Sunday, February 20, 2022

Boast only in your weakness & Christ’s power.

 

Sermon for Sexagesima, February 20, 2022

Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.  Amen.

2 Corinthians 11:19-12:9  19You gladly put up with fools, since you are just so wise!  20In fact, you put up with it if anyone makes you his slave, robs you, takes advantage of you, looks down on you, or strikes you in the face!  21I am ashamed to say that we were too weak for that!  However bold anyone might be (I am speaking in a foolish way), I am going to be bold too.  22Are they Hebrews?  So am I.  Are they Israelites?  So am I.  Are they Abraham’s seed?  So am I.  23Are they ministers of Christ? (I am speaking in a crazy way.)  I am even more.  I’ve done more hard work, been in prisons more often, been whipped far more, and I’ve been close to death many times.  24Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one.  25Three times I was beaten with rods.  One time I was stoned.  Three times I was shipwrecked.  I have spent a night and a day on the open sea.  26I have often been on journeys, in danger from rivers, in danger from robbers, in danger from my own people, in danger from Gentiles, in danger in the city, in danger in the wilderness, in danger on the sea, in danger among false brothers.  27I have worked hard and struggled.  I’ve spent many sleepless nights.  I’ve been hungry and thirsty.  I’ve gone without food many times.  I’ve been cold and lacked clothing.  28Besides those external matters, there is the daily pressure on me of my concern for all the churches.  29Who is weak without my being weak?  Who falls into sin without my being distressed?  30If it is necessary that I boast, I will boast of the things that show my weakness.  31The God and Father of the Lord Jesus, who is eternally blessed, knows that I am not lying.  32In Damascus, the governor under King Aretas kept the city of Damascus on alert to arrest me, 33but I was lowered in a basket through a window in the wall and escaped from his hands.  12:1I must go on boasting, although there is nothing to be gained.  So I will go on to visions and revelations of the Lord.  2I know a man in Christ who, fourteen years ago, was carried up to the third heaven (whether in the body, I do not know, or out of the body, I do not know—God knows).  3And I know that such a man (whether in the body or out of the body, I do not know—God knows) 4was carried up into Paradise and heard inexpressible words that a man cannot possibly speak.  5On behalf of such a one I will boast, but on my own behalf I will not boast, except about my weaknesses.  6Indeed, if I wanted to boast, I would not be a fool, because I would be speaking the truth.  But I refrain from doing this, so that no one will think more highly of me than what he sees in me or hears from me.  7Therefore, to keep me from becoming arrogant due to the extraordinary nature of these revelations, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me, so that I would not become arrogant.  8Three times I pleaded with the Lord about this, that he would take it away from me.  9And he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, because my power is made perfect in weakness.”  Therefore I will be glad to boast all the more in my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may shelter me. (EHV)

Boast only in your weakness & Christ’s power.

Dear redeemed and sanctified in Christ Jesus,

            There are two sentences that are often spoken in moments of weakness: “Lord, why do You let me suffer like this?” and “God is good.”  Now, I grant you that these seem like polar opposites.  Yet, they sometimes spring from the same root, for both can show the weakness of our sinful nature.

St. Paul was confronting an outgrowth of just such an attitude as he wrote this letter to the Corinthian congregation.  Deceiving teachers had entered Corinth and challenged the people to believe a different gospel than Paul had proclaimed.  In so doing, they also denigrated Paul as someone not worth hearing.  They bragged about their own accomplishments, merits, and the skill of their oratory.  They questioned why anyone could take confidence in the message of such a poor preacher as Paul.  Paul’s answer teaches us to Boast only in your weakness & Christ’s power.

At one point in his life, Paul (then known as Saul) also had been driven by selfish misunderstanding of his works.  Assuming to please God with vigorous attacks against Christian believers, Saul was on a highway to hell, until Jesus met him on the road to Damascus and changed his life.  In the aftermath of that meeting, the Lord said to Ananias, “This man is my chosen instrument to carry my name before the Gentiles and kings and the people of Israel.  Indeed, I will show him how much he must suffer for my name.” (Acts 9:15-16)  Now, our initial reaction might be that God was planning to punish Paul for his previous actions, but that is not the case.  Rather, when choosing Paul as His instrument for bringing peace to the nations, God also recognized the trouble a rebellious world would inflict upon Paul.

