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

Be Ready; Be Wise

11/25/2019

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Picture
The Parable of Wise and Foolish Virgins (unfinished), Peter von Cornelius, 1813-1816, Museum KunstPalast. Public Domain
Matthew 25:1-13 
November 24, 2019 
 
These ten virgins are what we today might think of as bridesmaids. Their job is to attend to the bridal couple at the wedding and of course to celebrate with them at the wedding feast. At the time when Jesus first told this parable, it was customary among the Jews for the bridegroom to go and prepare the marital home while the bride remained in the home of her parents. When the bridegroom had finished preparing the house, he would go and get his bride and bring her back to their new home and everyone would celebrate with them there. This is what these ten virgins are waiting for. But there is no set time for when the bridegroom will return. Perhaps he’ll finish up midmorning. Perhaps he’ll be done in the middle of the night. Yet, whenever he comes, the virgins must be ready to accompany the bridal couple and celebrate with them. This is why they brought lamps.  
Jesus tells this parable to teach us about the kingdom of heaven, specifically, that the return of Christ and his visible kingdom will come at a time you will not expect, so you must be ready day or night. We are the virgins, the bridesmaids, who are to accompany Christ Jesus the bridegroom as he enters into the house to celebrate his union with his bride, the Church; a union, which will have no end.  
The wise virgins are ready when the bridegroom comes. They are ready, because they have oil, both in their lamps and in their flasks, so that they can light their way even in the darkest hour of the night. Their oil is their wisdom. The foolish virgins are not ready. They had no oil, that is, they had no wisdom. The wise virgins entered into the wedding feast to celebrate, that is, they entered heaven. The foolish virgins were denied entrance. The door was already closed. The bridegroom said that he did not know them. The foolish virgins went to hell.  
Wise and foolish, wisdom and folly: this is a great theme in Scripture. The wise enter eternal life. The foolish enter eternal punishment. But what is wisdom? What is this oil that leads to eternal life? And what does it mean to be a fool? What does it mean to have no oil?  
Scripture says in a number of places, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” So, in order to have wisdom, you must fear the Lord. Now, this fear does not mean to be scared of the Lord, per se. Yet, it does mean more than simply to respect him. To fear the Lord means to recognize that he is the creator of the heavens and the earth; he kills and he makes alive; he has authority not only to kill the body, but also to send your soul into hell; he judges the living and the dead on the Last Day! This fear entails more than just a fear of God’s limitless power, but also an earnest trust that God will provide you with what you need. Psalm 130 states, “If you, O LORD, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand? But with you there is forgiveness, that you may be feared.” The LORD forgives all our sins therefore, we fear him. To fear the Lord is to see him as our Father from whom we receive all good things. Psalm 103 states, “As a father shows compassion to his children, so the LORD shows compassion to those who fear him.” And so, to fear the LORD means to recognize that the Lord is all powerful; that he provides all good things; that he tells the truth; that he judges; that he is the source of forgiveness and eternal life! 
Yet, Scripture say, “The fool says in his heart, ‘There is no God.” (Psalm 14:1) This does not necessarily mean that the fool is an atheist, although, it is clear that to be an atheist is a very foolish thing. Rather, a fool lives as if there is no God; as if God is not watching; as if he does not judge. There is no fear of God before a fool’s eyes. It is important here to note that these foolish virgins with no oil look just like the virgins with oil. They are dressed appropriately and they have their lamps with them. No one knows who has oil and who doesn’t until the watchman cries in the middle of the night and only the wise are able to trim their lamps. The fool may go to church, he may call himself a Christian, he may say that he believes in God, but he does not fear God in his heart. He thinks and speaks and follows his heart without fear or trust in God.  
The wise seek knowledge from God. Proverbs 9 states, “Give instruction to a wiseman, and he will be still wiser; teach a righteous man, and he will increase in learning.”  Wisdom comes from hearing the word of the Lord. This is what fear of the Lord does; you want to hear and learn God’s word. This is why Jesus says, “My sheep hear my voice.” And Scripture also says, “Faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.”  
But is important to notice, that wisdom is not just having a little knowledge stored somewhere in the back of your brain like, “George Washington was the first president of the United States.” or “The Green Bay Packers won the first two Super Bowls.” Wisdom seeks to gain more wisdom. Proverbs 4 states, “The beginning of wisdom is this: Get wisdom, and whatever you get, get insight.” To be wise means to continue to get more wisdom. We know that the devil, the world, and our sinful flesh are constantly pulling us away from Christ, away from our God. Living in this sinful world, it is impossible not to conform and become like it, unless we constantly hear God’s word and are filled with his wisdom. 
