Sermon Text 5.2.2021 — Waiting… Waiting…

May 2, 2021 – Confirmation                                                                        Text:  Daniel 12:12

Dear Friends in Christ,

            This year’s Confirmation class has many unique characteristics.  They are all young men.  3 of the 4 were baptized within two months of each other.  I was privileged to perform all four baptisms and they have all been lifelong members of Good Shepherd.  The other unique characteristic that is important for today is that they all have an older brother, brothers, or sister.  3 of the 4 are the youngest in their family.  Which means they have all had to wait.  They watched siblings start school.  They saw a brother or sister get into organized sports before them.  Scouting membership was something they waited on.  They set through the questioning and confirmation of their beloved brother and sister.  They’ve waited and here they are.

            The prophet Daniel says in our text that waiting is a blessing.  How do you see it?  Today is a future oriented day but not just for these young men.  It is also important for all in the Christian Church.  What does the future look like and what place do I play in it?  Hang on to your patience as we delve into . . .

“WAITING. . . WAITING . . .”

            In the United States, the holy, Christian Church is facing a fork in the road.  Since the days of Emperor Theodosius I in AD 379 Christianity has enjoyed privileged status in Western European culture.  The Church has had freedom to wield political, legal, intellectual, and cultural power, according to its mission and purpose.  But it looks more and more like the Church’s privileged status is coming to an end.  The Church has been fragmented and secularism has pushed the Church to the fringe of society.  In all the areas I mentioned earlier the voice of orthodox Christianity is diminishing. 

            The two most popular paths to follow in the past have been zealotry and despair.  Zealotry seeks to regain power at all costs.  You then turn your renewed status against your oppressor.  Despair is surrendering.  Withdraw from the conflicts that seem insurmountable, repudiate the world and start a nirvana somewhere else.  Both paths have been followed in the past and failed.

            As with the pandemic there is nothing new.  History repeats and repeats.  The first three centuries of the Christian Church faced wave after wave of hostility.  Political exclusion.  Legal persecution.  Cultural contempt.  Roman rulers identified the Christian Church as a dangerous “contagion” that needed to be quarantined for the good of society.

            The ancient Church rejected both paths in favor of a third – the path of patience, or, better, long-suffering.  Does that make you squirm in the pew a bit?  In American culture patience is met with skepticism.  We live in an impatient society.  I see more people who think stop signs are just a suggestion.  “Seize the day!”  “Just do it.”  The politics of the day feed this activism with crisis after crisis, which leads to immediate action.  To be patient is equated with doing nothing. 

            The early Church Father Cyprian who advocated waiting said this, “We do not speak great things, we live them.”  Patience is the Christian form of life and it is active.  We don’t eliminate or evade suffering, we bear it, we endure, and we outlast it.  God is the author of supreme patience.  We see it with Abraham and Isaac, Jacob, Joseph who makes peace with his brothers, Moses, David, and all the righteous.  Yet it is only in Christ that a full and perfect patience is finally consummated. 

            The true Son, Jesus, gives form to the perfect patience of the Father.  Although righteous, He bears the sins of the whole world; though immortal, He suffers death; though guiltless, He is reckoned with sinners.  Patience does not look to rule the world or reject the world.  It seeks fulfillment in the redemption of the world, in the repentance of sinners, in the resurrection and manifestation of Christ in the glory of His Father.  The resurrection and the life of the world to come gives Christians the freedom to be patient, turn the cheek, to love the enemy and bear one another’s burdens in Christ.  Patience is freedom because it has no boundaries.  Its beginning and end reside in God, and so patience and waiting is the path for Christians.

            As people of faith we await the Lord’s deliverance.  King David wrote in Psalm 130, “I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in his word I hope.” (v. 4)  It was a wonderful blessing to talk with these young men about their future as husbands and fathers.  They wait to be spiritual heads of their families.  They wait for the Christian spouse God has for them.  They wait to prayerfully be blessed with children.  Christian patience.  Make a God-ordained difference in your little part of the world.  Men who will lead their families are so needed.

            For all of us we wait for our eternal home.  May our patience be a sign of God’s enduring mercy and a testimony to the hope of the resurrection.  On that day, the beatitude will be fulfilled:  “Blessed is the man who waits.”

                                                                                                            Amen.     