As you are well aware, it wasn’t just his name that changed after Saul met Jesus.  Where once, Saul had been respected and praised by enemies of the Church, now he was a pariah among his former peers.  That led to many of the things Paul suffered while serving the Lord.

Paul’s purpose with this letter was to respond against those teachers who were troubling the Corinthians with ideas of earning their salvation or improving their blessing from God through their own actions.  One of the dangers that always seems to follow Christian’s around is the idea that we still have to do our share to please God and make Him bless us, either with salvation in heaven or riches here on earth.  No doubt, it seems logical that God would bless the righteous and afflict the wicked, but in this broken world that is not always what we see. 

For much of our country’s history, we have benefitted from a mostly Christian-friendly situation, but for much of the history of Christ’s Church, that is not the case.  More normal is for the world to reject the good news of the Bible in order to remain under the devil’s deceits.  We see that rising up again in our times.  Christians being persecuted, attacked, and killed for their faith around the world.  Christians, here at home, being mocked for holding to the truths of Scripture and the morality expressed in God’s law.  Decide what you are, do what you want, and take whatever you desire seems to be the mantra of our times.

In response to such ideas, many succumb to the temptation to believe that we have to do something more to please God.  Many are the preachers in our day, too, who will use the Bible to tell you how they think you should live but ignore what Jesus has done to give us life.

The Corinthians were falling prey to deceivers who told them to forget the Good News they had heard from Paul in order to obey their schemes for earning God’s good judgment.  In reality, though, doing so meant submitting themselves again to law that only condemns.  It was a deathtrap.  Paul says those teachers were abusing and enslaving his friends, but many of the deceived willingly accepted it.  How tragic and heartbreaking that was to a man who suffered so much to bring the Good News of Jesus to a damaged world. 

Thus, Paul tells his friends that if it is boasting they want, he has much more to boast about than the deceivers.  He gives us a long list, that is not inclusive, of all he suffered.  Yet, Paul knows that it isn’t what he has suffered that will help them.  The reason Paul doesn’t boast about himself in his preaching is that the Lord has taught him to trust solely in Jesus for forgiveness and salvation.  Rather than elevate his own status, Paul wants every sinner looking to the Savior who humbled Himself to such a degree that He gained forgiveness, perfection, and salvation for all of us.

In teaching Paul to trust his God, the Lord gave the apostle some continuous affliction.  We have no idea what that pain was, but Paul called it “a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me, so that I would not become arrogant.”  That last part is the point.  The affliction was there to remind Paul that he was not perfect but needed a Savior always.  There was nothing he could do to save himself.  Still, there was nothing that remained undone in gaining salvation for Paul because Jesus had done it all.

My friends, the Scriptures give many admonitions to holy living, and we should rightly strive to live according to God’s commands.  At the same time, recognize that nothing we do can save us from the condemnation we deserve.  That doesn’t give us license to sin nor should we, in despair, turn to the nature of our birth and live in sinful rebellion against God.  Neither does obeying God’s commands guarantee that the world will love or bless us.  The world will always hate us because it hates Jesus.  Thus, when we are afflicted, in whatever way, rather than cry out against God, we can humbly bear the burdens of our trials confident in His eternal blessing in heaven, and in this we will be witnesses to the world of the glory of our Savior and the surety on His promises.

At the beginning of this sermon, I mentioned that one way we sometimes mistrust our God is to say, “God is good.”  That needs some explanation because, without a doubt, God is good, and He is exceedingly generous in blessing us.  But, when do we say it?  Is it when we are blessed materially or physically?  Do we only remember God’s goodness when our earthly lives are comfortable and sweet?  Do we forget that God remains good and generous to us even when trouble or hardship overtakes us?

Our sinful nature likes to assume that God blesses only those who deserve it, and the rest must suffer.  The deceivers in Corinth seem to have taken that tack.  The Jews of Jesus’ day thought that material wealth showed that a person was earning God’s favor by his behavior and generosity.  The truth is, God blesses people in many and varied ways simply because of His unfathomable love.

