Zion Lutheran Church of Gwinner, ND


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Showing posts with label The Ten Commandments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ten Commandments. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2015

Forgiveness For Eyes That Grow Hands


Grace and Peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

God’s design for life begins with perfect fear, love and trust in Him.  This perfect fear, love, and trust in Him function like a foundation to a perfectly built house.  Everything else rests upon this sure foundation. 

Then comes the use of God’s Name, followed by gladly hearing and learning His Word.  The themes in the Second and Third Commandments function like the structure of the house, the framework if you will. 

Our house metaphor needs walls, windows, doors and some decorations too.  This is where the gifts of: authority, life, a good reputation, marriage, contentment, and possessions come into play.  These gifts become the walls, windows, doors, and decorations of our foundation and structure, thus completing our house.  Indeed, the gifts of authority, life, marriage, a good reputation, and so forth flow out of fear, love, and trust in the Lord.

As mentioned in previous sermons, the commandments are the Lord’s protection of His gifts; they function like protective fences for God’s gifts.  The First, Second, and Third Commandments seek to protect the foundation and structure, whereas commandments Four through Ten function to protect the walls, doors, windows, and decorations.  Together all Ten Commandments guard the Lord’s good and perfect gifts ‘to’ and ‘for’ us; the commandments guard God’s house, this design of how life ought to be.  
 
Tonight though, we will be focusing on the remaining three commandments of our six part series: the Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Commandments.  In other words, we are going to focus on the gift of possessions and the gift of contentment.  Indeed, returning to our house metaphor, we will be looking at the remaining doors and windows of our house, the house that represents God’s perfect design for life. 

Like the Fifth and Eighth Commandments, the Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Commandments have a bit of overlap as well.  The Ninth and Tenth Commandments state,

Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his cattle, nor anything that is his.

The Seventh Commandment states,

“Thou shalt not steal.”

In other words, coveting happens when the gift of contentment is attacked by our sinful nature and this coveting can fuel and lead to the breaking of the Seventh Commandment, stealing.  That is to say, coveting is having sinful desire for anyone or anything that belongs to our neighbor.  If left unchecked however, this coveting will lead to robbery, theft, or dishonest ways of getting that which we covet, thus breaking the Seventh Commandment of stealing as well.

Truly, the Lord is all about protecting the gifts of material possessions and the gift of contentment.  They need protection because of our hearts and because of the tactics of the Evil One.  Yes, from our hearts proceed all evil thoughts, such as coveting. 

This covetous heart is really exposed and ensnared by the Ninth and Tenth Commandments though.  These two commandments on coveting will catch us every time.  These commandments are directed precisely at the most upright, good and religious people.  Because just when you think you’ve kept all the other commandments, along comes the command “Don’t covet.”

In the other commandments, God dealt with actions.  In the ninth and tenth He zeros in on your heart and your desires.  With these two as with the others, God is protecting our neighbors from ourselves.

Coveting is looking to get what God did not give you.  In other words, don’t let your eyes grow hands.  That’s what we do when we covet.  We are saying that we are not content with what God has given us, so we look to our neighbor’s things, or blessings, or reputation… “if only I could get my hands on some of that.”

Coveting happens.  But no matter where or when it happens, the sin is the same.  We have a problem being content with what God has given us, whether it’s house or spouse, goods or kids.

Simply put, when we long for the honor, wealth, happy life, or what seems to be the ease of the lives of others, we are coveting. 

When we become stingy and self-indulgent with our money so that we can try to keep up with the Jones, we are coveting. 

When we live with grudges and a fist full of discontentment about what we should’ve got and what we supposedly deserve and how others shouldn’t deserve their gifts, we are coveting.

When we have wanted our neighbor’s spouse, property and possessions or if we attempt to win the affections of our neighbor’s spouse or children away from our neighbor, we are coveting.

There is no doubt about it that the Ninth and Tenth Commandments shine the light of truth on us good and religious people.  God’s Law shows us as the malcontents we really are.  And amazingly it all goes back to the First Commandment; we really don’t trust God and how He chooses to take care of us.

As you can see, these evil covetous thoughts not only erode contentment, but these covetous thoughts are like hot embers.  They are hot embers that are fanned by the Evil One in order that they catch fire.  When they catch fire, the flame attacks other people through robbery, theft, and getting things in dishonest ways, thus leading us to the Seventh Commandment.

This commandment has to do with taking advantage of our neighbor in any way that makes them lose something.  As with the other commandments, with this one God is protecting your neighbor from you because He knows how we can be tempted to look at what our neighbor has and make plans to take it.