Likewise, if you know anything about oil lamps you know that oil burns up! You must continue to buy more oil. If you do not, then your oil will burn up and run out! Likewise, when you stop hearing the words of Christ, when you stop listening to his voice, your wisdom runs out. Your faith in Christ dies. Yet, the wise desires to constantly hear and learn the word of God, to become stronger in faith, so that the enemies of God cannot drag you away.  
Fools, on the other hand, have no desire to hear and learn the word of God. Rather, they ignore it and seek after knowledge that does not build up. Proverbs 18:2 states, “A fool takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion.” And what a danger this folly is! How often do Christians ignore what the Bible says, saying things like, “Well, the Bible may say this, but I think...” Or, “I don’t know what the Bible says about that, but I think...” Who cares what you think? Your opinion is not helpful. God’s word is helpful! God’s word saves! St. Paul tells Pastor Timothy, “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness...”(2 Timothy 3:16) Yet, more and more Christians live like fools by not hearing and learning the word of God. They take no pleasure in understanding, but follow their own opinions or the opinions of others. This is not wise. To be wise it to gladly hear the word of God, to learn it, and to conform your mind to it. This is why we should go to church as often as we can to hear God’s word and learn from it; to read our Bibles and seek to understand what Scripture says, attend Bible studies and grow in knowledge.  
The wise don’t just listen to the word of God. They do it. Jesus concluded his Sermon on the Mount saying, “Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock... And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand.” (Matthew 7:24, 26). Going to church every Sunday, even attending Bible studies regularly does not make one a Christian, if all you’re doing is hearing. The words must actually have an effect on your heart. You must believe them. And your faith must move you to live according to them.  
The wise accept correction. The proverb says, “A wise son hears his father’s instruction, but a scoffer does not listen to rebuke.” (13:1) and another proverb says, “A rebuke goes deeper into a man of understanding than a hundred blows into a fool.” This tells us two things about the wise. 1. They are not perfect. The wise still sin. They fall short. They need salvation. And 2. The wise are humble. The wise, filled with wisdom from God’s word, accept rebuke and instruction. They know that they are sinners and desire God to correct and forgive them when they have done wrong. “Let a righteous man strike me- it is a kindness; let him rebuke me- it is oil for my head; let my head not refuse it.” (Psalm 141:5). This is true wisdom, to repent when you have done wrong; to accept rebuke and correction from God’s word.  
Fools, however, scoff at rebuke and correction. They are not afraid of their own sins. Rather, by continuing in sin, they despise the sacrifice of Christ, which he made to take away sin. Whoever corrects a scoffer gets himself abuse, but he who reproves a wise man is loved by him. Through faith in Jesus Christ, we are able to accept correction and rebuke, to repent of our sins and try to do better even as we trust in God’s forgiveness. Yet, when our pride is so great that we cannot accept correction even from the word of God, then we prove ourselves to be fools and false Christians.  
To be wise is to have the mind of Christ. Scripture says, “Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men, and being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on the cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name...” Philippians 2:5-10.  
Wisdom is knowing Christ Jesus through his word. Put simply, to be wise is to trust in Jesus for forgiveness and salvation, to repent of your sins and look to Christ to make you whole. Wisdom does not center on your own good works, but on Christ Jesus and the work he has done for you. Christ humbled himself to the point of death to take away your sins and God highly exalted him to eternal glory. And Christ teaches us to humble ourselves, to repent of our sins and to ask him for his kingdom by grace. And God exalts us freely for Christ’s sake. To be wise is to trust in Christ.  
The wedding banquet that awaits us will be pure joy. We want to be there. At that banquet we will enjoy our resurrected bodies without any flaw, or pain, or sickness. There will be no sin anymore and no enmity with another human. The creation will be so perfect that lions and wolves will get along with sheep and oxen. It will be truly as God intended. And greatest of all, Jesus, our Bridegroom will be there. We will see him with our eyes, whom we have held in our hearts for so long.  
Jesus is with us here today through the preaching of his word. He is with us in the Sacrament of his true body and blood. The foolish do not see it. But the wise see it with eyes of faith. We receive Jesus now in faith. Through faith we know him and he knows us. This is how we know that when Jesus returns visibly, we will be received by him. He will certainly know us, as he will know all those who have faith in him. This Jesus promised when he said, “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. Amen.  
