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"For faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ." ~ Romans 10:17

The Power of Forgiveness

10/19/2023

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.Trinity 19 
Mathew 9:5 and Ephesians 4:17-28 
Pastor James Preus 

Trinity Lutheran Church  
October 15, 2023 
 
“Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’?” asks Jesus before causing the paralyzed man to walk. But you’ll notice that Jesus never answers the question. Which is easier? Well, the point is not whether it is easier to forgive sins or easier to cause a paralyzed man to walk. The point is that He who has the power to cause a paralyzed man to walk also has the authority to forgive sins. And it is not simply that Jesus is God, therefore He has the authority both to heal and to forgive. But rather, the point is that forgiveness and healing for the body are intimately connected. This is because every physical ailment, every sickness and weakness, whether paralysis, cancer, chronic pain, what have you, are symptoms of mortality. They are symptoms of your impending death. You die, because you are a sinner. You suffer the pangs of death, because you are a sinner.  
So, when you are forgiven, death is taken away. When you are forgiven, the pangs of death are taken away. When you are forgiven, the consequences of your sins are undone. When Jesus suffered on the cross for our sins, he took our illnesses and bore our diseases (Matthew 8:17; Isaiah 53:4). This is why Jesus suffered and died when He took on our sins, because that was the just punishment for our sins. And because Jesus made full atonement for our sin with his death, St. Paul declares, “We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over Him.” (Romans 6:9) Death no longer has dominion over Him, because He has done away with our sins.  
This means that if you are forgiven, then all your bodily ailments will pass away. No matter how weak and ill you are today, whether your legs or eyes don’t work, or your memory is failing you, if your sins are forgiven, you will run, you will see clearly, you will remember with perfect clarity. The forgiveness of sins necessitates the resurrection of the body. What Jesus did by raising the paralyzed man was foreshadow that man’s resurrection and the resurrection of every person who receives the forgiveness of sins through faith.  
But does the forgiveness of sins have any effect on you today? Today, few people value the forgiveness of sins. They’d rather have the miracle worker heal paralysis and other diseases. But since the Church offers only forgiveness, people spurn it. What good is forgiveness? They don’t think of the promise of the future resurrection connected to forgiveness. Yet, within the Church we have another problem, which damages our faith and unity with Christ. People take the forgiveness of sins for granted. They appreciate being forgiven, but they don’t think it has any effect on their lives today. But does the forgiveness of sins have no effect on your life, except to remove your guilt? Does the forgiveness of sins, which will cause your body to rise to immortality really have no effect on your life today?  
Jesus asks, ‘Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’?” You could similarly ask today, ‘Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, 'walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace’?” (Ephesians 4:1-3) Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds.’?” (Ephesians 4:17) Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.” (Ephesians 4:22-24) 
Sometimes we get so comfortable confessing to being poor, miserable sinners, that we forget that we have been washed, sanctified, and justified by the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:11). We forget that being baptized into Christ, we have died to sin and have risen to walk in newness of life. By the same power by which He forgave the paralytic’s sins, Jesus told the man to rise and walk. And the man walked. So, you also should believe that by the same power by which Jesus forgives your sins, He also is able to tell you to rise and walk.  
The word for rise Jesus uses here is the same word used for Christ being raised from the dead. In Romans 6, St. Paul teaches us that as many of us as were baptized into Christ were baptized into His death, we were buried therefore with Him through Baptism into death, in order that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. The word Jesus used for walk, περιπατέω (peripateo) is the same word St. Paul uses for to walk in newness of life in Romans 6. It is the same word St. Paul uses for no longer walking as the gentiles do, but to walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called (Ephesians 4:17, 1).  