The greatest demonstration of God’s love was His Son being nailed to a cross to pay for our sins.  Therefore, if God was being good to us then, He is also being good to us when He allows affliction and trouble to touch our lives.  God allowed affliction to torment Job far beyond what any of us could imagine.  He allowed Lazarus to suffer a lifetime of pain, and God allowed Paul to endure great anxiety and physical and emotional pain as he carried the good news of Jesus to the world.

“Certainly my plans are not your plans, and your ways are not my ways,” declares the Lord.  “Just as the heavens are higher than the earth, so my ways are higher than your ways, and my plans are higher than your plans.” (Isaiah 55:8-9)  We may not always understand why God allows some to suffer and others to enjoy wealth and every blessing, but regardless of whether we have poverty or riches, good health or great pain, peace or persecution, we remain in God’s loving care, and we continue to have His sure promise of forgiveness and salvation guaranteed to us through faith in Jesus.

Furthermore, we have God’s promise to Paul to consider: “My grace is sufficient for you, because my power is made perfect in weakness.”  When you are struggling, understand that God is working through that to keep you trusting in His mercy, and when you face the end of your days, whether from old age, or sudden illness, or at the point of a gun, God’s grace remains all you need for life everlasting.  By the power of His Word and sacrament, God has made you His own dear child, cleansed you of every sin, and built for you a lovely home in the glory of heaven.

Therefore, when we understand the fullness and sufficiency of God’s grace, we can say, like Paul, “Therefore I will be glad to boast all the more in my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may shelter me.”  What need do we have to boast about anything we have done for the Lord?  Jesus has already done everything needed to make us righteous and fit for the glories of heaven. 

Trust the power of the Savior who died as satisfaction for all the guilt of the world and who rose again in victory over sin, devil, and grave.  Trust the Savior who says, Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.” (Matthew 24:35)  Trust Him when He declares, “My grace is sufficient for you, because my power is made perfect in weakness.”  Boast only in your weakness and in Christ’s power.  Amen.

The peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus unto life everlasting.  Amen.

Sunday, February 13, 2022

Chosen and appointed to believe and do.

 

Sermon for Septuagesima, February 13, 2022

Grace, mercy, and peace from God our Father and Christ Jesus our Lord.  Amen.

Jeremiah 1:4-10  4The word of the Lord came to me.  5 “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, and before you were born, I set you apart.  I appointed you to be a prophet to the nations.”  6But I said, “Ah, Lord God!  I really do not know how to speak!  I am only a child!”  7The Lord said to me, “Do not say, ‘I am only a child.’  You must go to everyone to whom I send you and say whatever I command you.  8Do not be afraid of them, because I am with you, and I will rescue you, declares the Lord.”  9Then the Lord stretched out his hand and touched my mouth.  The Lord said to me: “There!  I have now placed my words in your mouth.  10Look, today I appoint you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and to tear down, to destroy and to overthrow, to build and to plant.” (EHV)

Chosen and appointed to believe and do.

Dear fellow redeemed,

            Philosophers and others like to debate questions like, “How did we get here?”  “Why are we here?”  “Why do people do what they do?”  And, “What is our purpose in life?”  Christians, on the other hand, should know the God-given answer to those questions.  For example, while still quite young, Jeremiah received the answer directly from God Almighty, and from these words, we can likewise know that we are Chosen and appointed to believe and do.

Jeremiah reported, “The word of the Lord came to me.  Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, and before you were born, I set you apart.  I appointed you to be a prophet to the nations.”  While the world believes our origin is a mystery, the Bible makes it clear that we are a product of God’s design for God’s purpose. 

