The blessing of being poor

poor-in-spirit

Epiphany 4 2017
Immanuel Lutheran, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
January 29, 2017
Psalm 15:1-5, Micah 6:1-8, 1 Corinthians 1:18-31, Matthew 5:1-2

 

It is that time of year when we are through the NFL playoffs and looking forward to the Super Bowl next weekend.  At the beginning of the season there was great hope for all the teams; even the Bengals and Browns, but now it has come down to just two.  Who will be victorious?  Who will be the winner?  As you watch the game you will see players scoring touchdowns and then proudly pointing skyward in thanks to God for their success.

You will also quarterbacks get sacked and running backs get tackled for a loss.  They will humbly have to pick themselves up off the ground, brush off and straighten their gear.  But, almost certainly, you won’t see them point skyward in thanks to God in their humiliation.

We love success.  We celebrate victory.  We rejoice with winners.  We love to be inspired to do more; to achieve more; to be more.  It is the American dream.

We love victory and success and then we come to church and we normally start out by getting down our knees and admitting that we are, by nature, sinful and unclean.  We admit that we have sinned in thought, word and deed and deserve God’s present punishment and God’s eternal punishment.

This is one of the hard things about trying to advertise to get people to come to church.  Telling people that they are sinners is hard to market.  The church tells people things about themselves that they do not want to hear and that doesn’t sell.

You want to hear, “You are good enough just as you are.”  The Church tells you that you are in bondage to sin.

You want to hear, “You just need to try a little harder.”  The Church tells you that you cannot free yourself no matter how hard you try.

You want to hear that everything is ok.  You want to hear about success and victory, and the church talks about sin and forgiveness.

There is a simple message at Church, the same message that prepared the way for Jesus.  “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  Jesus continues to preach John the Baptist’s message, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  We have the same message today, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  The rule of heaven; the reign of heaven; the Kingdom of Heaven is here in the person of Jesus.

Jesus is the Lord and King.  Jesus is God in flesh come to be with the people.  The people are called to repent because Jesus is here; God in flesh is here; Immanuel is here.  You are called to repent because Jesus is here with us where two or three are gathered.  You are called to repent because you are baptized into Christ.  You have put on Christ.  You are called to repent because Jesus is present in His Word.  You are called to repent because Jesus is present in Holy Communion.

God is present here for you.  You are a sinner who comes into the presence of God and that is a humbling, frightening thing to do.  God is holy; you are a sinner.  You confess that you deserve God’s immediate and eternal punishment.

Repentance is a difficult thing to do because in repentance you admit that you cannot change the fact that you are a sinner.  In repentance you know that no matter how hard you try you are going to sin again.  You fear; you worry, you know you are going to return again to that same, stupid, selfish sin.  In repentance you realize that despite your best efforts you are not able to stop sinning.  You are a sinner in the presence of the Holy God.

   Repentance is a difficult thing to do because in repentance you admit that you cannot change the fact that you are a sinner.

You want to try to say its okay.  There is great temptation to try to redefine sin or to rationalize sin or to make excuses for sin or to explain away sin but all of these are simply word games to avoid the truth.  You are a sinner.  You bring nothing to the table with which to negotiate with God.

You are not a spiritual giant.  You are not spiritually rich.  You do not have things together.  When it comes to spiritual things you are poor.  You are poor in spirit.  You can struggle against sin, but you cannot overcome your sinful nature.  You are poor in spirit.  I am poor in spirit.  Other than Jesus, everyone descended from Adam is poor in spirit.

But some don’t want to believe it.  Some people claim that they are spiritually rich.  They claim they are doing it; they are good enough.  They claim that they are able to conquer sin and achieve holiness in this life.  They are fooling themselves.  “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.”

You are poor in spirit.

Jesus teaches, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

Repenting of your sin and realizing that you are indeed a natural born sinner reveals the key to the Kingdom of Heaven.

Jesus is the key to the Kingdom of Heaven.  Jesus is the door to the kingdom of heaven.  Jesus is the door to life everlasting.  Repenting of your sin and knowing you are sinner shows your need for a savior.  It shows your need for Jesus.  The door is open for everyone but those that are fooling themselves into believing they are rich in spirit won’t use the door.

Everyone is given the key to Kingdom of heaven.  Everyone is given forgiveness of sins in Jesus, but so many think they don’t need it.  They think they don’t need Jesus and they throw away the key.  They believe they are good enough.  They believe they try hard enough.  They believe they have done enough and are saved by their own good works.  They believe that they may not be perfect but they are not as bad as those really bad sinners, so it is okay.

How tragic that someone has the key to the kingdom of heaven given to them and they simply throw it away because they want to trust their own good works.

You have the key to the kingdom.  You have Jesus.  You know that you cannot do it on your own.  You know and have confessed that you are by nature sinful and unclean.  You know you are poor in spirit.

And you are blessed.  You are blessed with God’s blessing for now and on the judgment day.  Blessed are the poor in spirit.

You are blessed because you are right now in the kingdom of heaven.  You are right now in the reign of Jesus.  You are right now made holy and perfect through the blood of Jesus shed on the cross.  Not from anything you have done, but from what Jesus has done for you in his life, death and resurrection.  Truly, it is not about you; it’s about Jesus for you.  This is great Good News; you are a sinner saved by the Grace of God.  Such amazing Good News and yet this Good News drives people away from the doorway to the Kingdom of Heaven because they do not want to admit they are sinners.  They do not want to admit they need Jesus.  They do not want to admit that they are not a part of their own salvation.  They do not want to admit that salvation comes from Christ on the cross alone.  They think the cross is foolishness.

And, indeed, Christ on the cross is a strange way of salvation.  How is a beaten and bloody man dying in excruciating pain on the cross the source of forgiveness?  How can this be?  What kind of God would have this incredible humiliation be the source of the world’s salvation?  So many people look at Jesus on the cross and think; what kind of God is this?  What good is this?  Where is the success?  Where is the victory?  How strange is the cross, but on that cross is where Jesus paid the price for your salvation.  On that cross is where Jesus declared, “it is finished.”  Your salvation is complete, but so many cannot accept the free gift.  They want to do something themselves. That is why in every humanly devised religion salvation is found in doing good works.  What do I need to do to be saved?  Give me a list of things to do.

