Monday, April 30, 2012

Mandate Issue Not About Contraceptives


I wrote the following article for the local newspaper here in Hankinson.  Not sure if it will be published or not.  In any case, I am posting it here:

On January 20, the Department of Health and Human Services issued a mandate requiring all health insurance plans to cover all contraceptives approved by the FDA at no cost.  Immediately, this set off a fire storm of debate between different political, as well as religious, groups. 

The political spin has gone something like this.  Republicans declared that President Obama hated religion, and Democrats said the Republicans hated women and reproductive rights.  As often happens in Washington, neither party hit the mark on the head.  To further confuse the matter, media personalities failed to discuss the issue but instead resorted to name calling. 

If we set aside politics, the issue really is this:  Can the federal government tell a church body what its practice must be?  Specifically, can congress legislate that a church has to do something to which it is theologically and morally opposed?  And if so, where does that authority end? 

Can the government mandate that all Jewish citizens eat bacon?  Can they mandate that atheists attend church on Sundays even if they don’t believe?  Can they tell you what your religious practice must be, even if you disagree?  If not, how can they force a church body that disagrees with abortion and abortion causing drugs to cover it in their health insurance? 

We in the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod stand with our Catholic brothers and sisters opposed to this mandate, for fear of where this slippery slope will end.  We also stand with them opposed to abortion and abortion causing contraceptives.  We cannot stand idly by while our consciences are trampled on by those who disagree with our own beliefs.  We stand together with them, against laws that tell us what our belief must be.  Our nation is one which values freedom of thought and practice.  We cannot turn our head the other way when that freedom is under attack.  

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Thursday, April 19, 2012

World Malaria Day




Often the LC-MS gets accused of not actually caring about people, and being cold and distant.  And yet, we do more work to help the suffering throughout all the world than you can possibly imagine.  I have recently been assigned the work of a variety of projects in North Dakota, including the building of orphanages connected to Lutheran Schools in Kenya, Native American ministry, and also this project, the Lutheran Malaria Initiative.


"One child in Africa dies every 60 seconds from malaria. In a single 24-hour period—one day—1,440 people in Africa will succumb to this disease. World Malaria Day offers an opportunity to raise awareness of the devastating effects of this disease and encourage people to join in the worldwide effort to end malaria deaths in Africa by 2015."
On Wednesday, April 25World Malaria Day—please join us in a moment of prayer at 2:40 p.m. as we consider the 1,440 Africans who die each day from malaria and remember in prayer all who suffer from malaria or will lose a child or other family member to the disease.

For more information, please see Pastor Bernie Seter's blog post here:  http://www.northerncrossingsmercy.org/world-malaria-day/
Also feel free to contact me so that we can supply materials and other information.  
In addition, see the following video for information on Project 24, and contact me if you would like to support it.  


Sunday, April 15, 2012

Easter 2 - G - 2012 - Confess and be Forgiven


The Second Sunday of Easter
April 15, 2012 - Pastor Adam Moline

Acts 4:32-35             1 John 1:1-2:2             John 20:19-31

He is risen!  He is risen indeed!  Alleluia!  Amen.  Our text today comes from the second reading, especially these words, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us, but if we confess our sins, God who is faithful and just will forgive our sins, and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”  Thus far our text. 
There once was a man, who lived with his wife and his children, and worked hard every day.  One particularly cold day, he was out shoveling snow, when suddenly he felt a pain in his arm.  The man ignored it and kept on shoveling.  Soon, he felt slightly out of breath, and went inside for a few minutes.  While he was telling his wife what was going on, she looked at him and said point blank, “That sounds serious, perhaps we should go to the doctor.  The man told her right back, “Only sissies go to the doctor, I’ll be fine.” 
The next day the same thing happened, and the next and the next, and still he ignored the pain and shortness of breath, even as they got worse.  Finally one day, the man fell collapsed while he was out working, and died from a heart attack that could have been prevented had the man paid attention to the symptoms.  If he would have simply admitted something was wrong and gone to see the doctor, he could have been healed and lived for many more happy years with his wife and family.  But instead he deceived himself saying, “I’m fine, I don’t need any help.”
Dear friends, I hope that none of you ever face that particular situation, and yet the truth is, you face it every day.  No, not with heart problems, but with sin.  Daily we are confronted by the fact that we are sinners, that we are guilty, that we deserve punishment, and yet, so often we ignore it like it doesn’t exist, deceiving ourselves.  The signs are there, the symptoms are ever present, and you deny the truth of the matter.  And yes, I am talking about you all. 
This past week we celebrated Easter, the joyous resurrection of the dead, the hope of life through the Risen Lord and Savior of the entire world, Jesus.  We came, we saw our lilies, we said the Easter greeting, ate our hams and then went on like nothing had happened the rest of the week.  We heard the truth, the wonderful Gospel of Easter, and then we returned to our sin, as scripture says, “like a dog returns to its vomit.”  You did it, and dear friends, I too have done it. 
Our text says, “If we claim to have fellowship with him yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth.”  When we continue in our life of sin, we deny that Christ has risen, we deny that we are sick and that we need his help.  We fail to live in the truth, and worst of all, we don’t confess it to those who are around us. 
If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us.  We become like that man, who ignored the symptoms of heart troubles, and who died because of it.  We are that person, we who so joyously celebrated a week ago, have deceived ourselves much since then.  We have worshiped false gods and idols, mostly ourselves.  We have cursed, sworn, we have committed murder and adultery in thought word and deed, we have stolen, coveted, cheated, and more.  And all of these are the symptom of the greater problem.  All these are the shortness of breath caused by a heart attack.  All of these things show that we live like Christ is still dead, like he is still in the tomb.  And if Christ is dead in the tomb, that is all the further you will get yourself.  If Christ is dead, you are dead as well.
If you live in darkness, if you live in sin, you do not have fellowship with Christ, you are not in the light.  Don’t deceive yourself.  You are in sin.  You are guilty.  You do deserve punishment and wrath from God.  Each of you.  Each and every one of you.  Jesus said so, that’s why he came, to rescue you.  To die for your sin. 
So confess your sin.  Confess your sin and walk in it no longer.  Christ is risen from the dead, so don’t live a life of death any longer.  Confess your sin, so that God who is faithful and just will forgive it, so that he will cleanse you from unrighteousness.  Confess your sin, so that the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world will take yours as well.  Tell him your deepest darkest sin, and be forgiven.  Confess all that you have done wrong, Before God plead guilty of all sins, even those you do not know, as we do in the Lord’s Prayer.  And before the Pastor, we confess those sins that we know and feel in our hearts, that bother you.  Confess and be forgiven.    
If anyone does sin, we have one who speaks to the Father in our defense-- Jesus Christ, the Righteous One.  He is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world.  He went to the cross for sins, both the confessed and the unconfessed.  He went to the cross so that you would not have to make the difficult choices your sin brings about, so that you would not have to deal with the difficult situations your sin puts you in.  So that you can be free from them forever without end. 
And now, Christ is risen!  He is risen indeed.  He who killed your sin now lives sin free with you.  He who was bloodied now bloodies you in his own holiness of life.  You cannot live anymore in your sin, “No one who is born of God will continue to sin, because God's seed remains in him; he cannot go on sinning, because he has been born of God.”  Confess, be forgiven, live in the holiness that Christ gives to you by His grace. 
Christ is risen, be risen with him, and leave your sin behind.  In the name of Jesus.  Amen. 

