Sermon
for Good Friday, April 18, 2025
The God of love and peace will be with you. Amen.
Psalm
51:14-17 14Deliver me from bloodshed, O God, the
God who saves me. My tongue will shout
for joy about your righteousness. 15Lord,
open my lips, and my mouth will declare your praise. 16For you do not delight in
sacrifice, or I would give it. You do
not take pleasure in burnt offerings. 17The
sacrifices God wants are a broken spirit.
A broken and crushed heart, O God, you will not despise. (EHV)
Restored by
His sacrifice.
Dear broken and crushed hearts,
Even
though he tried desperately to hide it for a time, when confronted by the
prophet, Nathan, David finally faced the guilt of his grave sin including the
murder of an innocent man. Brought to
repentance by a metaphor of another man’s terrible crime, David could only plead
for mercy. With his spirit crushed by
the weight of his guilt, David no longer tried to hide his sin from the Lord. Bereft of any excuse, David then prayed this
prayer. My friends, that is exactly
where we want and need to be.
By nature, the sinner
always wants to hide from justice. No
one truly wants to be punished for the wrong he or she commits. We much prefer to imagine ourselves
innocent. Even if we admit some guilt,
our natural inclination is to try to buy our freedom from punishment by lifting
up some good thing we might do, an act of charity, perhaps; an act of service
to the less fortunate, or by some sacrifice given to honor whatever deity we
want to serve.
Sacrifices offered to the
gods were not limited to Israel. In
fact, it never seemed unusual to the Israelite people that God would demand
sacrifices at His temple. However, there
always remained a great difference between sacrifices offered to appease idols
and the worship God insisted upon among His chosen nation. The sacrifices God commanded Israel to bring
brought God no benefit. Indeed, He
declared through the Psalmist, “I do not need to take a bull from your barn
or goats from your pens, because every animal in the forest is mine, the cattle
on a thousand mountains … If I were hungry, I would not tell you, because the
world is mine, and all that fills it.” (Psalm 50:9,10&12)
Therefore, repentant David
was correct in recognizing that our sacrifices never buy forgiveness. Instead, God instituted sacrifices in Israel
to teach the people about the truly atoning sacrifice He would make of His
Son. God gave Jesus, His own beloved,
holy Son into cruel death to pay for the sins of the world. In return, God expects only that we repent of
our sins and believe in the Savior Son.
Thus, David wrote, “For you do not delight in sacrifice, or I would
give it. You do not take pleasure in
burnt offerings.” Later, when people
asked Jesus what they should do to serve God, He told them, “This is the
work of God: that you believe in the one he sent.” (John 6:29)
Like you and me, David
deserved God’s wrath. At the same time,
David believed God’s promise that a Savior was coming into the world to redeem
him from his sin. One thousand years
later, that promise was effected as Jesus humbled Himself to take our place of
suffering and death, so that we can receive the mercy of the God who loves us
unreservedly. God demands no payment
from us nor any retribution for the pain we caused Jesus, but rather, in return
for His mercy, “The sacrifices God wants are a broken spirit. A broken and crushed heart, O God, you will
not despise.”
David prayed, “Deliver
me from bloodshed, O God, the God who saves me.
My tongue will shout for joy about your righteousness. Lord, open my lips, and my mouth will declare
your praise.” David was a great
warrior king. He had as much power as
any ruler on earth, and riches beyond measure, but David couldn’t do anything
to make himself right with God. No
sacrifice or service would buy forgiveness.
No price he could pay would free David from condemnation.
Only God’s mercy could design
a way to replace our guilt with the righteousness of His Son. And, that’s exactly what Jesus accomplished
for you and me, and King David, that day on a cross outside of Jerusalem. As the crowds mocked and jeered and shouted,
“Crucify Him!” Jesus silently bore the abuse we deserved. In His great love for His friends, Jesus made
the ultimate sacrifice. However, when
Jesus offered up His life for our guilt, He suffered not just the death of His
body, but also the pain of hell, crying out, “My God, my God, why have you
forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46) as His Father in heaven turned His face away
from the Son to make Him feel the full wrath our sins had earned. As His enemies celebrated, Jesus took our sins
to the gates of hell and silenced the devil’s claim on us forever.
Tonight, dear friends, we
remember Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross.
We remember the agony He endured in our place. We remember the grief of Jesus’ mother and
the shame of His disciples who ran away.
We remember the blood streaming from His body, the nails driven through
His hands and feet, His parched lips announcing, “I thirst.” We remember Jesus committing His spirit into
His Father’s care as He laid down His life, the soldier’s spear piercing Jesus’
side after He drew His last breath, and finally, our dearest, most trustworthy
Friend laid in a borrowed tomb after He gave His all to win our freedom
forever.
As we remember all of
that, remember even more that Jesus’ death is not the end for Him nor for
us. Remember that because of God’s love
for us, and Jesus’ willing embrace of our need for a Savior, that when Jesus
declared, “It is finished,” He proclaims to the world that we are Restored
by His sacrifice—fully, finally, and forever, forgiven and freed from sin’s
curse. Remember,
also, that on the third day, Jesus rose from the dead in triumphant victory
over our every enemy, giving undeniable proof in heaven and on earth that we
are Restored by His sacrifice.
Amen.
May
God be gracious to us and bless us. May
his face shine on us. Amen.
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