May 2nd, 2010
Text: John 16:12-22
Date: Easter V + 5/2/10
Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Rochester Hills, MI
The scripture readings for this Fifth Sunday of Easter have us looking both forward and back. The reading from Revelation is obviously a glimpse of what is yet to be, the new heaven and the new earth of eternal life. Indeed, today’s Gospel has Jesus speaking in future terms. But it is important to remember that these words were spoken at the Last Supper of Thursday of Holy Week, before His death and resurrection. He said that there were things that His disciples “could not bear,” that is, understand right then and He promised them the Spirit of truth and that their sorrow would turn to joy in “a little while.” While we can apply these words to our need for understanding and spiritual growth and our experiences of sorrow as we await our Lord’s second, final, triumphant coming on the day of judgment, our first consideration must be to understand what He meant originally on that night. Today with resurrection eyes, knowing that the crucifixion led to the empty tomb of His rising again, we can go back to recall and to understand now what we couldn’t understand before. In doing so we hope to discover and understand the True Joy of being His disciples. Read the rest of this entry »
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April 25th, 2010
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April 25th, 2010
Text: John 10:22-30
Date: Easter IV + St. Mark, Evangelist + 4/25/10
Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Rochester Hills, MI
Someone once pictured the great multitude of St. John’s vision standing before the throne of God in heaven from a unique point of view. It was the view from behind the great multitude and all you can see is the back of their heads as their attention is on the throne of Christ. Can you tell who is sitting in front of you from seeing just the back of their head? A friend remembered that his parents would always sit in the back of church “so that,” they said, “they could see who was there.” Well, again, that’s fine, if you can recognize someone from the back of their head! Read the rest of this entry »
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April 11th, 2010
Text: John 20:19-31
Date: Easter II + 4/11/10
Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Rochester Hills, MI
When our Lord Jesus Christ appeared to His disciples on that first Easter evening, He could have, maybe even should have, reprimanded them for their unbelief, their disloyalty, their fear and failure; and even more so when He appeared the next Sunday to doubting, unbelieving Thomas. But what were His words of resurrection greeting? “Peace be with you.” A common enough greeting of the day, some would be tempted to translate it, “Howdy” or “Good Day” or (as too many say today) “Ha’ya’doin’?” But the risen Lord’s greeting was not meant to be a “common enough” greeting. Those who attempt to clothe peoples’ encounter with Christ in worship today as being as common and comfortable as your own living room are further away, not the closer to the dynamic, inspiring, faith-instilling Gospel greeting of Jesus that first Easter Day. For “Peace be with you” is the first word and the last word. The peace He wishes He actually brings and bestows just by saying it, though this peace is not just a wish or a word but a completed accomplishment and gift of the God who not only created all things but has more gloriously restored all things and won us back from the tyranny of sin, death and the devil. Our Lord’s innocent, humble, vicarious suffering and death, and His mighty, glorious, incomparable, astounding awakening from the cold, dead tomb, has changed everything; it has changed the entire history of the world and its destiny. And it will change even your history and destiny when the mighty word of the Gospel is grasped by your heart: “Peace Be With You.” Read the rest of this entry »
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April 4th, 2010
Text: Luke 24:1-12
Date: Resurrection / Easter Day + 4/4/10
Lutheran Church of the Incarnate Word, Rochester Hills, MI
There was a time when people actually believed that the world was flat and that the sun and the stars all revolved around the earth. It only made sense according to our perception, our limited perspective. Of course, science has proven beyond a doubt that the world is an orb and that the changing alignment of sun and stars in the sky is a much more complicated issue as the earth revolves around the sun. On the one hand are the facts and on the other is our ability to perceive, to know and to agree with or believe the facts. Read the rest of this entry »
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April 3rd, 2010
Text: John 19:17-30
Date: Good Friday Triduum II + 4/2/10
From a harmony of the four Gospels we have seven words or statements from the cross. Matthew and Mark report only the one, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” There are three from Luke’s Gospel, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do;” “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise;” and “Father, into thy hands I commit my spirit!” Each account has its own character and purpose. St. Luke’s is the most catechetical, proclaiming the faithful Son of God who came to release all mankind from the grip of the bondage of sin. The Good Friday portion of the Triduum, however, is reserved, always, for Saint John. He reports the words from the cross, “Woman, behold, your son,” “I thirst,” and “It is finished.” In addition to those words, however, are two more important details: the soldiers gambling for his tunic, and the piercing of Jesus’ side with a spear and the flow of blood and water. Taken together, St. John’s account of the crucifixion emphasizes the triumph and victory of the Son of God, the Word made flesh Who came to conquer death and give life to all who believe. In John the Passion is victorious. Jesus’ death is referred to as his glorification, and by his cross he is lifted up like the healing serpent in the wilderness. Even his final word is a cry of victory, “It is finished.” He is not overcome. He has overcome. Read the rest of this entry »
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