Sunday, April 8, 2012

The Resurrection of our Lord - G - 2012 - The Dark Walk to an Empty Tomb


The Resurrection of our Lord
April 8, 2012 - Pastor Adam Moline

Isaiah 25:6-9               1 Corinthians 15:1-11             Mark 16:1-8


Christ is risen!  He is risen indeed!  Alleluia!  Amen.  Our text today comes from the readings just read, especially these words, “He has risen; he is not here. See the place where they laid him.”  Thus far our text. 
Dear friends in Christ, early in the morning at the very beginning of the day, three women walk the road to a tomb, expecting to find a dead man.  The day before they had spent quietly weeping and mourning, because they knew the truth, once you’re dead, you’re dead.  There is no return, not even for Him.  The screams from Friday still fill the ears of those women as they carefully walk outside the walls of Jerusalem to the tomb, the tomb near the place where it happened, just down the hill. 
That Friday sticks in these women’s mind, the blood, the laughter, the taunting, the earthquake.  All these things stick in their mind, especially the moment, when they took down the body and quickly rushed it to the nearby tomb.  There wasn’t time to properly care for it.  There wasn’t time to show the respect any dead body deserves.  It was too close to sunset, to the Sabbath, so they had rushed.  Today they will make things right, today they will wash away the dried blood, they may even sew together some of the cuts, they will cover the body in spices to keep away the smell, and say their last goodbyes to Jesus, for he is dead.
But there is a big stone, one that is sealed shut, that blocks there way?  Who will help them move it?  Dare they ask the Roman guards to help them with it? After all they are foreigners, and they are the ones who did this horrible act.  And as these women are discussing this they arrive and are caught off guard.  The soldiers aren’t there.  They have abandoned their post, a treasonous act that’s punishment is death.  The tomb is opened, the stone rolled back.  Someone must have already come to clean the body. 
As they duck down into the tomb, through the already opened door, they meet a young man in the tomb, dressed all in white, glowing white.  They are instantly afraid, for all who meet angels are afraid.  His glory reflects the glory of the living God in heaven.  He sits on the rock bench where just a few hours earlier the dead body of Jesus had been set.  And the body of Jesus is not there.  He’s gone!
“Do not be alarmed. You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen; he is not here. See the place where they laid him. But go, tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before you to Galilee. There you will see him, just as he told you”  Its true!  Christ is risen!  He isn’t dead!  His heart beats again, he breathes the air again!  Death has been defeated, it has been swallowed up by death!  The power of Satan is forever destroyed!  Don’t be afraid, you will see him alive again forever!
Dear friends, that news is for you.  That promise is for you.  A dozen times over the last year we have made the journey to the cemetery to bury a loved one.  Countless times, tears have been shed, countless times we have mourned as a loved one left us forever.  All of us have lost a loved one.  All of us have felt the sting of death, some more, some less. 
And we all know the truth, one day, we too will die.  We will be carried to a grave, buried in a tomb, and left there even as our family and friends mourn our loss.  And behind it is all is our sin.  Behind it is all is the very fact that in our thoughts words and deeds we have turned our back on the one who gave us our very life.  In our desire to become gods we turned against the one true God, and looked only at our wants, our desires, our opinions.  We did this to such a great extent that when God visited our world, born of the Virgin Mary in Bethlehem, born in our flesh just like you and me, that we put him to death. 
But as those women discover, Jesus didn’t remain dead.  He died for your sin – yes, but death could not contain him.  He suffered your guilt and shame as he hung naked on a cross, but that could not stop his glory.  For today, He is risen!  He is risen indeed.  And because he is risen, you too will one day be risen as well.  For as he died your death, he gave you his life.  As he laid in the tomb with you, he will call you forth one day too.  As he died, and as you die, so too will you rise as he rises! 
His victory is yours!  His resurrection is yours!  No longer is your separation from your loved ones eternal.  Yes we mourn our loved ones, but we mourn as those with hope!  Christ is Risen!  And so too will they be!  Christ is alive forever, and so too are they, and yes dear friends, so too are you. 
And so today, on this most Holy of Sundays, we come and we eat the body that hung on the cross, that laid in the tomb, and know that it is now alive forever!  We come and we drink the blood spilled for us and our sin, and know that as it flows through Christ’s veins today, so too will it flow through ours forever as well.  Today we receive the countless blessings earned and bestowed upon us by the Victorious Risen Christ! 

