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

Scripture Was Written for our Learning

12/15/2023

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Advent 2  
Romans 15:4-7 
Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church 
December 10, 2023 
 
“For whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through the endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.”  
St. Paul tells us that the Holy Scriptures were written for our instruction. It does us no good if we confess that the Bible is the Word of God without any errors, if we do not learn the Bible! We should read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest the Holy Scriptures. Why? For endurance and encouragement, so that we might have hope. Endurance for the now; hope for eternity. Scripture teaches us how to live today and how to hope for eternity. There is no more practical book than the Bible. There is no more necessary book than the Holy Scriptures.  
Scripture gives endurance and encouragement, that we might have hope. That Scripture gives us endurance teaches us that Scripture does not remove adversity, suffering, and death. Those who give fluffy stories that after they started reading the Bible, they stopped suffering are deceivers. Which one of the saints in the Bible stopped suffering after he turned to God’s Word? No, reading and learning the Bible does not remove suffering, rather, it reveals the holy cross, which must be borne with patience. Jesus said, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me.” (Luke 9:23) Yet, the Scriptures give purpose to your suffering, so that you can endure it.  
Endurance means the ability to put up with suffering. This life is filled with suffering, because this life is filled with sin and death. Scripture calls this life the valley of the shadow of death (Psalm 23). And so, to have endurance in suffering, you must have encouragement. St. Paul speaks of such encouragement in Romans 5, “More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.” The worst thing that can happen to us is for us to lose our hope in Christ. Scripture teaches us that God uses suffering to increase our endurance, so that we do not lose hope.  
“For whatever was written in former days…” That little word “for” is important. It tells us that Paul made this statement in response to what he previously said. St. Paul wrote immediately before this verse, “Let each of us please his neighbor for his good, to build him up. For Christ did not please himself, but as it is written, ‘The reproaches of those who reproached you fell on me.’” So, St. Paul tells us that Holy Scripture was written for our learning after quoting Holy Scripture. What is this passage he has quoted? It is from Psalm 69, where, St. Paul tells us, King David prophesies of Christ. The reproaches that should have fallen on sinners fell rather on Christ the sinless one. This was written for our learning for two reasons. First, to set an example for how we should live as Christians. And second, so that we may know Christ and hope in Him.  
Jesus didn’t live His life looking out for Himself. He wasn’t concerned with getting even, getting His share, defending His rights. Rather, He came concerned for the rights of others, that other’s get what they need, that they be made righteous. There is no better example of selflessness than Jesus of Nazareth. So, if you want to be a better husband or wife, father or mother, son or daughter, employee, student, neighbor, friend, congregational member, citizen, or whatever other station you may have in life, you ought to follow the example of Jesus. You ought to read your Bible. St. Paul writes, “May the God of endurance and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus…” What he actually said is, “May the God of endurance and encouragement give you the same way of thinking with one another according to Christ Jesus.” We should think the same toward one another. How can we think the same? By thinking like Christ.  
St. Paul writes at the beginning of this chapter, “Let each of us please his neighbor for his good, to build him up.” Now, this does not mean that we therefore approve of evil and encourage bad behavior, permitting our neighbor to steal from us, or letting our children misbehave and adopt destructive behavior, or promote sexual perversions in the public square for the sake of tolerance and inclusion. No, St. Paul adds those little words, “for his good” and “to build him up.”  
So, how should you treat your wife? You don’t seek to please yourself, but to please her for her good. How do you do this? By loving her and sacrificing yourself for her, caring for her body and soul (Ephesians 5). And how should you treat your husband? Not by insisting on your own way and trying to get the most for yourself, but by thinking of him before yourself, and doing those things that will help him be better by submitting to him, showing him respect, and encouraging him to be a spiritual leader in your household (Ephesians 5). How do you treat your children? They aren’t simply your servants or property, but you are to seek out their good and how to benefit them. You should discipline them not out of anger, but for their own good, remembering the authority and responsibility God has given you. You should bring them to church and set a godly example for them at home. Likewise, children, your parents are not there simply to serve you and give you everything you want. You are to serve them, seek to please them, not yourselves, obeying and honoring them all to the glory of God.  
This rule of following Christ’s example can be applied in every aspect of life. As Christ bore the reproaches of others for our sake, so we are willing to bear one another’s burdens. We are not afraid to suffer, knowing that Christ suffered first and greater than us, and God vindicated Him.  