But there is no list.  There is nothing for you to do.  It has been done for you.  You are saved because of what Jesus has done for you.

You have been given the key to the Kingdom of Heaven and invited in.  Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

You are in the Kingdom of Heaven.  You are under the rule and reign of Jesus and so you live as a citizen of the Kingdom.  You live in daily repentance. You live in love for one another.  You live in service to one another.  You live out who you are in Christ, struggling against sin and resisting the devil.  However difficult life is here on earth, however many defeats and humiliations you suffer, success and victory are yours in Christ.  Even in humiliation and defeat when you’ve been tackled by life you can point heavenward in thanks to God who has blessed you for eternity.  Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  Amen.

 

With Jesus there is no “life unworthy of life.”

care_2360c-1Epiphany 3 2017
Life Sunday
January 22, 2017
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
Psalm 27:1-9, Isaiah 9:1-4, 1 Corinthians 1:10-18, Matthew 4:12-25

In high school I really wanted to go to the Coast Guard Academy after graduation.  I had gone up to visit; I had done all their applications and medical testing.  I told people that is where I am going to go.  Then a letter arrives from the United States Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut.  It began…I regret to inform you…blah, blah, blah…you didn’t make the cut.

When I was looking for a new job once I applied to work at a large sales company selling computers to people who called in from advertisements.  I had done a couple of interviews and was confident I would get the job as I thought I was pretty overqualified.  Then I got the email.  I didn’t get the job.  I didn’t make the cut.

Have you ever had the experience of being told that you didn’t make the cut?  You applied for a position but didn’t get the job.  Maybe you were trying out for a play and you thought you had done a really good job on the audition, but when they posted the cast list your name wasn’t on it.  What a terrible feeling to know you didn’t make the cut.

Or perhaps you tried out for a sports team and you gave it your best effort, but you got cut from the team because you were not big enough or fast enough.  You hadn’t developed enough.  You didn’t make the cut.

Not big enough, not fast enough, cannot sing or act well enough.  Or maybe you didn’t make the cut because the director or coach just doesn’t like your kind of people.  Maybe you came from the wrong side of the tracks.  Maybe you weren’t part of the right group.  Sometimes you don’t even know why you weren’t accepted, but you know that you just didn’t make the cut.

In life there are a lot of people who are weak and vulnerable; people who need extra care and protection.  There are people who are susceptible due to poverty, to illness, to mental or physical disabilities, to addictions, to age, to size; so many people who are fragile and defenseless.

It is far too easy to look at weak and vulnerable people and declare that they do not make the cut.  They are not good enough; strong enough; productive enough; valuable enough.  There is a growing movement in the world and in this nation to promote assisted suicide for people who are weak and vulnerable.  There are now six states in the U.S. and many countries around the world that allow doctor assisted suicide.  In Belgium this can be applied to children as young as 12.  And in the Netherlands a man was killed by assisted suicide due to his alcohol addiction.

And it begins by being called “death with dignity.”  But death is not our choice.  It is not given to us to take a life; even our own.  Only the government has the right to take a life and then only in restraint of evil.  And while it may start out being called “death with dignity” it soon will become a duty to die; an implied obligation to die because you no longer make the cut.  You have become a burden on others.  You are costing too much money.  Your life has become a “life unworthy of life.”  In German this is Lebensunwertes Leben.  And in Nazi Germany it meant it was a good thing to kill you because you did not make the cut.  You were handicapped.  You were not good enough; strong enough; fast enough.  You didn’t believe the right things, you were out of the norm, your racial heritage was not approved of.  Your life was deemed Lebensunwertes Leben , “Life unworthy of life.”  And you could be put to death because you didn’t make the cut.

Now Nazi Germany it would seem is an extreme example as they deemed more than 10 million people to be “life unworthy of life”.  It may seem extreme, but not when you look at what is happening in our own nation.  We must be on guard against the danger of operating under the same principle that there is some life unworthy of life.  State after state is voting to legalize assisted suicide.  Forty four years ago today, the Supreme Court of the United States declared that it was a constitutionally protected right to decide that some life is “Life unworthy of life.”  The Supreme Court declared that people have a constitutional right to end the life of their unborn child if that life is decided to be “life unworthy of life.”  Since that fateful decision in 1973 not 10 Million, not 20 million, but over 55 million babies have been declared to be “life unworthy of life.”  That number is mind boggling.

Too often pregnancies are terminated because the child doesn’t make the cut.  It might be that the child has medical issues, or it has the wrong number of chromosomes, or it has come at a bad time, or even that the child is not the sex the parents’ desire.  Because of any number of reasons the child is determined to be “life unworthy of life” and is terminated.  People will make excuses as to why it is okay. It is small, it is undeveloped, it is inside another person, it is dependent on others.  So they declare the child to be “life unworthy of life.”  This is the same principle that made Nazi Germany the despicable place that it became; the principle that some people don’t make the cut for life.

This is the same principle that made Nazi Germany the despicable place that it became; the principle that some people don’t make the cut for life.

This is a great darkness in our land and in our world.  What a tremendous darkness that instead of protecting the weakest and most vulnerable we deem them unworthy and kill them.  We can get so focused on the rich and powerful and beautiful and thin and productive people that we start to believe that others just don’t make the cut.  We can start to believe that we are worthy, but these others are unworthy.

What do we learn from Jesus about who makes the cut?  In our Gospel reading today we find Jesus beginning His ministry after being baptized and then tempted in the wilderness.  How does Jesus’ ministry begin?  Is it with a big parade of victory into the great city of Jerusalem?  No.  It begins with the prophet announcing Jesus’ arrival being arrested and thrown into the dungeon at Herod’s castle.  Jesus does not go to the great Jewish city of Jerusalem, but rather to the sketchy, border region of Galilee in the land of the tribes of Zebulun and Naphtali.  Jesus goes to the outlying regions where the people intermarried and Jewish bloodlines are tainted.  Jesus, the King of the Jews, takes up residence in the rough and tumble city of Capernaum.  Jesus goes to the land of darkness and in the land of darkness the light has dawned.

And Jesus continues to preach the message first brought by John the Baptist.  “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  Repent, for the reign of heaven is at hand.  Indeed it is.  Jesus is the king who has come to rule over his people.  The reign of heaven is right here in the person of Jesus; the Lord; the Messiah.