No one is born by random chance.  Instead, just like Jeremiah, we are a product of God’s creative power extended through our forefathers as God brings people into the world.  Before we were born, God also knew us, knew that He had a purpose for us, and designed us expressly for the fulfillment of His will in the world.  Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, St. Paul wrote to Timothy, “He saved us and called us with a holy calling, not because of our works, but because of his own purpose and grace.  This grace was given to us in Christ Jesus before time began.” (2 Timothy 1:9)

Now, we are not all formed to fill the specific office of prophet, yet we are called to a specific purpose in God’s salvation plan.  Peter wrote, “You also, like living stones, are being built as a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, in order to bring spiritual sacrifices that are acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” (1 Peter 2:5)  As Christian believers, we are each formed for a specific spot and purpose in God’s Church.  God has put us each in a certain place, time, and position to further the advancement of His kingdom.  Therefore, when the opportunity to serve the Lord is set before you, you can be confident that God wants you to serve faithfully. 

God has purposely designed you for the tasks He gives you and the time in which you live.  More than that, God doesn’t choose you because of any great skill or worthiness in your nature.  Rather, He chisels you to fit the role He appoints you to, molds you for the task He assigns, and empowers you to do what He wills.  The very fact that you believe in Jesus as your Savior is proof that the Lord God has changed you to be the Christian you are, for “no one can say, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” (1 Corinthians 12:3)

Now, the sceptic might ask, “Why, then, are there so many unbelievers?”  The answer is sin.  The sinful nature fights against the will of God to save.  Not that God cannot overpower the will of man, because no one can believe unless God grants that faith and works it in the heart, yet God doesn’t force faith.  The same sceptic would then like to blame God for all the evil in the world, but again, evil is a product of sin in man.  Jeremiah was being sent to deliver God’s word to a nation of people that would for the most part reject it.  It isn’t that God’s word is ineffective.  Nor did Jeremiah fail to do his work.  Rather, the sinful hearts rejected God and suffered for their rejection.

The call to serve the Lord often feels overwhelming even to the believer.  Upon hearing God’s call, Jeremiah cried out, “Ah, Lord God!  I really do not know how to speak!  I am only a child!”  How often have we felt the same way?  “I don’t know how!”  “We can’t afford it!”  “I am too timid to speak!”  “My neighbor, or child, might reject me!”  Even Moses pleaded when God called, “Please, Lord, send someone else.” (Exodus 4:13)  Again, it is the sin that resides in us that makes us timid or unwilling to do what God calls us to do.  Yet, we must note, God doesn’t expect us to perform miracles on our own.  Instead, He empowers us to serve.  He gives us ability and success as He sees fit.

To Jeremiah, the Lord answered, “Do not say, ‘I am only a child.’  You must go to everyone to whom I send you and say whatever I command you.  Do not be afraid of them, because I am with you, and I will rescue you, declares the Lord.”  Jeremiah was Chosen and appointed to believe and do.  Because He was God’s choice for the task, the Lord would be with him, and the Lord would enable him to do the difficult work assigned to him.  Notice also, however, this didn’t mean that it would always be easy.  This world is full of trouble and full of people who reject God and His servants.  However, because God was always with Jeremiah, we too can be confident in His promise that He will be with us. (Matthew 28:20)

Being a Christian does not in any way mean that we won’t face hardship in life or persecution from the world.  We can expect that any discipline God pours out on a population will also affect us, and like all of God’s prophets of old, we will be blamed for the bad things that happen and receive little to no praise for any good that the Lord might send down for the blessing of His people.  This should not concern us, either, because the Lord has a better place waiting for us in His heavenly mansions, and He will shelter us in His holy care until He calls us to our everlasting rest in heaven.  Jesus gives us confidence in this for He promised, “In this world you are going to have trouble.  But be courageous!  I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)

About this time, you might be wondering how we are to serve and what we are to believe and teach.  The answer is always found in God’s Word.  We can be confident in every word given to us in the Bible, because not one dot of it comes to us by man’s imagination.  We can be confident of everything Jeremiah spoke because it is God-given.  Jeremiah reported, “Then the Lord stretched out his hand and touched my mouth.  The Lord said to me: There!  I have now placed my words in your mouth.” 

Likewise are all of the Scriptures, for the Holy Spirit emphatically declared through St. Peter, “No prophecy of Scripture comes about from someone’s own interpretation.  In fact, no prophecy ever came by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were being carried along by the Holy Spirit.” (2 Peter 1:20-21)  Thus, any teaching that conflicts with God’s word marks itself as a product of sin and Satan’s deceptions, but the pure word of Scripture is both our guide and the power that brings us faith and life.  Therefore, as Christian believers, Chosen and appointed to believe and do, we place full confidence in the words God has put in our hands.  We want to trust God’s word in the whole and in each part, never setting one part against another or making selfish decisions about which part to follow, for all of God’s Word is given to work faith in Jesus in us for our everlasting good.

