For Those in Peril

Text: Matthew 14:22-33
Date: Pentecost IX Proper 14A + 8/10/14

At first hearing today’s readings and the sermon title may seem to strongly bring to mind (for those who are old enough to remember) images from the old television series “Victory at Sea” or other naval documentaries from World War II. One might conclude that the point of these readings is the hope of some miraculous deliverance from all trouble provided by the all-powerful Savior who can walk on water. And though the Lord does deliver from many earthly adversities, this is not the point. Continue reading “For Those in Peril”

What Earth Could Never Buy

Text: Matthew 14:13-21
Date: Pentecost VIII Proper 13A + 8/3/14

The title of today’s sermon is, once again, from the hymn of the day reflecting on the Gospel of the Feeding of the 5,000.

My Lord, You here have led me
To this most holy place
And with Yourself have fed me
The treasures of Your grace;
For You have freely given
What earth could never buy,
The bread of life from heaven,
That now I shall not die. (LSB 642:2) Continue reading “What Earth Could Never Buy”

LCMS Worship Institute 2014: Hymn Festival Meditations

Meditation 1: Evening and Morning

Comfort. Everyone wants to be comfortable, whether it is a quality bed, good furniture, a favorite chair, or maybe good friends whom you know and who really know you.

In the mouth and from the hand of pastor and hymn writer Paul Gerhardt, however, “comfort” is more than a word and has to do with much more than mere relief from physical or emotional troubles, difficulty or anxiety.

Gerhardt was surrounded by death—the death of his father and mother when he was barely a teenager, then his brother and later his first-born daughter, then two more of his children and finally his wife—surrounded by destruction and warfare as long as he lived. As a young pastor he felt the same hunger, fear and poverty as the rest of the people he served. But he especially felt abandoned when he was forced out of his office as a pastor at the Church of St. Nicholas in Berlin (a nascent form of the dreaded CRM status!) finally to be reinstated in another town just a few years before his death. For Gerhardt, “comfort” was more than a word. It is, as he says in our first hymn, above all a work and glory and gift of God to those who belong to Him.

The comfort he preached he himself discovered as he knew what it meant to “lay in fetters, groaning,” his “shame bemoaning.” For it was precisely in and through those troubles and pains that he discovered comfort. It is the comfort of God’s love that caused the Savior’s incarnation, His blessed death that gives the peace of sin forgiven.

He sings the song of the Christmas angels with great joy and asks, “should we fear our God’s displeasure, Who, to save, Freely gave His most precious treasure?” This Jesus he preached. He is the Son of God, He is the Lamb of God who came uncomplaining to bear our griefs and carry our sorrows (Is 53:4). He carried them to the cross where His sacred Head, now wounded, became the icon of joy to call Him mine.

Having taken our sin, our despair, our solitude and our death to the grave once and for all, by Jesus’ resurrection He now awakens every believer’s heart with gladness that nothing ever saddens the joy within the heart. And how is such gladness, faith and joy attained and held on to even amid the threats and troubles of believing in a faithless world? “O Christian, firmly hold this gift…Your baptism stands and makes you whole And then in death completes you.”

Tonight we sing this faith, this hope, this joy this night.

 

Meditation 2: Entrust Your Days and Burdens

So there you’ve got it! Got what? The Gospel that brings comfort and joy at all times, even times of stress, or doubt, or fear. But in order for that to happen you need to hear it. Gerhardt wrote 134 hymns.[1] We have sung only a few tonight. In some hymns he puts words of prayer in our mouths. In others words of praise to God. Occasionally he even has us turning to sing encouragement to one another. One hymn, however, is more of a sermon, Pastor Paul Gerhardt preaching to us. Just the first words of each stanza form a mini-sermon: “Entrust your days and burdens To God’s most loving hand;” “Rely on God your Savior;” “Take heart, have hope…and do not be dismayed;” “Leave all to His direction; His wisdom rules for you.” And then he always points us to our final deliverance: “O blessed heir of heaven You’ll hear the song resound Of endless jubilation When you with life are crowned.” Then, at the end of his sermon we pray the Lord to strengthen our hands and feet and spirits with joy, “Until we see the ending Of all our life’s distress.” And will we see it?

Well, “What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?” God’s Word awakens our faith and makes it explode in bold confidence and confession, saying, “If God Himself be for me, I may a host defy.”