Jesus is king and yet Jesus does not act like a king.  Jesus begins to assemble a group of followers and who does he go to?  What kind of people does Jesus choose?  Does Jesus choose the rich, the powerful, the beautiful, the best and the brightest?  No.  Jesus chooses fishermen.  He calls them and they follow him.

And Jesus teaches and proclaims the gospel of the kingdom and he heals people.  Jesus goes the weak and vulnerable and brings them healing.  What kind of people does Jesus hang out with?  The sick; those afflicted with various diseases and pains; those oppressed by demons, epileptics and paralytics.  Jesus welcomes the people that don’t make the cut in the world.

Jesus welcomes tax collectors and sinners and eats with them.  Jesus welcomes those who don’t make the cut.

Jesus welcomes sinners and what great Good News this is for you and me.  You are a sinner who does not make the cut in the quest for holiness and perfection.  You are indeed a poor, miserable sinner.  You are indeed, by nature, sinful and unclean.  You are weak and vulnerable because of your sin.  Jesus welcomes you.  Jesus heals you from sin and guilt.

The Church; the Body of Christ on earth, is in the business of bringing the healing touch of Jesus to a world made weak and vulnerable by sin.  Now sometimes we can think that there are some sins Jesus will forgive and some sins that are so bad that those folks don’t make the cut.  But Jesus forgives all sins.  The gift of forgiveness is for all people.  All people are called on to be followers of Jesus.  Jesus forgives all your sins even those you are so ashamed of; even the sin of declaring another “life unworthy of life” and ending a pregnancy or participating with another in terminating a pregnancy.

With Jesus there is no one who doesn’t make the cut.  With Jesus there is no letter that starts with, “I regret to inform you…”  With Jesus there is no rejection email.  No team roster without your name on it.  With Jesus all people are called to repent and follow Him and be His disciple.  With Jesus everyone makes the cut.  With Jesus there is no one whose life is unworthy of life.  Not even those whom we may want to marginalize.  Jesus comes for unexpectedly lowly people.  He comes for the hurting; for the weak and vulnerable; for you and me.  He calls you to love and serve each other; especially the weak and vulnerable.

With Jesus you make the cut because He gave His life for you.  In your baptism Jesus made you worthy of eternal life in the reign of heaven right now and for eternity.

Amen.

Behold! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!

Epiphany 2, 2017
January 15, 2017
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
Psalm 40:1-11, Isaiah 49:1-7, 1 Corinthians 1:1-9, John 1:29-42

 

lamb_6710cn            “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

When the children of Israel were in slavery in Egypt the Lord sent plagues against hard-hearted Pharaoh and all the Egyptians.  The final plague was the Lord coming against the Egyptians to kill the firstborn both of man and animal.

The children of Israel were protected from this plague by the blood of lambs.  Each family selected an unblemished year old male lamb and killed it at twilight.  They painted the lintel and doorposts of their homes with the blood and roasted the lambs to eat with unleavened bread and bitter herbs.  The Lord that night passed over the houses of the children of Israel protected by the blood of the lamb.

Each year the Jews remembered God’s deliverance from Egypt by killing a lamb and roasting it and eating it to remember the first Passover when God protected them by the blood of lambs from the Plague of the death of the first born.

In accordance with the Lord’s instruction in Exodus 29 early each morning the Jewish priest would make his way to the sheep pen. Each and every morning the temple priest selected a year old lamb, carried it out of the pen, bond its legs, took a knife and sacrificed it on the temple altar.  He did this every morning.  He did the same thing every evening.  He selected a lamb and sacrificed it on the temple altar.  Every morning and every evening the priest sacrificed a lamb.  Two lambs a day, 14 lambs a week, 60 lambs a month, 730 lambs a year.  This was a regular burnt offering on the temple altar to remember that the Lord YHWH is God.  He is the one who brought the children of Israel up out of the land of Egypt so that He might dwell with them.

730 lambs a year as a daily remembrance of God’s deliverance; thousands of lambs sacrificed each year for the Passover meal.  So many lambs…shedding so much blood.

John the Baptist sees Jesus coming towards him.  “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

John the Baptist here says a mouthful as he sees Jesus coming towards him, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

Behold is one of those words that we don’t really use much in our daily language.  Behold!  Anyone who is listening, take notice!  This is important.  Behold!

The Lamb of God.  The Lamb of God.  All the blood of thousands upon thousands of lambs sacrificed daily and at Passover all culminate in this one Lamb, who is not a lamb, but a man; who is not only a man, but God in flesh.  The Lamb of God.  How can this be?  What does this mean?  How can Jesus of Nazareth, be The Lamb of God.  The Lambs are killed.  What is going to happen to Jesus?

And what does it mean that He is the Lamb of God?  Is this a Lamb owned by God or a Lamb provided by God?  As we learn more about this Jesus of Nazareth we learn that indeed He is the Lamb provided by God.  Jesus is the Lamb offered by God.

The Passover Lambs shed their blood to protect the children of Israel from the Lord’s wrath against Egypt.  What is this Lamb going to do?

“Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”  Takes away the sin of the world.”

What an amazing thing to say about Jesus.  He is going to take away the sin of the world.

All the original Passover lambs gave their lives to protect the children of Israel in Egypt.  Jesus is going to take away the sin of the world.  Not just Israel, but all the world.  The world is not only a huge idea, but it is also a sin-filled place.  We talk about the causes of sin being the devil, the world and our own sinful nature.  The world is not an agent of good as much as an agent of temptation and sin.

Jesus of Nazareth is going to take away the sin of the world.  This is a overwhelming concept.  The quantity of my own sin and rebellion is devastating.  If one person’s sin is crushing what about the sin of the whole world?  What does one person’s sin look like?  A wheelbarrow load of muck?  A truckload?  A pile?  A mountain?  What does the sin of the world look like?  What does this sin of 100 billion people look like.

“Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”  How does a lamb take away sin?  By shedding its blood.  The title of Lamb of God is not a title of distinction.  It is a title of service; a title of sacrifice.  Jesus is the one anointed by the Holy Spirit to be the sacrifice for the sin of the world.  Jesus of Nazareth is the one chosen to shed His blood to cover the sins of the world.  This man walking toward John the Baptist is anointed to be sacrificed on the altar of the cross to be the perfect, final offering.  He is God in flesh.  He is the Christ.  Christ the victim, Christ the priest.

This one sentence of John the Baptist has so much in it.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.”  Think of this verse when you see a crucifix; a depiction of Jesus Christ dying on the cross.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” Think of this verse when you see the letter IHS on a cross which are the first three letters in Greek for Jesus.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”  Think of this verse as you look at the front stained glass and see God the Son represented as a lamb.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

Think of this verse when you see a crucifix; a depiction of Jesus Christ dying on the cross.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

What an amazing verse.  Enough here to chew on for a lifetime of meditation.  This is a lot to ponder for a very long time.

Because just saying it doesn’t mean we understand it.  Understanding it doesn’t mean we have full comprehension.  How can we comprehend that kind of love?

Now, reading our Gospel lesson today, it seems like we have the story of Jesus pretty much wrapped up by the end of the first chapter in John.  We can wonder how it is that the book of John needs to continue.  The people already seem to have Jesus figured out.  He is the Lamb of God, he is Son of God, he is Rabbi, He is Messiah, He is Christ.  It seems that John the Baptist and the disciples already know all they need to know about Jesus.  But even though they know these titles, they, like us, still have a lot to learn.  We know that they don’t fully understand.  We know the rest of the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection and ascension, and we don’t fully understand.  But we do know that it is true.  “Behold!  The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”  We all need to continue to bask in the love of God shown in sending Jesus to be the sacrificial Lamb.

We all need to continue to receive the gifts of God given through Jesus; His washing in Holy Baptism, His Word of forgiveness, His body and blood in Holy Communion.  We live in love and forgiveness protected by the blood of the Lamb.

Behold! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!

Amen.

Filthy dirty Jesus

water_14952ac

Epiphany 1, Baptism of our Lord, 2017
January 8, 2017
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
Psalm 29:1-11, Isaiah 42:1-9, Romans 6:1-11, Matthew 3:13-17

 

There is a long line of sheep all heading for the river.  The sheep are filthy dirty.  Their wool is matted and caked with dirt with big hunks of muck hanging off of them; their legs are brown from walking through mud.  The smell of the sheep is enough to make you gag and cause your eyes to water.  These grubby sheep are all lined up headed towards the river.

The dirty sheep are guided down into the river by a shepherd dressed in camel hair with a leather belt.  The sheep go into the water of the river and all of the dirt and filth is washed away and they emerge from the river beautiful and clean and brilliant.

Strangely, there is another group of filthy dirty sheep on the bank of the river.  These sheep are just as dirty as the others but they just watch the other sheep being cleansed in the waters and they shake their heads and look on disapprovingly.  These sheep don’t seem to realize that they too are dirty.

In the midst of all these filthy, dirty sheep one stands out.  This Lamb gets in line with the other sheep, but this one is different.  This Lamb is spotless.  This Lamb is perfect.  This Lamb’s wool is beautiful and clean.  This Lamb does not have a mark or blemish or stain.  Standing in the line with all the filthy, dirty sheep this spotless Lamb stands out.  When the Lamb comes to the edge of the river the shepherd, at first, refuses to let the sparkling clean lamb enter the water made dirty by all the other sheep.  But then this beautiful, spotless, clean lamb does enter into the water; the same water the filthy dirty sheep entered to have all their muck washed away.  The clean lamb enters the water and the filth and dirt from countless sheep is drawn to the Lamb’s clean wool.  The beautiful, spotless lamb is surrounded by the filth and dirt of all the sheep and it clings to him.  The spotless Lamb is a magnet for the filth and emerges from the water a dirty, filthy, stinking ball of wretchedness.  The one lamb takes all the dirt from all the other sheep and carries it away.

            The one lamb takes all the dirt from all the other sheep and carries it away.

The group of dirty sheep on the banks of the river watching all this happen are disgusted by the lamb and set in their minds that they must kill this lamb when they get the chance.  That one lamb is carrying the filth for the many that are now clean.

What a wonderful thing to be one of the formerly filthy, dirty sheep that has been washed clean in the water.  You are one of those sheep.  You have been washed clean in the waters of holy baptism.  All of your sins have been washed away and transferred to the spotless Lamb of God who has taken all your sin.  And this is God’s will. As Jesus emerges from the waters of His baptism having taken ownership of the sins of the world, Matthew 3:16-17 (ESV) 16 … the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming to rest on him; 17 and behold, a voice from heaven said, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.” [1]

2 Corinthians 5:21 (ESV) 21 For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.[2]

You have been baptized into Christ.  You have put on Christ.  You have been washed clean.  You wear the sparkling white robe of Christ’s righteousness.

So what do you do when you find yourself tempted by the devil, the world and your own sinful nature to take up a big handful of dirt and filth and smear it on yourself?  You stand there with a big handful of mud as you are about to hit that enter key on the computer that will take you to places on the internet that will pour gasoline on the flame of your lusts.  You stand there ready to fall into a field of filth as you prepare to engage in that sexual relationship outside the bonds of the lifelong marriage union of a man and a woman.  You are there ready to swim in a pool of filth as you let your anger bubble over unchecked and you insist on your own way by threats and intimidation.  You stand, spotless and clean, washed in the waters of baptism and yet so tempted to embrace the filth of sin in so many situations of life.  You want to give filthy sin a big hug because it seems to be the easy way out, it bring momentary pleasure, it is the short cut, it is what comes naturally.

When you find yourself ready to rub the dirt and filth of sin onto your spotless white robe of Christ’s righteousness remember these three words.  “I am baptized.”

As you find yourself about to head to the dark side of the internet, confess the truth about yourself.  “I am baptized.”  As you are about to engage in sexual immorality, confess who you are, “I am baptized.”  As you are about to lose your self-control speak your identity, “I am baptized.”  As you are about to embrace sin yet again remember you have been washed clean in the blood of Jesus, “I am baptized.”

You are one of the sheep washed clean; why would you smear filth on yourself?  You are a baptized child of God.  You are called to live out your life struggling against sin because you have been washed clean.  You are already in the Kingdom of Heaven.  You have died to sin.

