Sunday, January 27, 2013

Epiphany 3 - G - 2013 - Throw Him Off a Cliff?



The Fourth Sunday After the Epiphany
February 3, 2013 - Pastor Adam Moline

Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10      1 Corinthians 12:12-31a          Luke 4:16-30

Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Amen.  Our text today is the Gospel lesson just read, especially these words, “And they rose up and drove him out of the town and brought him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they could throw him down the cliff.”
Dear friends in Christ.  In the church year, we are in the season of Epiphany.  Epiphany means “Shine forth” or “Be revealed.”  It is during this time of the year that we see who Jesus is, as he reveals himself to be the very Son of God made flesh, and dwelling among us.  And Jesus very clearly tells us who he is in our text today.  Quoting the prophet Isaiah’s prophecy about the coming Messiah, Jesus says, ““The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.”
And yet, when Jesus tells the people plainly who he is, they scoff at his words.  “Isn’t this Jesus, the son of Joseph and Mary?  We know him!  We’ve seen his brothers and his sisters. He’s no messiah, he’s a nuisance.  Let’s take care of him!”  And off they go to throw Jesus, the Son of God, off of the 900 foot cliff near their town.  You see, they don’t believe the words Jesus speaks.  They don’t believe what Jesus says about himself.  They don’t believe the words of Scripture that Jesus read.  They don’t believe the words of the Word of God made flesh.
It’s easy for us to judge that isn’t it?  It’s easy for us to put them down, to complain about the way they treated Jesus, and to say that “Oh, no, we’d never do that.”  But the truth is, our sinful nature is just as guilty.  Our sinful nature hates Jesus and his claims of divinity just as much as those Nazarene’s so long ago.  Our sin is just as great. 

And we see that all over the world don’t we?  So often in our world today, people don’t like what Jesus stands for.  They don’t like who Christ wants them to be.  They call us bigots, they call us prejudice, they tell us we are up to date with the modern world.  They despise us because of the word we preach, and the faith we believe. 
Who is Christ?  He’s the one who has come and proclaimed the truth.  That we are captives to our sin, that it infects us to the deepest core, and that we on our own can do nothing, no not one thing to save ourselves.  But Christ tells us even more, he proclaims liberty to the captives, freedom to the slaves to sin.  He comes to tell us of the year of the Lord’s favor, whether we like it or not.  He comes to reveal himself to us.  To tell us the reason he has truly come. 
And that reason is to die for our sin.  To take it away as far as the east is from the west.  To make us sinners holy again – and it isn’t based on you, or your works, its based on a cross on a hill far away.  Its based on nails hammered into the hand of God.  Its based on blood – the blood of God – being poured out upon the world.  It is a forgiveness for you, a freedom for the captives, and a great joy for all people. 
Its Jesus.  God who has come to this world to set you free from your sin.  He may not come in the way we want, or the way we understand, but he comes all the same.  And as he comes, he brings forgiveness in his wings. 
Jesus has come, and today he reveals himself.  The God who brings good news to the captives, and liberty to us.  Freedom from our sin, bought with his blood.  That’s our God.  That’s who he is.  Praise be to his name.  Amen.  