“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?
No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Was that Pastor Gerhardt preaching? “No,” you say, but the Apostle Paul. But is that not to be what every sermon should be by every pastor? The very Word of God, the voice of God that speaks and sings repentance, forgiveness, faith, life and hope into us and into the world? What shall separate us, tear us away from the love of Christ? Have no fear. Paul the pastor gives us an even longer list than Paul the Apostle: “No danger, thirst, or hunger, No pain or poverty, No earthly tyrant’s anger…No fire or sword or thunder…. No angel and no gladness, No throne, no pomp, no show, No love, no hate, no sadness, No pain, no depth of woe, No scheming, no contrivance, No subtle thing or great Shall draw me from Your guidance Nor from You separate.”

As a final word, then when our warfare is ended: Peace. Rest and Peace. God Himself has given us the words of prayer in the psalm, “In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for you alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety” (Psalm 4:8). It is the peace of sins forgiven, the peace that the world cannot give, peace and quietness for this night and forever.

[1]  Eberhard von Cranach-Sichart, Paul Gerhardt: Wach auf, mein Herz, und singe, © 1982 Wuppertal und Kassel, Oncken Verlag, p. 6.

The Love of God Brings Blessing

Text: Deuteronomy 7:6-9
Date: Pentecost VII Proper 12 + 7/27/14

God loves you. Do you know how much God loves you? Do you know that He loved you even before you were you? St. Paul says today, “For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son” (Rom 8:29).

You think you are too insignificant amid the gazillions of God’s creation? Out of all the people of the earth, with even less of a chance than of winning the Publisher’s Clearing House sweepstakes, God chose a man named Abraham and made of him a great nation. He made a covenant with Abraham promising that by his descendents all the nations of the earth would be blessed. Through the ages, even when it seemed impossible, God kept His word. By God’s choice He made a covenant in love to bless the whole world. Continue reading “The Love of God Brings Blessing”

Judgment Belongs to God

Text: Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
Date: Pentecost VI Proper 11 + 7/20/14

Last Sunday, in the parable of the sower, we learned that saving faith in God is always the result of God’s action in us from beginning to end. He comes to ears and hearts that are not closed to Him. He comes by means of His mighty spoken Word. This is of great comfort to us who know that faith and salvation is quite beyond our ability to conjure up or produce of ourselves but can only be received as a gift. We pray Psalm 51, “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me” (Ps 51:10). Continue reading “Judgment Belongs to God”

Thy Word Bespeaks Us Righteous

Prologue
As you know every summer I plan ahead to the next liturgical year creating sermon titles and publishing them in a little brochure. Last summer I chose for this Sunday to use a line from Martin Franzmann’s hymn, “Thy Strong Word.” I also chose to reference Klemet Preus’ comment on it in his book “The Fire and the Staff.”
At the graduation and alumni reunion events this past May at Concordia Theological Seminary Klemet’s brothers Dan and Peter informed us of his sudden serious illness. Last summer I could not, of course, have known that this sermon would fall on the Sunday immediately following Klemet’s death which I prefer to call “entering life.” Requiescat in pace dear brother.

 Thy Word Bespeaks Us Righteous Continue reading “Thy Word Bespeaks Us Righteous”

Jesus Reveals the Father

Text: Matthew 11:25-30
Date: Pentecost IV, Proper 9A + 7/6/14

In today’s Epistle (Rom 7:14-25a) we hear of St. Paul’s deep struggle with sin under the law of God. We even take comfort as we see that someone as exemplary as he should reveal that he struggles just like we do. “I do not understand my own actions,” he says. “For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate.” All of us are here this morning for exactly that reason. We feel guilty about our waywardness and sin. We want to do better. We also believe that we need help. So does the Apostle and everyone who tries to seek God, to seek holiness in the way and under the burden of the law. We look to God’s Word to try to find rules or principles that lead to God and to holy living. And they are there. The only problem is the law does not supply what we need to succeed. While it reveals God’s good and gracious will, it also reveals our weakness and continually condemns us. Paul expresses the final conclusion of trying to live by God’s law alone, saying, “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?”

Who will deliver me? Who will deliver you? God has provided the answer. But is His answer good enough? Okay, we’re baptized and claim to be Christians, followers of Jesus Christ. But life doesn’t seem to get much better for us. In fact many times we, like Paul, lose heart, get flustered or frustrated with ourselves and even, if we are honest, with God Himself. The problem is that it may be that though we intend to be following Christ we are actually still following the law looking to Jesus only as to give us the rules, the methods, the advice to the way of a good life. That’s how many confuse the Gospel with Law.

That’s why, just before our reading in Matthew’s Gospel, we hear Jesus “denouncing the cities where most of his mighty works had been done, because they did not repent.” Though crowds continued to flock to hear Him they really didn’t “hear” Him, that is, they were never moved to repentance. “Woe to you” He said, “for if the mighty works done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.” “But I tell you that it will be more tolerable on the day of judgment for the land of Sodom than for you” (Mt 11:20-24). For all their appreciation for Jesus’ teaching, they were missing the most important thing.