Granted, you probably wouldn’t do it outright like a common thief.  But stealing happens more commonly and more innocently than you might think.  God counts it as stealing when we are lazy in our work or at school.

He considers it stealing because we are taking time and materials from our employer or teacher.  God also counts it as stealing when we over charge someone for something or try to get something for far less than what it’s worth.  We steal when we fail to care for the property in the neighborhood, school, or church so that it is improved.  We steal when we do not help our neighbor in his needs.  We steal when we work for ourselves rather than for Christ and the benefit of our neighbor.  And yes, it is also stealing when we hold tightfisted to our finances becoming stingy in our giving back to the Lord, when we withhold our thank offerings from the offering plate. 

Dr. Luther said in the Large Catechism that “thievery is the most common craft and largest guild on the earth.”  And we have all practiced that craft one time or another.

Instead of stealing, God’s design is to help your neighbor improve and protect their possessions and income.  Love looks out for its neighbor’s benefit, not its own.  Truly, God is gracious enough to give each of you exactly what you need.  With your needs, not necessarily your wants met, you are freed up to help and serve your neighbor.

God always gives us the money and possessions we need, especially in America, so we don’t have to worry about taking what belongs to our neighbor.  In fact the wealth and possessions, whether great or little are gifts from God so that you may bless others with what you have been given.

With all of this stated in regard to the Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Commandants, we find ourselves again at the end of our rope like last week, and the week before that and the week before that.  Convicted of sin, no way out, mouths shut, at wits end, and spiritually bankrupt. 

It is most definitely true that the Holy and Divine and Good and Salutary Law of God not only protects His gifts and reveals sin, but when it is proclaimed, it also has a way of stopping us dead in our tracks.  It catches us red handed and points a finger at us saying, “Guilty!”

This is all much needed and is very good.  Otherwise stated, it is good when we are stripped down and shown for what we are:  naked, frantically grasping for fig leaves; poor damned miserable sinners.   

This is healthy and a good place to be.  Otherwise stated, this is right where we need to be, especially the week before Holy Week.  Yes, when the Law shows us that there is no way out by our own reason or strength, we are actually being prepared to hear about the only way out.  We are being prepared to hear about what the Lord thinks, says, and does ‘to’ and ‘for’ us.  Truly, the only way out of this is by God’s giving and forgiving, namely in His Word and Sacraments delivering the benefits of Holy Week to us.

Dear baptized Saints, you, who have ears, hear…. in Jesus, you have a gracious God who provides for you in His death and resurrection.  In Jesus you have forgiveness; you are forgiven, the debt has been canceled, and you have been gifted every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places.   Indeed, in the Holy Week gift, the Lord has met your greatest need and desire, as well as giving you the proof and promise that He will always see to your needs of both body and soul.

Believe it or not, that’s it!  We have finished six weeks of rehearsing and relearning God’s design for life in the Ten Commandments, though somewhat abbreviated at times.

It hasn’t been anything flashy or entertaining and it wasn’t supposed to be.  Because the Ten Commandments themselves are not flashy.  They are rooted in the simple everyday actions of faith in God and love toward our neighbor.  They are there as protective fences to protect God’s gifts.  They come from God Himself and reveal to us His perfect will for our lives.  They show us where fall short and sin against God and neighbor and they lead us to see our need for Holy Week and our need for the God-Man Jesus Christ  dying and rising for us.  Undeniably, they prepare us to hear about the all availing sacrifice for sinners, Jesus Christ, who not only takes away the sins of the world, but also fulfilled the Law perfectly for you and in your place.

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


Thursday, March 19, 2015

Text: Exodus 20:1-17 and Matthew 5:27-32

Grace and Peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

In the previous Midweek Lenten sermons, we have heard that the Lord is all about protecting particular gifts that He gives to us.  He protects His gifts to us through His divine commandments.  Yes, the Ten Commandments are like protective fences that guard God’s gifts.  They are intended to safeguard the gifts of: rest, authority, life, a good reputation, property, and so forth.  However, when the commandments are broken due to sin, God’s gifts are tragically polluted, abused, and twisted. 

As we continue our journey towards Good Friday and Easter Sunday, we continue our series on the Ten Commandments—God’s Ten Words for you and for me.  More specifically, though, this evening we will be moving on from the Fifth and Eighth Commandments to the Sixth Commandment. 

The Sixth Commandment states,

          “You shall not commit adultery.”

