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

What is a great faith?

3/9/2020

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Picture
The Woman of Canaan by Michael Angelo Immenraet, 17th century, Public Domain
Reminiscere (Lent 2) 
Matthew 15:21-28 
March 8, 2020 
 
“O woman, great is your faith!” What a compliment our Lord gave this Canaanite woman, who proved herself to be a daughter of Abraham through faith. Wouldn’t we all love to have so great a faith as this woman. But what does it mean to have a great faith? 
One of my favorite illustrations to teach what faith is, is the story about two different men on two different lakes in the winter. The first man needs to get across the lake, but he fears that the ice is too thin to hold him up. He decides to crawl across the ice, spreading out his weight so as not to crack the ice. He does this until he sees a great big pickup truck drive across the ice without any problem. He realizes that the ice is three feet thick and he has no need to fear it breaking open beneath him.  
The second man on a different lake has no such fear. He is positive that the ice on this lake will hold his weight. He needs to get across to the other side, so he confidently marches onto the ice. Almost immediately the ice breaks from under him. It was only a centimeter thick. The man’s confidence was misplaced.  
Which man had a stronger faith? Well, certainly the second man. He was confident the ice would hold him. But he was wrong. His faith was wrong. The first man had the better faith, even though he feared and trembled like a bruised reed in the wind.  
And this teaches us that the greatness of a faith is not measured in the confidence a person has alone. A sinner who has doubts, but who does trust in Jesus has saving faith. A person may have much stronger faith in something false, but that doesn’t make his faith true. The object of your faith is much more important than the strength of your faith. The object of our faith is Jesus. Faith receives Jesus and all the blessings he gives us. If Jesus is not the object of your faith, you will not receive his blessings.  
The two people we learned about in our Old Testament and Gospel lesson struggled a lot with God. God seemed to be mean to them. God wrestled with Jacob all night long, even knocking his hip out of joint, so that he limped for the rest of his life. And that poor Canaanite woman! All she wanted was for her daughter to be rescued from the demon that oppressed her. Yet, Jesus ignored her, treated her like an outsider, and finally insulted her, calling her a dog.  
Now, why did God treat these two individuals so harshly? He was testing them, in order to strengthen their faith. But I thought even a weak faith can receive salvation! Why does Jesus test this woman’s faith? Because losing your faith is a real danger. Jesus knows that those who follow him will bear their own crosses. A few weeks ago, we heard the parable about the sower. The seed he sowed was the word of God. Those planted on the rocks were those who heard the word of God and believed it with joy, but when the sun came out, that is, when tribulation and persecution arrived, the plants withered, because they had no depth to their roots. They indeed had true saving faith! But they fell away, because their faith was weak and unable to withstand the cross.  
Jesus knows that those who follow him will be attacked by the devil, persecuted by the world, and that even their own sinful hearts will betray them to turn them away from Jesus. And so, our God tests us. He wrestles with us. He permits us to suffer, so that we will gain endurance, character, and hope that will not put to shame.  
Little Bayla, who was just baptized into Christ a few moments ago, is a Christian. God has washed away all her sins in the washing of rebirth that joins her to Jesus’ death and resurrection. The Holy Spirit dwells in her. She has a simple, yet real infant faith in her Lord Jesus Christ. As she grows, she will learn more about her Savior Jesus. Her parents will teach her how Jesus, who is both God and man, died on the cross and rose from the dead to save her from her sins. She will learn that when she dies, she will go to heaven. The instruction will be simply and childlike. Yet, as she gets older and wiser, the devil’s tricks will become more sophisticated in order to trick her growing intellect. Her parents will not be able to control her environment, but the world will grow bigger and bigger around her, and so will its influence. And as her body grows and matures, so will her sinful flesh, which fights against the Spirit of God, who dwells inside her.  
So, just as her parent feed her only milk now and do not discipline her at all, yet as she grows she will eat more complex foods, be given more responsibilities, and will be disciplined along the way, so also, her spiritual food will become more complex. She will be taught the faith in greater depth. She will learn arguments to fight against the devil’s lies and to withstand the pressure of the world and win the struggle against the sinful flesh. And God will permit her to suffer along the way too, as he does for all of us. This is how we grow in faith. This is who our faith grows stronger, so that we can bear the crosses of this life with patience.  
Both Jacob and this Canaanite woman wrestled with God. And both Jacob and this Canaanite woman won. Jacob stubbornly held onto God, who was in the form of a man, until he blessed him. He wouldn’t even let go when his hip was knocked out of joint. Why did Jacob refuse to let go? Why did he insist on being blessed? Because God promised to bless him! God promised to be with Jacob wherever he went and that he would protect his family and make his offspring like the dust of the ground. God promised Jacob that he would not leave him until he had done as he promised (Gen. 28:13-15). Yet, in our Old Testament lesson, it looks like the opposite was happening. It looked like Jacob’s brother Esau was going to kill him and his wives and children and take all that he had. What Jacob saw looked like the opposite of what God promised. So, what did Jacob do? He prayed to God and held him at his word. Before his wrestling match with God, he said in a prayer, “But you said, ‘I will surely do you good.’” Jacob held on to God’s promise, just as he held onto the man he wrestled. And he won.  
