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St. Mark's Lutheran Church

 

  2008

 Sermons



Dez 28 - The Costly Gift

Dez 24 - The Whole Story

Dez 21 - Disrupted!

Dez 21 - Blessed be God, anyway

Dez 14 - Signpost People

Dez 7 - Turn Around!

Nov 30 - Lament

Nov 23 - Seeing Jesus

Nov 16 - Treasure

Nov 9 - Good News, or Bad?

Okt 12 - Now We Join in Celebration

Okt 5 - Is All Lost?

Sep 27 - No reason to brag

Sep 21 - At the Right Time

Sep 14 - The Holy Cross of Christ has set us free!

Sep 7 - Responsibility for One Another?

Aug 31 - Extreme?

Aug 24 - Questions

Aug 17 - Inside, Outside, Upside Down

Aug 10 - Against Giants

Aug 3 - You Are What You Eat

Jul 27 - Whose Treasure?

Jul 20 - ...and the Harvest

Jul 13 - God, Seed, Growth, Harvest

Jul 6 - Burden and Yoke

Jun 29 - The Big Question

Jun 22 - Death and Life

Jun 15 - Priestly and Holy

Jun 8 - Lord, Have Mercy

Jun 1 - And it will be hard

Mai 25 - Just One More....

Mai 18 - Good...very good!

Mai 11 - Transformed!

Mai 4 - It's a battle..............

Apr 27 - In the conversation

Apr 20 - We are...we will be....

Apr 13 - Worship and Life

Apr 6 - Just Talking

Mrz 30 - Resurrection of the Body

Mrz 23 - This New Day

Mrz 22 - Blessed be God!

Mrz 21 - It is finished!

Mrz 21 - Died, For Me!

Mrz 20 - This Do!

Mrz 16 - Good News for those who flunk the test

Mrz 9 - To Laugh, Yes, To Laugh!

Mrz 2 - Together in Christ - Glenn Lunger

Mrz 2 - Why?

Feb 24 - Bigger than we thought

Feb 17 - Abraham the Player, Nicodemus the Spectator

Feb 10 - Saying NO

Feb 6 - In deep conversation with the Father

Feb 3 - How close to God?

Jan 27 - What? Who? Where? When?

Jan 20 - Behold, the Lamb who takes....

Jan 13 - It Just Might Happen

Jan 6 - The Gift of You


2009 Sermons    

      2007 Sermons

Where Jesus walks; where we walk. Part I: In deep conversation with the Father.

 

Ash Wednesday - February 6, 2008

The Rev. Kenneth R. Elkin

 

Today we hear  Jesus in prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane, and on Sunday we will hear Jesus facing Satan in the three tests.

In one sense, they deal with the same thing, don't they?

 

It is the problem of evil that plagues Jesus, and us.

Where does Jesus walk with this crisis, and where do we walk, day by day?

 

We confess in the Creed that Jesus is become completely human as well as being completely God.

The purpose of this to live through everything that life can throw at us, including a horrible and horrifying death on a humiliating cross,

so that when he conquers that death by way of the resurrection,

he can and will make promises that we are sure he is able to keep.

 

He walks on a harsh road, without being swallowed up by the deep potholes.

He faces all the possibilities of sin, without succumbing to any of them.

But he is the absolutely unique individual

          who does not give in to the things that bring us down time after time.

 

We walk on harsh roads also, but things with us are a far different state.

Where Jesus prays with intensity and single-mindedness,

we pray with mixed feelings and distraction.

 

Where Jesus prays with full recognition of what is going in around him,

we pray with short-sightedness.

 

Where Jesus prays with full vision and communion with the Father as to the outcome of it all,

we pray as if fumbling in the dark, only knowing a bit at a time how things fit together.

 

Jesus is able to pray in calmness of spirit “Not my will but thine be done,”

while we are always struggling to have our prayers fit that pattern.

 

And that is the key element to the whole enterprise.

In our weakness, we turn our prayers into demands against God...

“Do what I want or I won't believe in you anymore.”

or a Christmas wish-list of the most childish sort:

“Fix this ...., give me that, Lord...,

 

or maybe we despair of prayer at all, so that it becomes only a set of words recited without ourselves really being involved.

 

And that brings us to the next point to know: effective prayer,

prayer modeled on that of the Lord Jesus, is prayer in which all of our being  is involved.

Jesus backed his prayer with his whole life.

 

Jesus prays “Thy will be done” while knowing the kind of sacrifice that is involved.

Some time ago we worked on the definition of a sacrifice as “prayer attached to an object”.

In this case, the object attached to Jesus' prayer is himself.

Together with his words, he is ready to offer himself up to cruel death, so that an even greater victory might result.

Is Jesus asking us to put ourselves on the line as he does?

Is Jesus asking that we offer ourselves as part of the answer for which our prayers call?

 

So when we pray that the Lord remember those who are ill, a corner of God's answer might be that we have an encouraging word for  doctors, and also that we visit and aid the sick ourselves.

When we pray that God remember those who serve in our armed forces, one portion of the answer to that prayer is that we sit down and write to them.

When we pray that God grant us the blessings of nature in doses that we can handle, neither too much rain nor too little, then one portion of God's answer may be that we learn  and practice good stewardship of those blessings ourselves, for the sake of all.

There is much more to the sacrificial prayer, of course, but that is one portion of what it means.

 

We need to look at another part of this relationship called prayer.

In John's telling of the story of Jesus, the Lord prays on that fateful night:

“All that I have is yours, Father,”

          and it seems that he is talking about his life, the life of his disciples, and the lives of the believers of every age, all at the same time.

The truth of our lives is tied up in that prayer of Jesus.

We are living our true existence as we are offering ourselves to the will of the Father: “All that I have is yours, Father, ...Thy will be done.”

 

So many persons say to me “Why am I here?”

As we wrestle with the question, this has to be part of the answer ...that we give ourselves into the hands of God and use Jesus' own words: “Not my will but thine be done.”

 

Young people at a recent retreat came to understand this in an impressive way.

In the late evening before bedtime they read what Paul says about life and death to the Romans:

“By Baptism we were buried with him, and lay dead, “ and each student blew out the candle each was holding.

Then in the morning when they gathered again, they continued with the verse from Romans: “By Baptism we were buried with him, and lay dead,...in order that, as Christ was raised from the dead in the splendor of the Father, so also we might set our feet upon the new path of life.” 

And then each of them lit a new candle from the Christ candle.

Whenever we say

that such an understanding and such a life are only for a super-disciple, we need to hear again our first lesson for this day.

In the vision of the glory of God, Isaiah rightly responds, ”Woe is me, for I am a man of unclean lips.”

Rather than saying: “Right you are, get out of here,” the Lord's angel purifies him, so that when the Lord calls “Whom shall I send?”, Isaiah squeaks out “Here am I, send me.”

 

This day

--we have heard the admonitions at the beginning of Lent.

--we have confessed our sinfulness and unworthiness of the notice of God.

--we have overheard our Lord in conversation with the Father as he sets the pattern for our praying.

--we will shortly receive the assurance of his presence and pardon in the Holy Communion.

--what comes next is our true reception of all of this by amending our lives and giving ourselves over to prayer in the manner of Jesus, knowing that his victory will at length be ours.

To this life, to this work, to this following of Jesus, let all say AMEN

 

Please note: The preceding sermon is provided as a resource for the thought, prayer, and meditation of the members and friends of St. Mark's. It is the residue of a verbal event, and thus it does not have academic footnotes and other details that would be expected in a written document. The writer gladly acknowledges the prior thought and work of many Christians before him.