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

Exaudi (Confirmation) Sunday: The Testimony of the Holy Spirit Brings True Comfort

5/14/2018

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John 15:26-16:4 

May 13, 2018 
 
The rite of Confirmation is not in the Bible. Jesus never commanded that we confirm teenagers before they receive Holy Communion. Jesus did command that the Church baptize all nations. He commanded that we preach the Gospel. He commanded that we have the Lord's Supper. Yet, he never once commanded Confirmation. Confirmation is a tradition, made up by people in the Church.  
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A few weeks ago, I met a man, who told me that our church was doing things wrong by celebrating Christmas and Easter and doing a bunch of other things, because they are traditions and Jesus didn't command them. He then cited the Gospel of Mark chapter 7, where Jesus says to the Pharisees, "You have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to establish your tradition!" Of course, Jesus doesn't here or anywhere else in Scripture condemn all traditions or forbid them. He condemned traditions that go against God's commandments and teaching.  

A tradition is simply something that is handed down from generation to generation. They can be good or bad. Our Lutheran confessions state, "Our churches teach that ceremonies ought to be observed that may be observed without sin. Also, ceremonies and other practices that are profitable for tranquility and good order in the Church (in particular, holy days, festivals, and the like) ought to be observed." (Augsburg Confession XV) And this ought to be kept in mind when considering your Confirmation.  

Confirmation is a tradition, a man-made ceremony. It can be either good or bad. It is good if it is used to teach the Word of God and for good order. It is bad if it works against faith in Christ and his Word. Our church practices Confirmation, because we are convinced that it does good and promotes the Christian faith. We confirm after the confirmands have gone through thorough Christian instruction. This is in accord with our Lord's command to teach all that he has commanded us (Matthew 28:19) and with the command of St. Paul that ministers teach in accord with sound doctrine (Titus 2:1). In Confirmation the confirmands confess the true Christian faith, as it is taught in Scripture. This too is in accord with God's Word. Psalm 119:46 states, "I will also speak of your testimonies before kings and shall not be put to shame." St. Peter writes, "In your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you." (1 Peter 3:15) And of course, our Lord Jesus says, "So everyone who confesses me before men, I also will confess before my Father who is in heaven, but whoever denies me before men, I also will deny before my Father who is in heaven. (Matthew 10:32) So, we have good reason to believe that Confirmation is a good tradition.  

Yet, Confirmation can also be used for bad. This is done when you remove learning God's Word and confessing Christ. Sadly, within our church body it has become common for people to regard Confirmation as a life-long ticket to Communion and into heaven. Individuals confirmed in an LCMS congregation believe that they should be permitted to commune at any LCMS altar even when they live in open and impenitent sin, join themselves to churches that teach falsely, or even if they give up hearing the word of God all together, all of which are breaking the vows made in Confirmation. So, it is important to remember that Baptism, which is commanded by our Lord and is given a sure promise of salvation, does not save anyone without faith. How much less can Confirmation, which is a man-made tradition, save those without faith?  

God does not command Confirmation. But he does command that we teach the Word of God to everyone, especially to children. He does command that we confess Christ and that a person examine himself, before he eat and drink Christ's body and blood. Therefore, Confirmation is good. But you, Jaime and Luke, are not done learning the Word of God after today. Neither are you done confessing Christ before men. Nor is this the last time you will be examined before you receive the Lord's Supper. Rather, you should continue to learn God's Word throughout your life, confess Christ at every opportunity, and examine yourself every time you receive the Lord's Supper and be willing to be examined by the pastor as well. You are not worthy to receive the Lord's Supper because you are confirmed, but rather because of the faith which you confess in your Confirmation. Likewise, no one ever went to heaven because he was confirmed. But you cannot go to heaven apart from the faith, which you confess today.  

 Jesus says in our Gospel lesson, "Indeed, the hour is coming when whoever kills you will think he is offering service to God." It is very appropriate that this is the Gospel lesson for this Confirmation Sunday. In a little bit the confirmands will be asked, "Do you intend to live according to the Word of God, and in faith, word, and deed to remain true to God, Father Son, and Holy Spirit, even to death?", and, "Do you intend to continue in this confession and Church and to suffer all, even death, rather than fall away from it?", to which Jaime and Luke will answer, "I do, by the grace of God."  

Jesus is telling the disciples in our Gospel lesson that they will suffer all, even death, for the sake of the faith that Jaime and Luke are confessing today. Nearly all the disciples died for the name of Jesus. And many more Christians suffered and still suffer a similar fate for the sake of Christ. And do not be mistaken, it is not simply for the sake of ceremony that we have confirmands make this promise even here in cozy safe America. If you are to be a Christian you should be prepared to suffer persecution.  