The Canaanite woman won in the same way. She called Jesus the Son of David, which means that she believed Jesus to be the Christ, God’s anointed Savior. And she believed the promise of Scripture that the Christ would save not only the people of Israel, but also the nations of the whole world. So, she called out to Jesus, the Son of David, for mercy.  
But Jesus ignored her. When she continues to cry out, he said that he was sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel, that is, he was sent only to Jews. This woman is not a Jew, not a descendent of Israel. What Jesus says is true on two counts. He was sent first to proclaim the Gospel only to Israel. This is why he told his disciples to stay in Jerusalem until they received the Holy Spirit on Pentecost. This is also why St. Paul writes in Romans chapter 1, “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.” So, technically yes, Jesus’ ministry at that time was directed at the Jewish people. Jesus’ statement was also true, because everyone who believes in him, both Jews and non-Jews, are grafted into the one House of Israel. We are members of the House of Israel through faith.  
It sounds like Jesus is rejecting her, but the woman continues to ask for help. Jesus says that it is not right to take the children’s bread and give it to the dogs. Here, Jesus is calling the Jews children and the Gentiles dogs. He’s calling her a dog. Will she give up? Will she walk away from Jesus and seek help elsewhere? No. She agrees with Jesus. She acknowledges that she is a dog. That is, she acknowledges that she doesn’t deserve anything from Jesus. But she knows what has been promised. She clings to the promise.  
This is why Jesus says she has a great faith. She has a great faith, not only because she trusts in Jesus, but because she clings to Jesus even when it seems like he is rejecting her. She has a great faith, because she clings to Jesus’ word and promise.  
A great faith clings to God’s promise, even when it seems like God is delaying, even through suffering and hardship. In fact, this suffering, hardship, and waiting strengthens the faith, which clings to the promise.  
Many people measure their faith based on their feelings. When they feel good, they think their faith is strong. Others measure their faith based on their perceived power: how good they are at being a Christian. Some even measure their faith on whether they can speak in tongues or prophesy, or heal sick people. But these are false ways of measuring faith. You might feel good and strong, but that does not mean that you have a strong faith. And you might feel miserable and weak, but that doesn’t mean you have a weak faith. Rather, the true measurement of faith is Jesus Christ and the promise of forgiveness and salvation he offers in his word. If you hold onto Jesus and his promise, your faith is great. Your feelings will change. If you base your faith on your feelings, then your faith is founded on sinking sand. When your feelings change, when you get depressed or feel under attack, then your faith will crumble. But if your faith is grounded on Jesus and his promises, then whether you are sick or healthy, happy or depressed, weak or strong, your faith remains strong.  
When I was in high school, I was on the wrestling team. Someone put up a poster in the wrestling room that said, “Pain is weakness leaving the body.” At the end of a grueling practice, when my clothes were drenched in sweat and my arms and legs felt like rubber, our coach would make us run sprints, do push-ups, and other exercises. They called it conditioning. In one exercise we would sit against the wall as if there were a chair underneath, with only our legs holding us up. As the strength was running out of me and my legs were burning and as the clock on the wall seemed to stop, I would look at that poster and read, “Pain is weakness leaving the body.” And I hated that poster.  
When you’re in pain, when you’re suffering, you don’t like being told that your pain is good. When things are going well, it’s easy to quotes scripture and say, “We know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those called according to his purpose.” (Romans 8:28). But when you’re suffering, you don’t want to hear it. You just want your suffering to go away. But it would still be foolish to say the suffering did no good, or to give up Christ in an attempt to escape the suffering.  
It is good that God lets us suffer here on earth, so that we cling closer to him and his promises. God has promised in our Baptism that we are his own children. He has promised that through Christ he will answer all our prayers. He has promised to forgive all our sins for the sake of Christ’s death and resurrection. He has promised to give us eternal life, to raise us from the dead. God has promised that our suffering is only temporary and that it is better to lose our life here on earth for Christ’s sake, than gain the whole world. God always keeps his promises.  
The suffering we experience in this life is an exercise God gives us to strengthen our faith. As we suffer, we cling closer to the promises God gives us through Jesus in his Word. As we suffer, we fall out of love with our bodies, which cause us so much pain. We fall out of love with the world, which leaves us behind. We fall out of love with ourselves, and claim to be nothing. And Jesus becomes everything. It is as the Psalmist says in Psalm 73, “Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” (vss. 25-26) 
When this world, its cares and troubles, our pride and power, and everything else becomes nothing, and Christ is our everything, then our faith is great. Scripture promises that the suffering of this present time is not worth comparing with the glory to be revealed to us in Jesus. God grant us the faith to believe that. Amen.  
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March 18th, 2019