In the Sixth Commandment, God protects the great gift of marriage.  That is to say, each person’s spouse is a gift from God.  The institution of marriage itself is also a great gift.  In that light, God’s design for marriage is that the husband and wife should fear and love the Lord, so that they lead a sexually pure and decent life in what they say and do.  That is to say, with the gift of marriage, one will also find the gift of sexuality.  Marriage and sexuality go hand in hand, for where you find the gift of marriage, you will also find the gift of sexuality. 

With all of this stated, we must keep in mind that sex—yes, sex—is a good thing, because it is designed by God for a husband and wife.  God loves marriage; God loves sex.  Sex is the best expression of love between a husband and a wife in marriage. But like all gifts, sex can be mistreated. 

Sadly, sex has been and is corrupted by mankind’s sin.  Thus, when the gift of sex is abused, there are some very negative, serious, and long lasting spiritual and physical consequences, consequences especially upon the institution of marriage. 

But how is the gift of sex abused?  We first must keep in mind that “sex between two people is one of two things: marriage or adultery.”[1]  It is really that black and white.  Sex inside of marriage is good, right, and salutary.  Sex outside of marriage, regardless of the age, circumstances, feelings, and excuses, is bluntly stated, ‘adultery.’  Indeed, sex outside of the institution of marriage between a man and woman is precisely what the Sixth Commandment is addressing.

Just in case you are attempting to create some sort of justification or loophole to the Sixth Commandment, our Gospel reading from tonight closes all escape routes.  Jesus opens the meaning of the Sixth Commandment in tonight’s reading when He says

“I say to you that whoever looks at a woman to lust after her has already committed adultery with her in his heart.”

What this means is that, “Committing adultery doesn’t just involve physical infidelity; it also involves cheating that occurs even in our minds.”[2]  For example, “Rather than thinking of pornography as a quick thrill, we need to see it for what it is: a ‘virtual’ way to cheat on your spouse.  Even if you’re not married, pornography still warps your sexual expectations, which always affects your future relationships.”[3]

The Sixth Commandment is about physical adultery and adultery found in the heart and mind, as well. 

It would be easy at this point to simply assume that the Sixth Commandment is just a sexual killjoy.  That is to say, that the Sixth Commandment is all about spoiling a good time.  We may even be inclined to label the Sixth Commandment as an irrelevant, stuffy, and old-fashioned sexual ethic that idealistic grandparents once held to.  Otherwise stated, we may be tempted to simply write the Sixth Commandment off, as an ethic of the years gone by, and simply too unreasonable for our modern day and age. 

Dear friends, we have to keep in mind that “Sexual sin is as old as sin itself.  Even a brief glance through the Old Testament demonstrates that sinner have been sinning ever since Eden.  God wouldn’t have given us [the Sixth Commandment] forbidding adultery if sexual temptation were not an issue even way back then.”[4]

With that stated though, “Sexually speaking, our world is a mess right now.  Sure, there’s been unbridled sensuality before in history, but things have gone up a notch.  Setting aside basic biology, we’ve effectively redefined marriage as sexual pleasure and emotional commitment, even opening it to same-sex couplings.  And in the name of sexual freedom, we’ve gone still further.  We’ve deconstructed and dismantled sex itself.”[5]

 As a result of our sexually rebellious hearts, we have wreaked havoc on our society, on our lives, and on our families: 
·        …Approximately 15.3 million new cases of sexually transmitted diseases each year.
·        …Nearly 16,000 deaths due to STDs each year.
·        …A culture that is overly saturated with sensuality and eroticism
 ·        …A porn industry that is bigger than the NFL, the NBA, and Major League Baseball combined. 
·        …Divorce 
·        …Split-families 
·        …Loss of friends and family 
·        …Injury to children
·        …Emotional pain 
·        …Mental exhaustion 
·        …Guilt 
·        …Shame 
·        …Fear
·        …Eternal Damnation
…And the list of consequences due to sexual sins could go on and on and on and on.

This is the whole point of the Sixth Commandment.  The Sixth Commandment is God putting a protective fence around your neighbor’s spouse and around your spouse as well, to protect you from unnecessary pain, hardships, and grief.   And He’s also protecting us whether we are single or married from using our bodies in ways offensive to Him, and from seeing other people as sexual objects to be used and abused at will.  God makes it crystal clear, if you are married…your spouse alone is for you, and if you are single… it’s hands off until you are married.

From the Sixth Commandment we can see how highly God honors marriage.  And we can also see how much we despise it.  Sex outside of marriage is widely accepted, but don’t think for a minute that it is therefore pleasing or right in God’s eyes.