Monday, January 14, 2013

Baptism of our Lord - 2012 - OT - When you have passed through the waters

Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, Amen.  Our text today is the Gospel lesson just read, along with these words from the Old Testament Lesson, “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine.  When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.”  Thus far our text for today.
Dear friends in Christ.  Israel passed through the Red Sea to escape the tyranny of Pharaoh on their way to enter the promised land.  40 years later, Israel again passed through the waters of the Jordan River on dry land as it entered the land flowing with milk and honey.  Noah and his family went safely through the savage flood waters that destroyed the world on the Ark.  And so in our text today, it is necessary for Jesus to pass through water as well.  
And so it is that Jesus comes to the Jordan River in our text today, to see his cousin John.  Luke tells it very plainly, especially compared to the rest of Luke’s Gospel.  “And while the rest of the people were being baptized, Jesus too came.  And as he was praying, heaven was opened and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove.  And a voice came from heaven, “You are my Son whom I love, with you I am well pleased.”  
And so Jesus passes through water, as his people of old had.  Jesus passes through water, declared to be the Holy Son of God, and then begins his ministry.  Jesus passes through water before he sets his eyes for the cross and ministry it will bring him.  Immediately following his baptism Jesus is tempted by Satan, the same temptations that we face every day of our lives.  Jesus is tested by his hunger, his desire for earthly things, and his faith in God, just as we are everyday.  But unlike our so often failure, the baptized Jesus passes the temptation without sin.
The baptized Jesus then continues his ministry.  He cares for the sick, he heals the blind, he raises the dead.  The baptized Jesus feeds the hungry, and casts out demons.  He teaches the people of Israel about the true God.  The washed in water Lord spends time with the lowest and dirtiest of society - tax collectors and sinners.  He speaks the truth to all of them, that you too must be washed, that your sin must be taken away, that your robes must be washed white in the blood of the lamb - baptized with fire and the Holy Spirit - and then, and only then will your sins all be forgiven.  
And with his work done, the baptized Jesus cleanses the world with his blood.  He takes the sin of the world upon himself, and destroys it in a washing and flood of his own blood.  The baptized Jesus’ blood spills out upon the ground, to forgive all Israel.  The baptized Jesus’ is pierced with a spear, and water and blood flood this world, and sin is destroyed forever and ever amen!
And this he does for you as well.  You need his saving washing just as much as any Israelite of old.  You need forgiveness also, because the truth is, you are filthy with sin as well.  Your guilt is plain also.  Your need of a savior is there.  Day by day, you fall into the devil’s temptation.  Your sin is ever before you face, accusing you, condemning you, saying with the very words of Satan - “You have not lived up to God’s will for your life, you’ve failed.  You have desired more in this world than God has deigned to give to you, and have stolen and cheated to gain it for yourself.  You have worshipped the many false gods of this world: fame, fortune and self, and feared, loved and trusted in them above all things.  You are guilty, and there’s not a single thing that you can do about it.    
And what Satan says of our sin is the truth - we are guilty, we are wrong, we are sinners headed to hell on our own.  But Satan’s words are only a half truth because of what the Baptized Jesus has done for you.  Satan’s words ring deaf to our ears because of the washed Jesus - the Son of God with whom the Father is well pleased.  
Because you too, like Israel of old, and like Jesus himself, have passed through water.  And when you were baptized, God said the words of our Old Testament lesson to you, ““Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;  I have summoned you by name; you are mine.  When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.”  Do those last words ring a bell?  Just a few weeks ago we sat here and greeted the birth of a savior - God with us -Immanuel.  Its the same words Jesus says before he ascends into heaven -Surely  I am with you always - Immanuel.  
And not only is He with you, but he has redeemed you, in a washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit.  You see with a few drops of water, combined with the Holy Word of God made flesh, we were washed with Jesus.  We passed through the waters with Israel and our Lord.  We have been saved by baptism, as St. Peter himself says.  And as we read today in our Epistle lesson, ‘We were therefore buried with Jesus through baptism into death, in order that just as Christ was raised from the dead... we too may live a new life.”  
The water and blood that poured from he baptized Jesus’ side at his death flowed into our baptismal font.  It flowed into our lives.  It flowed over your forehead, as you received a new name upon you to mark you as one redeemed by Christ the crucified.  And now, because you are washed, God says of you, along with Jesus, “This is my beloved child, with him I am well pleased!”  Now you belong to God, now you are his.  
In baptism, you went with Noah through the ark.  In baptism, you went with Israel through the Red Sea and the Jordan River.  And most importantly, in that Water and Word, you went with Jesus through death into life.  And its in baptism that you now belong - a holy child of God, who has washed your robe and made it white in the blood of the Lamb Jesus.  
Today, Jesus goes to be baptized.  Why?  To sanctify all waters to be a life giving flood, and a washing of rebirth and renewal for you.  Today Jesus is washed, so that you may be in his blood - even forevermore.  And now God is with you always, even to the end of the age.  Amen.