The Lord God said to Jeremiah, “Look, today I appoint you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and to tear down, to destroy and to overthrow, to build and to plant.”  God appointed that young man to a lifetime of preaching law and gospel to a rebellious nation.  It would not be an easy life.  Nor would there be great earthly reward.  In fact, while Jeremiah faithfully served the Lord all his days, he also suffered grievous persecution and personal, even physical, attacks by those who rebelled against the Lord.

Therefore, let us be warned, if we ever go against what the LORD has spoken, we too will be subject to His condemnation.  Likewise, even if we are faithful like Jeremiah, we may have to endure the affliction that a rebellious world brings against God’s chosen believers.  Having said this, we all confess that we have sinned against the Lord and deserve only His condemnation.  However, we also have received the promise God has spoken about faith in His only begotten Son. 

Jeremiah was sent to call people back to trusting the God who saved them from slavery in Egypt.  You and I are being called, regularly through Word and Sacrament, to faith in that same loving Lord.  Our Lord and Savior lived and died so that He could promise us with great assurance, “If anyone loves me, he will hold on to my word.  My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.” (John 14:23)

Dear friends, as young children, God picked you up out of the muck and mire of the human condition, and washing you clean of your sin in Baptism, He claimed you as His own precious child.  Having been cleansed by the blood of Jesus, God credited to you the faithful life of His dear Son.  Now, He calls you to trust and to serve.  The specific roles He will reveal to you as you go through life: student, parent, servant, teacher, helper, giver, leader, proclaimer, and many more.  Each of us have roles in God’s assembly of believers.  Guided by the Holy Spirit, Paul wrote to the congregation in Rome:

We have different gifts, according to the grace God has given us.  If the gift is prophecy, do it in complete agreement with the faith.  If it is serving, then serve.  If it is teaching, then teach.  If it is encouraging, then encourage.  If it is contributing, be generous.  If it is leadership, be diligent.  If it is showing mercy, do it cheerfully. (Romans 12:6-8)

Each of us, as God’s adopted children, are Chosen and appointed to believe and do.  Amen.

Now to Him, who is able, according to the power that is at work within us, to do infinitely more than we can ask or imagine, to Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever!  Amen.

 

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.

 

Sermon for Transfiguration Sunday, February 6, 2022

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places.  Amen.

Matthew 17:1-9  Six days later Jesus took with him Peter, James, and John the brother of James; and he led them up onto a high mountain by themselves.  2There he was transfigured in front of them.  His face was shining like the sun.  His clothing became as white as the light.  3Just then, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Jesus.  4Peter said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here.  If you want, I will make three shelters here: one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”  5While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them.  Just then, a voice came out of the cloud, saying, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.  Listen to him.”  6When the disciples heard this, they fell face down and were terrified.  7Jesus approached and as he touched them, he said, “Get up, and do not be afraid.”  8When they opened their eyes, they saw no one except Jesus alone.  9As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus commanded them, “Do not tell anyone what you have seen until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.” (EHV)

Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.

Dear brothers and sisters of the Holy Son,

            As Christians, we rightly emphasize the suffering, death, and resurrection of the Lord Jesus without which we would all be lost to eternal condemnation.  However, it may be that, at times, we forget what Jesus had to accomplish before He paid for the sins of the world.  It may also be that even though we believe that Jesus is our Savior, we may struggle with feelings of guilt which leads us to feel uncertain about our futures.  Therefore, I tell you, Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.

            When Jesus walked this earth, the people who met Him didn’t comprehend the fullness of Jesus’ nature.  Though some believed Jesus was the promised Messiah, there was much confusion, even among His disciples, about who He truly is.  Vast crowds viewed Jesus as a miracle worker and healer.  Some followed Jesus for a while, but when what He taught became hard to understand, they went away.  Others thought Jesus was a great prophet God had sent to help them, much like the judges God had sent before there was a king in Israel—someone to rescue them from foreign enemies.  Others, especially the leaders: the scribes, Sadducees, and Pharisees, thought Jesus was a troublemaker and blasphemer. 