Sermon Text 4.25.2021 — Living with Purpose

April 25, 2021                                                                                   Text:  Psalm 23:2-3

Dear Friends in Christ,

            A little shaver liked to help his dad and mom around the house.  He would dust and try to vacuum and do what he could at his tender age.  One day, his father was brushing his teeth with one of those toothbrushes with a row of blue bristles.  As the blue fades away it is time to get a new brush.  But his was not fading, it was getting bluer.  In asking his wife she knew nothing about it.  They asked their young son if he knew anything about it and he replied, “that’s my ‘ty-ty’ brush.”

            Mom was getting the picture while dad was still a little confused.  As they asked more questions of their helpful child he went into the bathroom and came out with a toilet brush in one hand and his dad’s toothbrush in the other.  Holding up the toilet brush he said, “Mommy’s ‘ty-ty’ brush is too big, so I use daddy’s ‘ty-ty’ brush!”

            Everything in this world is designed for a purpose:  a toothbrush for brushing teeth; a toilet brush, for brushing porcelain.  It is the same way with God’s creation.  The fruit tree gives fruit.  The sun gives warmth and marks time.  When it comes to man and what his purpose is, well, things start to get a bit unclear.  May the Holy Spirit help us this morning as we look at the Creator’s plan . . .

“LIVING WITH PURPOSE”

            One thing we learn about God today from Psalm 23 is that God is a real ‘He’ man.  Yes, He is almighty, but we are not talking bustling biceps here.  Listen and see if you notice.  “HE makes me lie down in green pastures; HE leads me beside still waters.  HE restores my soul; HE leads me in paths of righteousness for HIS name’s sake.”

            Who is the one He makes lie down? Leads?  Restores?  It’s me.  It’s you.  “He makes ME lie down in green pastures.  He leads ME beside still waters.  He restores MY soul.  He leads ME in paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.”

            God in Heaven has a longing desire to give you a purpose and He is deeply involved in the life of man.  You are the object of that purpose.  You are still breathing air because God “ain’t finished with you yet.”  He has a purpose for your life.

            Hasn’t man had these questions since God breathed into Adam?  Why am I here?  What is my purpose?  Someone went to a lot of trouble to turn a small seed into a redwood tree or to take one small cell from a man and one small cell from a woman and create a beautiful infant child.  What does it all mean?

            To get that answer we must check the Manual.  We have to go to the Source, and find out what the Creator has said about His creation, and that source is the Word.  It’s the Holy Bible.

            We find there that God had a purpose.  “He makes me lie down in green pastures.  He leads me beside still waters.” That is God’s provision.  He provides what we need to support this body and life.  He gave Adam and Eve the garden.  He sustained the Israelites in the wilderness for forty years.  God still wants us to trust Him.  He provides abundantly and daily.  He gives live purpose.  He wants to be our Shepherd.  Look at His blessings even in the past year.  Did anyone see the financial security God provided many churches and charities?  We have seen it at Good Shepherd and the Pregnancy Center Walk For Life set a record this year.  In the midst of chaos, isn’t it great our Creator leads us beside still waters?

            Then man needs his soul restored.  So many souls are lost and confused.  What’s going on?  My life has no direction.  Suicides are exploding.  When people don’t even know their sex, we know the train has jumped the tracks.  God’s people have let “worry” encompass their existence.  They have lost sight of the end goal of the Good Shepherd. 

            Christ cares for every human need.  Christ alone restores our soul as He sacrifices His life for the sheep.  Jesus did that for us so that our sin-broken souls would be restored and fixed and then He might lead us on the path to heaven.

             That word “leads” comes up again.  The Lord is leading our path.  Do you see that?  Do you see His Almighty hand in everything?  Do you see His purpose even as people turn their back on their Creator?  The Shepherd leads us on the righteous path.  As Christians the path we take must be above the fray.  The Lord grants us kindness and compassion and understanding as we feed on His Word, as we graze in his pasture. 

            Remember Deuteronomy 8:  “Man does live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.”  Digest the Word.  May the Holy Spirit put the Scriptures inside you.  Too many people forget on Monday what they had to eat at the 9:00 a.m. Sunday meal.  Let the banquet last throughout the week.  Supplement it with Bible study, devotions, personal Bible reading.

            All of this helps to restore our soul – mending our broken lives, reviving hurting marriages, giving strength for life’s challenges.  We are restored back to our original purpose to know our Savior – to know our Shepherd.  He seeks to lead and guide.  Loved ones, your lives have a great purpose.  Follow Him, won’t you?    Amen.  