Yet, Christ did not bear our reproaches simply to set an example. And we do not read the Bible just to learn how to be moral people. Jesus bore reproaches to give us hope! Holy Scripture was written, so that we might find eternal life in them. St. Paul tells us that by becoming a servant to the circumcised, God confirmed His promise to the patriarchs, so that the Gentiles might glorify God for His mercy. In other words, because God fulfilled what He promised by sending Christ Jesus to bless all families of the earth through His suffering, death, and resurrection, all nations have reason to glorify God for His mercy. In Scripture, we find that God is truthful and merciful. Everyone may find their Savior in Christ Jesus, as He is revealed in the Bible.  
Paul tells this to the Christians in Rome, so that they might have unity, and that they may glorify God with one voice. Unity is something we all desire, but there is only one way to unity, just as there is only one way to salvation. We don’t find unity through democracy. Majority opinion is no way to find the truth. Elijah was greatly outnumbered by the prophets of Baal, and those who would have spared Jesus from crucifixion were drowned out by the majority’s shouts to crucify Him. And you certainly are not going to learn to live a more God-pleasing life by following the crowd, which increasingly chooses to ignore God’s preaching and Word and follow the passions of the flesh. To find true unity, you must be united with Christ. “Have the same way of thinking with one another, according to Christ Jesus,” St. Paul writes to the Romans. “Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus,” St. Paul says in Philippians 2. The only true unity that matters is found in Christ, who is found in Holy Scripture.  
We sing in the final verse of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, “O Come, Desire of nations, bind/ In one the hearts of all mankind;/ Bid Thou our sad divisions cease, / And be Thyself our King of Peace.” Unless, we are united in Christ and His teaching, our sad divisions will remain. There are divisions in Christendom concerning Baptism, the Lord’s Supper, open and closed Communion, evolution, homosexuality, and many more. And people have sought unity by following the most popular opinion about these issues. And to do that, they’ll even say that the Bible has errors, and that it is not all God’s Word. They’ll say as long as we keep the important teachings, we’ll be okay if we cut out the less important teachings in Scripture.  
But what you have to understand is that the most controversial and offensive teaching in all of Scripture is not that Baptism saves, or that the Lord’s Supper is Jesus’ true body and blood, or that only those who have been examined and are in unity of doctrine should receive the Lord’s Supper, or that God created the world in six days, or that marriage is between one man and one woman, and all other forms of sexual activity is sinful. The most controversial and offensive teaching in all of Scripture is that Jesus Christ, God’s own Son suffered and died for the sins of the whole world, and that no one can be saved apart from faith in Him. And when you start picking apart the Bible to remove the offensive and controversial teachings from it, all you are doing is inching toward the inevitable goal of cutting Christ Jesus out of it. And this is what those churches have done, which have denied the inerrancy of Scripture. They have rejected Jesus as the one true Savior of the world.  
So, we should hold to every teaching of the Bible, because every teaching is important. Jesus says that Scripture cannot be broken, so we should take His word for it (John 10:35). And we will find that when we hold to the teaching of Scripture, we are holding on to Christ our Savior.  
In our Gospel lesson, Jesus speaks of the nations fainting in distress, because of what is happening upon the world, but He says to His Christians, “When you see these things taking place, straighten up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.” ( Luke 21:28) How can we lift up our heads, when the world is falling apart? Because through the endurance and the through the encouragement of Holy Scripture, we have hope! We have hope in Christ, who died for us and took away all our sins. We have hope in Christ, who baptized us into His name, so that we are clothed in His righteousness and are known in heaven as children of God (Mark 16:16; Galatians 3:26-27). We have hope, because we have repented of our sins and heard the voice of our Good Shepherd, that He has forgiven us (John 20:22-23); hope, because we have tasted that the Lord is good when He fed us His body and blood as a token of forgiveness from His cross (Matthew 26:26-28). The prophet Hosea warns that God’s people are destroyed from a lack of knowledge (Hosea 4:6), but we who have learned from Holy Scripture the truth of our Savior Jesus will not be destroyed.  
Scripture is abundantly clear that everything will pass away. Your body, your property, your dreams, even heaven and earth will pass away, but Christ’s words will never pass away. And so, our hope will not pass away, because we set our hope in Christ’s Word. Your Baptism will not pass away. God’s promise of forgiveness will not pass away. Your home in paradise and your resurrected body will not pass away. Everything promised to you in Christ’s Word will never pass away. May these words encourage you to endure all suffering in this present life, and to look forward to Christ’s return with hope. Amen.  
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Receiving Christ in Humility