Likewise, today, confusion about Jesus exists among many people.  There are still large groups that think of Jesus mostly as a morality teacher.  Others wonder if He ever even existed.  Some wonder whether Jesus was really true God, and others question whether Jesus was a Man or just appeared to be human.  Both in Jesus’ time and in our own, confusion about Jesus leads to terrible consequences.  Not knowing who Jesus truly is, and what He did for us, leaves one vulnerable to the devil’s lies and accusations.  So, I repeat, Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.

“Jesus took with him Peter, James, and John the brother of James; and he led them up onto a high mountain by themselves.  There he was transfigured in front of them.  His face was shining like the sun.  His clothing became as white as the light.”  The Greek verb used here comes down to us as metamorphosis, the word we use to describe the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly.  Much like a caterpillar wraps itself in a cocoon before being transfigured into its more impressive form, Jesus wrapped Himself in human flesh so that He could be in the world without the world knowing it.  There on that high mountain, the wrap was laid aside to reveal to those three men the true God-Man who came into this world for our rescue.  They saw Jesus in all His divine glory and holiness.

As is always the case when sinners come near the presence of God, Peter, James, and John became terrified.  Centuries earlier when Moses went up the mountain to receive the commandments from God’s hand, “The people saw, and they trembled and stood far away.  Then they said to Moses, ‘Speak with us yourself, and we will listen, but do not let God speak with us, or we will die.’” (Exodus 20:18-19)  Even from that great distance, God’s glory was too much for the sinner to face.  Therefore, God promised the Israelites an Intercessor.  His Son led those three disciples up the mountain to show that Jesus is the fulfilment of God’s promise to Moses after the people were terrified to be in God’s presence: “I will raise up a prophet for them from among their brothers, like you, and I will put my words in his mouth, and he will speak to them everything that I command him.” (Deuteronomy 18:18)

While in the world, Jesus looked like an ordinary man, but lest we think Jesus sinned like an ordinary man, as some modern heathens pretend, God is declaring that while Jesus lives as a Man, He remained holy as only the Son of God can.  Therefore, Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.

While Peter was mumbling mindlessly about building shelters to keep Jesus, Moses, and Elijah here in their glorified state, the scene changed.  “While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them.  Just then, a voice came out of the cloud, saying, ‘This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.  Listen to him.’”  That cloud was illuminated with a brightness beyond what our words can express.  Yet, the Father’s voice rang out clearly.  The message the disciples needed to hear is that Jesus was perfectly pleasing to His Father in heaven in every thought, word, and deed.  You and I need to know this. 

In some ways, this is repeating the Father’s testimony from Jesus’ baptism.  At the same time, it echoes what God had told Moses centuries earlier.  Jesus is our true Prophet bringing to earth the message of salvation from our God.  Thus the command, “Listen to Him!”  Because we could never live to please a holy God, God sent His Son to live in our place.  Jesus declared, “Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets.  I did not come to destroy them but to fulfill them.  Amen I tell you: Until heaven and earth pass away, not even the smallest letter, or even part of a letter, will in any way pass away from the Law until everything is fulfilled.” (Matthew 5:17-18)

Our enemies want you to think you are beyond rescue because of your sin.  Alternately, Satan would try to get you to doubt Jesus’ work on your behalf.  God wants you to know that He gave His faithful, perfectly holy Son to be your sin, so that He could punish all of our sins in Jesus.  If Jesus had sinned, He would have had to die for His sins only, and His death would have been useless to us.  However, God the Father was making sure we knew His Son would never fail us.  Therefore, I can confidently say, Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you. 