Sermon Text 4.18.2021 — Disbelieved for Joy

April 18, 2021                                                                                   Text:  Luke 24:36-49

Dear Friends in Christ,

            I think you’ll recognize the last name.  Charles Ponzi became infamous in the 1920’s.  Before he perfected his pyramid scheme he had already been in trouble with the law.  He had gone into a Montreal business with no one in the office, found their checkbook, and wrote himself a nice bonus though he didn’t work there.  He served three years and when his mother, who was living in Italy inquired about his employment he wrote home and said, “I’ve got a job as the assistant to the warden at a prison.” 

            Ponzi’s scheme promised returns of 50 and 100 percent.  He used postal coupons and he kept it going as long as he had investors.  When that house of cards fell apart his investors lost 20 million dollars about 250 million in today’s dollars.  His name is known for this type of swindle.  You know it as a “Ponzi Scheme.”

            Most people do not fall for this scheme anymore because they see it as too good to be true.  We are suspicious and distrustful . . . but people still get duped every day.

            We might think of the Gospel in the same way.  God gives up His only Son to die and come back to life.  This seems too good to be true.  People have been there before.  Look at the disciples in our text, they “disbelieved for joy.” (v. 41)  However, as we will see in our sermon for this morning, the gift of the death and resurrection of Jesus is one promise that we can absolutely take to the bank.

“DISBELIEVED FOR JOY”

            Other than reading those words in our text, I don’t believe I have ever used those words in that order.  Have you?  I disbelieved for joy when the Cubs won the World Series.  I disbelieved for joy when Illinois won the Big Ten Tournament.  I disbelieved for joy when Toni said “yes” to my marriage proposal.  We just don’t talk that way. 

            So how would we define “disbelieved for joy?”  The heart is too small to take in all the joy at once.  Maybe the reality is not real.  Luther calls this a curious statement.  Fear and fright first hold up faith, it is then held up by the very opposite, joy.  Grace is altogether too great and glorious to take it all in. 

            Let’s see what led the disciples to get to that point.  The disciples were gathering and wondering.  In steps the Savior.  Hold it – it’s a spirit.  “Guys, it’s me Jesus.  Why do you doubt?  Look at me.  Touch me.  I have flesh and bones.”  This is what prompts the “disbelieving for joy.”

            A few years back we changed banks.  The boys and I went in to make the change.  In the course of our conversation, the bank employee said I could do online banking.  I blurted out something that gave a little embarrassment to the sons.  “I told the guy I don’t do online banking.  I want to touch.  I want to feel my money and come to a branch.”  Most of you know I am that way about a lot of things.  I want to see and interact.  I would have fit in well with the disciples.

            What do you need to see to believe?  Do you need to see Jesus eat?  Many of you like meals together.  Would this have you “disbelieving for joy?”  Here, sit next to Jesus and have some fish.

            Would you “disbelieve for joy” once Jesus started telling you how the Scriptures needed to be fulfilled?  Here He is the living proof of everything the writers in the Old Testament were pointing towards.  He is sharing the peace with them.  He is sharing that peace with you. 

            The message is “that repentance and forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem.” (v. 47)  Don’t we have great joy in knowing that for the sake of the death and resurrection of Jesus our sin against God has been forgiven?  He spared no expense.  This is no Ponzi scheme.  This is flesh and blood sacrificed on a cross.  This is flesh and blood come back to life.  This is flesh and blood dining with disciples.  This is flesh and blood that appeared to many in the next 40 days.  “You are witness of these things.” (v. 48)

            The resurrection of Jesus is for your joy.  Repent of your sin before God.  Repent of your sin before one another.  Live in the joy of the Gospel.  Live in the joy of restored relationships with one another.  It is not too good to be true.  It is true.  Christ has come back to life . . . and you have “disbelieved for joy.”

                                                                                                                        Amen.   

Sermon Text Easter Sunday — THE EMPTY TOMB OVERCOMES OUR FEAR

April 4, 2021 – Easter                                                                        Text:  John 20:1-10

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Well here we are.  Almost a year removed from an Easter most had never experienced.  Locked up in homes.  Afraid to venture out.  Chilled to our soul with the news of the day.  Fear overtook our nation and our world.  What was everybody afraid of?  Certainly the unknown.  But take away all the fluff and experts and press conferences and what do you get.  The fear of death.  People were and still are afraid of dying. 

            Philip Yancey wrote a book, “I Was Just Wondering,” where it imagines a society in which no believes in life after death.  No heaven.  No hell.  No nothing.  The fictional land is called Acirema.  This was written over 20 years ago.