Yet, we think this is impossible. We think Christ can forgive our sins, but we don’t think he can give us power to set aside our old sinful self and walk in newness of life. We believe that God can tell us that our sins are forgiven, but he can’t lead us to reform our lives. But which is easier, to say, “I forgive you all your sins,” or to say, “stop misusing God’s name”? Which is easier, to say, “I forgive you all your sins,” or to say, “stop skipping church and ignoring God’s preaching”? Which is easier, to say, “I forgive you all your sins,” or to say, “be reconciled with the person you are mad at”? Which is easier, to say, “I forgive you all your sins,” or to say, “stop looking at smut on the internet and TV”? Which is easier, to say, “I forgive you all your sins,” or to say, “speak kindly to your neighbor and forgive those who sin against you”? We think the former is easy to say, but the latter is impossible. Yet, that same power, which forgives our sins, also causes our old self to die and our new self to rise and walk!  
Indeed, it is true that in this life, we will always struggle with sin. Our old self will war with our new self to get us to do those things we do not want to do (Galatians 5 and Romans 7). Yet, that is not an excuse to give up and to give yourself over to the desires of the sinful flesh and to live indistinguishably from the unbelieving world! That is not the way you learned Christ! You didn’t learn Christ by misusing God’s name, avoiding the preaching of God’s word, speaking hateful and filthy words, indulging in sexual immorality, or holding grudges. Rather, you learned Christ by putting off your old self by repenting of your sins and by putting on your new self after the image of Christ, which means in humility to love God and your neighbor.  
We must stop thinking that God’s word is powerful to remove the guilt of our sins, yet it remains powerless to renew our lives. We need to stop thinking that we are living as Christians, when we claim to believe in the forgiveness of sins, but then go on living in those same sins without remorse. We need to believe that the same power, which takes our sins away, also gives us the power to resist temptation, to resist the power of Satan and our sinful flesh, and to walk in the light of Christ.  
St. Paul argues in Romans chapter 8, “For the mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God, for it does not submit to God’s law; indeed, it cannot. Those who are in the flesh cannot please God. You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to Him. But if Christ is in you, although the body is dead because of sin, the Spirit is life because of righteousness. If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.” The life St. Paul speaks of here is not the resurrection of the dead, which will happen on the Last Day, but the new life, which every Christian lives after receiving the forgiveness of sins. This new life foreshadows the resurrection of the dead. If you receive the forgiveness of sins through faith in Christ, then you also receive the Spirit of Christ, who renews your spirit to walk with God. 
So, you must not be a defeatist. Do you believe that your sins are forgiven for Christ’s sake? Then believe that God will empower you to overcome temptation and to live according to His love, to put off the old self and to walk in newness of life.  
Now, you won’t do this perfectly. In fact, many of those sins for which you have asked God for forgiveness many times will return to haunt you. And Satan will try to convince you that you cannot be renewed, that you cannot overcome sin, that you may as well continue in sin. But don’t believe Satan’s lie. Scripture states clearly that you will continue to struggle with sin, that the good you want to do is not what you will do, but the evil you do not want to do is what you will keep on doing (Romans 7:18-19), that if you deny you have sin, that the truth is not in you (1 John 1:8). That is why Christ has established for you a way to receive the forgiveness of sins throughout your life. Jesus proclaimed that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins. And that authority, Christ gave to His Church on earth (Matthew 28:19), saying, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them.” (John 20:22-23) Therefore, you should believe that when the pastor declares that your sins are forgiven, that they are forgiven before God in heaven! And you should also believe, that with that forgiveness comes the power to overcome sin, to walk in newness of life, to love God and your neighbor.  
When your sins give you alarm, when it seems like you are not getting any better, but in fact, you’re getting worse, when you fall for the same sins over and over and over again, so that you wonder whether you are any different than an unbeliever, then go to church. Confess your sins to the pastor. And believe that the forgiveness he speaks to you is Christ’s forgiveness. And believe that your past sins do not define you, but the forgiveness Christ’s minister speaks to you defines you. Satan tells you that you are a blasphemer, a despiser of God’s word, a lecher, a gossip, a miser, and a hater. You tell Satan, “I am forgiven.” And walk in the power of that forgiveness, to the scorn of Satan and to the glory of God. Amen.  
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What You Need to Know to be a Christian