3/18/2019

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Genesis 32:22-32 
Matthew 15:22-28  
March 17, 2019 
 
Jacob’s anxiety levels are so high, he’s having trouble breathing. His brother Esau is coming to meet him with four hundred men; Esau, who swore that he would kill Jacob. Jacob thinks that he is going to lose everything that God gave him: his flocks and servants, his wives and children. And then a man from God comes to wrestle him all through the night, as if to taunt him saying, “God will not bless you. You will die with your family. Your name will die with you.”  
A mother’s overcome with anguish only a mother worried for her child can know. Her daughter is badly oppressed by a demon. St. Matthew doesn’t tell us from what exact ailment this little girl suffers, but from other accounts of demonic oppression from the Gospels, we can come up with a number of likely possibilities: Deafness, muteness, seizers, paralysis, extreme pain, the loss of her mental faculties, torture of the mind. Regardless of the exact nature of this particular demon, her daughter suffers and this mother feels helpless.  
She’s a Canaanite, a descendent of pagans, whom God commanded Israel to drive out of the land. Yet, she believes in Jesus. She calls him her Lord. She calls him the Son of David, which means the Christ. She pleads for him to have mercy on her daughter, believing that God is merciful as Scripture promises. But Jesus doesn’t answer. Then he says he was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel, which clearly excludes Canaanites. And finally, Jesus calls her a dog.  
This Canaanite woman and Jacob both had faith in the one true God. They heard the promises God made through his word and they believed God. Why then is God so mean to them? Why can’t he just give them a break? Why must he push them away, insult them, and pour salt in their wounds? These two stories sound strange, yet Scripture is filled with examples of God’s people crying out to a seemingly disinterested or even vindictive God.  
Psalm 10:1, “Why, O LORD, do you stand far away? Why do you hide yourself in times of trouble?” Psalm 13, “How long, O LORD? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me? How long must I take counsel in my soul and have sorrow in my heart all the day?” Psalm 44, “In God we have boasted continually, and we will give thanks to your name forever. But you have rejected us and disgraced us and have not gone out with our armies. You have made us turn back from the foe, and those who hate us have gotten spoil. … All day long my disgrace is before me, and shame has covered my face at the sound of the taunter and reviler, at the sight of the enemy and the avenger. All this has come upon us, though we have not forgotten you, and we have not been false to your covenant. Our heart has not turned back, nor have our steps departed from your way; yet you have broken us in the place of jackals and covered us with the shadow of death. If we had forgotten the name of our God or spread out our hands to a foreign god, would not God discover this? For he knows the secrets of the heart. Yet for your sake we are killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered. Awake! Why are you sleeping, O Lord? Rouse yourself! Do not reject us forever! Why do you hide your face? Why do you forget our affliction and oppression?” 
Why does God let his Christians suffer? He still does, doesn’t he? Don’t we Christians still suffer? And I’m not just talking about physical pain and the anxieties of day to day life, which even the unbelievers must endure. I’m talking about suffering that attacks your very soul; Physical suffering that makes you wonder whether God loves you; Betrayal from those, who you thought loved you. I’m talking about a suffering that certainly includes physical, emotional, and mental pain, but goes much deeper than that; suffering, which assaults your faith in God. Why, oh why does God permit such suffering to happen to his children? 
It’s not because God hates his children. God didn’t hate Jacob. Jesus didn’t hate the Canaanite woman or her daughter. And he doesn’t hate you. Rather, God permits his dear Christians to suffer in order to strengthen their faith in him.  
Martin Luther explains how this works when he writes on how to become a theologian. A theologian is someone who studies God’s Word. We should all seek to be theologians. Luther says that a theologian must go through three stages: oratio, meditatio, tentatio.  
Oratio refers to prayer. Luther teaches that the Holy Scriptures are not like any other book. The Bible is the Word of God. It teaches spiritual things, which cannot be understood by natural man, but only by those who are Spiritual (1 Corinthians 2). That is why you must always begin with prayer. You need the Holy Spirit to understand the words of God. This is also why we pray before we listen to a sermon. God is always the teacher of his word.  
Meditatio is what it sounds like, meditation. Yet, the meditation Luther refers to here is not what you might think of with Buddhist monks meditating with their eyes closed, trying to reach a state of nothingness. No, Christian meditation does not happen apart from God’s word. Meditating on God’s Word means to read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest God’s Word. This is different than reading any other book. When you read any other book you make constant judgments as to whether what the author says is true, whether it makes sense to you, whether it is acceptable to your school of reasoning. Not so with Scripture. When you read Scripture, you must submit yourself to it. It is God’s Word. God must teach you.  
Meditating on God’s word is how your faith in Christ grows. Faith of course comes from hearing the words of Christ. Scripture is the word of Christ. Yet, as you grow in understanding and conviction in the promises found in God’s Word the third stage happens: tentatio. 
Tentatio refers to spiritual assault. This is when the devil attacks you. This sounds terrifying and strange, but this is exactly what will happen if you believe the words of Christ. Satan hates Jesus. He doesn’t want anyone to follow him. He wants all Jesus’ Christians to fall away and go to hell. So, he violently attacks Christians, you, me, and little Canaanite girls.  