You are one of God’s spotless sheep, and yet there lurks the ever-present desire to sin.  Ever since Adam and Eve’s fall into sin it comes so naturally to all of their offspring.  Sin comes so naturally to me.  I can sin without even trying.  Sin comes so naturally to you.  You sin in ways that you cannot even believe yourself.  There is always the desire to want to say that it is okay to sin.  We are sorely tempted to say that this sin is okay because times have changed.  We are profoundly tempted to say, “I know the Bible says it is wrong…but.”  We desperately want to believe that sin is okay.  St. Paul knows this when he writes to the church in Rome.

Romans 6:1-4 (ESV) 1 What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? 2 By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? 3 Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? 4 We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.[3]

Are we to continue in sin?  By no means!  You have been washed clean in Jesus.  The sinless Lamb of God has taken all of your sin on Himself and taken it to the cross.  As you sin you are not just smearing mud and filth on yourself, you are smearing the filth of your sin onto the sinless Son of God; the same sinless Son of God who comes to John the Baptist to be baptized.

John the Baptist is right.  Jesus does not need to repent of His sins.  He has done nothing wrong.  Jesus undergoes a baptism He doesn’t need.  Jesus suffers a death He doesn’t deserve.  Jesus stands in the place of sinners.  Jesus stands in your place and takes your sin.  Jesus lowers Himself to your level as filthy, dirty sinner.

So each day lower yourself.  Humble yourself and repent of your sins and remember your baptism.  Remember those three powerful words, “I am baptized.”

And what does such baptizing with water indicate?

It indicates that the Old Adam in us should by daily contrition and repentance be drowned and die with all sins and evil desires, and that a new man should daily emerge and arise to live before God in righteousness and purity forever.

“I am baptized.”  Say it together, “I am baptized.”

You have been washed clean by the Lamb.  Humble yourself daily and admit, “I am a sinner who needs a savior.”  Say those three terrible words.  “I was wrong.”  And, the two difficult words, “I’m sorry.”  Repent and remember the truth about yourself, “I am baptized.”

You are clean in Christ because He became filthy dirty for you.

Amen.

[1]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001
[2]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001
[3]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

 

 

Would it be great if God to come to be God with us?

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Christmas Eve 2016
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
December 24, 2016
Various Christmas Lessons

Picture yourself for a moment on a clear, moonless summer night out in the country away from all the city lights.  You are lying on your back in the grass looking up at the stars and there are a lot of stars.  It is incredible.  You can see airplanes 30,000 feet away and satellites 22,000 miles away and the North Star 433 light years away.  You can see constellations and the Milky Way and you see an occasional shooting star.  In moments like this you almost cannot help but to contemplate God.  God created all of this.  God created the heavens and the earth.  God created you and all people.  There is no way this all came about by random chance.  God is amazing.  God is truly awesome.  The vastness of the stars in the night sky gives a faint glimpse of the limitlessness of the eternal God.

When you think about God, what words come to mind?  I asked this question at school chapel on Wednesday.  Answers came back such as, “All powerful, all knowing, present everywhere.  God is awesome.  God is frightening.  God brings fear and trembling.  God is righteous and just.  Moses and Elijah learned that God’s glory is so great that you cannot look upon Him or you would die.

God is the one who created the heavens and earth with just His Word. God caused a global flood to wipe out evil.  God sent plagues on the Egyptians and made the Red Sea separate to save the Israelites.  God is powerful.

God is righteous and awesome.  God is fearsome and incomprehensible.  God is omniscient and omnipresent and all powerful.  As you ponder about God it is hard to understand His Divinity; difficult to comprehend that kind of power, impossible to fathom that God is eternal; without beginning or end.  It is easy to become overwhelmed by the awesomeness of God.

Wouldn’t it be wonderful if God made Himself more accessible?  Wouldn’t it be great if God were more like you and me?  Wouldn’t it be great if God were one of us?

Just imagine that.  The all-knowing, all-powerful God coming to earth to be like one of us?  The authority and understanding of the entire universe coming to earth.  How would He come?  What kind of entrance would the awesome, almighty God need to make?  Maybe he would descend in a flaming chariot accompanied by an army of angels bearing swords to destroy anyone who gets in His way.  Maybe He would enter into our world like a conquering king in all his glory and might.  Maybe He would come with an elaborate spectacle of lightning and thunder and great clouds and wind and in the midst of this tremendous weather display God would appear and reign over the people as a great king ruling his domain from a colossal golden throne.  Maybe there would be huge marching bands and fireworks and fighter jet flyovers and lots and lots of pomp and ceremony.  Almighty, awesome God coming to earth to be… God with us.

What would it be like for God to come to earth?  If God did this it would be easier to understand Him.  If only He could be one of us.  Be God with us.  What would it be like?

         If only He could be one of us.  Be God with us.  What would it be like?

Well, as you know of course, it has already happened.  God has come to be with us.  God has come to live with us.  God did come to be God with us, but He did it in a most unexpected way.  He did not come in a flaming chariot and He did not sit on a golden throne.

God comes to be God with us in a most surprising way.  God comes as a helpless little baby born to simple parents.  He is born to parents who have been forced to travel far from home because the Roman Emperor wants to count all his subjects so he can better tax them.  The baby is born, subject to Roman authority, far from home with no proper bed.  God comes to us as a newborn baby wrapped up tightly and laid in an animal’s feed trough.

Where is the flaming chariot?  Where is the fighter jet flyover?  Where is the golden throne?  What kind of God is this that comes in this utterly simple way?  What do we learn about God from this far-from-majestic entry into the world?  There is a lot to learn.

That’s why you are here this evening, 2,000 some years afterwards, gathering on this night to remember and celebrate this baby boy born in Bethlehem.  Because you know some of the lessons learned from this baby’s birth.  You know the secret about who this baby is.  This baby, lying in a manger, is Christ the Lord.  And it isn’t much of a secret really.  For even though baby Jesus, God in flesh, God incarnate, did not come with a flaming chariot and a fighter jet flyover he did have an army of angels.