Perhaps you will not be killed for confessing Christ, but you will be persecuted. You will be pressured into silence. People will try to intimidate you into thinking that you aren't as smart for believing in what the Bible says. And you won't be able to choose how you will suffer for Christ. It is a romantic fantasy that persecution will find you standing before the firing squad and being ordered to deny Christ, so that the smell of gunpowder gives way to incense, and the sound of gunfire gives way to angels singing as you confess Christ with your last breath. Remember that John the Baptist was imprisoned and beheaded for preaching against adultery. And Christian bakers and florists are losing their businesses for confessing marriage between a man and a woman. Yet, they too suffered for Christ. 

The world hates Jesus. And if you are a Christian, it hates you too. And the world will show its hatred by pressuring you to consider your faith as inferior to the world. When sporting events for children are scheduled on Sunday mornings, the world shows that it hates Jesus, because they know that is when Jesus teaches his little lambs. When sexual immorality and moral relativism is pushed on you in high school and college both in the classroom and in movies and sitcoms, the world shows its hatred for Jesus. And if you confess Christ, its hatred will turn to you too.  

Jesus tells us plainly that we will suffer for having faith in him. Yet, he doesn't leave us without comfort. Christ promises to send the Helper, that is, the Spirit of Truth. The Helper can also be translated the Comforter. The Comforter is the Holy Spirit, of whom we confess in the Creed "proceeds from the Father and the Son." He provides comfort for Jesus' disciples in every generation, even under the harshest persecution. And Christ still sends him to us today.  

To understand the comfort given by the Holy Spirit, you need to distinguish it from the comfort offered by this world. The comfort of this world is what you probably are most familiar with. It's being wrapped in a warm blanket next to a fire when it's minus 20 degrees outside. It's having enough money in the bank account, so that you aren't worried about any unexpected expenses. It's being healthy and pain free, having friends and family who like you. This is the comfort the world wants you to cherish.  

The comfort of the Holy Spirit is different. It remains when the cold bites and the fire burns, when hunger fills your stomach and when you have no money or friends. The comfort of the Holy Spirit can be with you whether you are free or in prison. The comfort of the world leaves you on your death bed, but even there the comfort of the Holy Spirit remains. The comfort of the world is fragile and fleeting. The comfort of the Holy Spirit endures forever.  

This is because the Holy Spirit doesn't comfort you with physical comfort, but with spiritual. How does the Holy Spirit comfort you? Jesus says, "He will bear witness about me." The Holy Spirit testifies about Jesus. That is how he comforts you. He gives you hope for eternal life that cannot be taken away from you.  

From Scripture you know that God is a consuming fire (Deuteronomy 4:24), who punished the whole world with a flood that killed all people except 8 souls. He rained down burning sulfur on sexually immoral and greedy Sodom and Gomorrah. Time and again he sent punishment upon Israel for their false worship. And as you examine yourself according to the Ten Commandment you see that you are indeed a poor miserable sinner, who deserves both temporal and eternal punishment from this wrathful God. Yet, the Holy Spirit comforts you by bearing witness of Jesus, whom God sent to bear his wrath on the cross. In Jesus, you see God's love for you. His blood washes away your sins and appeases God. There exists no true comfort for a conscience burdened by sin outside of the comfort of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, which the Holy Spirit preaches to you.  

Not only does the Holy Spirit comfort you when your conscience stings with guilt. He strengthens you to endure in the faith and confess Christ, even under extreme circumstances. Take St. Peter for example. He denied Christ three times when questioned by a few people, even calling down curses upon himself swearing that he was not Jesus' disciple. Yet, when the Holy Spirit fell upon Peter, he preached repentance and forgiveness of sins to the same crowd that cried, "Crucify him!" on the day of Jesus' death. And so, the Holy Spirit can strengthen Jaime and Luke, not only to confess Christ in the presence of family and friends today, but before hostile forces throughout their lives.   

It is also important to note how and where the Holy Spirit testifies of Christ and gives comfort. Jesus says to his disciples, "And you also will bear witness." Jesus' disciples bore witness of him when they preached and wrote the New Testament. You can find the testimony of the Holy Spirit, which he makes of Jesus in the Holy Scriptures and in the preaching of the Word and administration of the Sacraments. This is why Jaime and Luke will confess that the Scriptures are the inspired word of God and that they intend to hear the Word of God and receive the Lord's Supper faithfully. This is where the Holy Spirit works and brings comfort: through his Word.  

It is impossible to become a Christian without the Holy Spirit working through God's Word. This is how the Comforter takes out your heart of stone and gives you a heart of flesh, so that you walk in God's statutes and obey his rules. This is also how the Holy Spirit keeps you in the true faith.  