It is good for you to look to and hear the law of God. Not, however, in hopes of being saved by it. Rather, the law only succeeds in its purpose when it pushes us over the edge, the edge of despairing of ourselves and our works, and turning…(the word repent means to turn!)…turning from our sin-laden ways and turning in faith, helpless and in our weakness, to Jesus. Paul asked, “Who will deliver me from this body of death?” And immediately he turned, saying, “Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!”

The contrast between Jesus’ words of law and condemnation of the Galilean cities just before our text and the words we hear today couldn’t be more striking. For Matthew tells us, “At that time Jesus declared….” “That time” was immediately after the word of judgment, the moment when repentance was possible. And what did He declare?

He began with prayer. “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little children; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will.” What were “these things” that have been hidden? They are God’s plan God’s way of salvation by His grace alone through faith alone in Jesus our Savior alone; “alone” meaning without and apart from the law. They are hidden to the wisdom of earthly knowledge because of our blind and dead, fallen sinful nature. The prophet Isaiah declared, “the Lord said: ‘Because this people draw near with their mouth and honor me with their lips, while their hearts are far from me, and their fear of me is a commandment taught by men, therefore, behold, …the wisdom of their wise men shall perish, and the discernment of their discerning men shall be hidden’” (Is 29:13-14). It is only by allowing the Holy Spirit to work the gift of repentance and faith in the heart that God’s salvation is uncovered, discovered, revealed. For who would guess that our hope should be not in our own bravery, wisdom or strength but in the humble weakness of a suffering Savior who was a loser, rejected, crucified, who dies as if defeated by it all. But He did die being defeated by our sin, the sin of the world. By His holiness His death was our death, that is, for us as paying the price of sin, our sin, the price we could never pay.

Then the words of Gospel invitation: “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” This “Rest” is the forgiveness of sins. And it also points to the Sabbath, the day of rest. This is what is behind His next words, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” What is this “yoke”?

To God’s people of old, the Jews, they immediately thought of “the yoke of the Law,” the yoke of the Torah, God’s revealed word of scripture. But as we have seen, without the revelation that the Messiah, the Savior is behind all the words and commands of the Old Testament, the law remains our frustrated enemy, frustrated because we do not let it push us to repentance. When Jesus talks about His yoke it is the “law” if you will of His deliverance, in other words, the Gospel. It is the good news of release from the grip of sin and death by faith in Him. Hence His yoke, His “law” is easy and light compared to the condemning, frustrating yoke of the law alone.

“Come to me” is the invitation extended to “all who labor and are heavy laden.” Though physical sweat and pain and weariness is the experience of all in this life, the labor Jesus speaks of here is all those attempts at self-justification, salvation by works of the law, the law that condemns and frustrates and makes us confess, “Wretched man that I am!” To all who labor spiritually they will find rest, that is, forgiveness and life only by faith in Jesus. He is the gentle Savior who will not break a bruised reed nor quench a faintly burning wick (Is 42:3). He is the lowly Savior, the humble king who has come in righteousness and having salvation. (Zech 9:9).

“No one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.” Today He reminds you, He has chosen you. He has revealed the Father to you and says, “Come to me.”

Ella Wagman Funeral

Ella Mary Wagman Funeral
9/4/21—6/26/14
92 years 9 months 22 days

Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester, MI

Text: John 11:25
Date: 7/1/14

Jesus meant it when He said, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die.” Now that may sound like anything from a silly to an obvious statement, “Jesus meant it.” But at a time like this we look for a certain amount of understanding as well as faith. Did Jesus mean only that He is a heavenly cheerleader bringing the hope of consolation, an illusive sense of peace and even joy to our otherwise dreary lives? Or did He mean to predict His own physical resurrection from the dead and promise that we too would be raised at some indefinite future date? When a loved one dies it isn’t right. Death is not part of God’s will or plan. There’s nothing good about the last enemy. Then we begin to either question or to take more seriously what we mouth with little emotion every Sunday, “I believe in the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.” To all of our questions, hopes or doubts we say today, Jesus really meant it when He said, “I am the resurrection.” Continue reading “Ella Wagman Funeral”

Preaching Jesus

Text: Matthew 16:13-19
Date: Sts. Peter & Paul, Apostles Day + 6/29/14

What a change! What a change for the man named Saul to suddenly, miraculously change from being a leading persecutor of the Church to an apostle and preacher of Jesus and leading evangelist to the Gentiles. We have heard that he had to undergo a certain amount of examination and acceptance by the Church in Jerusalem but finally was accepted. Continue reading “Preaching Jesus”