Luke 2:8-14 (ESV) 8 And in the same region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. 9 And an angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were filled with fear. 10 And the angel said to them, “Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy that will be for all the people. 11 For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord. 12 And this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in swaddling cloths and lying in a manger.” 13 And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, 14 “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!”[1]

What an incredible contrast.  Even when God does things that we would expect Him to do, He does them in unexpected ways.  Here we have an angel of the Lord making an announcement and then the angel is joined by a multitude of the heavenly host; a multitude of the heavenly army praising God.

Who are the privileged ones who receive this message delivered by angels?  The king?  Caesar himself?  The religious leaders at the temple in Jerusalem?  It must be someone very important to get this message delivered this way.

But if you look around you see that the army of angels is not at the Temple.  They are not at Herod’s palace or the House of Caesar Augustus in Rome.  The angels seem to have missed their mark for they are out in a field with sheep and a handful of shepherds.

What kind of God is this that announces His arrival with an army of angels, but announces it to shepherds in the fields?

Now, the setting for this announcement does bring a lot of things to mind.  The shepherds are in the fields outside of Bethlehem.  These are quite possibly the same fields where young David was a shepherd boy 1,000 years earlier.  David was the shepherd king and now there is a new shepherd king born in the city of David to a descendent of King David.

What an amazing contrast.  The shepherds receive this grand announcement from the angels about the birth of the Savior, Christ the Lord.  But what are they told to look for?  A baby, wrapped in swaddling cloths and lying in a manger.  What a contrast?  How strange?  What kind of God is this?  It is a God who understands your trouble.

Life in this world is hard.  This supposedly happy time of year is, for so many, not so happy.  Life is a struggle.  There is sickness and suffering and evil and death.  There are personal battles against sin and addiction.  That same stupid sin that you promised God you would never do again keeps finding its way back into your life.  You are a natural born sinner and sin comes to you far too easily.  Life in this human flesh is not an easy life for anyone.  And yet into this struggling human flesh Jesus enters.  Jesus takes on this flesh only He is without sin.  He will offer Himself as the spotless Lamb of God.

This is our awesome, amazing, powerful God veiled in the flesh of a Jewish infant; the humble savior, the suffering servant, God in flesh who is destined for humiliation, anguish and death on the cross for your sins.  Jesus comes as that baby in Bethlehem in love and service to you.  He saves you by His Word, “I baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,” and “I forgive you all your sins.”  He feeds you with His body and blood in the bread and wine of Holy Communion.  What kind of God is this… who does His saving work with words, water, bread and wine?  It is the kind of God that comes to earth and chooses a manger and a cross.

God indeed has come to earth to be one of us.  Jesus is the Word.  We are very familiar with the Christmas story from Matthew and Luke.  This is the Christmas story from the Gospel of John.  John 1:1-4 (ESV) 1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2 He was in the beginning with God. 3 All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. 4 In him was life, and the life was the light of men.  John 1:14 (ESV) 14 And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.[2]

The word became flesh and dwelt among us.  You know God the Father through Jesus; God with us; Immanuel.  You know Jesus through faith worked in you by the Holy Spirit.

God came to be with us but He did not come as we expected.  He did not do what we expected him to do.  He did what he needed to do.  He saved you by His death and resurrection.

And so, as a redeemed child of God washed in the waters of baptism, live your life in love and service, fight the good fight, keep the faith, keep spiritually awake and keep watch for Jesus coming again on the last day with great power and glory.  Tonight we celebrate God coming to earth in a most unexpected way. O come, O come Immanuel.  God with us.  Amen.

 

[1]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

 

[2]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

 

You are not an average Joe

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Advent 4 2016
Immanuel Lutheran, Hamilton, Ohio
December 18, 2016
Psalm 24:1-10, Isaiah 7:10-17, Romans 1:1-7, Matthew 1:18-25
Pastor Kevin Jud

Sometimes being a follower of Jesus can feel like a long, monotonous slog through life.  Day after day.  Week after week.  Worship service after worship service.  Sin and forgiveness.  Sin and forgiveness.  Get up, try to do what you are supposed to do, go to bed.  Repeat.  Read your Bible, come to worship.  Hear the Good News.  Repeat.  There is, at times, a desire for more; more excitement, more emotion, more direct revelation from God.  More direct interaction like back in Bible times when angels would appear to people.  How cool would that be to have an angel appear to you?  How exciting would it be to have an angel come and talk to you and bring you a message from God?  That would be pretty amazing, but for the most part we live pretty average lives as followers of God; Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Joe is one of the good guys.  An average Joe.  A blue collar kind of guy who makes his living with His hands.  He is loyal to one girl.  He is patient.  They have been pledged to each other for quite a while and Joe has been a perfect gentlemen. He is concerned about his own reputation and he is concerned about the reputation and honor of his future wife.  He is a hard worker and is very much looking forward to getting married and starting a family.  Life is going along pretty well for this good guy from a small town. Life is good for this average Joe.

Everything is going good, that is, until it all comes crashing down on Joe with two words from his fiancée, “I’m pregnant.”  What?!?  How can this be?  Joe has been chaste; he has been waiting until the wedding night; how can this be?  Oh no!  No! No! No!  This can’t be true.  This sweet young lady that he has been waiting to marry has been with another man. This one that Joe had been waiting for and protecting her honor; she has given herself to some other guy. Life for this average Joe went from good to terrible with just two words, “I’m pregnant.”

        Life for this average Joe went from good to terrible with just two words, “I’m pregnant.”

Joe’s head is spinning.  Joe is concerned about his reputation.  Everyone is going to think that he took indecent liberties before the wedding day.  They will think Joe is a cad.  They will think that he was not willing to wait until the wedding.  Everyone is going to blame him for getting her pregnant.

Now Joe could be very clear to everyone that this is not his child; he did not get her pregnant.  It’s not his fault.  She is a loose woman.  She cheated on him. This is all her fault.  Joe can make sure everyone knows the truth.  He could do this, but Joe is a good guy and even in the pain of his heartbreak and humiliation he is still concerned about her reputation and her safety.  Joe still cares about her and he is still a good guy.  If Joe blames her, people will accuse her and shame her and shun her and maybe they will even hurt her or kill her for cheating on Joe.

Joe decides he will try to do the best for both of them and quietly break off their engagement and be on his way.  Maybe she can leave town or lay low for a while and all this will somehow blow over.  Maybe he can go back to being just an average, albeit lonely, Joe.