The testimony of the Holy Spirit is the only thing that can give comfort to your conscience when it is burdened with sin and guilt. It is the only thing that can give comfort when you face persecution from the world. It is the only thing that can give comfort when every worldly comfort has left you, even when you are dying. And that is why we rejoice at Jaime and Luke's Confirmation today. Because they have been taught the testimony of the Holy Spirit. And they are going to testify themselves that they believe in Christ. And it is this testimony, which will give them comfort throughout their lives. And it is this testimony that will give them confidence to stand before God on the Last Day. Jaime and Luke, may the Holy Spirit comfort you with the testimony of Jesus Christ today and every day of your lives. Amen. 
 
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Exaudi Sunday (Sunday after the Ascension

5/30/2017

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Picture
John 15:26-16:4

"They will put you out of the synagogues. Indeed the hour will come when whoever kills you will think he is offering service to God." Christians suffer. And no I'm not talking about cancer or chronic pain or other physical ailments. Christians suffer persecution. Why? Jesus says, "Because they (that is, those who will persecute you) have not known the Father, nor me."  
Christians will suffer for Christ's sake, because the world hates Christ. Our Lord spoke just before the beginning of our Gospel lesson, "If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. Remember the word that I said to you: 'A servant is not greater than his master.' If they persecuted me, there will also persecute you." (John 15:18-20a)  
The world hates Jesus. The religious leaders, the Romans, the proud; they hated him and killed him. Jesus is quite clear that Christians can expect the same treatment. "If they have called the master of the house Beelzebul, how much more will they malign those of his household." (Matthew 10:25) St. Peter also writes immediately after our Epistle lesson, "Beloved, do not be surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. But rejoice insofar as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed. If you are insulted for the name of Christ, you are blessed, because the Spirit of glory and of God rests upon you. But let none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an evildoer or as a meddler. Yet if anyone suffers as a Christian, let him not be ashamed, but let him glorify God in that name." (1 Peter 4:12-16) 
So not only should Christians not be surprised that they suffer for Christ, but they should count it as a great blessing! In fact, our Lord says, "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." (Matthew 5:11-12) To suffer for Christ is a mark of persistent faith. And Jesus promises eternal rewards for those who hold true to faith even under suffering. For this reason, the Apostles gave us an example when after they were beaten, "they left the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name." (Acts 5:41) 
But what does it mean to suffer for Christ? It isn't any type of suffering. You don't suffer for Christ when you miss the head of the nail and smash your thumb with a hammer. And you especially don't suffer for Christ if you drink too much and wake up with a hangover. No suffering for Christ is suffering, because you confess Christ as your Lord and Savior.  
This happened to the Apostles. Not only were they driven out of the synagogues and temple, they were beaten, stoned, beheaded, and crucified for the name of Christ. And throughout Church history martyrs have shed their blood for Christ. And even today we hear of Christians killed for confessing Christ. Yes, those radical Islamists thought they were doing service to God when they ambushed and killed at least 21 Christians and injured 22 more just this past Friday in Egypt. And we can find similar stories repeated in the news.  
But none of you risks getting ambushed and murdered for Christ today, do you? Is your life in danger for confessing Christ or attending Trinity Lutheran Church? By God's grace it appears not. Although we feel compassion for our brothers and sisters in Christ who are murdered across the ocean, we ourselves have been spared such violence. But that does not mean that you will not suffer for the name of Christ.  
Are you or your children mocked for being "religious?" Are you afraid to confess Christ or talk about Jesus with your co-workers, friends, or even your family? Are you afraid of being thought of as too strict or rigid in your beliefs? Or feel stupid for having faith in Christ? I'm not trying to give you a victim complex, but rather to make you aware that the world is not your friend. "Friendship with the world is enmity with God," St. James warns. (James 4:4) The reason you feel uncomfortable "wearing your faith on your sleeve" is because the world wants you to keep your faith in Jesus under a bushel, so they don't have to look at it.  
Your goal in life should not be to be liked by everyone. In fact it is not a sign that you live a God pleasing life when the most amount of people possible are pleased with you. The world is sinful. People are sinful and inherently hate Christ. And the more you devote your life to Christ and his word the more you will see how at odds the world is with your Christian life. When people tell you not to talk theology, they are telling you that they don't want to hear what Jesus has to say. When coaches schedule sporting events on Sunday mornings, they are telling you that they don't care about your child's faith in Jesus. In fact, they are persecuting your child for believing in Jesus and actively working to steal their faith away by taking them away from God's Word.  
