Behold Your God

Text: Isaiah 34:4-7a
Date: Pentecost XV (Proper 18) + 9/9/12

Last week residents in my neighborhood of Waterford received a mailing entitled, “Understand Prophecy: Finding HOPE in Uncertain Times.” Billed as “a dynamic Bible prophecy series” it, of course, treats “prophecy” primarily as telling the future, specifically of the end of the world. People have always wondered and are fascinated by questions concerning the end of the world, “judgment day” as at least some of us still refer to it. Gazillions of books have been written on the subject, all of them claiming to have some insight and evidence from the Bible. When asked, “Which book of the Bible do you want to study next?” more times than not the response is, “Revelation.” There is a fascination about the Last Day, the end of the world, the Day of Judgment. Continue reading “Behold Your God”

Learn By Heart

Text: Deuteronomy 4:1-2, 6-9
Date: Pentecost XIV (Proper 17) + 9/2/12

In today’s Gospel Jesus responds to the confusion of the Pharisees and scribes over the proper interpretation of and faith in the word of God’s law. He exposes their presumed faithfulness to be nothing but hypocrisy. But today we see that Jesus does not merely slam them (or us) with a word of judgment and walk away, but continues to reveal the Heart of God’s law to us, the true, graceful, life-giving intent and purpose of God’s law. It’s not the mere outward observance of the law but the inner conversion and renewal of the heart that redeems and saves. “Nothing outside a person…can defile him…. What comes out of a person defiles him…out of the heart.” The issue is the heart. The issue is sin. What people need is that for which Psalm 51 prays, “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me” (Ps 51:10). Continue reading “Learn By Heart”

You Turn Things Upside Down!

Text: Isaiah 29:1-19
Date: Pentecost XIII (Proper 16) + 8/26/12

Do you suffer from “stupefaction”? It doesn’t mean you are stupid, really. It’s a word I discovered describing the problem of God’s people in Isaiah 29 and the Pharisees and scribes in today’s Gospel. “Stupefaction.” It’s the state of being stupefied, in a stupor or senseless state. Spiritual senselessness, of course, describes everyone according to our inherited, fallen sinful nature. We all are, by nature, sinful, spiritually blind, dead, enemies of God and senseless. We confess this truth in the Divine Service saying, “that we have sinned in thought, word, and deed, and that we cannot free ourselves from our sinful condition.” Because of sin everything we know or think we know about ourselves, about God, about His good creation and even about His Word has been turned upside down from the way God originally intended things to be. God tells us in today’s text, “You turn things upside down!” Continue reading “You Turn Things Upside Down!”

The Feast of Wisdom

Text: Proverbs 9:1-10
Date: Pentecost XII (Proper 15) + 8/19/12

When we read and speak of “wisdom” in the Book of Proverbs we are not talking about merely a concept, an attitude or a philosophy. The New Testament says we are talking about Christ. St. Paul writing to the Colossians describes “the riches of full assurance of understanding and the knowledge of God’s mystery, which is Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (Col 2:1-3). And more than merely containing or possessing wisdom the Apostle wrote to the Corinthians of Christ that He is “the power of God and the wisdom of God” (1 Cor 1:24). Continue reading “The Feast of Wisdom”

Bread for the Journey

Text: 1 Kings 19:1-8
Date: Pentecost XI (Proper 14) + 8/12/12

“The angel of the Lord came…and said, ‘Arise and eat, for the journey is too great for you.’ And (Elijah) arose and ate and drank, and went in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights to Horeb, the mount of God.”

So is reported this little detail in the ministry of the great prophet and representative of all the prophets, Elijah. It happened after his great victory over the false prophets of the false god Baal. “Seize the prophets of Baal,” he said, “let not one of them escape.” We’re told there were 450 of them (1 Kings 18:19 and 22)! “And Elijah brought them down to the brook Kishon (kee-shone) and slaughtered them there” (18:40). Such was commanded to be the punishment for those who deceive God’s people to “go and serve other gods” (Dt. 13:6). Continue reading “Bread for the Journey”

The Bread of Life

Text: Exodus 16:2-15
Date: Pentecost X (Proper 13) + 8/5/2012

Bread. On the one hand it’s the name of any sort of usually baked and leavened food made of a mixture of flour or meal. There is white bread, whole wheat bread, rye bread, pumpernickel bread and the like. But then the word can also refer just to food in general for physical sustenance as in the Lord’s Prayer, “give us this day our daily bread.” And that leads to an even wider definition that includes more than food but everything that contributes to your livelihood, and usually that brings up the subject of money, also referred to as dough. But what happens when you run out of bread? when there are literally no loaves or rolls or when the pantry is empty or you lost your job? Ever since the creation God created man as a hungry being. We need to eat. Eating is not an option. And when there is little or no bread there is poverty, weakness, starvation and ultimately death. Continue reading “The Bread of Life”