Then this average Joe finds out he is no longer average. That night, while he sleeps, Matthew 1:20 (ESV) 20 …an angel of the Lord appear[s] to him in a dream, saying, “Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit.”[1]

This average Joe is going to be the step father of a miraculous baby boy.  The angel tells him, Matthew 1:21 (ESV) 21 “She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”[2]

Joe is going to be stepfather to Jesus, in Greek, ihsous, in Hebrew, Ya-shawa which means YHWH Saves; the Lord saves.  Joe is going to be responsible for caring for Immanuel; God with us.

Joe is going to get married after all.  He will step up and do what the angel instructed him to do.  He will take upon himself any shame and scorn that people might otherwise direct towards his pregnant wife Mary.  He will make sure no one hurts Mary or the baby.  Everyone will think that the baby is his baby and he was the one to pressure Mary to compromise her honor.  Joe will take the shame and protect Mary and the unborn child from harm.  Joe’s life is changed completely with two words from Mary and then changed completely again with a visit from an angel of the Lord.  How crazy must this all be for Joe?  How frightening.  How disconcerting.  How life-altering.  Jesus’ arrival on the scene has brought with it great trouble and turmoil.  And Joseph is transformed from being an average Joe to being the stepfather of God in flesh and his adventures are only beginning.

This world is full of darkness and trouble and turmoil. The world loves the darkness and Jesus brings difficulty into the lives of those who love him because Jesus is not of this world.  Jesus does not bring friendship with the world.  Jesus is the light and the darkness does not understand the light.  The world is a world of selfishness and greed and indulgence and evil; Jesus brings a message of peace, love, and service.  Jesus bring peace; God and man are reconciled.  As a redeemed child of God you are called out of the ways of the world and called onto the path of God to delight in His will and walk in His ways, doing what you are supposed to be doing in your various vocations of life.  Life as a follower of Jesus can be difficult.  It means living as a child of light in a world of darkness.  It means feeling out of place in so much of the world.

Now, you likely will never be spoken to by an angel of the Lord like Joseph was and given immediate, life-changing instructions.  You likely will never have an angel of the Lord appear to you in a dream and that is a relief because the messages Joseph received were life-altering.  You may never be spoken to by an angel of the Lord like Joseph was, but you were spoken to by an angel with a message from the Lord for you.  The word “angel”; “angelos”, in Greek means messenger.  In English we think of angel as like the angel Gabriel.  But angel simply means messenger.  So an angel has spoken to you.  A messenger of the Lord has spoken to you the word of the Lord, “I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” Those words changed you from being an average person in this world and called you into the Kingdom of God as a child of God; an heir of the riches of the Kingdom of Heaven.  It called you out of being an average person to being a royal priest of God Almighty offering yourself as a living sacrifice.

That messenger of God who baptized you may have worn a white robe, but he was just a man speaking on behalf of God bringing you the Good News of forgiveness in Jesus Christ.  There are still angels bringing you the message of God and that message is still, “your sins are forgiven.”  The message is still radical in calling you to live in love and care for others.  The message is still about that baby who is God incarnate; God in flesh, who has come to give Himself for you.

The message is still about that baby that Joseph cared for and protected while being knit together in Mary’s womb and cared for and protected and taught once He was born.  It is about that baby that Joseph, being instructed by an angel, escaped with to Egypt along with Mary to flee Herod’s sword and then brought back to Nazareth when Herod the Great was dead. It is about that child that Joseph raised. It is about that child who is the one; the Christ; God in Flesh.  This child placed under Joseph’s care by an angel is God in flesh who grows up to offer that flesh on the altar of the cross as a sacrifice for your sins and the sins of the world.  The one protected from shame and scorn by Joseph takes on the shame and scorn of the world for you.  God came into the world to save the world.  Jesus coming in the flesh into the human story changes everything. God came to be with us to live the perfect life and die as the spotless Lamb of God.

An angel comes to the Virgin Mary to announce to her that she would give birth to the savior conceived by the Holy Spirit. An angel comes to Joseph to tell him to take Mary as his wife because she is pregnant with God.  Angels are still around you guarding and protecting.  Messengers are still bringing you the Good News about that baby boy.

Sometimes being a follower of Jesus can feel like a long, monotonous slog through life.  Day after day.  Week after week.  Read your Bible, come to worship.  Hear the Good News.  Repeat.  Even those working in full time ministry as teachers and pastors and missionaries can feel the grind of getting through life one day at a time trying to live God’s way of love and service.  Life in Christ is often a daily, repetitive struggle.  Life in Christ is generally not a series of exciting events.  Even for Joseph, who received multiple instructions from an angel in his care for Jesus, most of his life was spent in quiet obedience, loving and caring for Jesus and Mary and their other children and that is okay.  Quiet obedience and humble repentance and loving and serving others is a good way to live because you have the Good News of the Christ who came to save you.  Jesus came for you.  Jesus brought light into a world of darkness and you have that light.  In service to God Joseph guarded Jesus from the womb through birth and childhood.  Joseph made sure Jesus was safe so He could die at the right time for you.  And because of that you are destined to live forever in the heavenly kingdom because that baby that Joseph saved came to save you. Amen.

[1]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

[2]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

Sometimes it is hard to see Jesus in the darkness.

candles_12245cnAdvent 3, 2016
December 11, 2016
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Hamilton, Ohio
Pastor Kevin Jud
Psalm 146:1-10, Isaiah 35:1-10, James 5:7-11, Matthew 11:2-15

Has it ever gotten so dark for you that it was hard to see Jesus?  It is hard to live in the darkness; the darkness overwhelms the light and threatens to snuff it out.

You are a baptized child of God.  You have the light of Christ.  In Christ you are the light of the world.  You have the light and yet the darkness comes.  You can almost feel the darkness as it rolls into your life like a thick fog.  The darkness of grief and depression rolls over you and makes it hard to see Jesus.  The darkness of illness and suffering pushes into your life.  The darkness of death comes suddenly to take away loved ones and leave you reeling in the gloom.  The darkness of addiction and sin creeps silently into your life trying to extinguish the light of Christ.  For many, the darkness of confinement in jail or prison or a nursing home or even your own home can be a deep gloom that overshadows everything in life.  Sometimes it gets so dark that it is hard to see that Jesus is the one who has come to save you.

