2013
Sermons
Dez 29 - Never "back to normal"
Dez 29 - Remember!
Dez 24 - The Great Exchange
Dez 22 - Embarrassed by the Great Offense
Dez 19 - Suitable for its time
Dez 15 - Patience?
Dez 13 - The Life of the Servant of Christ Jesus
Dez 8 - Is "hope" the right word?
Dez 1 - In God's Good Time
Nov 24 - Prophet, Priest, and King
Nov 17 - On that Day
Nov 10 - Persistent Hope
Nov 3 - To sing the forever song
Nov 3 - Witness of all the saints
Okt 27 - Is there some other Gospel?
Okt 25 - With a voice of singing
Okt 20 - Are you a consecrated disciple?
Okt 13 - No Escape?
Sep 22 - Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
Sep 15 - Good News in Every Corner
Sep 8 - The Cost of Discipleship
Sep 1 - For Ourselves, or for God?
Aug 25 - Who, Me?
Aug 18 - The Cloud of Witnesses
Aug 11 - Eschatology and Ethics
Aug 4 - Possessed
Jul 29 - How long a sermon, how long a prayer?
Jul 21 - Hospitality, and then...
Jul 14 - Held Together
Jul 14 - Disciple or Admirer?
Jul 7 - Go, fish!
Jun 9 - Two Processions
Jun 2 - Inside or Outside?
Mai 30 - On the Way
Mai 26 - What kind of God?
Mai 19 - Come Down, Holy Spirit
Mai 18 - Good Gifts of God
Mai 14 - Not Zero!
Mai 12 - Glory?
Mai 5 - Finding or being found?
Apr 28 - A Heavenly Vision
Apr 21 - Our small acts and Christ's resurrection
Apr 14 - Transformed!
Apr 7 - Give God the Glory
Mrz 31 - Refocused Sight
Mrz 30 - Walls
Mrz 29 - It was Night
Mrz 29 - Today, Paradise
Mrz 28 - To Show God's Love
Mrz 24 - Bridging the Distance
Mrz 17 - The Extravagance of God's Actions
Mrz 10 - Foolish Message or Foolish People?
Mrz 3 - What about you?
Feb 24 - Holy Promises
Feb 18 - God's Word by the Prophet
Feb 17 - Tempted by whom?
Feb 13 - On a New Basis
Feb 10 - On Not Managing God
Feb 3 - Who, me?
Jan 27 - Fulfilled in your hearing
Jan 20 - Where Jesus Is, the Old becomes New
Jan 13 - Called by Name
Jan 6 - Three antagonists, three places, three gifts
Jan 4 - The Teacher
Read: John 8:31-36
Reformation Sunday - October 27, 2013
Today is Reformation Sunday which we can regard in a variety of ways.
Sometimes it has been used as Lutheran triumphalism; we're better than anyone else...we have something no one else has.
That doesn't ring true.
Sometimes it has been used as an historical reminder of the breaking apart of the church in the16th century,
--with sadness that it was necessary, --with wistfulness that it could be healed someday,
--or with gruff determination that it is to be permanent.
But a history lesson is not sufficient for us this morning.
The questions are rather about what these scriptures are doing to us.
What are they demanding of us today, not just back in the 16th or in any other century.
Remember Paul's advice to Timothy that we heard as the Second Lesson last Sunday: For the time is coming when people will not put up with sound doctrine, but having itching ears, will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own desires, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander away to myths.
Is the story of Jesus true?
Is it sufficient for us?
Is it adequate for these troubled and complicated times?
Does it need to be supplemented or superseded by some other story, some other person, or a different Savior?
We are well aware that a very small percentage of the persons who report the news to us want to have anything to do with the church of Jesus Christ.
We have watched the glamorous movie stars who dabble in Scientology or Buddhism, or astrology and crystals.
We ought to be dismayed by the claims of radical Muslims who clearly say “convert to Islam or we will kill you.”
Are these challenges new?
Is this a different situation than the early church faced?
And the answer is No.
It may be dressed differently, but it is exactly the same sorts of problems that the church has faced from the very beginning.
Paul warns the Corinthians to watch out for those who will proclaim another gospel than what he had given to them. (2C11:3-5)
Paul admonishes the Galatians:
I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to another Gospel – not that there is a different gospel, but there are some who are confusing you and want to pervert the Gospel of Christ. (Gal 1:6-8)
The old, old problems of “Who is this Jesus and what has he to do with me?” are very much alive and at work these days.