God permits these attacks. Not because he’s cruel or reckless, but in order to strengthen your faith. “No pain, no gain,” is a cliché, but it is true. If you have a traumatic accident and can’t walk and must go through physical therapy, you must learn to work through some pain in order to walk again. This is the same thing with faith in Christ. This is why Jesus says, “Whoever does not bear his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciples.” Your faith comes with a cross. If you are not willing to bear the cross, then you will lose your faith as well.  
God uses Satan’s attacks to strengthen your faith; Satan clearly has a different goal. He desires to kill your faith. He does this by trying to make the cross you must bear for Christ too heavy, so that you throw out your faith in order to escape the cross. Satan is in a mad furry to kill your faith, but he is also cleverer than you know and well versed in his craft.  
Yet, what foils these attacks of the devil is his own attack. What do Christians do when they are spiritually assaulted? What should you do when Satan attacks you? Pray to God and go to Scripture. Take refuge in the promises of God. This is how you foil the devil’s attacks. And this is how you defeat God in a wrestling match. The devil wants you to despair of God’s promises. God intends you to cling to his promises even if you lose everything else.  
This is what Jacob did. Jacob wrestled God himself. Yet, he would not let go until God blessed him. Why did he say this? Because God promised to bless him. Even with a dislocated hip Jacob clung to God’s promise. He would die clinging to it. God said to Jacob in Genesis 28, “I am the LORD, the God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac. The land on which you lie I will give to you and to your offspring. Your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, and you shall spread abroad to the west and to the east and to the north and to the south, and in you and in your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed. Behold, I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, and will bring you back to this land. For I will not leave you until I have done what I promised you.”  
God promised Jacob, “in you and in your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed.” Jacob clung to this promise. So did the Canaanite woman. She believed that she would be blessed through Jesus Christ, the offspring of Jacob. When Jesus ignored her, she clung to the promise. When Jesus said he was only sent to the lost sheep of Israel, she clung to the promise. When Jesus took away her pride and humiliated her, she clung to Jesus’ words. She called herself a dog and Jesus raised her up to sit at the table.  
“Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.” We heard Jesus say these words last week when he defeated Satan. So, it seems strange that Jesus would not help this woman, whose daughter is oppressed by a minion of the devil. Yet, Jesus is teaching the woman these very words, which thwarted Satan’s plans. Through this trial Jesus taught this woman to value nothing, not her strength, not her intelligence or pride, nothing, but the word of God. And Jesus teaches us the same thing in our lives.  
The trials we face, the suffering we endure, God uses them to teach us to trust solely in him. We sang last week, “Take they our lives, goods, fame, child, and wife, though these all be gone, our vict’ry has been won; the Kingdom ours remaineth.” Let these all be gone. If I have but God’s word, his promise, then I have everything I need.  
It is important for our faith to mature to such a trust that we can lose everything and yet still be satisfied with Christ. Because, our lives will change. We will lose what we love. That’s part of life. When you have everything you think you need, you feel like God is with you. But it would be a terrifying thing if God were only with you when you felt that he was with you. Because you will not always feel that way. Things may not always go as you’d like them to. You may feel like God is far away. But if you cling to the promises God makes to you in his word, you know that he is near, with you every day.  
It seems brutal that Jesus would permit us to suffer so. But Jesus himself had to wrestle with God. In the garden he suffered anguish on account of God’s word. Yet, he trusted in his heavenly Father even as he gave him the cup of woe to drink, the bitter cup of guilt and condemnation of all people. He trusted in the promise of Scripture that he would be raised from the dead, even as he cried to God in dereliction from the cross. Jesus knows more than any human being in the world what it feels like to have his faith tested by God. And he endured it for our sake. He went to the cross confident that his Father would raise him from the grave.  
When Jesus willingly bore the guilt of the whole world and died on the cross for sinners, he confessed his confidence in the word of God. And his resurrection from the dead proved God keeps his promises. God permits you to suffer. And sometimes God himself pushes you. He does this so that you will pray to him even more fervently and so that you will look to his promises in Scripture with even greater hope. Satan would have you escape God’s hand and find solace in some earthly, temporal pleasure. Don’t do that. Rather, when affliction oppresses you turn to God. Cling to his promise and remind God of the promise he made to you. Find your comfort in the fact that God sent Jesus to die for you to save you from your sins. God is pleased with you. He loves you and wants to give you all things as a free gift. Let the trials God sends you be an opportunity to cast off all distractions and rest in God’s grace alone. God accepts you for the sake of Jesus’ suffering and death. He forgives your sins on account of Christ. There is no greater comfort you can find in this life than the comfort of God’s love for you revealed in Scripture. And Scripture promises that the sufferings you now endure are not even worth comparing to the glory to be revealed to you. God loves you. And there is nothing on this earth or in heaven or hell or in your past or future that can change that.   Amen.
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Remiscere: God Lets Himself Be Conquered Through His Word