The only proper place for sex is in the trusting bonds of marriage between one man and one woman.  When husband and wife love and honor each other, it is the holiest work a husband and wife can do.   Randy Newman teaches on this saying,
“Within marriage God blesses the husband and wife in total voluntary vulnerability. In this marriage bond the husband and wife are allowed to be intimately free and find acceptance in each other. Over time instead of ridicule, oneness emerges where acceptance and unashamed love captivates the couple.”
He goes on to say,

“By protecting the intimacy of sex from pollutants and keeping it bound in the covenant of marriage, a husband and wife can heal each other in their deepest areas of pain. They get to bind together what has been shattered from life, serving each other within the shadow of the Cross.”

Dear brothers and sisters, we fail in such love and honor.  We do not observe the protective fences that the Lord has put up.  We have sexually sinned in thought, in word, and in deed.  We have let the desires and lusts of the flesh control us.  We have followed the desires and lusts of the flesh and have disregarded God’s  Word in the Sixth Commandment. 

Lord, have mercy; Christ, have mercy; Lord, have mercy.

There is Good News for you and for me.  The Good News is that in Christ and His love, all things are made new. 

For the baptized who daily confess their sins and daily live in the grace of Christ Jesus, there is restoration every day. 

So what do you do if you have had many partners or just one outside of marriage?  [What do you do if you struggle with porn or wandering eyes to those not your spouse?]  Repent; you are forgiven and redeemed in Christ Jesus.  Even for those [of you] who carry various consequences in the [body due to sexual sins], there is full redemption, forgiveness and mercy in Christ Jesus.”[6] 

Dear friends, you are baptized.  Know that your true identity is found in being a baptized child of Christ, not in the chaos of sexual sin.

Dear Baptized Saints, Jesus has paid for all your sins in full—including your sexual sins—not with gold or silver, but with His holy, precious blood and with His innocent suffering and death (Small Catechism).

Dear Baptized Saints, your sexual sins are erased; you are covered by the white radiance, purity, and holiness of Jesus. 

Dear Baptized Saints, yes your sexual sins and every single sin from the past, present, and future is buried deeply in the wounds of Jesus. 

Blameless, you are!  Holy and righteous Saints, you are!  Called in purity; set apart in honor and integrity, in the midst of this sexually depraved world.

Gifted the Lord’s blessed favor of sex and marriage!  Gifted, forgiven, and protected indeed!

May the peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.





[1] Theodore Cook, “Sin-Corrupted Sex: Is the Sixth Commandment just a sexual killjoy?” The Lutheran Witness, February 2015.

[2] Jon Olson, “The Smoldering Wick” The Lutheran Witness, February 2015.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Harold Senkbeil, “Love among the Ruins: How do we reclaim sexual virtue in a depraved world?” The Lutheran Witness, February 2015.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Craig Donofrio, “It’s Just Sex,” The Lutheran Witness, February 2015.





CLICK HERE to access the other sermons in this series.


Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Forgiveness For Murderous Hearts And Slandering Tongues

2015 Zion Lutheran Lent Series
God's Ten Word's - For You
Part 4 of 6 
Text: Exodus 20:1-17 and Matthew 5:21-26

Grace and Peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

Tonight, as we continue to journey towards Calvary’s Cross, we move on to the Eighth and the Fifth Commandments.

The Eighth Commandment states,

“You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.”

The Fifth Commandment states,

          “You shall not murder.”

Now, both of these commandments have a somewhat similar theme.  That theme is the protection of the gift of a good reputation and the gift of life.  In other words, the gift of a good reputation has to do with the protection of one’s overall quality and disposition—that which tends to be in the sphere of a person’s character—whereas, the gift of life has to do with the protection of one’s overall physical body. Indeed, both a good reputation and physical life are precious gifts given to us and should be protected in every way.  Both your neighbor’s reputation and his life need to be protected, that is to say, protected from you and from me. 

But why do these gifts need protection from us?  They need protection because of our hearts and because of the tactics of the Evil One.  Yes, from our hearts proceed all evil thoughts.  These evil thoughts are not just left alone in the heart, but are like hot embers.  They are hot embers that are fanned by the Evil One in order that they catch fire.  When they catch fire, the flame attacks other persons by an abusive tongue, or possibly through a punch thrown into the face of a neighbor. 