Rejoice!  Christ is Risen!  He is Risen Indeed!  Alleluia!  Amen!  He has swallowed up death forever; and now the Lord God will wipe away tears from all faces, and the reproach of his people – all your sin - he will take away from all the earth, for the Lord has spoken.


Easter Sunrise 2012


He raised the widow’s on at Nain.  He raised Jairus’ daughter.  In fact, Jesus brought the house down with laughter when He said:  “She’s not dead – just taking a little nap!”  He audaciously and categorically promised Martha:  “I am the Resurrection and the Life.  He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in m will never die,” (John 11:25).  He walked to His best friend’s grave and barked out these orders to the already decomposing remains:  “Lazarus, come on out!”  And He did!  Grave clothes and all!  But all these people eventually died again.

Now Jesus is dead!  Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James and Salome are off to the tomb.  You go to the cemetery to pay your respects to the DEAD!  The Lord who preached, “I am the Resurrection and the Life” is graveyard dead! 

Can’t get any deader!  Joseph of Arimathea wrapped up the dead body and then laid it in the tomb!  The least you can do is anoint the corpse with spices.  So it’s off to the grave “when the Sabbath was over” to pay their respects to the dead – the dead and buried Jesus!

What’s this?  Oh, my …!  The tomb … is open!  The large, heavy sealed tombstone has been moved! Oh no!  It can’t be!  But it sure looks like it!  That’s the only explanation!  A tomb invasion!  A break in!  Trespassers have violated the tomb!   No doubt, they have desecrated and profaned the Lord’s body!  He had many enemies!  Wasn’t it enough to viciously murder Him?  Can’t they leave Him alone even in death?  Do we even dare to look?

They do.  They step in to the tomb.  Someone’s there!  The trespasser is still here! 

He’s no intruder.  No desecrator of the grave!  He’s a holy angel!  Strange!  Very strange!  You don’t see angels every day.  But we did see them at the Annunciation and at Jesus’ birth, after His temptation in the wilderness, and while He prayed in the Garden!  Now here too!  You’d be alarmed too!  Angels are mighty creatures.  Every time someone in the Bible sees an angel he is scared stiff! 

“Ladies, no need to be frightened!  I won’t hurt you,” the angel proclaims.  “Looking for the corpse, ladies?  The body of Jesus?  Jesus from Nazareth?  Well, are you?  You are, aren’t you?  Well, then I’ve got great news for you!  Get a load of this, ladies!  GRAVE EMPTY!  TAKE A LOOK!  SEE WHERE JOSEPH LAID THE BODY!  IT IS GONE!  NO LONGER HERE!  HERE’S WHY!  JESUS THE CRUCIFIED, DEAD AND BURIED RIGHT HERE IN THIS TOMB HAS RISEN!  RISEN FROM THE DEAD!”

This is the game changer!  The salvation game changer!  The cross is not emptied of its power because He rose!  You are no longer in your sins because He rose!  You’re faith in Him is not in vain!   

Why?  Because He did it!  Did exactly what He said He would do!  In every detail!  Betrayed.  Condemned to death.  Mocked.  Spit on.  Flogged.  Killed.  Then the clincher:  AND THREE DAYS LATER HE PHYSICALLY ROSE FROM THE GRAVE (Mark 10:33-34; 8:31)!  Awakened from the dead!  Shed the burial clothes!  Folded them up and placed there here as He left the cemetery!  Never to return! Never to die again! No one else has ever done this!  Muhammad didn’t! Buddha didn’t!  Not Joseph Smith!  Not Brigham Young!  Not even Harry Potter! No one!  Excluding the fictional character from Hogwarts, these dead and decayed bodies still remain in their graves! But not Jesus! I will trust Him!  You can trust Jesus!  He does what He says!  Does what He promises! He rose!

Many saw Jesus!  He really did come out the grave!  When St. Paul wrote his first letter to the Corinthians he gives evidence of this fact with witnesses.  The resurrected Jesus, he writes, “appeared to Peter and then to the Twelve … he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep.  Then he appeared to [His half-brother] James, then to all the apostles, and last of all he appeared to me also, as to one abnormally born,” (1 Corinthians 15:5-7).  It is true!  We have witnesses!  His grave is empty!  Hundreds saw Him!   