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The Least of These

11/18/2019

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Picture
Last Judgment, Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1525-1530, Nelson-Aktins Museum of Art, Public Domain
Matthew 25:32-46 
November 17, 2019 
 
The day of judgment is coming when Jesus Christ will judge the living and the dead. We confess this every time we say the creed. So, as Christians we are not surprised that Jesus tells us about the final judgment, even if the world laughs at such a notion, because they do not fear God. Yet, what you might find surprising is how Jesus appears to reward and condemn based on works. Those who will inherit the kingdom of heaven do so, because they showed mercy to the least of Jesus’ brethren, while those who are sent away to eternal punishment are condemned, because they failed to show mercy.  
But I thought that we are justified by faith apart from our works and that salvation is a free gift from God. Romans 3:28 states, “For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.” And Romans 8:1 states, “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.” And Jesus Christ says in John 5, “Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life. He does not come into judgment but has passed from death to life.”  
This is indeed the consistent teaching of Scripture, that we are saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ alone, who by his death made satisfaction for our sins. To be saved by grace means to be saved apart from your works (Romans 11:6). To be saved through faith means that you are saved when you believe that Jesus Christ saved you by dying on the cross for your sins, so that there remains no charge or guilt against you. Neither grace nor faith depend on your works, but solely on the merits of Christ Jesus and God’s unfailing love and justice.  
So, what is Jesus doing here? Is he giving another way to salvation, one that depends on your mercy? Some claim this, that Jesus here teaches that those who do not have faith in Jesus, but who show love to Jesus by being merciful to their neighbors, then they are saved by their works. Yet, this is not true. All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. And although unbelievers can do outwardly good works, it is impossible to please God without faith (Hebrews 11:6). In fact, Scriptures goes so far to say that whatever is done without faith is sin (Romans 14:22).  
Neither is Jesus teaching that people will be saved by their works in addition to their faith. Rather, he teaches that those on the right will inherit a kingdom prepared for them before the foundation of the world! That is grace, apart from their works. God chose them and prepared a kingdom for them before they were even born.  
So, why does Jesus tell these righteous to enter paradise, because they ministered to him when he was in need? Because, although our works do not contribute to our salvation, God delights greatly in our works of love both now and in eternity. Perhaps the most popular Bible passages used to prove that we are saved by grace apart from our works is Ephesians 2:8-9, “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.” You can’t get much clearer than that! Yet, listen to the very next verse, “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.”  
God saved you by grace so that you would live before Christ in righteousness both now and forever. Good works are the fruit of faith. God glories in the good works that are produced by his Christians. In this vision of the final judgment we see our heavenly king present his harvest before the angels of heaven and say, “See what great seed I used. Look at my crop! How beautiful is my fruit!” His seed is the gospel of Jesus Christ. The fruit is the love which his Christians show to each other.  
“By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”, said our Lord Jesus to his disciples on the night when he was betrayed. Love is the fruit of faith that will continue to produce and increase even when we live in heaven. Love is the most wonderful fruit of faith, because it reflects the great love God has shown us by sending his Son into the world to save us. We love, because he first loved us. For this reason, we pray earnestly every time we receive the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, which were given and shed out of great love for our human race, that by receiving this meal, it would increase our faith toward God and our fervent love toward one another.  
“Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? And when did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?”, we will ask our gracious King on that great day. And he will answer us, “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.”  
Who are these least of Jesus’ brothers? They are those with whom Christ identifies himself; those whom Christ has joined himself to so intimately that when you feed, clothe, or visit them, you have fed, clothed, and visited Christ himself.  
The least of these Jesus’ brothers are all Christians. Christians ought to identify Christ in other Christians. Jesus says, “Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me.” When you receive another Christian, you receive Christ. So, also when you mistreat a Christian, you mistreat Christ Jesus. This is why Jesus said to Saul on the road to Damascus, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?” Saul was persecuting Christians, against whom he breathed murderous threats, bound, and took to prison. Yet, Jesus said to Saul, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.”  
So, if you treat a fellow Christian well, you treat Christ Jesus well. And if you mistreat another Christian, you are mistreating Christ Jesus. So, how ought we behave toward one another? We should love one another! We should look out for one another’s best interest, make sure that others are clothed and fed. When Christians are persecuted for practicing their Christian faith, we should pray for them and speak up for them. When Christians join our congregation, no matter their background, whether they are life-long Lutherans or recent converts, whether they look like you or not, whether they are from this country or not, whether they are rich or poor, whether you know them or they are strangers, you should be kind to them and love them.  
Members of the same congregation should not be at enmity with one another; they shouldn’t hold grudges; they shouldn’t speak ill or try to cause any harm to one another. Rather, they should forgive one another as God in Christ forgave them. Each of us needs to swallow his own pride and try to get along with each person in this congregation and in the Church as a whole, recognizing Christ Jesus himself in each person.  