There is a pretty definable pattern in all of this, even for us Christians.  What typically happens is that “Satan gets another Christian to sin against us in deed or word. It pleases Satan if a person with spiritual significance or authority, such as a parent, pastor, spouse or leader in the Church sins against us. Their spiritual status, their office, magnifies their offense and intensifies the damage that it does. This is a kind of ritual abuse, the misuse of holy things against us.”[1]

“After the offense has occurred, Satan gets us to brood over it, like a stuck track or a video loop, repeatedly and obsessively in our minds, with every greater emphasis on the gravity and injustice of it. As we process the offense and its effect on us, Satan gradually distorts our remembrance and our assessment of it. He uses this offense to encourage us to bring our mental accusations against the offender in the court of our minds. There he presides over the proceedings as we hold a secret trial in which we both prosecute and pass judgment on the wrongdoer.”[2]

“The more we brood on the offense, the angrier we get against the offender. [This is the beginnings of hatred.]  We remember all the other offenses that we have ever suffered from that person and all the other people that have ever hurt us. And that fuels our anger and our desire for justice, [thus the start of our breaking the Fifth Commandment].  We maintain that we are in the right; we are justified in our judgment of them. We hold the moral high ground against them. Then, before we know it, anger leads to bitterness and resentment. This, in turn, leads to outrage, hatred, and lust for revenge. And so we end up stewing in our own poison.”[3]

Keep in mind though, that this poison of anger and hatred don’t merely remain in our hearts, but rather, as previously mentioned, this poison seeps out through our tongues with passive aggressive slander towards our neighbor behind their back. 

Things are heightened though, because more times often than not, this passive aggressive slander becomes focused towards our neighbor’s face with direct verbal attacks.  Yes, if not curbed and stopped, the poisonous anger and  hatred go from passive aggressive slander to direct slander, and then to physical threats; if left unchecked, the physical threats are enacted with a push, a shove, and/or a fist hitting our neighbor’s face, and then to the pinnacle of the conflict, possible death. 

Dear friends, when we begin to hate those whom we should love and when our tongues turn from instruments of praise to weapons of slander, not only does Satan have us right where he wants us, but we have violated the Fifth and Eighth Commandments. 

Yes, when our hands and tongues are not instruments of help, but weapons that damn, curse, and tear down, we have gone the way of attacking the gift of life and the gift of a good reputation.    

But you may say to yourself, “I don’t need to worry; I have never physically murdered anyone before.  I don’t need to worry for I have never told a lie in the court of law against a person on trial.”  This is a common response to God’s Law.  Indeed, this is a very common response.  You see, all of us try to defend ourselves when we look at the Law.  We say to ourselves, “At least I have not killed anyone.  At least I have never lied under oath.”  We attempt to believe that God’s Law is for other people, those people ‘out there’ in the messy world.  We convince ourselves that we are not that bad, in order to convince ourselves that we are righteous.

In tonight’s reading though, from the Gospel of Matthew, we hear from Jesus on this subject of the Law.  What is interesting to note is that Jesus does not take the Old Testament Commandments to a new level.  He is not adding to the Laws of Moses or adjusting the Ten Commandments to accommodate a unique message.  There is only one Law because there is only one Lord.  In other words, what Jesus does is that He simply expounds on the essence of the commandments.  For example, in our reading from tonight, Jesus essentially states that if you have anger towards a brother or sister or if you have insulted a brother or sister, you are guilty of breaking God’s Commandments.  Otherwise stated, Jesus is closing any loopholes that we might create with God’s Law.  He is attempting to show that no one is righteous, that no one does things right, and that we all fall short. 

Permit me to do the same as well tonight.  That is to say, permit me the opportunity to close any loopholes by applying the Eighth and Fifth Commandments to you.  Dear friends:[4]

Have you gossiped, delighted to tell others about the faults or mistakes of another, excusing yourself especially by saying that you spoke only the truth?

Have you slanted stories to your benefit or deceived others by withholding some evidence of the story?

Have you found ways gladly and willingly to explain, in the best possible way, those words or actions of others that hurt you?

Have you defended your neighbor when things said about your neighbor have made others think badly about him or her?

Have you been faithful in keeping the secrets of another’s heart entrusted to you in confidence?

Brothers and sisters, repent, for you have broken the Eighth Commandment. 

Dear friends:[5]

Have you treated your neighbor’s body and life as gifts of God to him?

Have you injured your neighbor with violent actions, hitting and beating on your neighbor, spoken debasing and insulting words, using foul or dirty words to describe the neighbor, or murdered him with thoughts of anger, contempt, and hatred?

Have you injured your neighbor by ridicule, by neglecting to feed or clothe him, withholding compassion and comfort from him?