            “Aciremans would put great emphasis on youth.  The idea of growing old and eventually dying would be so traumatic that they would have no hope for the future.  Therefore, preserving youth would become an obsession.  Old age, and anything associated with aging, would be shunned and devalued.  In this way, the rest of society could continue the charade of denying the facts of aging.  Every kind of cosmetic and chemical treatment that can possibly slow down the aging process would be necessary. 

            “Appearances would be all that matter.  Inner beauty, characterized by such things as integrity, compassion, and decorum, would no longer matter.  People who do not look attractive, young, and healthy would face great discrimination.  Scientists would try to figure out how to eliminate death.  People would use all kinds of euphemisms to say that someone has died.  Religion for the Aciremans would consist of philosophies to help them make the most of the here and now.  Eternal rewards wouldn’t exist in their belief system, so Acireman religion would teach that one must be fully gratified and rewarded in this lifetime.  Therefore, Aciremans would be taught to ‘grab all the gusto they can get,’ to build up riches and satisfy their whims and desires as soon as they can.”

            By the way, Acirema, spelled backwards is America.  Fear. Unbelief.  Sadness.  We finish our Lenten theme this morning “The New Normal – Or Is It” and see once again that our times and biblical times are the same.  Fear. Unbelief.  Sadness.  They needed something that first Easter.  It is still a need we have today.  Where is Jesus?

“THE EMPTY TOMB OVERCOMES OUR FEAR”

            The women and disciples were early risers.  Mary Magdalene sees the stone rolled away and tells the disciples, “they have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid him.” (v. 2)  Fear.  “We don’t know what this virus can do.  People are dying.  What should we do?”  Without Christ the unknown is there for all of us.

            Dr. James Dobson observed this, “Life itself is a fatal disease.  None of us is going to get out of it alive.  And it happens so quickly too; about the time your face clears up, your mind gets fuzzy.”  There it is the grave . . . in the distance . . . and no amount of posturing can make it go away. 

            It’s a sprint to the tomb and John gets there before Peter.  They both see the linen cloths lying there.  And the face cloth was folded by itself.  “The other disciple, who had reached the tomb first, also went in, and he saw and believed…” (v. 8)  Believed what?  They didn’t believe in Christ victorious over the grave, they believed what Mary Magdalene told them.  They still didn’t understand He must rise from the dead.  Then look at the last verse of our text, “Then the disciples went back to their homes.”  The fear.  The sadness.  The unknown.  Where do they go? – home.  Go back again to last April.  The fear.  The sadness.  The unknown.  Where were you – in your home.

            The disciples eventually came out and realized what had happened.  They remembered the words of Jesus – “On the third day I will rise again.”  We too come out from our shelters and face the reality.  This life is hard.  We can make all the facades we want.  When we visit the empty tomb we come to terms with the tremendous victory won for us.  The empty tomb overcomes our fear.  Fear of death.  Fear of virus.  Fear of governmental control.  Fear of our sins.  Jesus said, “Because I live, you also will live.”  Have you been living?

            Mary Magdalene says in verse 18, “I have seen the Lord.”  It’s glorious news.  It is our news.  Have you see the Risen Lord?  I mean have you really seen Him?  Has His presence let you just live life.  Have His words uplifted your sagging spirit?  Has His Holy Meal provided comfort and strength?  Has seeing the Lord changed the way you see everything?  I pray it has.  Living in fear leaves you entombed.  Be reminded again – the tomb is empty . . . empty . . . empty . . . He Has Risen!

            At Christ’s tomb the One who loves us with an everlasting love directs us Heavenward!  And our last earthly dwelling – the grave – is just as temporary as the present.  A victory has been handed to us, my dear brothers and sisters.  Eternal life.  And the sign outside the tomb reads . . . VACANT.  Glory be to Jesus.

                                                                                                                        Amen.          