He did what He promised!  Therefore -- JESUS IS WHO HE SAYS HE IS!  Who St. Mark and the centurion at the foot of the cross confess:  THE SON OF GOD (Mark 1:1; 15:39)!  I.E. God in the flesh!  Son of God Jesus for you!  “WHO DIED FOR YOUR SINS!”

You’d be full of awe and fear too!  In the First Commandment way, that is!  Fearing, loving, and trusting in Jesus above all things!  This is always what happens when Jesus does His salvation stuff in the Gospel according to St. Mark!  He awed and overwhelmed folks when He taught from the Word and then cast out demons on the authority of His word (Mark 1:21-22, 27).  When He calmed the storm and walked on the sea (Mark 4:41; 6:51) the disciples were “terrified,” “amazed,” and “asked each other, ‘Who is this?  Even the wind and the waves obey Him!’”  When Jesus absolved and healed a paralytic the citizens of Capernaum were “amazed” and “praised God” proclaiming, “We have never seen anything like this,”  (Mark 2:12)!  The snickers turned to absolute astonishment when Jesus raised Jairus’ dead daughter with only a command, “Talitha koum,” (Mark 5:42)!  Vociferous Peter was left completely speechless – petrified into silence -- at the sight of Mount of Transfiguration Jesus (Mark 9:6)!  As Jesus led the way to Jerusalem without hesitation for the last week of His life, the disciples were astonished and the others who followed were frightened (Mark 10:32)!

So too here at the empty tomb!  First Commandment fear and awe!  With even greater intensity!  It is absolutely incredible!  Another miracle!  He did it!  He did what He said He would do!  HE ROSE FROM THE DEAD!  These shaking in their boots women now know what every disciple of the Risen Lord Jesus comes to know – that in Jesus the Son of God all divine power and mercy is present!  For the crucified and risen Jesus is God Himself! 

HIS RESURRECTION MEANS THAT JESUS IS GOD … FOR SINNERS!  Every one of them!  Including Peter – one of the worst.  Denied Jesus.  Wouldn’t be seen with Jesus in His greatest need!  Oh, Peter!  He failed so badly.  You wouldn’t fear, love and trust in Jesus above all things!  But Jesus died and rose for Peter!  Jesus wants to tell Peter that He still loves him!  Always has!  That all is forgiven!  Reconciled! 

That’s why Peter is singled out:  “Go, tell his disciples and Peter.  He’ll meet you in Galilee as He promised.” To show them His hands and His side!  To absolve these sinners!  For all of them to confess like Thomas:  “My Lord, and my God” (John 20:28)!

You too!  In His death Jesus has redeemed you.  Purchased and won you from all sins, death, and the power of the devil.  He rose for you too!  This is the Gospel – on which we take our stand!  This is the Gospel by which you are saved:  “THAT CHRIST DIED FOR OUR SINS ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES, THAT HE WAS BURIED, THAT HE WAS RAISED ON THE THIRD DAY ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES!”    

However, the crucified and risen Jesus doesn’t meet you in Galilee!  He promises to meet you in the divine service through His Word and Sacrament.  To be God for you!  In order to absolve you too!  You, who are no better than Peter!  Perhaps even worse!  You too are forgiven!  Jesus shed His Blood for you!  That’s exactly His promise every Sunday in the Sacrament:  “Given and shed for your for the forgiveness of your sins.”

He is the Lord!  He is Lord God for you!  The only One!  The First Commandment One!    

For now!  And forever!  Death does not have the last word.  First Commandment God Jesus does!  After all, the Crucified Jesus is the Risen Jesus!  He is the Resurrection and the Life.  His promise still holds true: “He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in m will never die!”

Have a happy Resurrection Day!

In the Name of Jesus.  

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Easter Vigil 2012


St. Matthew 27:57-66

Can it be?  Really?  Yes, it’s true.  Ask Joseph of Arimathea.  He was there.

He went to the governor Pontius Pilate and asked for the corpse.  Carefully, he handles it.  Gently, he washes the wounds.  Tenderly, he wraps it in linen cloth.  With great care he carries it and lays it to rest in his own new tomb! 

Jesus – dead and buried.  Really.  Truly.  Incredible! 

“O darkest woe!
Ye tears forth flow!
Has earth so sad a wonder?
God the Father’s only Son
Now is buried yonder.”

O sorrow dread!
Our God is dead
Upon the cross extended.
There His love enlivens us
As His life was ended.”[1]

Yes, that’s right:  “Our God is dead.”  The Father didn’t die.  The Holy Spirit didn’t die.  BUT JESUS DID!

This is what it takes to win your salvation!  God must do it!  Only God saves!  Only God forgives!  Therefore the eternal Son of the Father takes on flesh and He gives His divine life into death on the cross!  He sheds His divine blood!  That’s Jesus!  He is true God and true man!  All for you!  The “It is finished” job of salvation is done!  By Jesus!  All sin answered for!  All sin died for! 

So now He rests from the work of salvation that He won for you and for the world.  The God-man laid and sealed in the tomb!  There He lays!

But even then – even there – graveyard dead Jesus is not a nothing!  His divine and holy Word made flesh body hallows, holies, or sanctifies what it touches!  And, yes, that includes the cemetery!  The tomb!  The grave!

His three day rest in that borrowed tomb was for you!  He was buried for you!  Now your grave is holy!  Your grave is hallowed!  Your tomb is sanctified!  All because the divine and holy body of Jesus has forever changed the cemetery and the grave! 