Now, the world is filled with guilty consciences.  Some wallow in that guilt suffering daily, even to the point of despair.  Other consciences get so abused with constant sin that they become defiant against God, imagining that they actually obey His commands.  Most people troubled by their consciences seek ways to appease that constant nagging with works, but they too fail to find true peace, because the law always accuses.  The law shows that we have failed to live according to God’s will.  That is why it is so important for us to know and believe what Jesus has done for us.  Before Jesus went to the cross to suffer the penalty of death for sins on our behalf, He had already lived perfect obedience for us all.  His trust in His Father was absolute.  His holiness as the Son of God remained perfectly intact as the Son of Man.

Without the transfiguration of our Lord, we might have nagging doubts about whether Jesus was righteous enough to substitute for sinners like us.  Likewise, the devil would be only too happy to torment us with his lying questions and accusations.  But here on that mountain, we have God the Father’s testimony that Jesus perfectly satisfied our Creator on our behalf.  Jesus accomplished everything His Father requires of us.  Therefore, the Holy Spirit comforts us through St. Paul saying, “God made him, who did not know sin, to become sin for us, so that we might become the righteousness of God in him.” (2 Corinthians 5:21)  We don’t become the righteousness of God by imitating Jesus.  Rather, Jesus took the guilt and shame that separated us from God so that His Father could credit Jesus’ perfect obedience to everyone who is called to believe.

As the disciples heard God speak, they were obviously terrified.  Though they knew Jesus, they were just beginning to understand the fulness of what God was doing through His Son.  Sure confidence would come later.  For now, Jesus was there to comfort them.  “Jesus approached and as he touched them, he said, ‘Get up, and do not be afraid.’  When they opened their eyes, they saw no one except Jesus alone.  As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus commanded them, ‘Do not tell anyone what you have seen until the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.’”  The time to report this vision had to wait until Jesus finished His mission.  The ultimate testimony about the holiness of God’s Son came when the Father raised Jesus alive from the tomb.  Then the whole world would need to know, and the disciples would remember, all that Jesus had done for them and for us.

Dear friends, all of us feel guilt.  Only a true sociopath has a conscience so dulled that it doesn’t feel the accusations of his guilt, but I would contend that even then the guilty conscience is only suppressed.  For most of us, however, guilt is an everyday affliction.  We hurt someone, and knowing it is wrong, we despise ourselves for the pain we cause.  We fail to do what is right and the accuser is right there pointing out our weaknesses.  Sometimes, in anger, hurt, jealousy, or greed, we strike out intentionally, but later that nagging conscience is there troubling us again.  The conscience is actually good for us in that way if it turns us back to Jesus.  When guilt for your shortcomings weighs down heavy upon you, listen to Jesus say, “Come to me all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.  Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, because I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew 11:28-29)

Sometimes, too, this twisted world tries to make us feel guilty by imagining guilt where God has not commanded, or by pretending good is evil and evil is good while accusing us under those false constructions.  The only cure for all this guilt is Jesus.  Every command God has laid upon humanity was fulfilled by the One Man who lived perfectly holy in our place.  Then, because the wages of sin is death, Jesus took our place on the cross so that no sin can ever be held against those who believe in Him, because Jesus paid for the sins of the whole world with His innocent death.

There is no reason for anyone to be consigned to hell for eternity for Jesus has won salvation for all sinners.  Still, it is also true that those who reject God’s grace, or the work of His Son, remain condemned in their sins.  Jesus declared, “The Father loves the Son and has put everything in his hands.  The one who believes in the Son has eternal life, but the one who rejects the Son will not see life; instead, God’s wrath remains on him.” (John 3:35-36)  Listen to God’s Son; we are saved only by faith in Jesus, and that faith is given to us through the Word and Sacraments of our Lord.  Through baptism and the hearing of the Good News of all that Jesus has done for you, God worked faith in your hearts, faith that trusts the testimony of the Father in heaven and that of the men Jesus chose to bring Good News to you. 

To anyone weighed down with guilt and shame for what you have done in your life, hear with a humble heart the proclamation of the Father in heaven, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.  Listen to him.”  The Savior who died for you also lived the holiness God expected of you, and His righteousness is now credited to all who believe Him.  Therefore, today and every day, remember what Jesus has done for you with His life and His sacrifice.  Then in your going, serve the Lord in joyful peace.  Fear not; Jesus pleased God for you.  Amen.

The peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus unto life everlasting.  Amen.