The major problem in front of us is:
Shall we talk about divine redemption or something quite different, divine acceptance?
“Jesus, save me!” is the ancient plea.
The basic problem in creation is human sin, and Jesus' action in the cross and resurrection is God's solution to it.
God confronts us in our sinfulness; God forgives us; God raises us to new life in Christ Jesus.
Thereafter our whole life consists of turning to that truth again and again, knowing that we mess up our lives constantly, but that God is determined to reach us, to transform us, to save us.
That is the faith to which the scriptures call us every day across the millennia, divine redemption.
The current version of the old heresies is about “divine acceptance”.
In this view, sin is not within us, but is in the oppressive structures of society that have excluded people from being fully accepted in their “created goodness.”
We don't have to change anything about ourselves.
God loves us just as we are.
In this world-view, there is no wrath, no condemnation for sinners, no judgment.
The cross is not needed; it is unimportant.
Love means an uncritical acceptance of whoever shows up and whatever they are saying or doing.
This view rejects the idea of a “tough love” that calls us to account, which bids us to take up our cross and to wrestle with what it means to follow Jesus to Calvary.
In this kind of gospel, love is not about repentance for sin, but a celebration of acceptance of ourselves just the way we are because God loves us as we are.
This other gospel should make us queasy since it is so foreign to what we have been taught in scripture and through the tradition of the church.
Unfortunately it has been making great inroads in the church in recent years, with disastrous results.
Here are samples:
(1)some apologize for having missionaries in other lands, saying that they have their own path to God and who are we to suggest something different.
But the rapidly growing churches who live under persecution in Africa do not feel that way; they are even sending some missionaries to the US these days.
(2)some can't think or talk clearly and Biblically about human sexuality, and the church is terribly divided.
(3)some find it so difficult to talk about our faith with friends and neighbors, having lost both the language and the nerve to do so.
(4)some treat the Bible as irrelevant in decisions about what is right and true and good and useful, rather than being the basis and ground from which we work.
(5)some twist Baptism into our complete acceptance by God rather than a dying and rising with Christ,
(6)some have been claiming that Jesus is not God's unique way of reaching out to us, but only one among many ways.
As has often been the case when the church goes off the track, this other gospel uses the same language we have known, but makes up new meanings for the words.
Baptism, forgiveness, love, freedom, gospel ...all of them have been twisted into something different.
It has been portrayed as a healthy diversity of hearing lots of voices.
Rather, let us be clear that we are engaged in a life and death struggle for the church itself.
Paul puts it very strongly to the Galatians:
Even if we or an angel from heaven should proclaim to you a gospel contrary to what you received, let that one be accursed.” (Gal.1:9)
On Mt Carmel, Elijah exhorted the people of Israel, “How long will you go limping with two different opinions. If the Lord is God, follow him; but if Baal, follow him.” (1K.18:21)
There is no doubt that the church is indeed limping these days.
The Reformation is not just a particular point in church history 500 years ago, it is the constant call to receive the Good News, to think clearly, and to boldly act in accord with that News in this day.
At a meeting of the Lutheran—Roman Catholic Commission on Unity this past week, Pope Francis was given a symbolic gift from the General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation.
It was a small teapot from a refugee in Kenya where 400,000 persons wait and suffer.
As he received the little gift, the Pope said, “We are attacked by those who don't accept us, whether a person is Lutheran or Roman Catholic, Orthodox or Coptic. Our blood is not divided.”
He was moved by the gift, which he said was pointing to the ecumenism of martyrdom.
This is how serious a struggle it is.
And so let's hear those scriptures in humility, holy fear, and joy:
“I will write it on their hearts,” says the Lord; “and I will be their God and they shall be my people.” (Jeremiah 31:33)
“Since all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, they are now justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a sacrifice of atonement by his blood, effective through faith.” (Romans 3:23-25)
“If you continue in my Word, you are truly my disciples.” (John 8:31)
These are the true words, the words that kill and make alive, the words that point us to life in God's completed kingdom and how to live in the in-between times right now.
These are the words that help us to answer those questions that keep coming up in front of us:
Is the story of Jesus true? YES
Is it sufficient for us? YES
Is it adequate for these troubled and complicated times? YES
Does it need to be supplemented or superseded by some other story, some other person, a different Savior? NO
Lord, keep us steadfast in this Word, and let us not fall prey to another. 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. |