You Are Christ's

Text: 1 Corinthians 3
Date: 8/9/12
Occasion: KFUO “His Time”
In the Christian faith everyone starts as a spiritual baby—some literally since they (we) were baptized as infants, and some who, even as adults, have been schooled only in the basic, elementary teachings of the faith. We heard the apostle St. Paul writing to the Corinthians reminding them of this fact. The problem is that by this time he figured they shouldn’t be spiritual infants anymore. By this time the faith built on the foundation that no one else can lay “which is Jesus Christ” (1 Cor 3:11) should have matured beyond the elementary, “new member,” catechism class sort of faith.
So the apostle writes a relatively scathing letter to the Corinthians, first, reminding them of the foundation he himself laid, the foundation of their Christian faith which is the pure, creedal, doctrinal, catechism faith of the thoroughly Biblical teaching of Jesus Christ—the Son of God, who came down from heaven, “incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the virgin Mary, and was made man,” who then gave Himself as the bloody and only qualified sacrifice for the sin of the whole world (yours, mine and everyone’s!), and who, nevertheless, was raised from the dead because of His victory over sin and death. Now, the apostle says, everything else that is written, taught or preached about this gospel must build on this foundation, which is, to say it briefly, Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of sins.
He gives some options, however, for you to consider. You can build on this foundation, he says, either with what he calls “gold, silver or precious stones,” or with “wood, hay or straw” (3:12). The first, obviously, he is recommending as Biblical, faithfully doctrinal, may I say clear, Lutheran teaching. The second option: overlaying the Biblical teaching and doctrine with any sort of human additions. “You must add,” they say, in some way to your baptismal faith by good works or a good attitude or good anything from the point of view of the world, which he calls “the flesh.”
This is the point, he is saying, whether it was preached by himself, Paul, or by the wonderful and impressive preaching of Apollos, or even by the famous Cephas, Peter, the chief of the apostles himself! In other words, it doesn’t matter who’s your favorite pastor. (Well, okay, it does if that favoritism has to do with the faithfulness of his preaching and teaching and not just his personality.) It has to do with the doctrine, the teaching on the basis of the revelation of God Himself in His Son and through His holy, scriptural Word.
The warning and the promise is this: gold or stubble? The gold is every teaching, every prayer, every sermon that is clearly based on God’s clear Word and emphasizes the Gospel, that is, God’s love and what He has done for you for the forgiveness of your sins. The straw is the exact opposite. It may seem as logical and valuable and desirable as anything, but is, actually, in opposition to the Gospel.
The Gospel, finally, has nothing to do with our own emotions, any worldly so-called wisdom that detracts from Christ and destroys that on which all salvation and true wisdom depend, namely, the cross of Christ. This is what the apostle himself says when he wrote in the first chapter of his letter, “For Christ did not send me to baptize but to preach the gospel, and not with words of eloquent wisdom, lest the cross of Christ be emptied of its power” (1 Cor 1:17).
St. Paul wraps it all up in the words, “For all things are yours.” It doesn’t matter whether it’s from Paul or Apollos or Cephas, or your favorite pastor, or the world or life or death, (which we have come to know their place from God’s Word), “all are yours, and you are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s” (1 Cor 3:21-23). In other words, this “YOU” wipes out all the “I’s” of all the old slogans of a man-centered faith. Christ died for YOU. Christ lives in YOU. YOU belong to Christ.

Roy G Biv

Text: Genesis 9:8-17
Date: Pentecost IX (Proper 12) + 7/29/12

What’s the first thing that comes to your mind when you see a rainbow? Judy Garland? Leprechauns and pots of gold? Gay pride parades? Just the scientific wonder of “Roy G. Biv,” the acronym for the rainbow colors of red-orange-yellow, green, blue-indigo and violet? Or do you think of a promise of God? In our day of increasing Biblical illiteracy fewer it would seem think, much less even know, of God’s promise concerning the rainbow in Genesis 9. In fact this scripture has never been included in the lectionary until Lutheran Service Book included it for this Sunday. That means I’ve never preached on this text! Yet even more important than God’s promise and covenant with His creation never again to destroy the earth by water, today’s Gospel proclaims how this same, fearful almighty God who controls the forces of the universe by the command of His Word, “who alone stretched out the heavens and trampled the waves of the sea” (Job 9:8), has come to us as one of us, in human form, not to threaten or judge us but to save us. Today we proclaim that Jesus is this same almighty God of creation come to deliver us from sin, separation and death, to the eternal life of holiness and righteousness as God’s new creation. The short prayer in the Lutheran Study Bible asks, “O God, for Jesus’ sake, grant that every sighting of a rainbow may bring to mind Your promises of grace and mercy” (p. 29). Continue reading “Roy G Biv”

Born to be Wild

Text: Ezekiel 2:1-5
Date: Pentecost VI + Proper 9 + 7/8/12

“God has spoken by His prophets,” but who’s listening? The record of the scriptures demonstrates how, through the ages, “no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but [certain] men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit” (2 Pet 1:20-21). That their word is God’s Word is attested to by the Spirit of God Himself guiding and directing His people in the faithful preservation and transmission of those sacred writings that clearly agree with each other concerning God’s revelation, His justice and mercy, Law and Gospel, and ultimately all that attests to and is fulfilled in the Messiah, Jesus Christ. All of the Old Testament prophets knew they were called by God because the true God speaks and communicates in words. Today we heard a bit of the call of Ezekiel, St. Paul’s description of his ministry (2 Cor 12:1-10) and Jesus’ call of the twelve disciples (Mark 6:1-13). God has given gifts, namely, “the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers” (Eph 4:11) to proclaim repentance (Mark 6:12), to announce and preach the Word of God. Continue reading “Born to be Wild”