Holy Week Schedule

Thursday, April 1 at 7:00 p.m. – Maundy Thursday Worship w/Holy Communion (Theme – Politics)
Friday, April 2 at Noon – Tre Ore Service – Brief service of readings, homily and hymn.
Friday, April 2 at 7:00 p.m. – Good Friday Tenebrae Worship w/Holy Communion – Service of Darkness – (Theme – Lord In Control)
Sunday, April 4 at 7:00 a.m – Easter Worship w/Holy Communion (Mask Optional) – (Theme – Overcoming Fear)
Adult Bible Class and Sunday School  from 8:30 a.m – 9:30 a.m.
Sunday, April 4 at 10:00 a.m – Easter Worship w/Holy Communion (Please Wear A Mask) – (Theme – Overcoming Fear) 

Sermon Text Palm Sunday — By emptying Himself, Jesus fills you

March 28, 2021 – Palm Sunday                                               Text:  Philippians 2:5-11

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Are you an optimist or a pessimist?  Do you see things in a negative light or a positive light?  Some folks are completely one way or another.  Most of us are a combination.  I can be pessimistic sometimes about the teams I cheer for.  But as last weekend showed that is also reality.  I think I am a realist.  I’ve seen too much.  My nickname at the seminary was Dr. Reality.  I am also an optimist.  I am optimistic about the Lord’s Church and church work and the Lord’s people and our children.  These are all blessings in my life and have been for years.  As Christians depending on what it is we can be either.

            This week we are celebrating has elements of both.  Jesus rides into Jerusalem in optimism and cheering and by Friday it is “Crucify” and killing.  We Christians must have some pessimism in us if we like to see our Savior treated this way.  Then we have services to celebrate it!  But we have reasons for calling it “good” Friday.

            On Easter we will be accused of foolish optimism – believing a myth that Jesus Christ actually rose from the dead.  Get a life.  Look around at the world, my friend.  What is your Savior doing about it?

            A blessed Holy Week to you.  It is not about a glass half empty or a glass half full; it’s about Jesus emptying Himself in order to make us full.  That’s what St. Paul in our Epistle, teaches us really happens in these holy days.

“BY EMPTYING HIMSELF, JESUS FILLS YOU”

            We are commanded to empty ourselves by following Jesus’ example, but when you try, you just come up, well . . . empty.  Can we have the mind of Christ?  Perfect love.  Humble as He rides into Jerusalem on a borrowed donkey.  A mind of perfect obedience that allowed himself to be arrested and tried, tortured and killed according to the Father’s will.  Love that serves others.

            We strive for that but usually ending up serving ourselves.  We don’t like to look on the dark side or be pessimistic but this is the way our sinful nature works.  We come up empty when trying to empty ourselves.

            When Jesus emptied Himself, He was exalted to the full.  In Jesus’ state of humiliation He didn’t always use His divine powers on earth.  He emptied Himself as a baby, like us, inside Mary.  He put Himself under the Law in our place.  He became nothing in the form of a servant to become obedient to the point of death.  He could have walked away; He could have destroyed His enemies.  He could have…but He didn’t because He loves you and your soul too much.

            When Jesus emptied Himself it did not leave Him empty.  His name is above every name.  Every knee bows before Him.  Every tongue confesses Him as Lord.  Jesus now and forever uses His divine attributes.  We call this His state of exaltation.  That’s not half full.  It’s full.  It’s not foolish optimism, it’s true.

            What Jesus did counts for us.  We still can’t empty ourselves of our selfishness as we ought.  But Jesus did.  We still can’t live as humbly as the Savior did.  But we don’t have to because He paid for our sins.

            We share in Jesus’s exaltation.  For all eternity we wear His name.  When we kneel before Him we don’t do it in shame but in faith and joy.  With the angels, our tongues will forever sing his praise.  Knowing that God will exalt us fully with Christ even fills us with love that can humble itself in service to others – with a mind like Christ.

            The German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer lived and preached in Barcelona, Spain for a time.  On an Easter afternoon he was taken to a bullfight.  When he first observed it he was shocked at the gruesome elements and how the spectators seemed to enjoy the blood and cruelty.

            The second time he went he started to see the allure of it.  Ever the theologian, He wrote this in a letter to his wife Sabine:  “I have never seen the swing from ‘Hosanna’ to ‘Crucify’ more graphically evoked than in the virtually insane way the crowd goes berserk when the bullfighter makes a turn, and they immediately follow this with an equally insane howling and whistling when some mishap occurs.  The momentary character of this mass mood goes so far that they applaud the bull and against the bullfighter if, for example, the later proves to be cowardly and – quite understandably – his courage fails him for a moment.”

            We are stepping into Holy Week.  What do you observe?  Isn’t it great that we can be optimistic?  Whether you’ve experienced it for 10 years or 90 years you know who triumphs.  His courage will not fail.  The charging sin, death, Satan, and hell will not do Him in.  His humble obedience puts a spear through their heart.  They lay dead in the spiritual arena.  By emptying Himself, He fills you.

                                                                                                            Amen.