Are you the one who is to come, or shall we look for another?  Is Jesus of Nazareth the one?

John the Baptist knew Jesus was the one when John was a six month old fetus in his mother’s womb and he leaped for joy at Jesus’ presence inside His mother Mary who came to visit.  John the Baptist knew Jesus was the one when John said, Matthew 3:11 (ESV) 11 “I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire.”[1]  John the Baptist knew Jesus was the one when John said, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.”  John knows Jesus is the one and yet, in our Gospel reading today, we find John in prison sending messengers to ask, “Are you the one who is to come, or shall we look for another?”

John is in a dark place in his life.  John believes that Jesus is the one, but the darkness is starting to make that hard to see.  John is literally sitting in the darkness of Herod’s dungeon and the darkness is starting to overwhelm the light of faith.  Every time John hears someone coming and the door opening he doesn’t know if it is just someone bringing food, or someone bringing freedom, or someone bringing a sword to cut off his head.  John is in a very difficult, dangerous darkness and he wants reassurance from Jesus.

When we are trapped in the darkness of life we can find that it is hard to see that Jesus is the one.  Like John, we want reassurance.  “Are you the one or should we look for another?”

Jesus sends a message of hope.  Matthew 11:4-5 (ESV) 4 …“Go and tell John what you hear and see: 5 the blind receive their sight and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them.”[2]

Jesus is the one who is to come even in the darkness of John’s imprisonment.  Jesus is still the one to come even in the darkness of your trials and troubles; your doubts and despair.  Like John, we have the record of Jesus’ miraculous restoring of the blind and the deaf.  Cleansing of the lepers.  Raising of the dead.  But not only do we have that, we also have the eyewitness accounts of the greatest miracle; Jesus rising from the dead.  We know that Jesus is the one because He died on the cross that Friday on Calvary and rose from the tomb on Sunday morning.  Jesus conquered death… for you.  Jesus is the one to come and give His life as a sacrifice for your sin and to rise again to give you eternal life.

This is the good news that we hear in the darkness of this life as we walk through the valley of the shadow of death.   This is the Good News that we hear even when Jesus seems far away.

In the darkness of John the Baptist’s prison cell Jesus must have seemed so very far away; but the darkness is not evidence that Jesus is far from John.  Jesus’ promises are still very much in place.  Jesus’ promise of eternal life still holds firm for John in the darkness.  It still holds firm even as John loses his head to Herod’s henchmen.  Matthew 10:28 (ESV) 28 …do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.[3]  Jesus’ promise to John is still good even when things do not go as John wants them to go.

God does not always act the way you want him to.  He does not always remove you from the darkness of life, but rather is there, with you, in the darkness.

Even in your greatest darkness you can declare, “I am baptized.”

As Jesus reassures John that indeed He is the one to come He adds one more statement.  Matthew 11:6 (ESV) 6 “And blessed is the one who is not offended by me.”[4]

Very often, Jesus does not act the way you want him to.  He does not remove you from the hard things of life.  He does not eliminate evil.  He lets good people suffer while wicked people prosper.  This is not how you would do things, but God doesn’t act the way you want him to act.  God does things that you would never do.  God threatens to send unbelievers to hell.  This is very difficult; why does God let anyone go to Hell?  Why doesn’t He get rid of Hell altogether?

People say things like, “I can’t believe in a God who would send someone to Hell.  I can’t believe in a God who would allow this person I love to die.”  “I can’t believe in a God that doesn’t do things the way I want them to be done.”

Basically we are in the same place as John.  We want Jesus to come in great power and glory and destroy evil forever; rid the earth of disease and death.  Take from us depression and sinful temptations.  We want Jesus to do what we want Him to do.

And indeed, Jesus is the one who is to come, and He will one day return in glory and destroy evil forever and rid the earth of disease and death, but we still live in the time of now and not yet.  Jesus has come; He has taken the sin of the world upon himself but He has not yet returned in glory to destroy evil and restore the kingdom.

For now, like John, we trust in the Lord knowing Jesus is the one even when life is spinning out of control.  In the darkness of life you still have the light of the world shining in the gloom.  In His time of ministry Jesus was a humble teacher.  He did many of his miracles quietly without making a big show of it.  Jesus is the one who is to come, He is the Messiah; the Christ, but He is a humble, serving Christ.  In many ways Jesus comes as a hidden Christ with His glory concealed in his humility.

Seeing baby Jesus laying in the manger you would not first think, “This is God with us.”  Seeing Jesus with His disciples you would not first think, “This is God Almighty.”  Seeing Jesus hanging on the cross you would not first think.  “This is God in flesh.”  Jesus is not the God that people expect and because of that, many are offended.  Many resent that Jesus is not the Jesus that they want him to be.  Jesus may not be the Jesus you want Him to be, but Jesus is the Jesus you need Him to be.

American prosperity pastors preach about how Jesus wants you to have your best life now and how, as Joel Osteen tweeted recently, “When you have the boldness to believe big, to ask big and expect big, that’s when God is going to show out in your life.” This kind of preaching of the American dream is all a big pile of steaming fertilizer.  “You have to have the boldness to believe big?”  Tell that John the Baptist sitting in Herod’s dungeon.  Tell that to the dying man in hospice.  Tell that to the person struggling with addiction.  Tell that to the one battling depression.  Tell that to the one enveloped in darkness.  What a crock of man-centered, fabricated theology.

Jesus is indeed the one who came for you.  Even in your darkest days Jesus is still there for you.  He is with you through the darkness.  Here in the darkness of the season of Lent we light the pink candle to remember the joy we have in the Lord.  Jesus comes to you in the waters of Holy Baptism and in the promise of your baptism. Even in your greatest darkness you can declare, “I am baptized.”  Jesus comes in His word of cleansing, “I forgive you all your sins.”  He comes in His Body and Blood to strengthen and preserve you to eternal life.  Jesus comes to you in the darkness with the promise of eternal life in His light.  In Christ you have joy in the darkness.  Amen.

[1]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

[2]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

[3]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001

[4]  The Holy Bible : English Standard Version. Wheaton : Standard Bible Society, 2001