2/26/2018

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Matthew 15:21-28 
February 25, 2018 
 
Humanly speaking, which saint from the Bible would you trade places with? Would you be willing to live the earthly life of any of the saints in Scripture? Adam's firstborn son murdered his second born, which reminded Adam that sin entered the world because of him. Noah survived the great flood, but everyone he knew outside of his seven family members died in the deluge. God kept Abraham waiting for decades before giving him his son after making him leave his homeland. Joseph ruled Egypt, but not before he was sold into slavery and was imprisoned for years. King David lived as a fugitive more than once fearing for his life. Daniel was fed to lions. And the twelve disciples were either tortured, killed or both. You know, to be honest, I wouldn't trade places with any of them.  

Why does God let his saints suffer so? It seems for those who love and trust in God, they can expect hardship in this life. And perhaps you have experienced such hardship. When God doesn't answer your prayers, it is easy to think that God has forgotten you or perhaps that he even delights in your suffering, as Saint Job prayed in his anguish, "I cry to you for help and you do not answer me; I stand, and you only look at me. You have turned cruel to me; with the might of your hand you persecute me." (Job 30:20-21) And a common thought for the Christian going through suffering is that God is punishing him for some sin. So, why does God permit his Christians to suffer? 

Hebrews 12 states, "For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives. It is for discipline that you have to endure. God is treating you as sons. For what son is there whom his father does not discipline." (vss. 6-7) And this we certainly can understand. A child, who is not disciplined, will be rebellious. As a father disciplines his children for their good, so much more for our good does God discipline us.  

Therefore, when you suffer, it is always appropriate to repent of your sins to God, even those sins, which you do not know. Yet, not all suffering is a result of a direct sin. And sometimes Christians even suffer for doing what is right. Yet, God permits this suffering too, because suffering strengthens faith. St. Paul writes, "suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us." (Romans 5:3-5)  

God doesn't permit us to suffer to be cruel or to push us away from him. He permits us to suffer, so that we will be drawn closer to him and bear much fruit. Jesus says that every branch that bears fruit will be pruned, that it may bear more fruit. (John 15:2) So just as pruning might seem to hurt a plant, a gardener does it so that a plant will grow more fruit and be healthier. And some gardeners will even beat a fruit tree with a stick if it doesn't produce fruit, so that the tree gets shocked and starts to produce.  