10/13/2023

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Trinity 18 
Matthew 22:34-46 
Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church 
October 8, 2023 
 
On the Tuesday before He was crucified, just two days after His triumphal entry into Jerusalem, Jesus taught His last recorded lesson in the temple. And in this final lesson in the temple, Jesus teaches us what every Christian must know to be a Christian. What is the heart of the Law? And, who is the Christ? If you do not understand what the Law is all about and who the Christ is, then you cannot be a Christian.  
We learned in last week’s sermon that the heart of the Law is love. The goal of every commandment is that you love God and your neighbor. Jesus proved this by working on the Sabbath by healing a man with dropsy, yet He kept the spirit of the commandment by loving His neighbor and His God. So, it is no surprise for us today that when a lawyer asks Jesus what the greatest commandment in the Law is, Jesus answers, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets.”  
The Law and the Prophets refers to the Old Testament of the Bible. All of Scripture depends on the commandments to love God with all your heart, soul, and mind, and your neighbor as yourself. And so, every commandment we see in Scripture reinforces this fundamental goal of love. However, while love sounds nice, this standard of love does not make the law easier for us. Rather, it convicts us of sin at our very heart.  
Now, when you examine yourself according to the commandments, you can’t just say that you’ve slipped here and there in following a command. No, now your failures always go straight to the heart. Why did you misuse God’s name? It’s because you don’t love God. Why do you miss church all the time? It’s because you don’t love God. Why did you talk back to your mother and show her disrespect? Because you don’t love her. Why did you lust after another woman? Because you don’t love your wife as yourself. Why did you hit your brother? Because you don’t love him. Why did you gossip behind your friend’s back? Because you don’t love him. Why do you want what your neighbor has? Because you love yourself more than your neighbor and you don’t trust and love God.  
People will kick back at this. Everyone wants to believe that he can still love God and his neighbor, while doing and saying things that are hateful. But your words and actions betray your heart. And Scripture declares, “every intention of the thoughts of [man’s] heart [are] only evil continually.” (Genesis 6:5) And Jesus Himself says, “out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander.” (Matthew 15:19) So, all of Scripture depends on the command that you love God and your neighbor from the heart, yet Scripture states that you cannot love from the heart. Therefore, it is necessary for you to have a new heart! So, while Jesus masterfully and beautifully sums up all of Scripture with this message of love, the commandment to love hangs over our heads as a heavy burden.  
Next, Jesus asks, “Whose son is the Christ?” Now, Scripture is clear that the Christ is David’s Son. God promised King David that He would raise up a son from Him, who would sit on His throne forever (2 Samuel 7). And the prophets in one accord proclaim the son of David to be the Christ. We hear this every Christmastide, when we hear the prophecy of Isaiah, that the stump of Jesse (David’s Father), will send forth a shoot, who shall stand for a signal for the peoples (Isaiah 11:1, 10). This is why the chief priests and scribes were so indignant, when the crowds and children were singing to Jesus, “Hosanna to the Son of David!” (Matthew 21:15) By calling Him the son of David, they were declaring Jesus to be the Christ.  
It is not controversial that David’s son is the Christ. But what Jesus says next is the most controversial teaching, “How is it then that David, in the Spirit, calls him Lord, saying, ‘The Lord said to my lord, sit at my right hand, until I put your enemies under your feet’ If then David calls him Lord, how is he his son?” For us Christians, it is obvious what Jesus is implying with this question. The Christ is not only David’s son, but He is David’s Lord. The Christ is David’s God! 
But before we delve into the significance of that, let’s back up and focus on a thing Jesus says almost in passing. Jesus references Psalm 110, and says, “How is it that David in the Spirit, call the Christ Lord.” Did you catch that? In the Spirit. What Spirit? The Holy Spirit. David wrote Psalm 110 by inspiration of the Holy Spirit. This means that Psalm 110 is not simply a poem written by King David. It is a prophecy caused to be written by God the Holy Spirit Himself! In fact, all the Psalms were caused to be written by the Holy Spirit. This means that when you pray the Psalms, you are praying a prayer, which was composed in heaven for you. This also means that the Psalms are filled with prophesies about the Christ and His work of salvation.  
St. Peter proved this by quoting Psalm 16, where King David says, “For you will not abandon my soul to Sheol, or let your holy one see corruption.”  Peter points out that David did in fact die and that his tomb was still present in his day, so David was prophesying about Jesus Christ, who, though He died, God raised Him from the dead! (Acts 2:25-32) And so, we learn from Jesus and His apostles to search for Christ in the Psalms. Psalm 22, the first line of which Jesus quoted from the cross, crying, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me,” also records David saying, “they have pierced my hands and feet,” and “they divide my garments among them, and for my clothing they cast lots.” So, we see clearly, that David here prophesies of Jesus Christ.  