12/9/2023

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Advent 1 
Matthew 21:1-9 
Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church 
December 3, 2023 
 
Over the past few weeks, we have been focusing on Christ’s return in judgment. Seared in our memory is the image of the unrighteous being banished to eternal punishment prepared for the devil and his angels, and foolish virgins banging on the door to the Wedding Banquet, Christ refusing to let them in. Christ’s return in glory is a terrifying thought. How can we be prepared for His coming? And so, we begin a new Church year preparing for Christ’s second coming in glory by focusing on His first coming in the flesh.  
Yes, that mighty judge, who will come to us riding on the clouds with the voice of an archangel and the sound of a trumpet, who will judge the living and the dead from His glorious throne, has already come to us. Yet, He did not come in terror, but in humility. He was born a poor baby, laid in a manger, and first worshipped by lowly shepherds. He grew up among his brothers with no form of majesty or beauty that we should desire Him (Isaiah 53:2). And finally, He enters Jerusalem, His holy city, riding on a borrowed donkey, to the singing and cheering of little children and commoners.  
It is essential, if you are to be prepared for Christ’s coming in glory, that you first know Him in His coming in the flesh. It is only through Christ’s coming in humility that you can receive Him in faith, so that you may stand unashamed on the Last Day. The charming Christmas hymn states it well, “Come from on high to me; I cannot rise to Thee. Cheer my wearied spirit, O pure and holy Child; Through Thy grace and merit, Blest Jesus, Lord most mild, Draw me unto Thee! Draw me unto Thee!”  
We cannot rise to Christ! Our sins keep dragging us down. We cannot by our own merits or works prepare ourselves for Christ’s coming. Like the tower of Babel, Pharoah, Ninevah, King Nebuchadnezzar, Lucifer, and everyone else who exalts himself before God, we are cast down to the dust when we try reach God. That is why Christ’s return in judgment is so scary. Christ must come down to us, not in glory, lest we die, but in meekness, humility, clothed in the flesh of a servant, so that He may serve us and ransom us from our sins (Matthew 20:28).  
And that is exactly what He does. As we watch Jesus ride into Jerusalem on a donkey, we remember that He came in humility as a baby. We must not see Christ’s second coming in glory without seeing His first coming as a child! And as we watch Jesus ride into Jerusalem on a donkey, we remember that His destination is the cross, where He will lay down His life for us. And so, when we see Christ Jesus coming to us on the clouds with angels and archangels is His wake, we see Him who was laid in the straw for us, who rode into Jerusalem for us, whose hands and feet were pierced for our transgressions. We see Him who comes to save us.  
Yet, we obviously aren’t watching Jesus ride into Jerusalem this morning, nor are we peering into His cradle-stall, nor can we kneel before His cross or empty tomb. Yet, Christ still comes to us today to prepare us for His glorious return. The words of the prophet Zechariah still apply to us today, “Behold, your king is coming to you!” Yet, instead of riding in humble, and mounted on a donkey, He comes to us humble and mounted on the words spoken by His lowly servant, and upon water poured on a child, and upon bread and wine eaten as the very body and blood of Christ. This is how Christ comes to us today in His grace, so that we may believe in Him and thereafter receive Him in glory.  
Yet, as the high priests and loftiest of the people sneered at Jesus’ advent into Jerusalem on a donkey, so people sneer at Jesus’ coming to us in Word and Sacrament. “It’s boring! It’s always the same! I’ve heard this story before; why do I need to hear it again? I’ve had communion before; I think that should last me quite a while. I know what it tastes like. I’ve got more exciting things to do.” Thus, the hearts of the lapsed speak when they turn away from receiving Christ, who comes to us with His grace. They find the way Christ comes to them with His grace boring, uninteresting, not entertaining enough (As if the purpose of worshiping Christ is for Him to entertain you!).  
Of course, this is rich coming from those who do not get bored with their same old idols, lusts, and vices. Their idols remain the same: money, job, sports, booze, and drugs. These are boring, uninteresting idols, which predictably disappoint as they always do when you make them into your god. Their lusts provide no lasting stimulus except the persistent whip of a slavedriver, for one who follows his lusts is a slave to them. And the vices of hatred, anger, jealousy, laziness, pride, and gossip are all boring, repeatable, and destructive no matter how often you return to them. And yet, without seeing the irony at all, those who call the Lord’s Supper boring, the preaching of Christ predictable, and the forgiveness of sins unstimulating, religiously return to these idols, lusts, and vices, which lead only to shame, death, and hell.  