God wants you to produce fruit. He wants your faith in him to grow as well as your love for him and your neighbor. And God knows how much your faith can handle when he permits you to suffer. One of the authors of our Lutheran Confessions, Philip Melanchthon, wrote, "Hypocrisy mimics the Spirit of God, but trial will show the truth, since in affliction only the faithful endures." Hypocrites, that is, those with fake faith will not endure the trials God sends. They won't keep the faith when times get rough. But true faith endures trials and affliction. 
 
When going through suffering it can be easy to take your focus off your faith, especially when it seems that God isn't answering your prayers. But the most important thing to do when going through trials is to focus on God's Word. The Canaanite woman in our Gospel text teaches us how to do this.  

The woman's daughter is badly oppressed by a demon, which is a horror that none of us should wish on our worst enemy. She cries out to Jesus for mercy. Yet, she doesn't simply cry out to Jesus, because she hears that there's this miracle worker going around, who might help. She calls Jesus, "Son of David," which is the title of the Messiah. Even though she is a Gentile and not a Jew, she has faith in Jesus, because the Scriptures say that in him the Gentiles will hope. (Isaiah 11:10) 

Yet, Jesus doesn't answer her. Was her faith wrong? Did she misunderstand the promise? I'm sure you've experienced something similar, where you've prayed to God for mercy in some part of your life, but God doesn't seem to answer. This is where many would simply give up. But not the Canaanite woman, she continues to cry out for help. And so should you even when it seems that God is silent to your prayers. As Jesus said in another part of Scripture that we should continue to pray and never lose heart (Luke 18:1).  

As the woman continues to cry out, even Jesus' disciples plead to Jesus on her behalf. Yet Jesus responds, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." This is even worse than silence. Jesus says he was sent only to the house of Israel. This woman is a Gentile, not a Jew. Is Jesus really saying that he won't help her because of her race?  

Yet, the woman persists. She falls down on her knees before Jesus and says, "Lord, help me." But Jesus responds, "It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs." The Jews are the children. She's a Gentile dog. Surely, she'll give up now. How clearer could Jesus get. He's saying, "no." Isn't he?  

But the woman still isn't deterred. And here we learn the greatest lesson about prayer from our sister in Christ, the Canaanite woman. You see, the woman was listening carefully to Jesus' words, even as she was in distress. Jesus called her a dog. So, she says, "Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master's table." It's true isn't it? You're not going to deny a dog crumbs! So, Jesus says, "O woman, great is your faith! Let it be done for you as you desire."  

The woman beat Jesus in the war of words. Jesus didn't say anything untrue. He was only sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. It isn't good to take from children to give to dogs. But the woman listened closely to find a promise. You don't deprive dogs of crumbs. And so, the woman proved herself not to be a dog after all. Rather, she is a true sheep of the house of Israel. Israel, as we learned in our Old Testament lesson, means one who struggles with God and men and wins. This woman struggled with Jesus and came out victorious! And she proved that a person becomes a member of the house of Israel through faith and not through flesh.  

When Jesus teaches you to be persistent in prayer, he is not telling you to throw a temper tantrum like a two-year-old and cry and cry until we get what you want. He's not saying that if you want it really, really badly, then you will get it. As if God doesn't give you what you asked for, because you didn't want it badly enough. No, when Jesus teaches you to be persistent in prayer, he is teaching you to cling to his word. Just as the hymn says, "By the light His Word doth lend you, Prayer will joy and comfort send you." God's Word provides the light to your prayers. You don't know what to pray for without God's Word. And you don't know that God will answer your prayers unless he says so in his word.  

Jacob wrestled with God all night. And even as his hip was out of joint he clung to God and wouldn't let go until he blessed him. Why would Jacob do this? Is he teaching you that if you try your hardest God will reward you? No. He's teaching you to trust in God's word even when it looks like God is going back on his word. God said to Jacob, "Your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, and you shall spread abroad to the west and to the east and to the north and to the south, and in you and your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed. Behold, I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, and will bring you back to this land. For I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised." (Gen. 28:14-15)  

Jacob struggled all night and fought through the pain, because he had a promise from God. Scripture does not teach that you will get whatever you want if you never give up. There might be things you want that God doesn't promise to give you. There might be things you want that are wrong for you to want. But God promises you great things in his word, not the least of which is eternal life in heaven through the merits of Jesus Christ. God wants you to believe that he will give you everything he promises. And when it seems that God will not give what he promises, God wants you to cling to his promise with all your might.  