The least of Jesus’ brothers are faithful pastors. Christians ought to identify Christ Jesus in their pastor. Jesus says to his disciples, whom he sends out to proclaim the Gospel, “Whoever receives you receives me.” and further he says, “And whoever gives one of these little ones even a cup of cold water because he is a disciple, truly, I say to you, he will by no means lose his reward.” Christians should recognize Christ Jesus in their pastors, because pastors proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ, which has the power to save, and because pastors speak with God’s own authority to rebuke, reprove, teach, and forgive sins.  
Christians should love their pastors, because they love Jesus. This was demonstrated by the saints in Scripture who provided for the needs of the Apostles, literally gave them food, drink, and clothing, bandaged their wounds, and visited them in prison. This is why Christians welcome strangers as their pastors, show love to them, and care for them: because they come speaking the words of Christ, which alone give eternal life. For Christ’s sake, they show such love.  
Of course, Christians sin against each other. Pastors are sinners too. And sins hurt other people. Jesus of course never sinned against anyone, but only did good. So, it might seem difficult to identify Christ Jesus in your fellow Christian and in your pastor, when they are sinners! You certainly would give a cup of cold water to Jesus, you’d give him the shirt off your back, you wouldn’t just visit him in prison, you’d go to prison for him! But for these so-called Christians? For a pastor who is just as bad or worse of a sinner than you are? That’s a big pill to swallow.  
Yet, Christ does not expect you to treat your fellow Christians and your pastor as you would treat Christ himself, because they themselves are sinless. No, Jesus expects you to treat your fellow Christians and your pastor as you would treat him, because Jesus has joined himself to your fellow Christians and to your pastor, he has taken all their sins away and clothed them with his own righteousness. Jesus has joined himself to your fellow Christians and pastor so closely that when God the Father looks at them, he does not see their sins which you so clearly perceive, but he sees holy lambs washed clean in the blood of Christ. And so, it is important for you to recognize who are the least of these brothers of Jesus.  
The least of these Jesus’ brothers is you. In faith and through Baptism you became a child of God through Jesus Christ. You were born a child of God not according to the flesh or by the will of man, but by the will of God and through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. As God’s own child, you are Jesus’ brother or sister. Jesus identifies himself in you, as St. Paul writes, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” Christ has taken possession of all your sins and weaknesses. He bore them and died for them. Christ has clothed you in his righteousness by pure grace and so, God does not see your sins, but he recognizes Christ Jesus in you.  
So, when you see your fellow Christians, don’t see their sins. Don’t judge and condemn; don’t refuse your mercy, because they don’t deserve it. Because, you do not deserve God’s mercy, yet he gives it to you willingly for Christ’s sake. Rather, when you see the failings in your fellow Christians, see how much mercy God has shown on you by forgiving you and giving you Christ! Likewise, when you see the failings in your pastor, do not use that as an excuse to hate or reject him, but remember the Gospel he preaches, that Christ came to forgive sinners and to overcome our failures. Yes, if your brother or sister in Christ is caught in a transgression you should restore them in a spirit of gentleness, not to glory over your brother or sister, because they sinned, but to glory in Christ, who forgives all sins.  
You are saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ alone, who made satisfaction to God for all your sins through his bitter suffering and death. This salvation is secured for you apart from any good work you’ve done. My son Stephen, who has been baptized into Christ Jesus this morning, and who is incapable of performing an act of mercy, received full salvation in his Baptism. He is a child of God and Christ Jesus dwells in him. Yet, God has prepared good works of love for him and all who are saved by grace to walk in them. Although we sin, God will not count our sins against us for Christ sake. We will not come into judgment. But God will boast in the good works he causes to be done through us. He will rejoice in the love we show to one another. And that love will never end, even as the Father’s love for us in Christ Jesus will never end. Amen.  
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Christ Jesus Will Preserve His Elect

11/11/2019

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Picture
Lucas Signroelli, Sermon and Deeds of the Antichrist, 1499-1502, Public Domain
Matthew 24:15-28 

November 10, 2019 
 
You cannot predict when the end of the world will come. Anyone who claims that he knows when Jesus will return is lying. Jesus Christ himself says, “But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only.” (Matt. 24:36) God only knows when the end will come.  
But Jesus does tell us the signs of the end times. And it is precisely because no one knows the day the end will come that we ought to pay attention to the signs and listen to Jesus’ warning. Christ Jesus will return like a thief in the night, unexpectedly, while people are eating and drinking, working and playing, marrying and giving into marriage. Then there will be no time to repent, to change your ways, to turn to Christ. Then there will be sudden judgment. Some will go to everlasting life and others to everlasting contempt.  