Have you avoided giving help to your neighbor, avoiding involvement with him in his difficulty?

Brothers and sisters, repent, for you have broken the Fifth Commandment. 

As we can see, we tragically assassinate our neighbor’s character through the careless use of our tongues and we murder our neighbor through injuring their body by neglecting their needs or inflicting harm upon them.  Truly, something can rub us the wrong way about our neighbor and our anger can quickly ignite, causing our blood to boil, and then hatred seeps through our pores.  In a matter of minutes our tongues can get going a mile a minute and before we know it, we’ve injured our neighbor to their face or behind their back.  Undeniably, our neighbor needs to be protected from you and me.  We need to be protected from our neighbor as well, for this is God’s design.  This is what the Eighth and the Fifth Commandment are all about.  They are about God setting a protective fence around us and around others in order to protect the gift of life and the gift of a good reputation.  

There is another side to all of this as well.  In these commandments the Lord is trying to protect you from yourself.  You see, once hatred sets in, you and I can not only do a tremendous amount of damage to our neighbor, but believe it or not, this hatred can also slowly begin to dislodge us from Christ’s Church. That’s right, hatred, which is sin, can lead to spiritual suicide.  This hatred seduces us, because it makes us feel justified in our anger.  We convince ourselves that we are right and everyone else is wrong, in order to validate our hatred.  Sadly, we then cut ourselves off from anyone that would disagree with our assessments.  We will even cut ourselves off from Christ’s church, for we do not want to let go of our anger; our hands are just too clinched around our hatred.  Darkness sets in.  Isolation increases.  Spiritual suicide encroaches. 

Lord, have mercy, Christ, have mercy.  Lord, have mercy on us.

Dear friends, not only are the Ten Commandments the way that God intends to protect His gifts to and for us, but they also reveal the disastrous depths of our depravity.  Sure, the Fifth and Eighth Commandments are designed to protect the gifts of life and a good reputation, but these commandments also do something profound, they make our sin known.  In other words, the commandments not only protect God’s gifts, but they reveal and expose our sinful nature, that which wreaks havoc on our lives and the lives of others.  The commandments uncover that we do not fear, love, and trust the Lord, and that we do not love our neighbor as ourselves.  The commandments not only curb our outward actions, but they show us the utter depths of our broken heart as well.

We need mercy.

We need forgiveness.

We need grace.

We need Mt. Calvary. 

We need Jesus.

Fear not dear friends.  Contrary to what you may think, the Lord does not reject a heart that is broken by and ensnarled by hate.  The Lord is not turned off from a broken, beat down, and crippled spirit.  The Lord loves, and does not hate those broken from the seduction of hate.  The Lord loves, and does not curse, those whose tongues have been contaminated by sin.  Rather than loathe, the Lord joins the broken heart and the foul tongue—the sinner—to His mercy, for forgiveness and healing, for peace and purity. 

Dear Baptized Saints, hear! 

The Lord joined you to eternal life in your baptism and gave you a divine reputation by placing ‘His’ name upon you. In your baptisms you partake of Christ and the fruits of his death and resurrection. 

Hear the good news! 

You are forgiven of your hatred.  You are forgiven for your reckless tongue.  These sins are buried deeply in the wounds of Jesus, where they will never be able to rise up to condemn you. 

Look!  You are Baptized and fed in the Holy Supper!

You are washed clean in your baptisms, given a holy reputation as a redeemed Saint.  Your tongue and mouth are redeemed by the precious body and blood that are laid in your mouth at the Holy Supper. 

Protection of physical life!  Eternal Life!  A good reputation!  Declared a Saint!  All given to and for you—as complete and total gift.

The Lord, create in you a clean heart and renew a right spirit within you.  The Lord, create in you a clean heart to see the gifts of the life and a good reputation.  The Lord, renew a right spirit within you to walk in the Eighth and Fifth commandments, towards your neighbor.  The Lord protect and keep your life and your reputation, now, in the days to come, and unto everlasting life. The Lord, restore to you the joy of your salvation.

May the peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.





[1] John W. Kleinig, Grace Upon Grace (St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House, 2008), 234-236.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ken Korby, “The Ten Commandments Preach Repentance; That Is, By Them God Shows Us Our Sin And How Much We Need A Savior.” (12 April 2013) http://www.pastormattrichard.com/2013/04/the-ten-commandments-preach-repentance.html (9 March 2015).

[5] Ibid.