For you who believe in this Jesus the grave is now a place of rest and peace!  Rest in Jesus!  Peace in Jesus!

So when your day of death and burial takes place it is not the end.  Death does not have the last word.  Jesus does. 

A sealed and guarded tomb couldn’t keep God-man Jesus trapped in the grave!  The Scriptures must be fulfilled!  Jesus kept His promise.  He would be raised on the third day!  That’s the joy of tomorrow! 

To you for whom He died and was buried He promises the resurrection of your body on the Last Day.  He is the Firstfruits of those who sleep!  Of those who rest in Him! 

Today and tomorrow He teaches you to fear the grave as little as your bed.  After all, He will call you from your sleep!  He will wake you!  To a bodily resurrection and then eternal life with Him together with the Father and the Holy Spirit and all those who have gone before us in the faith! 

In the Name of Jesus.        


     [1] LSB #448:1-2 “O Darkest Woe.”

Friday, April 6, 2012

Good Friday Tenebrae 2012


Second Commandment:  You shall not misuse the Name of the Lord
     Your God
Bible Narrative:  Luke 23:46

Jesus:  bitterly betrayed. Judas and we use our mouth to cut that dastardly deal for some cash!  Jesus:  disappointingly denied.  Peter and we use our mouth to curse and swear in order to lie!  “I swear to God I don’t know this Jesus!  I’ll be damned if I’m one of His followers!”   Jesus:  appallingly abandoned.  By the rest of His disciples and all the rest of us!  “Let’s high tail it out of here!  We could be arrested too!  We can’t be seen with Him anymore!  It’s just too risky!”  With friends like that who needs … … … enemies?

Well, they show up too!  In spades!  Hurling insults!  Mocking!  Sneering!  “He saved others; let him save himself if he is the Christ of God, the Chosen One.”  “If you are the king of the Jews, save yourself.”  “Aren’t you the Christ?  Save yourself and us!”[1]  All these are huge satanic temptations!  “Think about yourself for a change Jesus!  Good grief!  Go ahead!  Hop off the cross!  You don’t deserve this!  You don’t need to suffer like this!  Show these people that you really are the Christ!  That you truly are who you say you are!  Save yourself!”     

His enemies desperately looked for a way to lay their hands on Him![2]  Jesus predicted that He would be given over / betrayed / handed over to the “hands” of sinful men![3]  Well, their hands, our hands, get what we all want!  Judas’ treason!  Hands over Jesus to His enemies!  He is given into the hands of sinful men!  Our hands.  Clenched.  Tightened.  Opened.  Shaken.  Too many to count!  With their hands, with our hands, we all slap, beat, pummel, flog, and pierce Him and pin Him with hammer and spikes! 

In the midst of His enemies, the evil powers of death, Satan, and sin and horrific suffering – in the midst of bearing the sin of the world – facing death -- suffering its damnation – (and this is the finale of Luke’s passion narrative) -- Jesus PLACES HIMSELF … INTO … HIS FATHER’S … HANDS!  “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.”  Incredible trust!  Faith!    

He Prays!  Calls upon not just some generic god – but to God the Father – His Father and our Father!  Calls upon Him by Name! In every trouble!  He was always going off and praying to His Father during His life.  “Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?”[4]   When everything heats up and He’s in Gethsemane he prays:  “Father, if you are willing take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done.”[5]  As He hangs on the cross between two terrorists He prays:  “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.”[6]  

Now, Holy One Jesus, in the midst of utter agony and the most immense trouble – facing death and damnation as THE SINNER by bearing all sin for the sake of sinners – He prays to His Father at the placed named Skull!   “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” 

That’s Psalm 31:5.  Jesus probably prayed the entire psalm of which we are only given a snippet.

This may have been the very first prayer Jesus learned as a boy.  Taught to Him by Mary.  It was the “Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep Prayer” of all Hebrew families.  The prayer that flows from faith!  Prayer that relies on God the Father for all help!  For everything!  Even at the moment of death! 

Jesus dies with prayer on His lips:  “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.”  Even then He uses God’s name properly.  He looks to His Father for all help in every need.  For all consolation!  For all deliverance! 

After all Jesus learned another prayer from the Psalter:  “Call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify me,” (Psalm 50:15)!  From such a promise Jesus lives!  And dies!  His unwavering trust in His Father continues in the moment of His death for sinners.  And for you!  And for your salvation – the salvation He earned, won and accomplished in His bitter suffering and death on Good Friday.

His death for you has born fruit in your life.  You are baptized into His death – the only death that counts against all your sin, death, and hell!  Faith in Jesus leads to the proper use of your mouth:  calling upon the Father in every trouble -- praise and thanksgiving.  And that’s every day.  Every morning and evening.  In the evening, right before you go to bed, which is a rehearsal for lying down to die, you too pray like Jesus.  You pray the Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep prayer of Psalm 31:5: “into your hands, Father, I commend myself, my body and soul and all things” in the sure and certain hope that because of Jesus, death doesn’t have the final word.  Jesus does!  He defeated death!  He rose from the grave.  And He will raise your body on the Last Day. 

More on that this Sunday!  Until then, a blessed Good Friday!

In the Name of Jesus.    


     [1]Luke 23:35-39. 
     [2]Luke 20:19; 22:53.
     [3]Luke 9:44; cf. 24:7.
     [4]Luke 2:49.
     [5]Luke 22:42.
     [6]Luke 23:34. 