 Yet, there will be signs of his coming; signs that we are in the end times. And Jesus says, “From the fig tree learn its lesson: as soon as its branches become tender and puts out its leaves, you know that summer is near. So, also when you see all these things, you know that he is near, at the very gate.” (Matt. 24:32-33) So, let us look at these signs of the end times and examine our own day.  
Jesus say that there will be wars and rumors of wars. I suppose you could say that is always the case. Yet, no one can deny that in the 20th century we had the most destructive wars in sheer loss of human life than has been recorded before. And wars have continued. And rumors of wars constantly captivate our minds.  
Jesus says there will be persecution. “They will deliver you up to tribulation and put you to death, and you will be hated by all nations for my name’s sake.” (Matthew 24:9) This certainly is true. Christians confess Christ at great risk to their lives. Some sources say that more Christians have been killed for their faith in the past century than in all Church history combined. And even we American Christians, who enjoy religious freedom and are not afraid of physical harassment for worshiping Christ, our culture has become increasingly intolerant of the teachings of Christ. Christians are continually silenced in public discourse and these anti-Christian attitudes are seeping into government policy. Persecution remains a real threat even to us.  
Jesus says in this chapter that many will fall away and betray one another and hate one another. Is this not self-evident? With few exceptions, churches in the western world are emptying and closing down. The word is chocked out of their hearts. People love this world more than Christ Jesus who has overcome the world. Jesus says, “My sheep hear my voice.” Yet, many who hear his voice refuse to hear it any longer.  
Jesus says that lawlessness will be increased. This again is self-evident. Today’s culture celebrates every abomination condemned in Scripture. Few set the Ten Commandments before their eyes and try to live by them. Idolatry, fornication, homosexuality, abortion, drunkenness, profane language, disrespecting elders and authority, divorce without biblical grounds, gossip, lawsuits against fellow Christians, and the list goes on. To speak against any of these as sins against God is often met with hot anger.  
“The love of many will grow cold.”, Jesus says. Isn’t that the truth! We don’t sympathize with others. We’re not patient. We don’t explain everything in the kindest way. We’re quick to judge. Quick to condemn. Quick to say, “He’s dead to me.” And this is the behavior of Christians toward other Christians! Cold love is dead love. Dead love comes from a dead faith.  
Yet, Jesus also says, “And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.” (Matt. 24:14) There are still places in the world where the Gospel is so strongly persecuted that it is difficult for it to be proclaimed in those lands. Yet, there is hardly a corner of the world where the Gospel has not at least been proclaimed.  
I think it’s clear, if we go through the list Jesus gives us, that the times we now live in qualifiy as the End Times. And, so we must beware. We must make sure our lamps have oil and be ready to trim them when the watchman calls. We must repent and believe in the Gospel. And in order to be ready, we must take special heed of the warning Jesus makes in our Gospel lesson. “False christs and false prophets will arise and perform great signs and wonders, so as to lead astray, if possible, even the elect.”   
False christs and false prophets are enemies of the church and all Christians. Yet, they are not enemies that fight from the outside. Rather, they are ravenous wolves dressed in sheep’s clothing. False christs look like Christ Jesus to the untrained eye. False prophets claim to speak for God. St. Paul informs the Christians in Thessalonica in 2 Thessalonians chapter 2, “Now concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our being gathered together to him, we ask you, brothers, not to be quickly shaken in mind or alarmed, ... For that day will not come unless the rebellion comes first, and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the son of destruction, who opposes and exalts himself against every so called god or object of worship, so that he takes his seat in the temple of God, proclaiming himself to be God.” 
This man of lawlessness sets himself up in the temple of God, that is, he dwells in the holy Christian Church on earth. He claims to be God himself, that is, he claims to speak with the authority of God. Christians will follow him and believe in him. They will listen to the lies that come from his mouth. This is the abomination of desolation of the end times. An abomination is a thing hated by God. God hates above all else false gods. It is an abomination set up in the holy place when idolatry, that is, the worship of false gods is set up within the Christian Church to lead Christians astray.  
We Christians should be diligent in marking and avoiding false christs and false prophets. And we should be aware of the man of lawlessness, who sets himself up in the temple of God.  
Many mainline church bodies have in the past century denied that the Bible is 100% true. They teach that much of the Bible is the opinion of human beings. This has resulted in some of the most offensive teachings and practices that have led people away from Christ, even as they remain practicing members of “Christian” congregations. In 2017 an openly lesbian bishop of the United Methodist Church, Karen Oliveto, preached a sermon in which she stated that Jesus Christ didn’t have his life figured out, that he outgrew his bigotry, and in which she warned against making an idol out of Jesus. Whereas the scriptures say that Jesus is our high priest who is able to sympathize with our weaknesses, having been tempted like us in every respect, yet without sin, this woman preached that Jesus was like us even to say that he did sin! This is a false teaching that robs people of a perfect Savior, who takes away sins through his holy sacrifice. Bishop Oliveto presents a false christ. Yet, despite complaints within her church body, Bishop Oliveto continues to preach in the Church.  
