The Vine Living and True

Text: John 15:1-8
Date: Easter V + 4/29/18

During Easter with the first disciples and witnesses of the resurrection to this day the risen Lord Jesus opens our minds to understand the scriptures (Lk 24:45). This includes all His words and teaching during His earthly ministry. Today, in the light of the resurrection, we recall the time right after that last Passover supper when He spoke of many things including the parable of the vine and the branches. “I am the true vine,” He said. Using the image of a grape vine He means to speak about our continuing connection with Him especially after His death and resurrection when we cannot see Him any longer as did the first disciples. The purpose or goal of staying connected with Him, He says, is the bearing of fruit. In this picture we are taught, first, how through His Word and Sacraments, we are brought to salvation, that is the justification of the sinner by God’s grace through faith without the works of the Law, and then, secondly, to the life of sanctification, the life of holy living, the life that says, “Lord, I love Your law.” Continue reading “The Vine Living and True”

I Lay Down My Life

Text: John 10:11-18
Date: Easter IV + 4/22/18

Only now can we hear, really hear and understand what our Lord said when, during His earthly life, He was speaking to the Pharisees before Hanukkah that year saying, “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.” Because if He really meant what He said, it meant He was going to die to protect and defend us. Which is what He meant. But then, it occurred to us, what good is a dead shepherd after that? So, it’s only now that we know what He meant, saying, “I lay down my life that I may take it up again.” Now in the afterglow of Easter we finally know what He meant. For He did lay down His life for us. But He has also taken it up again being raised from the dead. Only now in light of the resurrection has He opened our minds to understand. Only now can we believe we have a truly good shepherd, not a dead one! Continue reading “I Lay Down My Life”

Repentance and Forgiveness

Text: Luke 24:36-49
Date: Easter III + 4/15/18

I always get tripped up when I read this account of our Lord’s final Easter appearance to His disciples when St. Luke tells us, “they still disbelieved for joy and were marveling.” How can someone disbelieve and yet be happy about it? One commentator suggests this means “a purely emotional response which is so powerful that they are too overwhelmed to really ‘believe’ it in the sense of committing themselves to its reality.”[1] I assume we’ve all experience at some time or another what many call “a mountain top experience,” a moment of spiritual enlightenment not normally experienced in daily life. It may have even led us to say things that are beyond the reality of true faith. The question of this text is do we truly believe or do we still disbelieve though be it for joy? Easter is a happy, even a triumphant celebration with full organ and even full churches with brass and choir and timpani joyfully raising the roof. But then what happens? What happens to the joy we felt when we return to what strikes us as the “same old same old” of our lives? What happens? Disbelief? Continue reading “Repentance and Forgiveness”

What a Sight!

Text: John 20:19-31
Date: Easter II + 4/8/18

Today we hear the Apostle and Evangelist St. John telling the entire purpose of his Gospel, namely, “that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, and that believing in His name you may have life.” But what does it mean to believe? Today we hear Thomas echo our modern skepticism saying, “Unless I see;” “Unless I see in his hands the mark of the nails, and place my finger into the mark of the nails, and place my hand into his side, I will never believe.” That could be our excuse, too. “Seeing is believing,” right? Rather today we are invited by the promise of Jesus, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” Continue reading “What a Sight!”