Due to a busy week with the Higher Things Youth Trip, this sermon is indebted to Rev. William Weedon and Rev. Joshua Reimche.
Text: Luke 19:41-48
In
the name of Jesus: Amen.
It
is a fact that we do not hear much anymore about the wrath of God – those fire
and brimstone sermons. But rather, we
hear an abundance of sermons about God’s love and tolerance and acceptances –
mushy sermons decorated with sweet talk.
The reason why? Some Christians
cannot figure out how to reconcile their understanding of the God who “so loved
the world that he gave His only-begotten Son” with the existence of the fires
of hell.
As a
result, many Christians end up being closet universalists – assuming that in
the end a God of love will send no one to hell and everyone to heaven
regardless of their beliefs.
And
the old Adam – that is our sinful nature – inside each of us would love to
believe this a true. The reason
why? If everyone goes to heaven, then
there is no need to bother with God’s call to repentance. If everyone goes to heaven we can simply and
safely ignore the Lord’s warnings to those who persist in sin.
But,
of course, if we listen to God’s voice in the Scriptures, that is not an
option. The scriptures reveal a God who
is patient, loving, and merciful – all in degrees beyond our
comprehension. And yet a God who finally
does not overlook continual rebellion, who will, in the end, punish and destroy
– but a God who punishes and destroys with tears in His eyes.
In
this morning’s Gospel reading we read, “And as He drew near and saw the city, He
wept over it.” Why did the Lord Jesus
cry? Because He who is God in our flesh
does not take a sick delight in hurting, in judging, or in destroying. He did not create us for that, He did not
come into our flesh for that. And so He
weeps when we leave Him no choice but to do what He does not want to do, but
still must do.
You
heard God’s great sadness in the first reading.
Jeremiah was speaking to Israel.
They had rebelled countless times against the Lord and they thought that
they could keep on rebelling and yet God would keep them safe from their
enemies.
Their
prophets told them: “Peace! Peace!”
In other words, “Don’t worry! God
will never let anything happen to His holy city where his temple is.”
Therefore,
Jeremiah was sent to shatter that illusion, to prepare the people for what will
come. He tells them that merely knowing
the Law, but never bothering to repent of the times where it is broken; merely
possessing the Word of God, but never bothering to listen to it, will not keep
them safe; it will land them in destruction.
And
so the Lord gave His nation and His city into the hands of the Babylonians, so
that Israel - what was left of it - would learn that rebellion against the Lord
is no joking matter, nothing to be taken lightly. His patience is great – far beyond our
patience - but it has an end.
And
then in the Gospel lesson it was deja-vu.
Jesus is riding into Jerusalem in order to take the hit for Israel and
for all people.
Jesus
is coming to His cross and saying to His Father – pour it on me, all your
righteous wrath for all their rebellions, for all the times they heard your
Word and despised and ignored it without any care or concern for the
consequence – pour Your wrath out on me.
I will bear it for them.
I
will answer for their treason so that they may receive through me the pardon
and remission of their sins, so that they may not perish but have the eternal
life which is our joy and delight.
And
yet He bursts into tears, because He knows what will happen. He knows that even after He has borne hell
and felt the full fury of righteous wrath against all human pride and
rebellion, so many in His city will turn their nose up at His sacrifice. They will say: “No thank you. I don’t need You or anything You are offering
or doing. I can do it on my own.”
And
so our Jesus cries. He cries for
Jerusalem, but not only for Jerusalem.
He cries for us too, for all the times when we choose to ignore God’s
will and insist on going our own way.
He
cries for all the times when we take His sacrifice for granted and continue in
our disobedience and rebellion. For all
the times we say to ourselves: “Well,
I’m baptized and I’ve taken communion, so God will forgive me while I go on
doing my own will without regard for his commands.”
Jesus
cries for all the times we delude ourselves into thinking that we’ve done
enough and been good enough to pass muster on our own before the Judgment
seat. He cries for all of that when He
cries for Jerusalem, because He does not want us to experience where that leads
– to the loss everything He died to win for us and lives to give us.
There
is then, in his tears, a pleading. A
pleading for us to embrace a life of repentance. A pleading for us to cry with him over all
that our sins and rebellions have cost Him.
A pleading for us to fall before him and pray: “Lord Jesus, Son of God, have mercy on me a
sinner!”
Because
when we do, then there are tears of another sort. Tears of joy in His eyes and in the eyes of
our heavenly Father, in the eyes of the angel armies, tears of joy as we are
welcomed home like long-lost children.
Because
that is what our Lord longs for, that is what He came and bled and died for,
that is what He rose from the dead for: to welcome home each repentant soul and
unite you to Himself in an embrace of love so strong that we will share His
life forever.
And
when we celebrate it (that is what the Supper is truly about), it is not a
feast for those who are content to live in rebellion against God’s commands. It is a feast spread for those who ache over
how they have failed God and who desire His forgiveness and strength to do
better.
That
is what He gives you in His Word and Sacraments. He unites Himself to you so that His
forgiveness covers your sin and He “strengthens your faith in Him and your
fervent love for one another” as the prayer after communion has it.
He
is a God of patience, but not patience without end. He waits now for our repentance and when we
live in daily repentance and faith, it is His joy to grant us forgiveness,
life, and salvation.
“For
God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the
world might be saved through Him”.
In
the name of Jesus: Amen.
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