Tre Ore 2012


First WordLuke 23:32 Two others, who were criminals, were led away to be put to death with him. 33 And when they came to the place that is called The Skull, there they crucified him, and the criminals, one on his right and one on his left. 34 And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  And they cast lots to divide his garments.
In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.  Christ’s first words as he bleeds and dies nailed to a cross, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”  The first words that Jesus speaks from the cross are words of forgiveness.  Father, forgive them.  These words echoed out from the cross, even to today.  The reason we are here today is because we know we need forgiveness.  We know we need forgiveness, because there is so much sin within each one of us.  So much sin that separates us from God.  So much hurt and pain and so much anger.  The vast chasm that our sin creates separates us from God.  It is so large and so unwieldy that we can do nothing to change it or to overcome it. 
Murder, hate, lust, adultery, gossip, selfishness and pride.  Friends, we don’t know what we are doing.  So often our sin does what we know is wrong, what we know we shouldn’t do.  So often do we know that we are guilty, just as guilty as those who hammered nails into the hands and feet of Jesus, the Son of the Living God, who pierced His side with a spear.  But friends, Jesus’ first words are as much a prayer for you as they are for those who were there that fateful day.  And Jesus’ prayer isn’t only a request or a plea.  Jesus’ prayer is one that is answered.  For it is in Jesus’ own blood poured out that Good Friday from His body, in His own death, that He earns forgiveness for you.  “Father, forgive them, even though they don’t know what they do” Jesus’ prayer says, “and punish me in their place.”  We have full and complete forgiveness in the death of Jesus. 
Second Word:  Luke 23:39 One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying, “Are you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!” 40 But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? 41 And we indeed justly, for we are receiving the due reward of our deeds; but this man has done nothing wrong.” 42 And he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” 43 And he said to him, “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.”
Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise.  Today!  Right now!  Jesus makes a promise to that man on the cross.  He doesn’t say, “Maybe you will be with me in paradise.”  He doesn’t say, “Perhaps”, or “Tomorrow”, or “when I get around to it”.  Jesus says “today”.  It isn’t something that is in doubt.  It isn’t something that you need to worry about.  It is something that we have Today!!  Right now!  Today Jesus has suffered for me.  Today his blood covers me.  Today I am his holy precious child in the faith He pours out on me.  Today. 
Jesus is with me.  Jesus is here and nothing can separate me from His love.  It’s here for me Today, and all the Todays that are to come.  Salvation is now, salvation comes right now.  Salvation is yours today, because of the holy blood of Christ that spilled from his very side as he said, “Today, you will be with me in paradise.”  Today.  Amen.
Third Word:  John 19:25 but standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. 26 When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son!” 27 Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother!” And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home.
Jesus thinks not of Himself, but of others.  Even as he is bleeding and dying on that Old Rugged Cross.  Even as he suffers torture and crucifixion, Jesus is thinking of others.  Here he fulfills the Fourth Commandment, “honor your father and your mother”, by instructing John to take care of Mary as John would care for his own mother.  Jesus’ concern is not with what is happening to himself, but rather how to care for you.
By doing this, Jesus is fulfilling the entire Law.  From the moment of His birth until the moment of his death, Jesus is fulfilling what we cannot.  He has kept all Ten of the Commandments, where as we have kept none.  He has obeyed God perfectly and totally, and has even now submitted himself to suffering and death on the cross.  And Jesus does it all because he is concerned with you.  Jesus does it all because He wants you to be in that same relationship with God the Father as He is in – perfect love.  As Jesus suffers in your place, he says to you, “Behold, your heavenly Father, who has adopted you in my blood.”  And to His Father He says, “Behold your son, purchased and won with my holy precious blood and innocent suffering and death.”  Amen. 
Fourth Word:  Matthew 27:45 Now from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land until the ninth hour.  46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, “Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?” that is, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?  These words from Psalm 22 are more often than not our words.  When we feel abandoned.  When we feel alone, or betrayed.  When we are angry or frustrated, what are our first words?  God, how could you have let this happen?  God, how could you have done this to me?  Why have you forsaken me?  Friends, in our sin, that is exactly what we deserve.  Doesn’t it make sense that if we have so blatantly and utterly turned our backs on God that He should do the same?  As we have confessed by our actions that He doesn’t exist, as we have said, “I know what scripture says, but I am still going to do my own thing.”  We have done these things, so shouldn’t God abandon us, shouldn’t He leave us alone and bound for the Hell that we deserve?
But your God does not forsake you.  Even as so many times we feel like God doesn’t care at all.  Your God has not abandoned you.  Your God has not left you alone or betrayed you.  Rather your God took on your human flesh, and was Himself forsaken in your place on a cross.  He Himself was abandoned; He himself suffered the punishment of Hell apart from God.  God turned his back on Jesus.  He was forsaken so that you yourself might not be, and might live with Him forever in His kingdom.  There you will never be far from God.  There you will never be abandoned or forsaken.  There you will never be alone, for surely your God is with you always, even to the end of the age.  Jesus was forsaken so that you might always be in palm of your God’s hand, even forever more.  Amen. 
Fifth Word:  John 19:28 After this, Jesus, knowing that all was now finished, said (to fulfill the Scripture), “I thirst.
I am Thirsty.  I need a drink.  I Thirst.  Jesus said during the Sermon on the Mount, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.”   He told the woman at the well, “I will give you water to drink which you will drink and never thirst again.”  Jesus is the river of life.  Jesus has water that will satisfy.  Jesus has water that is good.  But so often, we thirst for other things, hoping that in them we will have satisfaction, that in them we will have peace, in them we will finally have our thirst quenched.  But when we partake of them, they still leave us feeling thirsty for more.  
But there is only one thing that can satisfy.  There is only one thing that can give us hope, only one thing which really will quench our thirst.  And that thing is the very love of Jesus.  The love that is so great that he will even give up his life for you, His beloved friend.  The love of Jesus which is so great that he would go to Calvary and drink the cup of God’s wrath so that you might drink the cup of God’s blessing and tenderness. 
What do you thirst for?  What things do you thirst for?  Friends, in faith we thirst for Jesus.  We thirst for His love.  We thirst for His forgiveness.  And as we do, we know that those springs of living water well up within us to everlasting life.  Amen. 
Sixth Word:  John 19:29 A jar full of sour wine stood there, so they put a sponge full of the sour wine on a hyssop branch and held it to his mouth. 30 When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It is finished,” and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
It is finished!  It’s all done.  The war our own sin began so long ago in the Garden of Eden, as Adam and Eve first disobeyed God, has now been completed.  Now the battle’s o’er, the victory’s won.  The battle has raged in each one of us.  The battle raged as we fought against our God and our Lord.  So often we deigned to be our own God.  So often we claimed to be in charge of ourselves.  We’ve made our own decisions, and in them so often spit in the eye of God and told Him, “I don’t need you!  I don’t want you!  Leave me alone!”  But now the battle is o’er.  Now “It is finished.” 
It is finished because your sin has been taken on Jesus.  All of it.  Every single thing wrong, those you know about, and those you don’t know about.  It is all on Jesus.  You cannot keep any for yourself.  He has taken it, and carried it up the hill called Golgotha, and there He has killed it once and for all.  It is FINISHED!  It is finished in the past as Jesus died.  It is finished now as that grace and forgiveness come to you in the precious means of grace.  It is finished because Christ has died for you, so that you may have new life in faith and hope and love.  No longer need you be burdened by your sin – it is finished.  No longer need you worry about your guilt – it is finished.  No longer do you have to ask, “Is what I have done so wrong, that I can never be forgiven?”  It is finished, period!  Everything necessary for your salvation is FINISHED!  You cannot add or subtract from it.  It is finished.  In Jesus, you are forgiven. Amen. 
Seventh Word:  Luke 23:46 Then Jesus, calling out with a loud voice, said, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!” And having said this he breathed his last.
Father into your hands, I commit my spirit.  Jesus again praying the psalms.  Jesus praying a prayer we can offer up every day.  Into your hands, I commit my spirit.  It makes sense, doesn’t it?  After all, we are in His hands.  Nothing or no one can snatch us out.  As Christians, we live in faith toward God, and love for neighbor that says, “I belong to God.”
But so often this is not our prayer.  So often we forget we are in God’s loving hands.  So often we would like to commit our lives, or at least the moment, to something much less than God.  Sometimes we commit ourselves to that which is downright evil and sinful.  Because of that, we are so often afraid, afraid of getting caught, afraid of consequences, afraid of the unknown.  And we can be honest, we are afraid of death. 
But no child is ever afraid to go where the leader has already gone.  We have seen the game, Follow the Leader.  But no matter how bold or daring that leader might be, over the fence, through the yard, across the street, the others may follow their leader without fear. 
Today, in our last word from the cross, Jesus teaches us how to live, and he teaches us how to die.  Don’t you know that all of you who have been baptized into the death of Jesus have already died with him?  You have died in the waters of Baptism, sharing in the death that Jesus dies right here, right now in our text.  And if you have died with him, you also follow him through death into his resurrection, into his everlasting life, into heaven. 
Father into your hands, I commit my spirit, for now I follow your Son boldly into new life with you forever.  Amen.  