Saturday, March 7, 2015

The Gift Of The Fourth Commandment

2015 Zion Lutheran Lent Series
God's Ten Word's - For You
Part 3 of 6 
Text: Exodus 20:1-17 Romans 13:1-7

Grace and Peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

We have learned about the first three commandments over the past two weeks.  In these first three commandments, we have learned about the Lord’s will for us in regard to: Himself, His name, and His Word for us. 

These first three commandments, which deal with our relationship to the Lord, lead us to the final remaining seven commandments.  More specifically, these seven remaining commandments do not primarily deal with our relationship to the Lord but how we ought to relate to our neighbor, while we fear, love, and trust the Lord. 

Among these final seven commandments is the first and the greatest, the fourth commandment:

“You are to honor your father and mother.”

As you have just heard, in the fourth commandment God gives us a very unique word.  He says, “Honor” your father and your mother. 

Now honor is more than love.  God wants us to love all people, but when it comes especially to parents and other people in authority, He wants us to ‘honor’ them because they are a gift of authority to us.

Honor is the opposite of rebellion.  Thus, to honor someone means to give them great respect, address them with humility, and give the highest place second only to God Himself. 

But why are we to honor?  We honor because God gives parents and authorities a certain hidden majesty.  Parents and other authorities are God’s representatives on earth, given by God for our protection and good.  These authoritative persons are gifts to and for us, for our well-being.  That is to say, God has instituted judges, police officers, soldiers, presidents, congressmen, and teachers to punish wrong, keep order, and uphold justice.  This is good. God has also instituted and given each of us parents, parents who took care of us while we were lying helplessly in our cribs, dirtying our diapers, and needing to be cleaned and fed.  Through parents God takes care of children, He took care of you and me.  This is good as well.

Police, governors, teachers, soldiers, moms, and dads, they are all for our own good.  Dads ‘father’ families; Mayors ‘father’ cities; Governors ‘father’ states; Presidents ‘father’ countries; but God fathers all of creation.  This is the divine gift described in the fourth commandment.

This means God wants you to view your parents as your most precious treasures on earth.  Even if parents seem odd or old fashioned.  Indeed, God commands you to honor your parents, but also for you to honor your teachers, police, politicians and all other authorities He has placed over you for your protection and good. 

With all that stated, I believe it is safe to say that we all can use a lesson in the fourth commandment, because even as adults we anger our parents and especially other authorities.  We are rebels at heart and do not like authority above us.  In fact, if I told you that all politicians were to be honored no matter how justified you may be in your dislike of them, what would your response be?  It’s kind of difficult to honor someone you dislike isn’t it?  Yet, this is what the fourth commandment calls us to do.  Indeed, there are no conditional statements or exceptions clauses in the fourth commandment that state we don’t have to honor democrats or that we don’t have to honor parents who are not hip and with the times.  No, the fourth commandment says to honor parents, to honor those in authority; period!  Even our Epistle reading from this evening, we hear the Apostle Paul calling the Christians in the city of Rome to honor their governing authorities, authorities who were persecuting them as Christians.  This is difficult for to process, is it not? 

This brings up a very interesting point though.  What is one to do when the governing authorities act contrary to God’s will?  Shall a citizen keep silent, embrace the fourth commandment, and honor the erring governing authority by sinning with them?  May this never be!  Rather than honor sin, as American citizens—who are also baptized saints—you are to work diligently and faithfully to correct the problems of the state through running for office, demonstrating, debating, and voting.  In other words, when the governing authorities enforce laws upon us as citizens that purposely cause us to violate conscious and violate the Word of God, with all tactfulness we obey God rather than man and thus oppose the state.[1]  We must find ways to be respectful to the offices that individuals were called to; however, we must refrain from the evil that may be commanded by an erring governing authority.  The bottom line is our loyalty to God is always first; we must obey God rather than men.

That makes sense in regard to governing authorities; however, what should one do when parents violate the Word of God and impose sin upon or cause their children to sin?  Are children and youth to honor their parents by sinning with their parent? If a child is asked to do something sinful, must they respect their parent and fulfill the evil deed?

Keep in mind that parenthood is also an office given by God and God wants you parents to carry out the duties of that office faithfully, so that you can bless and gift your children.  That means providing for your children, putting your children’s physical needs, not their wants, before your own desires.  It means training your children in God’s Word, teaching them the faith and making sure the church holds a prominent place in their lives.

But as previously mentioned, too often, and especially in the church, parents don’t want to take responsibility for their own children.  They prefer to pass off their religious instruction to someone else. 