And so, if you are going to receive Christ in His grace, you must humble yourself. Jesus will not rise to you. He will not meet you in your pride. He will only meet you in reality, that is, in your lowliness. So, not only do we humble ourselves by acknowledging our sin before our Creator, but we humble ourselves by receiving Christ in the seemingly mundane, through the words of a man, we don’t think is better than us; through bread and wine, that we would not crave, if it did not promise the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation.  
And when we receive Christ by these meek means, we realize how very gracious He is to us. Over this past Church year, did you attempt to rid yourself of some of those idols, lusts, and vices, which fill you with shame? If you are a Christian, you made the attempt. Well, how did you do? Have you cast every idol from the throne of your heart? Have you turned the whip on your lusts? Have you replaced your vices with virtue?  
And when you consider this, you’ll see how comforting it is that Christ continues to come to you in the same old way, week after week, proclaiming Himself your Redeemer, who forgives your sins, feeding you His body and blood, again and again, as a token of peace from God on high. He doesn’t tire of forgiving you. He doesn’t get bored with pardoning your guilt. Rather, week after week, as you come ashamed that you returned to your boring, predictable, destructive idols, lusts, and vices, Christ comforts you in the same familiar way, assuring you of forgiveness, cleansing your guilty conscience, and strengthening you to do better.  
How terrified the citizens of Jerusalem would have been if Jesus had ridden into Jerusalem on a chariot of fire with legions of seraphim and cherubim with flaming swords. The destruction would have been worse than that brought by Nebuchadnezzar or Titus. Yet, how glad they were to receive Him in meekness as their King! And so, we will not tire of receiving our Savior in His grace and mercy, because He comes to meet us in our weakness, so that He may make us strong.  
Yet, to whom does Christ come? The prophet Zechariah proclaimed His coming to the daughter of Zion, that is, the citizens of Jerusalem. Zion is the mountain on which Jerusalem is built, so Zion and Jerusalem are used interchangeably in Scripture. Jerusalem is the ancient capital of Israel, where King David reigned. Yet, Jerusalem is also recognized as the heavenly city where God’s people will dwell for eternity. St. Paul tells us that this heavenly Jerusalem is our mother (Galatians 4:26). So, the daughters of Zion, the true citizens of the heavenly Jerusalem are those who have faith in Christ and receive His coming in grace. Christ comes to His holy Christian Church!  
So, if you are to receive Christ as He comes with His grace to forgive and save, then you must be a daughter of Zion, you must be a citizen of the heavenly Jerusalem. You must be a member of Christ’s Church, for He enters no other gate to bring righteousness and salvation except through the gates of Jerusalem. Some smart Alecs will spout that Christ can come to us in any way He likes, so we don’t need to receive Him through the Church. Yet, we don’t choose how Jesus comes to us. Jesus does. How He could come is irrelevant. All that matters is how He does come. And He comes to the daughter of Zion. He enters the gates of Jerusalem. He comes to His bride, the Holy Christian Church through His Word and Sacraments to be received by faith.  
And so, we should behave like those saints in Jerusalem, who laid their garments before Him and waved palm branches in His honor, singing, “Hosanna in the Highest! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!” And indeed, we are singing that song today! We rise as a bride to meet Him every time we come to receive His grace, listening to His preaching, and receiving His body and blood.  
In humility Christ comes to save us by His grace and merit. Yet, in His humility Christ also leaves us an example to live in humility. While good works do not save us, saving faith produces good works. A sinful life, on the other hand, can prove detrimental to saving faith. This is why St. Paul warns us to cast off the works of darkness, and to walk properly as in the daytime. We do this by putting on Christ. Like the donkey, carrying Jesus as His burden, so we carry Christ. We are humble, as He is humble, considering the needs of others before our own and doing unto them as we would have them do unto us. And bearing Christ, we cannot be put to shame. We do not worry about our works being good enough, being bright and shiny enough, being noticed by the world. We are concerned only with humbly bearing Christ as we live with one another. This causes us to be quick to forgive, slow to anger, and ready to make peace for Christ’s sake.  
Jesus’ coming to us in the meekness of His flesh, whereby He earned our salvation, takes the terror of the final judgment away from us. Jesus’ coming to us in the humility of the Word and Sacraments prepares us to meet our Lord on that glorious day and to live with our neighbor in peace today. Let us not despise Christ in His humility, but rather, let us in humility meet Him as He condescends to us, so that we may also welcome Him in His glory. 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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