Yet, it is not only the Psalms, which prophesy of Christ. Every page of Scripture speaks of Christ, so that from the Old Testament we learn of Jesus’ virgin birth (Isaiah 7:14; Genesis 3:15), His divinity and humanity (Psalm 110:1), His atoning death for our sins (Isaiah 53), and his glorious resurrection from the dead (Jonah 1:17; Psalm 16:10), and His ascension at the right hand of God the Father (Psalm 110:1; 68:18). This is why Jesus told His disciples after His resurrection, “Everything written about Me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled. … Thus it is written, that the Christ should suffer and on the third day rise from the dead, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in His name to all nations beginning from Jerusalem.” (Luke 24:46-47) 
So, we learn that the entire Bible is inspired by God the Holy Spirit and is God’s Word. We learn that the Bible reveals the truth of salvation through Jesus Christ. And we learn that the Bible is fully trustworthy. The last time Jesus stands in the temple before He is crucified, just days after He is proclaimed to be the Son of David by the crowds, Jesus argues from Holy Scripture that the Christ, the Son of David, is David’s Lord. Jesus, David’s Son is David’s Lord.  
Why does this matter? It matters, because Jesus is anointed by God not simply to be a national hero like David, but to rescue all peoples from their sin. David said that the Lord said to His Lord, sit at my right hand, until I put your enemies under your feet. There is only one Lord, yet the LORD spoke to David’s Lord. God is one, yet God spoke to God. Psalm 110 teaches us of the Holy Trinity. To be at God’s right hand means to be equal to God. No one can be equal to God, but God. So, we learn that the Son is equal to the Father. There is one God, yet three persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  
 Yet, we also learn that the Son is David’s son. He is God, yet He is man. He bears our human flesh, yet He sits on God’s throne! This means that the enemies placed under His feet are not territorial leaders like the kings of the Philistines, Syrians, or Romans. The enemies Christ comes to conquer are sin, death, and hell. Satan himself is placed under Jesus’ feet. The prophet cries, “O death, where is your victory? O Death, where is your sting?” (Hosea 13:14) And the Apostle answers that the sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law, but thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Corinthians 15:55-57) Christ has ransomed us from death by paying for our sins. He being our brother in the flesh placed Himself under the Law and was judged according to the Law. Being found blameless, He suffered for our sins in our place. Being true God, His suffering is a sufficient price for our sins, and infinitely more. So, when Christ is placed on His rightful throne in heaven, our sin, our guilt, our Satan, our death, and our hell are all placed under His feet! 
So, the Christ prophesied of in Scripture is a Savior from sin, death, and hell. Our hearts betray us by causing us to sin against the Law of love. Yet, Christ comes and fulfills the Law of love for us, so that we may be saved through faith. And the same Holy Spirit, who caused the message of Christ to be written down in Holy Scripture also works through the preaching of this word to create a new heart within your breast, so that you may believe the promise of Christ, that He has borne your sins, and that whoever believes in Him will be saved.  
But wait a minute! What about those two commandments upon which all of Scripture hangs? Those two commandments that demand our love for God and our neighbor from the heart? Those two commandments, which expose our sinful hearts and condemn us to hell? Those two commandments, which the Holy Spirit Himself caused to be recorded? Do we ignore them and cast them away? How can we without undoing all of Scripture?  
We do not cast them away, but we find their fulfillment in Christ. Christ Jesus, David’s Son, loved the Lord His God with all His heart, soul, and mind, even dying on the cross out of obedience to God. And Christ loved His neighbor instead of Himself, suffering and dying for us, so that we might have eternal life. He fulfilled the Law for us. Yet, this Law of love remains God’s eternal will for us. He saved us through Jesus, so that we would continue in this love. So, by the power of the same Holy Spirit, who caused the Gospel to be written, and who created faith in our hearts, we too learn to love God with all our hearts and our neighbor as ourselves. Because of our sinful flesh, we do this imperfectly now, but God forgives our weakness for Christ’s sake. Yet, through faith in Christ, we do grow to love God more and more and our neighbor as well.  
Jesus did not come to abolish the Law and the Prophets. He came to fulfill the very heart of them: Love. And He did not do this to free us from the activity of love, but to free us from the condemnation of hate. Yet, that on which the Law and Prophets depend, still stands. And in our renewed state in the resurrection, we will truly love God with all our heart, soul, strength and mind and our neighbor as ourselves forever. Amen.  
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Eternal Love