When you are going through a trial, whether it is sickness or a broken relationship or financial troubles or a guilty conscience and it seems that God is silent to your prayers, God wants you to go to his word and pray according to his promises. God promises to clothe you and feed you. He promises to protect you from the devil and that no one can snatch his sheep out of his hands. God promises to forgive all your sins for the sake of Jesus' suffering and death. God promises that all who have been baptized into Christ are baptized into his death and are also joined to Christ's resurrection. God promises that whoever receives Christ's body and blood in the Sacrament in true faith receives forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation. God promises that guardian angels are watching over you. Read the Scriptures. Recite the Creed. Go to church and hear a sermon or go and talk to your pastor. Hear and learn God's word. Be like that Canaanite woman and listen carefully for God's yes to your prayers.  

Jesus was defeated by the Canaanite woman. And he wanted to be defeated. And he wants you to win too. But the only way you can win when you wrestle with God is by clinging to God's Word. That is how Jacob won. That is how the Canaanite woman won.  

You are saved through faith alone apart from your works. Yet, faith puts you to work. And you will find yourself exhausted in body, soul, and mind exercising your faith during life's trials. Yet faith is a resilient thing when it holds to God's Word. In the midst of Job's suffering, he was able to say of God, "Though he slay me, I will hope in him." (Jobe 13:15) Through faith, St. Paul was able to say, "For I consider the sufferings of this present time not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us.", and, "For those who love God, all things work together for good." (Romans 8:18; 28) And in the midst of your suffering your faith can say this too, because Jesus has promised you that whoever comes to him he will never cast out.  

Jesus said, "In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart. I have overcome the world." (John 16:33) Jesus overcame the world through his suffering on the cross. And through this suffering he won for you eternal life. Jesus' suffering also shows you God's willingness to give you every good thing. With faith in Jesus' suffering for your sins, you can have confidence to pray to God in every trouble, as King David said in Psalm 34, "The young lions suffer want and hunger; but those who seek the LORD lack no good thing." 
​

God always keeps his word. It is impossible for him to break his promise. So, if you want assurance that God will answer your prayer, listen to what God promises to give you in his word for the sake of Jesus Christ. No good thing can God deny you. Don't lose heart. Keep praying. Amen.  ​
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Reminiscere Sunday: Lent 2

3/13/2017

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Picture
Matthew 15:22-28 
​God Remembers His Mercy 
03/12/2017  
​