Recently a clergy person in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America named Nadia Bolz-Weber wrote a book entitled, “Shameless: A Sexual Reformation.” In this book she criticizes the idea that God teaches in the Bible that we should refrain from sex until marriage and that sex only belongs in marriage, which is a lifelong union between one man and one woman. Instead, she encourages her readers to embrace their sexual identity, whether that involves sex outside of marriage, homosexuality, or being transgender, because she says that God has made us diverse. This teaching leads people away from true repentance and into lives devoid of Christ’s forgiveness and true acceptance. She uses the freedom of Christ as an opportunity for the sinful flesh, which St. Paul explicitly warns us against in Galatians chapter 5. Nadia Bolz-Weber is a false prophet who continues to teach within the church to Christians.  
Recently Pope Francis held an Amazon Synod at the Vatican. During this synod people from the Amazon in traditional indigenous attire bowed down before wooden statues of naked pregnant women called Pachamamas, which is a fertility goddess for the indigenous people in the Andes. These statues were then put on display in a local Catholic Church in Rome. While the Vatican insists that this was not idolatrous worship, some Roman Catholics were upset at this apparent idolatry and took the statues out of the church and threw them into the Tiber River.  
Now this episode appears to be false worship in the very church of Rome that has even upset many within the Roman Catholic Church. Yet, Lutherans have been protesting the pope’s false teaching for five-hundred years, since the pope excommunicated Martin Luther for proclaiming the Gospel. The Pope continues to teach that good works are necessary for salvation and that even those who do not know Christ, but try their best can still enter heaven. This teaching of works righteousness pushes Jesus Christ out of the church and its fruits are seen as many Christians from various denominations now believe that Jesus is not the only way to heaven.  
Now, I am not taking an opportunity to bash other Christian denominations, but rather repeating the warning of our Lord Jesus Christ, who desires the salvation of you all. False christs and false prophets will arise and lead many astray. The abomination of desolation is the man of lawlessness, who places himself in the very Church of God and leads people away from God even as he claims to speak for him. Jesus tells us not to believe what they preach. Jesus tells us when we see these things to run to the mountains, meaning, run to the holy Scriptures. We must judge all teachers based on the truth of God’s word.  
Jesus Christ is the only way to heaven. He himself says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6) and St. Peter proclaims of Jesus, “there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)  
When false christs and false prophets tell you that not everything in the Bible is true, do not believe them. When they tell you that you do not need to repent of your sins, remember that false prophets said the same thing to Israel and God punished them for it. When they tell you that you can get to heaven by your own good works, by being a nice person, and without Jesus, do not believe them. Christ Jesus, true God and true man came to earth to save sinners. He lived a perfect life. He didn’t need to figure it out or overcome his bigotry. He came to teach and to save. He died on the cross for idolaters, fornicators, homosexuals, divorcees, murderers, liars, gossips, thieves, people who lose their temper, people confused about their sexual identity and so many more. He died for you! He took away all the sins of all people. He bore them on the cross and washed them away in his blood. Only Jesus has done this. Only Jesus saves.  
In Jesus you have full assurance that you will be saved on the Last Day. In Jesus you have confidence that you do not need to fear when that day comes, but you can look forward to that day, knowing that your redemption is coming near.  
These last days are filled with tribulation. Jesus says that if these days are not cut short that not even the elect will be saved, but for the sake of the elect they will be cut short. The elect are those who were chosen by God before the foundation of the world. St. Paul writes, “God chose us in him before the foundation of the world, … In love he predestined us for adoption as sons through Jesus Christ...” (Ephesians 1:4, 5). And it is impossible for those chosen by God to be lost on the Last Day. Jesus himself says, “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father’s hand.” (John 10:27-29) 
This teaching of election causes many to worry. How do I know that I am elect? How do I know that I am secure in the Father’s hand? You know through the Gospel of Jesus. St. Paul writes that God chose us in Christ. We are predestined through Jesus. Jesus’ sheep hear his voice. Keep your eyes on Jesus. In Jesus you see your salvation. You see your sins washed away. You see your victor who has overcome death, who will destroy the lawless one with the breath of his mouth, who will shepherd you into eternal life. Run to your Baptism and see that you are clothed in Christ. Receive Christ’s body and blood and know that you will rise with him. Hear the Gospel and know that your sins are forgiven. Those who trust in Jesus will never be put to shame.  