Regrettably, parents sin and fail consistently in thought, word, and deed; children also consistently fail in thought, word and deed.  Parents fail to live up to their calling as parents towards their children and children fail to honor their parents as they should.  Otherwise stated, parents were not called to the high office of parenthood to neglect or spoil or be cruel to their children.  They were not called to parenthood to lead children down the dark path of sin.  God did not bless a man with fatherhood so that he could abusively dominate and neglect his children.  A woman was not called into motherhood to abort her child.  Child abuse, mental cruelty, spiritual neglect, cold-heartedness, domestic fighting, provoking children—these things have nothing to do with God’s intentions and the role of parenthood, for they are sins against the calling and vocation of parenthood and sins against children and youth.
  
As a result of sin in families, children can rebel against their parents and parents will blame their children or someone else.  And around and around the dysfunction goes.  Pointing fingers, complaining, rebellion, and on and on and on and on… No confession of sin and no absolution and no healing.

This brings us to a very important crossroads.  It is clear that God has instituted governing authorities for the purpose of punishing wrongdoers, so that we might have order in our society and nation.  It is also clear that parenthood is a role that people are placed into, where parents are to be vehicles in which God brings forth life, and how the Lord intends the life of children to be sustained.  Otherwise stated, it is clear that the family is a kind of mini-church unto itself.  The father is kind of like a mini-pastor to his family; leading, teaching and sharing the Word with his family.  Fathers and mothers create, nurture and shape their children, both physically and spiritually.  This is how God works through parents. Furthermore, it is clear that we are to honor these parental and governing authorities, because in honoring them, we honor the Lord.  Finally, it is clear that we are to obey God, rather than man when parents and governing authorities violate the Word of God and attempt to lead us into sin.  Yes, we are to respectfully avoid the sin commanded by authorities and parents, while respecting the office and working for change.  This is all very clear and frankly somewhat common–sensical. 

What hasn’t been covered yet and what may not be clear to us is what are we to do when parents, governing authorities, children, and citizens fail?  What shall we do with our failures?  Shall parents suck it up and just try harder when they fail?  Shall children pull themselves up by their small boot-straps and just be more diligent to honor mom and dad?  As citizens shall we attempt to be more disciplined to watch our tongue?  Or, maybe we should just pretend that things are o.k., hide the abuse and sin—sweep it under the rug and act like all is well!

My friends, while determination, discipline, endurance, and so forth are all noble endeavors that may help externally uphold the fourth commandment in our lives as children, parents, and citizens, it has to be stated that the fourth commandment needs to lead us to Mt. Calvary where confession of sins and forgiveness happens.  For apart from Mt. Calvary, we are left with no absolution to our rebellion against the fourth commandment; we are left with no way forward or out.  No Calvary means no hope; damned.

Indeed, we must be driven to Calvary’s Cross, for the fourth commandment not only shows us the way things ought to be from our gift giving Lord, but it also reveals to us that we do not respect authority as we ought, nor do we properly fulfill our authoritative roles towards those who we are charged to oversee.  Yes, the fourth commandment not only shows us the gifts of authority, but it also reveals our sin against those people in authority.  It reveals your rebellious heart.  It reveals a heart full of anarchy.  It reveals a much deeper problem of a heart that rejects the gift of authority. 

Lord, have mercy on our rebellion towards authority.  Christ, have mercy on us and the wounds that we have received from abusive authority to us.  Lord, have mercy.

Take comfort my friends.  Be of good cheer though.  God has gifted you a gracious promise in response to your rebellion.  Receive Jesus and His authoritative Word of forgiveness, life, and salvation—for your rebellion against authority. 

“I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and the Holy Spirit.”

Be washed and healed from the authoritative abuse that you have received in the forgiveness of His cross delivered to you in your baptism,

“I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” 

Be refreshed by His salutary gift of His Holy Meal,

“The body and blood given and shed for you, for the forgiveness of your rebellion.”

Be strengthened in faith towards the authoritative Lord by His Word and Sacraments—for you.  Be strengthened in love for those in authority by His Word and Sacraments—given for you.  Be nurtured in the knowledge of the Lord and His will by the Holy Spirit working through the Word—for you.  Be strengthened, gifted, forgiven, and loved in Christ’s church, as you are returned to your baptismal identity.

The Lord, create in you a clean heart to see the gift of the fourth commandment.  The Lord, renew a right spirit within you to walk in the fourth commandment honoring those in authority.  The Lord, restore to you the joy of your salvation and the comfort of seeing the gifts of authority from the Lord. 

May the peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.





[1]  See Acts 5:29.