10/11/2023

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Trinity 17 
Luke 14:1-14 

Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church 
October 1, 2023 
 
        The leaders of the Pharisees invite Jesus over for dinner on the Sabbath, and in attendance is a man suffering from dropsy, a disease, which causes his body to bloat up. These Pharisees are experts in the law. And they watch Jesus closely to see whether He will do anything against the Law of Moses. But it is Jesus who quizzes these Pharisees concerning the law. “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?” Jesus asks.  The Law commands, “Remember the Sabbath Day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God. On it you shall not do any work…” (Exodus 20:8-10a) So, the letter of the Law forbids work of any kind on the Sabbath Day. But there is a man suffering from dropsy here. Jesus can heal him. Is it lawful for Jesus to heal this man, even on the Sabbath? But wouldn’t healing be considered work?  
The Pharisees remain silent. They do not want to say that it is lawful to heal on the Sabbath, because then they would lose their opportunity to condemn Jesus. But they do not want to say that it is unlawful, because they would seem heartless. But their silence betrays their lack of love. And so, Jesus, by asking this question and then going on to heal this man suffering from dropsy, proves what the law is all about: love.  
The Ten Commandments are not eternal. God gave the Ten Commandments to the people of Israel through Moses on Mount Sinai in the spring of 1441 BC. Before 1441 BC there were no Ten Commandments. Yet, the Ten Commandments did not appear out of thin air. The heart of the Ten Commandments is much older. The heart of the Ten Commandments is Love. God’s eternal will for us is that we love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, strength, and mind and to love our neighbor as ourself. God added the commandments, because of sin, that is, because we fail to love. The Ten Commandments are meant to teach us how to love.  
The commandments are not eternal, but love is eternal. Love is God’s eternal and unchanging will. Love is the eternal quality of God. Jesus spoke to God the Father in John 17, “You loved me before the foundation of the world.” (vs. 24) The Father has loved the son from eternity. This is why He calls Jesus His “beloved Son.” (Matthew 3:17) God is so loving, that Scripture says, “In love He predestined us for adoption as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of His will.” (Ephesians 1:4b-5) So, God has loved us before He even created us. This is why Scripture declares, “God is love.” (1 John 4:16) Of course, the clearest expression of God’s love is when He sent His Son to die to make satisfaction for our sins (John 3:16; 1 John 4:10). Christ sacrificing Himself for our sake is the greatest example of love.  
This shows us what the character of love is. Love does not envy or boast or insist on its own way (1 Corinthians13:4-5). Rather, love humbles itself and considers the needs of another before its own. In Christ’s demonstration of love for mankind, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death on a cross, therefore, God has highly exalted Him (Philippians 2:8-9). So, we learn that love does not exalt oneself, but rather, to love another means to humble oneself for the sake of another. God did not give us the law to condemn others, but so that we might love each other.  
Love is the fulfilling of the law. The goal of every commandment is to love. This is why Martin Luther begins the explanation for every commandment with, “We should fear and love God.” If you do not love, then you have broken the commandment, even if you have followed it to the letter. Likewise, as Jesus demonstrates, sometimes you must seemingly break the letter of the law in order to keep the spirit of the law. So, Jesus broke the letter of the commandment by working on the Sabbath, but He kept the spirit of the commandment by loving His neighbor and His God.  
Now, people abuse this. Our sinful flesh looks for any excuse to satisfy its passions. People hear that love is the essence of the commandment, so they figure, well I can break the commandment as long as I love. So, people excuse fornication, adultery, and other forms of sexual immorality by claiming that they are doing these things in love. People will excuse divorce, theft, and gossip by claiming that they are simply doing the loving thing. We see this especially in the LGBT movement, which promotes all kinds of sexual perversion and physical mutilation in defiance of God’s clear prohibition against sex outside of marriage between a man and a woman and the clear teaching that God has made us male and female. They defy God’s clear word by saying they are being loving. But love does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth (1 Corinthians 13:6). You can’t use love as an excuse to break the commandment to satisfy your own selfish passions.  
Perhaps nowhere is love used as an excuse for breaking the commandment more than the Third Commandment, “Remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy.” What does this mean? “We should fear and love God, so that we do not despise preaching and His Word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it.” Yet, people convince themselves that they still love God, even if they neglect to hear and learn His Word. They don’t think it is a sin to skip church, because they still love God. They don’t need to go to church to love God. But let’s examine this.  
