The following 'Funeral Sermon' is posted with family permission. May the Lord give to the family of Vicent Olson, and all who mourn, comfort in their grief and a sure confidence in the Lord's loving care.
Text: Mark 10:13-16
Donna,
Robert, Crystal, Roger, Darci, Debra, Rodney, Sandy, grandchildren, family, and
friends, grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
We
are assembled this morning because of one man; a man known by many of us, a man
who loved many, and a man who especially embraced the helpless, the needy, the
insignificant, and the sinful. That man
is obviously, Jesus Christ.
Yes,
we are gathered here this day because Jesus Christ has redeemed our brother
Vince Olson. Jesus has forgiven Vince of
all of his sin, claimed Vince as His own, and promised to resurrect Vince from
the grave at the last day. We are here
this day because we need to hear in this moment of our grief that Jesus Christ
has not, will not, and cannot forsake Vince that Jesus was with Vince in his
earthly life and is with him in death.
This
last Saturday, Vince took his last breath and his heart slowly drifted away;
however, as this happened, Christ Jesus took our beloved Vince into His arms,
laid His hands upon Vince, and blessed Him with rest of His soul in paradise.
The
reason why we can know this to be true is that Jesus Christ Himself has told us
that the Kingdom of God belongs to
little children, children like Vince.
But
we may say to ourselves; Vince was 91
years old; he was hardly a child. Yes, it is true that Vince was removed from
childhood by about 90 some years; however, we hear in the Gospel of Matthew chapter
eighteen that we adults are to change and become like little children if we are ever to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Indeed, unless we change and become like
children, we will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven.
What
does this mean, though? Dear friends, it means that it is not the strength
of our faith, the power of our good works, the splendor of our reputations, or the
supremacy of our abilities that gain us access to the Kingdom of God, but rather,
it is childlike helplessness. That is to
say; Jesus chooses to redeem, forgive,
and save those that become like helpless children – that is to say, those who
know that they are sinners in need of a Savior.
It is most certainly true; the
Lord chooses not to forsake helpless sinners like me, like you, and like Vince.
As
you all know, Vince was a gentle soul.
He had a kind disposition and a quiet,
compassionate voice. I say this not to
draw attention to Vince’s character, but to draw
attention to Vince’s helplessness. You
see, Vince knew that He was a sinner in need of a Savior. He knew that
he could not make it through this life on his own. He knew that
he was like a child – a child that needed help to make it to and through those
pearly gates – as they say. So, Vince in
his childlike helplessness trusted in another.
He trusted in Jesus Christ, the Savior of sinners, the Lord of life – His Lord,
His Redeemer, His refuge, His strength. In fact, in the last moments of his life, Vince did
not boast about himself. He did not look
to his past accomplishments. He did not even look to the power of his will, but
rather, he sang on his death bed with his beloved Donna. With a throat that had
been damaged by hospital tests, he sang the following,
And when I
think that God, his Son not sparing, sent him to die, I scarce can take it in,
that on that cross my burden gladly bearing, He bled and died to take away my
sin. Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to Thee: How great Thou
art! How great thou art!
Indeed,
we are here this day at this funeral service because we need to hear about the
surpassing value of knowing Christ. We
need to hear, believe, and trust in the
same Savior that Vince trusted in – Jesus Christ. We need to hear
the same thing that Vince heard on his
death bed, that we have a righteousness,
not of our own, but a righteousness found in Jesus Christ – a righteousness
given to those in need of grace. We need to hear about Jesus Christ and the
power of Jesus’ resurrection – a resurrection that guarantees our resurrection. We need to hear
all of this as children of the heavenly Father.
What
we learn from our brother Vince and our scripture
lessons this morning is that we need to be brought
to the status of childlike faith. We
need to be stripped of our attempts of
being self-sufficient and be reduced to a helpless, dependent, and needy childlike
status, for this is so very good. Why is
this good, though? This is good
because when we are brought from a position of strength and self-sufficiency to
a position of helplessness, we are then freed to look outside of ourselves. When we are brought to a position of
realizing that we can do nothing about our sinful condition and death itself, we
can then hear that we have a heavenly Father who cares for us, who has absolved
our sins, and who has triumphed over death.
Our
brother Vince was a child of the heavenly Father. He did not
have to struggle to get himself in a good position for having a relationship
with God. He did not have to craft ingenious ways of explaining his position to
Jesus. He did not have to create a pretty face for himself, and he did not have
to achieve any state of spiritual feeling or intellectual understanding before
the Lord. All Vince did was
happily receive Jesus and Jesus’s love.
All Vince did was receive the gift of the kingdom, for Jesus came to
Vince and received Vince into His arms at his baptism and held him some 91
years – especially at the very end.
Dear
friends, those who insist that they are not helpless sinners will never enter
the Kingdom of Heaven. On the other
hand, those who are helpless, dependent sinners
– those who are empty handed children depending on the Lord – are the greatest
in the Kingdom of Heaven, for the Lord does not loathe children, and He does not despise childlike faith. Oh no, He does not reject empty handed
childlike sinners, but in His mighty arms,
He accepts them and envelops them in His mighty strength.
Dear friends, you who feel helpless this day, you who feel
the pain of loss this morning, you who have been brought to the status of a
child with empty hands, hear and receive the good news of the Gospel, news that
is especially for you this day: neither life nor death shall ever sever
children like Vince and you from the Lord, for you are given the Lord’s grace.
Hear
and receive this day the good news of the
Gospel: though the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh, the Lord God does not abandon
his children, for they are the center of His love.
Hear
and receive this day the good news of the
Gospel: the Lord gathers His children in this life and especially at death to preserve them pure and holy.
Hear
and receive this day the good news of the Gospel: the Lord promises a
resurrection of His children. At the
last day, a trumpet shall sound, and Vince will rise alive with a new
body, unto life everlasting.
Take
comfort this morning dear friends. Our beloved Vince did not have to climb. He did not have to huff and puff. He did not
have to try and earn the Kingdom of God, but rather, it pleased our Father to
give him the kingdom, and it pleases the Father to give you the kingdom this
day as well, through the promises of His Word.
Take
comfort this morning that the Lord does not leave his children – children like
Vince –, but He meets His children to
lavish grace upon grace so that we might
all sing, ‘Then sings my soul, my Savior
God, to Thee: How great Thou art!
How great thou art!’
Now to him who is able to
keep you from stumbling and to present
you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God,
our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.
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