of the Temple, is a failure to communicate. Not failure on Jesus’s part as to how and what He wants accomplished in His Temple, His Body, but failure on our part to communicate to God how we want things done in His Temple. We want the authority to dictate how we have faith.
 
As Jesus said, this was accomplished in the hearts of the people by the lying pen of the Scribes, heard in our Old Testament reading. They were supposed to be the authority on God’s Word and yet we see them and the Word of God at odds. So who or what has authority in God’s Church and where does it come from?
 
Two important terms you should remember are Formal Principle and Material Principle. These two deal with Who’s voice gets to be heard in Church and what that voice gets to say. When dealing with what you believe, Formal Principal simply means where your doctrine, or teaching, comes from and Material Principle means what that doctrine is. Every church has a different Formal Principle, a different authority on their teaching.
 
Now you may have just checked out of this sermon, but don’t. Because what you may not understand is that doctrine is life; what you believe about something is extremely important. Case in point, all that people are outraged about in the Olympics, recently. If you believe that men can be women, your Material Principle, then you are for women being physically abused by biological males in public. This belief comes from the corrupt world who desperately tries to be progressive, your Formal Principle.
 
Hopefully you see how these work?
 
Let’s return to our Gospel reading with this in mind.
 
Jesus has revealed the Material Principle of the chief priests, scribes, and principal men. It is that Jesus’s House will be a den of robbers. Now how ridiculous to think of God’s things that way and of course they didn’t agree with Jesus’s assessment, which is why they wanted to kill Him. But that is the satanic trick. To make sin seem like something good or even something that God has commanded.
 
So what is their Formal Principle? The Word of God of course, just like you. In Deuteronomy 14, the Lord outlines that you are to bring the proper tithe to the Temple from your own things. However, He makes an exception in verses 24-26, “if the way is too long for you, so that you are not able to carry the tithe, when the Lord your God blesses you, because the place is too far from you, which the Lord your God chooses, to set his name there, then you shall turn it into money and bind up the money in your hand and go to the place that the Lord your God chooses and spend the money for whatever you desire—oxen or sheep or wine or strong drink, whatever your appetite craves. And you shall eat there before the Lord your God and rejoice, you and your household.”
 
Well, there it is. It was perfectly fine, even according to God, to be doing what those men were doing with and at the Temple. God’s Word said so! Jesus is wrong and He will continue to be wrong until we bring Him before our chief priests and scribes who know the law best, convict Him, and crucify Him.
 
Repent! Not only have we pit God against His own Word, but we will then continue to try and excuse Him by saying something like, the ruling house in charge of the Temple at the time was corrupt, and that’s why Jesus got angry. It was just a “at that time” thing and not a permanent thing. In other words, we become the authority and have no use for Jesus.
 
Yes, our doctrine, our material principle in our sin, is that we are the interpreters. We are the ones to say what God says and does on earth and what He does not. We have experience and reason, which God gave us!, to use in that regard. And when everyone disagrees, denominations, we’ll then say that you can’t know God’s will 100% and everyone has to find their own truth.
 
In all cases, we abandon God first because He doesn’t make sense and second because He doesn’t make sense. There is no winning for God in this world of superior logic and understanding. Since we can understand and have the knowledge of good and evil, there is no use for God. And this is why Jesus weeps.
 
Not just because we reject Him, but because we find solace and security with the enemy. Jesus is the only medicine and He is not mad, not sin-sick, like you. Thus He comes to shine the light on this enemy stronghold and says, “The Scriptures are not for you to wield as a cudgel and excuse any behavior you choose.” “You search the Scriptures in hopes of finding self-justification and eternal life, but these are they that speak of me.” (John 5:39)
 
The doctrine of the Temple needing to be a den of thieves comes from the belief that “we are wise and the Law of the Lord is with us”, so said our Old Testament. True belief comes from Jesus and true interpretation belongs to Jesus. This is why St. Paul can say in our Epistle, “no one speaking in the Spirit of God ever says “Jesus is accursed!” and no one can say “Jesus is Lord” except in the Holy Spirit” (v.3).
 
Thus the true and God-sent Formal Principle is Scripture alone. Not simply Scripture nakedly by itself, as some believe today, but Scripture Alone that leads to Justification by Faith Alone. That is both the Formal and Material Principle of authentic Christianity. 
 
Thus, Jesus being angry in the Temple is completely understandable now. When you enter the House of God, there should be Justification by Grace Alone, through Faith Alone, for Christ’s Sake. In sin, we reject the Word. In the Gospel, Christ is the Word made flesh.
 
And Jesus Christ is Lord. In His Unlimited Atonement made on the cross, He bypasses man’s sinful logic and reason to purchase and win the ultimate Bible interpretation tool: the Gospel. Not just the 4 gospels, not just gospel churches, and not gospel singers either. The true Gospel in Jesus hands alone, that is “the good news that we are freed from the guilt, the punishment, and the power of sin, and are saved eternally because of Christ’s keeping the Law and His suffering and death for us.” (LSCE q.84)
 
And since there is only one Spirit, and since He only preaches The Christ, and the Gospel is the power of God for salvation, then our key to correctly understanding the Bible is Christ Crucified. Indeed, in Jesus’s Day, if the enemies of God had truly heard the Scriptures, they would have run across Zechariah 14:21, “And every pot in Jerusalem and Judah shall be holy to the Lord of hosts, so that all who sacrifice may come and take of them and boil the meat of the sacrifice in them. And there shall no longer be a merchant in the house of the Lord of hosts on that day.”
 
 Because the Gospel is free. The forgiveness of sins and justification by Faith Alone is free. It is a gift of God so that no one may boast. Only Christ can boast. Boast that He has laid down His life to be the sacrifice that ends all sacrifices. Boast that He is the Tithe to end all tithes. Boast that He is the Word come to speak with us and commune with us.
 
 The Word given to Moses, concerning selling in the Temple, was given as a mercy to those who could not be near. It wasn’t to outline a proper religious business model. Those don’t show justification. the Word was given to show God’s mercy and His desire for Joy at the revelation of His Material Principle of Justification.
 
 Remember that verse ended with, “you shall turn it into money…And you shall eat there before the Lord your God and rejoice, you and your household” (v.25-26).
 
The end goal has always been the same for Jesus. When He created all things, they were to be a joy for Adam and Eve. Instead, sin made it a curse. When Jesus gave His Word to His chosen Prophets, it was meant to be a joy in communicating with God. Instead, Jesus has to continue to purge corruption of His Holy Word.
 
The Temple, His Church, and all the yearly celebrations contained therein, are meant to be for rejoicing. There is no rejoicing in keeping a law devoid of mercy. Then you just get more laws, permits, regulations, and jail time all from the mouth of man, not God. 
 
The things that make for peace are what Jesus, Who is both God and man, came to bring. Peace money-changers! You can have your businesses, but do not claim God’s authority with what you do to others. Peace chief priests, scribes, and principal men. You are indeed chosen to lead God’s people, but do not exceed your jurisdiction. 
 
Peace, you sinners. Where God has made peace, do not cause strife. For Jesus brings peace, not as the world gives it, as in everyone just think like me and we’ll get alone. But He brings peace from God and with God. Meaning we no longer have to strive to make God’s kingdom come into this world by sacrifice or business. God’s Kingdom comes, hanging on the cross, without our efforts.