Are you showing love toward God when you choose to sleep, play, fish, hunt, go to a game, work, or do anything else while God’s people gather to hear and learn God’s Word? Is it loving toward God to place other things in your life as more important than hearing and learning His Word? Is it loving toward God to refuse to come and pray to Him and praise Him with His people? Jesus says, “If anyone loves me, he will keep my word...” (John 14:23). How can you love Jesus if you refuse to listen to His Word? Jesus promises to be with those who hear His Word. If you loved Him, would you not gladly hear His Word?  
Others claim that loving God is only “between me and God.” But you do not only go to church to love God, but out of love for your neighbor. Scripture says, “Do not neglect to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encourage one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” (Hebrews 10:25) You encourage your fellow Christians by going with them to church, listening to God’s Word, praying with them, and standing in solidarity with them. When you go to church with others, you confess that you worship the same God, that you are willing to bear the cross with them which accompanies worshipping Christ. But when you miss public worship, you are discouraging those who go. Is it loving to discourage your brothers and sisters in Christ, by leaving them to worship alone?  
Love is humble. Are you being humble when you miss church? When you think that you don’t need to hear the instruction from God’s Word; when you think you have nothing to learn from the pastor’s sermon; when you neglect saying with the congregation, “I a poor miserable sinner, confess unto You all my sins and iniquities…”? No, this is not humility, but pride, which keeps you from submitting to God’s Word, learning it, and confessing your sins before your God.  
Refusing to hear God’s Word is also the most dangerous sin to commit! It is safer for your soul to commit adultery and murder than to despise God’s preaching and Word! When King David committed adultery with Bathsheba and murdered her husband Uriah (2 Samuel 11), God still listened to his prayer to cleanse him from his sins (Psalm 51:2), because David listened to the Word of God, which the prophet Nathan preached to him (2 Samuel 12). However, Proverbs 28:9 says, “If one turns away his ear from hearing the divine instruction, even his prayer is an abomination.” So, when you refuse to hear God’s Word, God may refuse to hear your prayer! So, we should not play games with this commandment. Let it be a given that you go to church on Sunday, just as you go to work each day of the week. There are fifty-two Sundays in a year. How many of them have you missed going to church and hearing God’s Word? If you missed so many days of work out of fifty-two, would you still have a job? So, we should not provoke our Lord to anger by testing him, because He alone has the power to keep us in the true faith.  
People hear that the heart of the commandments is love, and they think that love is easier than performing the commandments. But it is the opposite. It is easy to follow the letter of the commandments. It’s easy to go to church every Sunday. Just do it. Get up and go. It’s easy to not commit fornication or adultery. Just don’t do it. It’s easy not to commit murder, not to steal, to hold your tongue from slandering your neighbor. All these things just take simple discipline. But to do these things out of love from the heart for God and your neighbor, that is the greatest difficulty, because we are born corrupted by sin. For you to love from the heart, you need a new heart. You need to be born again! This happens when God changes your heart to believe and trust in His Son Jesus Christ as your Savior.  
Love is the fulfilling of the law, but none of us loves perfectly. Jesus loves perfectly. He loved us to completion on the cross, when He bore all our sins. The commandment to remember the Sabbath Day failed to give us Sabbath rest, because our sin kept us from loving as we ought. Jesus fulfilled this command for us, laboring on the sixth day on the cross, and finding perfect rest in the tomb on the Sabbath Day, so that He might rise on the first day of the new week to give us spiritual rest as a gift. Jesus says, “Come to me all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28) We find our Sabbath rest in Jesus.  
Jesus has fulfilled every commandment by loving God and us perfectly. We receive the fulfillment of the law through faith in Jesus. And it is faith in Christ, which produces love from the heart. Faith, like love, humbles itself. Faith does not claim righteousness by its own merit. Faith does not claim to deserve eternal life. Rather, faith humbly receives what God gives as a gift. Faith sits down at the lowest spot, confident that God for Christ’s sake will tell you to move up higher.  
And it is faith then that draws us to observe the Sabbath rest by going to church. We find rest in Christ, who forgives our sins. So, faith is not ashamed to confess to be a poor miserable sinner. Faith humbly receives forgiveness as a gift for Christ’s sake. Faith humbly sits down and learns God’s Word, trusting in the promise that Jesus dwells with us in His Word. Faith believes Jesus’ promise that He is with us in His body and blood in the Sacrament, so it desires more than anything to be there and receive it.  
Through faith in Christ, we receive that perfect love, which we fail to accomplish through the law. And through faith in Christ, God produces a sincere love for God and our neighbor in our heart. This love will never pass away. Amen.  
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    Rev. James Preus

    Rev. Preus is the pastor of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in Ottumwa, IA. These are audio and text of the sermons he preaches at Trinity according to the Historical Lectionary. 
    You can listen to sermons in podcast format at 
    [email protected]. 

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