Amen.  
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Christ Jesus Makes Us Saints

11/4/2019

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Picture
Sermon on the Mount, Carl Bloch, 1877, Museum of Natural History, Bedestolen, Public Domain
Matthew 5:1-12 
November 3, 2019 
 
Happy All Saints Day! What is a saint? A saint is a holy person? Well, what does it mean to be holy? Does it mean to be the epitome of good virtue, a hero of the faith? That is usually what we think of. St. Peter, St. Paul, St Mary; these are saints. “I’m no saint.” is a common statement of a humble person, who is all too acquainted with his own sin. And, “She’s such a saint!” is a common way to compliment someone of noble character. Those who do no wrong, who distinguish themselves above all others, who do not sin, perhaps even do a miracle or two, those are the true saints, the true holy ones. Right? But that isn’t actually what it means to be holy. To be holy means to be set apart by God for his own purpose. You do not make yourself holy by your own good works, rather God makes you holy by grace according to his love for you.  
The Beatitudes, that is, the nine blessings Jesus proclaims in the opening of his Sermon on the Mount is the traditional Gospel lesson for All Saints Day. The saints are blessed. Yet, just as many misunderstand and think that you become a saint by performing better than others, so many think that this sermon of Jesus is a lesson on how to become a saint. If you do the things listed in the Beatitudes, then you will become a saint and God will bless you! Yet, that is not what Jesus is teaching in this lesson. Jesus is not teaching us how to become saints. Rather, he is describing what saints are like. And Jesus tells us that the saints are blessed forever.  
You become a saint when God sets you apart for his own purpose. In our epistle lesson from 1 John chapter 3, the Apostle writes, “See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are.” How do we become children of God? It’s by the love of God! God sent his Son into this world to save sinners, to give his life as a ransom for many. The saints dressed in white robes standing before the throne of God in heaven made their robes white with the blood of the Lamb. That is, they were forgiven of all their sins for the sake of Jesus’ bloody death upon the cross. That is how they were washed clean. That is how we are able to be called children of God.  
God made you into a saint when you were baptized. Because it was in your baptism that God washed away all your sins in the blood of the Lamb, Christ Jesus. In Baptism you were joined to Christ and he to you. You became a member of the Communion of Saints, a people set apart by God to be his holy people forever. It is through faith in God’s promise of forgiveness and salvation that you become a saint. It is through faith in the blood of Christ that you believe that you are a saint now.  
Yes, it is through faith that you believe that you are a saint. Faith, not sight tells you that you are a saint. Because your sainthood does not depend on your actions, but on the loving compassion of our God in Jesus Christ. This again is why St. John says in our epistle lesson, “Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared.” He must tell us that we are God’s children, because if we looked at ourselves, we would not come to that conclusion. It must be believed by faith. 
What we will be has not yet appeared. This means that we are not yet perfect and without sin as we will be when we see Jesus Christ as he is in his heavenly splendor. Yet, we are God’s children now. We are saints now. Even here, in this valley of sorrows surrounded by sickness and death and bogged down by our own weaknesses, we are still blessed. This is what Jesus is telling us today.  
In the first four blessings, Jesus describes how the saints on earth are blessed, because they receive God’s grace and mercy.  
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 
Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.  
Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.  
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness for they shall be satisfied.” 
Here Jesus describes us! We are poor in spirit. We don’t have anything to offer God. We come before him empty handed, like beggars. Worse than empty handed! We come to lay before our Lord the words we wish we had not said, our anger and hatred, our deepest regrets. We don’t come as a glorious throng of sinless heroes, but as sinners, who have hurt others by our own actions and careless words, who have sullied our souls with impure thoughts and actions. We mourn our sinful condition and the corruption of the world, and God comforts us here and gives us a heavenly kingdom as our inheritance. We are eternally blessed, because God has had mercy on us for the sake of his Son Jesus Christ.  
While we can and should confidently confess to be saints and children of God, we do not boast in ourselves. Saints are meek, humble, lowly creatures. Our boasting is excluded by the law of faith, which teaches that we receive all good things, including our position as children of God through the grace of Jesus Christ. We do not boast in ourselves, but in the Lord, who has saved us from our miserable condition and has laid up treasures for us in heaven by the merits of Christ.  
We come to God hungry and thirsty. You hunger when your stomach is empty and you have no food. You thirst when your body needs water. Our souls hunger and thirst. We desire desperately to be fed a righteousness we do not have. Our works are rubbish. We have fallen short of the glory of God. And God bestows on us the righteousness of Christ, so that we are fully satisfied, lacking nothing. We have all we need to enter heaven.  