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Maundy Thursday 2012


Third Commandment:  Remember the Sabbath Day by Keeping It
     Holy
Bible Narrative:  Mark 14:12-26

God made the Sabbath Day holy.  That’s a given.  That’s Genesis 2!  And yet the Commandment:  Remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy!

What’s up with that?  Here’s the deal!  “God wants it to be holy for you.”[1]  The Sabbath Day is holy in itself but in the Third  Commandment God wants it to be holy FOR YOU!  Incredible! 

How then is the Sabbath Day kept holy FOR YOU?  The answer is this:  “when … [you] make use of God’s Word and exercise … [yourselves] in it.”[2]  The Sabbath is about you being all ears!  Being all ears to God’s Word!  I.E. it is about hearing God’s Word!

For in, with, and under His Word God talks.  God speaks.  God speaks to you through Jesus the Word made flesh!  And He speaks to you through His written Word – the Bible.  The Bible, as God’s Word is to be preached, taught, and pondered!  God’s Word is to be HEARD WITH YOUR EARS! 

It is to be heard because God’s Word is a living, dynamic, vigorous, energetic, efficacious Holy Spirit-filled act of speech!  God’s Word is vibrant and all creative.  “Let there be light!”  “Be fruitful and multiply!”  “Lazarus, come out!”  “I baptize you in the Name …”   The Lord’s Word proclaimed does exactly what it says.  It gives precisely what it commands.  The Lord does and gives what His Word says!    