You may also be tricked into thinking that you don't have to stand up for morality to be a Christian or that those who suffer for standing against sexual immorality, violence, and covetousness do not suffer for Christ. You absolutely do suffer for Christ for standing up for what is right. You don't have to be forced to deny that a sinner is justified before God by grace through faith in Jesus Christ alone to suffer for the sake of Christ. St. John the Baptist suffered for Christ when he was imprisoned and beheaded for telling King Herod he was committing adultery by taking his brother's wife. And St. Peter writes, "For the time that is past suffices for doing what the Gentiles want to do, living in sensuality, passions, drunkenness, orgies, drinking parties, and lawless idolatry. With respect to this they are surprised when you do not join them in the same flood of debauchery, and they malign you; but they will give account to him who is ready to judge the living and the dead." (1 Peter 4:3-5)  
When your children are mocked for not going out drinking or for not fornicating, they are persecuted for their faith in Christ. Jesus taught them that drunkenness and sexual immorality are sinful and not the way Christians behave. When you are called a bigot or hateful for standing on the truth that marriage is a lifelong union between one man and one woman for the purpose of chastity, companionship, and children under God and that fornication and homosexuality are sinful, you are persecuted for your faith in Christ.  
Jesus says, "If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me." (Matthew 16:24) But you don't get to choose your cross. You don't get to choose why people hate you or get mad at you. I don't think any of us would choose having to defend marriage in the current culture as our cross. So don't go looking for crosses. And certainly do not try to pick fights or be mean to people, thinking that if they retaliate you've earned your cross. If you do what is right, you will most likely find a cross weighing on your shoulder.  
You're going to suffer for confessing Christ. You'll be hated for claiming that your faith is true and all contrary confessions are false. You will be hated for living a morally upright life, fearing and trusting in God. You will be slandered and maligned for being a Christian. And so you need help and comfort. Thank God Jesus promises this help. "But when the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, he will bear witness about me. And you also will bear witness, because you have been with me from the beginning." (John 15:26-27) 
However, the help Jesus offers isn't the help we would first expect. People are earthly creatures. Even after being renewed by the Holy Spirit, we still get bogged down with earthly concerns. When we cry to God for help we want him to fix our physical problems. "If God will take away pain from my body, then I will be ready to receive Spiritual comfort." Or we expect that God will comfort us by removing persecution from us. But that is not how God works. Much to the frustration of our old Adam, the Holy Spirit doesn't find our physical suffering as his top priority.  
Now this is not to say that the Holy Spirit is not concerned with your physical suffering. No, in fact he has more concern for your physical suffering than you do. God loves you more than you love yourself. Rather the Holy Spirit knows what you need more than you know what you need. You think you need relief from physical suffering. You think you need the persecution you experience for your faith removed from you. But the Holy Spirit knows what you need. And he knows that suffering can intensify your faith in him. Rather, the Holy Spirit comforts and helps you by testifying of the truth of your confession in Christ.  
When John the Baptist languished in prison before he was beheaded, he sent messengers to Jesus. Jesus did not comfort him by breaking him free. Rather, he testified of the truth of what John preached that he was indeed the Christ promised by Scripture to bring good news to the poor. The Holy Spirit did not neglect to testify of the truth of St. Peter's confession as the Apostle was crucified upside down for confessing Christ. And the Holy Spirit was certainly not absent from those Egyptian Christians as bullets from the guns of Islamic terrorists riddled their vehicles and their bodies. Indeed the Helper comforted them by testifying that their faith in the Crucified One is true and that their death is precious in the sight of their Lord.  
Christ is clear what his priority is. "I have said all these things to you to keep you from falling away." Jesus doesn't want you to lose your faith and fall away from his flock. The way he keeps you in his flock is through the preaching of his word and the administration of his Sacraments. When you hear the truth of the Gospel, that Jesus the God-man bore all your sins on the cross and you stand blameless before the throne of God, the Holy Spirit strengthens you to bear persecution. When you receive the true body and blood of Christ, which was given and shed for you for the forgiveness of your sins, the Holy Spirit testifies to your soul that nothing can separate you from the love of God in Christ Jesus. Through the assurance of Christ's love you can confess with St. Paul, "For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us." (Romans 8:18) 
The Holy Spirit testifies to you that you are at peace with God. Your sins are forgiven. You do not need to be ashamed. Your faith in Christ is true and not in vain. This is the comfort that you need when you suffer for being a Christian. This is the testimony that causes you to pray with King David, "The LORD is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?" (Psalm 27:1) 
And rest assured that your God also cares about all your physical suffering. Not only can he relieve your suffering in this life, but much more certainly, the Holy Spirit testifies that you will rise from the dead in your body. There is nothing this world can take away from you that God will not return to you one-hundred fold.  
So take courage, dear Christians. Fight the good fight. Confess Christ in your words and in your deeds. And you will not be put to shame. 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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