This is not the picture of saints we often paint. But this is how Jesus describes those who are eternally blessed. Saints are sinners who have been rescued from their sins by God’s grace through the suffering and death of Christ. Sinners become saints through faith, not by their works.  
Beloved, we are God’s children now. Children imitate their father. Not perfectly. We still sin in this world, but God has set us apart even now to behave as his children in this life. With the next three blessings, Jesus describes the fruits of faith produced by saints in this life.  
“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.  
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.  
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.”  
Saints on earth are merciful, because they have received mercy from God. Holy Scripture exhorts us, “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.” (Ephesians 4:32) How can we come before God with penitent hearts, lay our guilt and shame before Jesus with the certain and urgent hope that he will wash it away in his blood and give us refuge from God’s wrath in his wounds, yet then turn to the one who has offended us and refuse to forgive? We have offended God, much greater than we can actually grasp with our minds (He sacrificed his own Son to pay the price of our sins!). And God graciously and willingly forgives us and invites us to come closer to him, to come to him not only for forgiveness but for help in every need. And can any of us say that another has offended us so greatly that we can refuse to forgive? To refuse the mercy to others, which we so freely received from Christ? No, but with the measure you use it will be measured back to you! If you do not forgive the trespasses of others, neither will your heavenly Father forgive your trespasses. Saints forgive. Saints are merciful, because saints have received mercy. And whenever a saint on earth forgives and puts away his anger, he confesses that God in heaven has forgiven him.  
To be pure in heart means to worship God in truth; to confess pure doctrine and reject what is false. True worship is to receive forgiveness, life, and salvation from God through faith. It is those who have faith in God’s promises, who will later see with their eyes that which they trust in through faith. They shall see the God, who dwells in their heart through faith.  
Peacemakers will be called sons of God. This is because God is the ultimate peacemaker. He made peace between us and him through the blood of Jesus’ cross. Even while we were still sinners, before we apologized or turned from our sin, Christ died for us. So, we desire peace with those who sin against us even before they repent. When we seek to become reconciled with our enemies, to willingly apologize when we do wrong and to forgive those who sin against us, we confess that we are God’s children. God is the God of peace. We are his children, who seek peace through Jesus Christ, both between us and God and between one another.  
These are the fruits of faith produced by the saints on earth. Saints do good works, because Christ dwells in them through faith. Yet, the flesh is weak. Has your selfish flesh kept you from showing mercy toward your neighbor? Have you refused to forgive others even as you ask God to forgive you? Has your heart been impure, seeking after things that are not gods, such as money, possessions, or leisure, while neglecting true worship? Have you failed to stand up for the truth of God’s word and accepted lies? Have you neglected to work toward peace and rather remained at enmity with others? How strongly the sinful human nature fights against the saints on earth. Repent. Turn back to God empty-handed, meek, and mourning over your sins and let God comfort you and bestow on you eternal blessings for Christ sake. God will satisfy your soul’s desire and strengthen you in faith. This is how it is with the saints on earth.  
In the final two blessings Jesus says that saints will suffer here on earth.  
“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  
Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”  
The saints often don’t live glamorous lives here on earth. They’re often mocked, ridiculed, and accused of all sorts of evil on account of their faith in Christ. They’re beaten, imprisoned, and killed for Christ’s sake. We see this happen even today around the world. Now, you might not personally face the persecution as strongly as other Christians, although it is likely you’ll be called names and disliked for your faith in the teachings of the Bible. Yet, even if you face little persecution in your day to day life, you still suffer for Christ. Because, the Church is one body, united with Christ. Jesus told Saul that he was persecuting him when Saul was attacking Christians. When our brothers and sisters in Christ are being imprisoned and killed across the world, we must bear that cross with them. When your fellow Christians are attacked when they confess the faith, you are attacked. This is why we regularly pray for the whole church of God. By doing so, we join in their suffering by crying out to our merciful God.  
The persecution of the saints in this life reminds us that the saint’s hope is not in this life. Our hope is in the life to come. We look forward to joining those saint who have gone before us, where we will hunger and thirst no more and where God will wipe away the last tear from our eyes. In celebrating All Saints Day, we thank God not only that he has made us saints even now, as we are indeed his children today, but we thank God for the saints who have gone before us, who have set an example for us in faith and good works, and whom we will indeed join in that incalculable throng, clothed in white robes singing praises to our God and redeemer, Jesus Christ.  
Beloved, we are saints now. And the glorious day will come when we will see this with our eyes. 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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