I have to go on extolling!  There’s even more!  Where the Lord’s Word is going on – being mouthed – preached – proclaimed, the Holy Spirit is going on!  I.E. where the divine Word -- there the Holy Spirit bestows and grants divine holiness – sanctifies!  Hallows! 

Did you hear that?  God’s Word hallows!  God’s Word holies!  God’s Word sanctifies!  All because His Word is most holy![3]  The Word bestows and gives the very holiness of the Triune God Himself!  TO YOU!  AND FOR YOU!  Through your ears!

Any day from the New Testament on, in which God’s Word is preached, taught, proclaimed is a holy day – a Sabbath Day for you!  For in that Word God is speaking to you!  In and through that Word the Lord deals with you!  And by His Word He hallows, holies, and sanctifies you the sinner.  The Third Commandment is about being occupied with God’s Word!  Hearing the preaching!  Holding it sacred!  Gladly hearing and learning it!  Not blowing it off!  Or treating it as a nothing!    

Tonight you are given to hear!  The Lord Jesus!  He does a Passover like none ever before!  He speaks words that were never ever spoken or heard at any Passover meal in the history of Israel! 

On the very day on which it was “customary to sacrifice the Passover lamb,” the Lamb is provided.  The Lamb is there!  The Lamb is the Lord Jesus Himself!  He is THE Lamb of God!  The Lord provides!  The perfect and without blemish Lamb!  The divine Lamb – the only One that takes away the sin of the world – that atones for all sin and for every sinner!  And Passover Lamb Jesus will be sacrificed.  That’s tomorrow.  Good Friday.

This evening is the night on which He is betrayed.  Judas!  Hands the Lamb over to sinners.  To be bound!  To be crucified on the altar of the cross!  “I tell you the truth, one of you will betray me – one who is eating with me … It is one of the Twelve … one who dips bread into the bowl with me.  The Son of Man will go just as it is written about him.”  

It is according to the Word!  The Word – the prophecies – are doing what they promised!  What they predicted!  “Even my close friend, whom I trusted, he who shared my bread, has lifted up his heel against me,” (Psalm 41:9)!  The divine Word from that Psalm is doing what it says.  Giving what it says!  To the Word made flesh Jesus – on the night in which He was betrayed! 

In the midst of this Passover meal Jesus takes bread.  He gives thanks and breaks it.  He takes a cup.  He gives thanks for it.  Then, as He hands out the bread and the wine to His disciple there are more words!  LORD Jesus speaks!  From His mouth!  “Take this bread.  It is my body.”  “This [cup of wine] is my blood of the new covenant which is poured out for many.”

What?  Is He serious?  Yes, deadly serious!  Has He lost His mind?  No.  He is of very sound mind!  The Lord says what He says.  Means what He says.  Does what He says!  Gives what He says.  THIS IS HIS LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. 

This is what He bequeaths!  This is the inheritance!  The gifts!  The bread IS His Body!  The wine IS His Blood! It is His Body born of the Virgin!  He doesn’t have another one!  It is His Blood that flows in His arteries!  He doesn’t have any other kind of Blood!  Both are to be received with your mouth!  Eaten.  Drunk. 

With His words Jesus makes a covenant!  Or a promise!  “This is my blood of the new covenant.”  This is the language of Exodus 24:6-8! Moses took the blood of the animal sacrifices and sprinkled it on the Israelites and said, “This is the blood of the covenant that the LORD has made with you …” 

Here, on the night He was betrayed, the LORD – the LORD Jesus takes the cup of wine and declares:  “This is my blood of the new covenant.”  Not the blood of animals!  BUT “MY BLOOD!”  BUT THE BLOOD OF THE GOD-MAN HIMSELF!    With these words Jesus suffers Himself to die!  As THE ONE AND ONLY SACRIFICE FOR SIN!  THAT IS WHAT IS “NEW” HERE!

His Blood is divine Blood that purifies from all sin!  Divine Blood for cleansing!  Divine Blood for forgiveness and salvation!  The Blood of God Himself in the very Body in that man Jesus that is given into death on the cross once for all at the end of the ages to do away with sin!

With the bread He gives His Body to eat.  With the wine He gives His Blood to drink.  “This is my blood of the new covenant which is poured out for many!”    FOR MANY – AND FOR YOU!  HE IS GOD THE LORD FOR YOU!  IN THIS WAY.  THE SACRAMENT OF THE ALTAR WAY! 

In the Sacrament tonight Jesus holies you, hallows you, sanctifies you!  His most holy Word hooked together with the bread and wine bestows what He promises.  Jesus Himself speaks to you tonight.  Into your ears go His Words!  Into your mouths goes what His Words say!  “Take this bread.  Eat it.  It is my Body.  Drink the cup.  It is my Blood.  It is the new covenant in which I prove that I am God for you!” 

It is a Holy Communion!  He comes.  He gathers.  He speaks.  He takes your sin!  He clothes you with His holiness!  It is holiness -- His – for you!  And with His Words that you hear tonight at the Sacrament  you have forgiveness – the forgiveness He won for you at Calvary!  With His Good Friday forgiveness bestowed with His Words “given and shed for you,” you also are given life and salvation! 

Jesus is the LORD.  He is LORD God for you!  And you are His holy, hallowed, sanctified people!  All bestowed with His Words!

Happy hearing!  Happy eating and drinking according to His Words! 

In the Name of Jesus.    


     [1]LC, 398:87.
     [2]LC, 398:88.
     [3]”For the Word of God is the true holy object above all holy objects,” LC 399:91.