“Lord Over Death” by “the late” Rev. Allen D. Lunneberg
Text: Matthew 16:21-26
Date: Pentecost XVI + 8/31/08
In Saint Matthew’s Gospel we have seen Jesus bringing His disciples along the way to faith in Him by means of His teaching and His miracles. With every step forward He was revealing to them (and to us), little by little, the depth and the fullness of who He is and what He came to accomplish. On the basis of His words and works, thus far, when asked straight out, “who do you say that I am?” Peter confessed, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Mt. 16:16). It was a mighty confession of faith (and still is)—revealed to Peter (and to us) not by flesh and blood, that is, not by our puny mind’s logic or examination of the facts, but by the heavenly Father Himself, His Spirit working mightily through His Word. To call Jesus the Christ, the Son of God, is to acknowledge Him as God the Redeemer who has taken on our flesh and blood, conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. To call Jesus the Christ, the Son of God, is to acknowledge that He came to usher in salvation in the Kingdom of God. To call Jesus the Christ, the Son of God, is to begin to understand the love of God for His world and everyone in it. But there’s more—because the salvation he came to bring us is for more than saving us from mere hunger as at the feeding of the 5,000, or from inclement weather as when He stilled the storm on the lake, or from sickness and suffering as with the daughter of the Canaanite woman, all of which is but the common lot of all in this sinful world. For, the love of God goes to the deepest recesses of our need. And that’s precisely the destination and destiny of the Christ, the Son of God. Continue reading “Lord Over Death”