"Remember your mercy, O LORD, and your steadfast love, for they have been from of old. According to your steadfast love remember me." (Psalm 25:6, 7) We prayed this as our Introit this morning. "Remember, O LORD!" Remember. Does the Lord forget? It sure seems like it sometimes, doesn't it.  
"Lord you promised! 'Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.' (Matthew 7:7) You promised, 'If you ask me anything in my name, I will do it.' (John 14:14) But I've asked. I've sought. I've knocked till my knuckles were raw. Why won't you answer? Have you forgotten what you promised? Have you forgotten me?"  
And so is the pain of suffering and waiting for the Lord. "I need a job. My child is sick. I have cancer. My child is addicted to drugs and estranged from the church. I feel guilty for my sins and the feeling won't go away and I'm suffocating from anxiety. Lord, have mercy on me. Lord, help me."  
Suffering is no fun. And suffering can be dangerous, not only to our bodies, but to our souls. In suffering we're tempted to look away from God and his promises and to find other sources of comfort. Not even just drugs and alcohol, although Satan certainly uses those, but lies. Comforts that boost your pride, that deny God's Law, his love, or his existence. But God does not permit us to suffer, because he hates us. He doesn't make us wait, because he's cruel. God permits us to suffer in order to direct us to his Word and to strengthen our faith. St. Paul writes, "We rejoice in our suffering, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put to shame..." (Romans 5:3-5) 
The Canaanite woman in our text teaches us a lot about suffering, faith, and prayer. She hears about Jesus and she believes what she has heard about him. She has faith in Jesus, that is why she calls him, "Lord, Son of David." She believes Jesus is the Christ. She comes to Jesus begging him to help her daughter. Her daughter is severely oppressed by a demon. Surely Jesus, who drove Satan away with the Word of God would gladly drive this devil out of her daughter. "O Lord, have mercy!" But Jesus is silent.  
Still the woman persists, so that even his disciples plead for her for nothing else than to stop hearing her annoying whining. And Jesus curtly replies, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." The woman is not an Israelite. She's a foreigner. Yet she persists. "Lord, help me."  
Is she deaf? Didn't Jesus just say he was sent only to the house of Israel? Is she an Israelite? Is she socially inept? Can't she see that Jesus doesn't want to help her? Well, if she hasn't figured it out yet, Jesus' next response surely will squash whatever faith she had in him. "It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs." My goodness. Does Jesus need to humiliate her? Does he have to call her a dog? Couldn't he just tell her, "no."? But Jesus doesn't say, "no." Does he?  
The woman doesn't hear, "no" either. And she is listening. She's been listening to Jesus the entire time, listening for a "yes" to her prayers, and she finds it. In an insult, she finds it. "Yes, Lord, I'm a dog. So give me what is entitled to a dog. Even the little dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their masters' table. Give me the crumbs. Save my daughter."  
And here our clever sister in Christ catches Jesus in his own words. And Jesus is glad to be caught. "O woman, great is your faith! Be it done for you as you desire." And her little girl was relieved of the tormenting spirit. Surely the woman's faith was great. It had been tried like silver in fire. She has proven herself a true daughter of Israel. Jacob was named Israel, because he strove with God and man and won. This woman strove with the God-man, Jesus Christ, and she won by clinging to Christ's word.  
And so this Syrophoenician woman teaches us about faith. Faith clings to God's word. It clings to his promise, even if it has to wait. Even if it seems to be rejected. Even if God himself seems to be rejecting it. Faith listens intently to God's Word and clings to God's promise. And so you too must be an Israel. You too must strive with God and cling to God's promise like Jacob clung to the Lord in the dust with a dislocated hip through the night until morning. Do not let go until you receive the blessing God has promised to you.  
God may say, "But you're a sinner. You deserve to go to hell. Didn't I call you to holiness, not to impurity? Yet you covet what isn't yours. You cheat your neighbor. You lust after indecency. Why should I answer your prayer?" You could despair at this and conclude that God hates you. You could get offended and say, "How dare you call me a sinner and threaten me with hell." You could hold on to your pride for dear life.  
Or, like the Canaanite woman you can listen to God's Word and find your promise there. "You call me a sinner? Why, yes I am a sinner. I cannot deny it no matter how much I wish I were a holy Israelite. So give me what you promise sinners. You said, 'I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.' (Matthew 9:13) Scripture says that Jesus Christ is 'the propitiation for our sins, and not our sins only but for the sins of the whole world.' (1 John 2:2) You caused the Psalmist to writes, 'I acknowledged my sin to you, and I did not cover my iniquity, I said, "I will confess my transgressions to the LORD," and you forgave the iniquity of my sin.' (Psalm 32:5) So God, I accept every word you say. I am a sinner. So treat me like a sinner. Forgive me and answer my prayer." 
This is how we must pray. In our suffering we will worry that God won't give us what we need, because we are so unworthy. Our sins will accuse us and so we think that God will let us go to ruin. But faith acknowledges that you don't deserve anything from God, but you receive it all by grace as a gift. Faith doesn't cling to your pride. It doesn't cling to what you deserve. It doesn't cling to your suffering. Faith clings to God's Word and promise. It searches God's Word for assurance.  
This is why we pray that God would remember us and have mercy on us. Not because God might forget. Not because God doesn't intend to have mercy on us. But for the sake of our faith, we must always pray according to God's Word and promise. God does remember you. He will have mercy on you. And your sins will not be a hindrance to his mercy, because he washes them away in Jesus' blood.  
A great mistake people make when praying, especially when they are suffering, is to pray without God's Word. Prayer without God's Word isn't prayer. It's brooding. It's complaining. It's self-pity. Prayer without God's Word leads to false belief and despair. So we must learn from this true sheep of the house of Israel, this Gentile, who sits at the Lord's table. She listened intently to God's Word and she prayed accordingly. So when you pray, first listen to God's Word. Read it. Ponder it. Pray it. Pray the Lord's Prayer, because you know God promises to answer it. Pray the Psalms. And listen in God's Word for the answer to your prayers. Through God's Word you will learn to accept the hardship God permits you to suffer and to realize when he is answering you with a big, "Yes."  
God remembers you. He remembers the mercy and steadfast love he promised you. But your faith must remember it. It remembers it by listening to God's Word. And when you pray according to God's Word, Jesus will say to you, "Great is your faith. Let it be as you have desired." 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 
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