Sunday, April 2, 2017

Fifth Sunday in Lent - Judica


In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

I think John, chapter 8, is where Jesus gets most exasperated with the stubborn Jews and their refusal to believe Him. He gets in their face and challenges them. He asks them flat out, “Why do you not understand what I say?” They have no reason to reject Him, no legitimate reason to even be suspicious of Him. In His life He is innocent, so He asks them, “Which one of you convicts me of sin?” In His doctrine or teaching He is blameless, so He asks them, “If I tell the truth, why do you not believe me?” But the Jews have no good answer to these questions. They simply don’t believe, which means they are not God’s children. They slander His life by saying, “You are a Samaritan!” They deny His doctrine by saying, “You have a demon!” Since they don’t receive Christ’s teaching and believe, they must reject Him and destroy Him.
Every preacher and every person who holds an office in the Church should follow the example of Christ here, because at some point we will encounter hostility and stubbornness from the world, so we should not make matters worse. Every preacher or officeholder should strive to demonstrate an innocent life and irreproachable doctrine. Of course, the difference between us and Christ is that we are never without sin before God. So we should try to maintain a holy life in the eyes of our fellow men, while trusting only in the righteousness of Christ for salvation. But doctrine is different, because it is not a matter of conduct, a matter of trying, it is a matter of truth or falsehood. Doctrine is either from God, the Father of Truth, or it’s from the Devil, the father of lies. So, our doctrine must be good and pure so that it stands not only before men but also before God.
As I said, at some point we all encounter hostility and stubbornness from the world, so what should we do? Again, let us look at the example of Christ: He lets the attacks and slanders at His life go and He endures the shame. He tolerates it when they call Him a Samaritan and He doesn’t bother to contradict the ridiculous accusation. But He defends the doctrine, the teaching. He says, “I do not have a demon.” He does not teach the Devil’s lies. He says, “I honor My Father.” He preaches the grace of God because that is how God is truly honored.
When we are attacked we should forget about our lives. Let them slander us. But we cannot let it go when the doctrine is attacked. The doctrine is not ours but God’s, and He does not tolerate lies. We should risk all we have for the purity and honor of God’s Word. If I perish, if I even lose my life, no great harm is done. But if I let God’s Word perish and I remain silent, then not only do I harm God’s honor but I also harm the world, because it is only through the Word of God that the world is saved. If I make people angry at me by speaking God’s Word, then not much has been lost. But if I do not speak the Truth, then I dishonor God and I condemn the people by not giving them the Word that they need to hear. And if people mock me or whisper lies about me, oh well. God will handle that. He is the judge and He will not let them go unpunished.
God promotes and upholds our honor. He did it for Christ. After all the mockery and lies He endured, God raised Him up again. The resurrection is the vindication of Christ. And He will do it for us too. All who believe and wait on God’s judgment will be proven right in the end. That is why we pray with Christ: Vindicate me, O God, and defend my cause against an ungodly people, from the deceitful and unjust man deliver me! For you are the God in whom I take refuge.
Now, Jesus not only defends His doctrine against the Jews’ lies, but He also declares that His doctrine has power over sin, death, and the devil. Truly, truly, I say to you, if anyone keeps my word, he will never see death. He’s not speaking about the word of the Law here, but the word of the Gospel. The Word of the Gospel talks about Christ who died for our sins. The Word of the Gospel presents Christ and His righteousness to us. It gives Him to us as the One who has overcome sin, death, and the devil. So, whoever grasps and holds onto this Word, grasps and holds onto Christ. And so, through this Word you are set free from eternal death.
This also explains what Jesus means by “keeping” His Word. He’s not talking about the kind of keeping we do when we keep the Law by doing its works. The Word of the Gospel must be kept in the heart by faith. That is the way we go through death but never see it.
We must all go into death, but a Christian does not see death, he is not terrified by it, he does not lose faith because of it. A Christian that keeps Christ’s Word by faith does not see death but only sees his Savior and eternal life. Jesus made a similar point in John, chapter 11: Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live. A Christian that keeps Christ’s Word has already been redeemed from eternal death. For a Christian, death is only sleep, and he goes through death and into life. That is the kind of power Christ and His Word have. And that is why the Jews are wrong when they claim that Abraham and the prophets are dead. Abraham is not dead. The prophets are not dead. In the midst of death they are still alive because they believed and kept the Word of the Gospel which forgives sins and gives eternal life.
Jesus kept pushing back against the Jews’ arguments. He won’t let things slide. He continues to defend His doctrine. Jesus made His second-most offensive statement to the Jews when He declared, “Your father Abraham rejoiced that he would see my day. He saw it and was glad.” Of course, this doesn’t mean that Abraham saw Jesus with the eyeballs in his head, but he saw Jesus by faith. He saw Jesus when he believed the Word spoken to him: In your Seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed (Genesis 22:18). In that Word, Abraham saw that his descendant would be born of a virgin, live a truly innocent life, suffer for sins of the world, rise again, and cause this message to be preached and cover the world with blessing. In hearing and keeping that Word, Abraham saw the day of Christ, the time of the Gospel. And now you, today, some 4000 years after Abraham, some 2000 years after Christ’s death and resurrection, this same Word is given to you. And this is the Day of Christ. This is the time of the Gospel. And if anyone keeps this Word he will never see death.
And yet after all this, the Jews still resist, still deny, still refuse to believe. So, Jesus kicks it up a notch and makes His most offensive statement yet: “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am.” In other words, you want to know how I can say all this? You want me to answer your silly objections and explain Myself? Okay. I existed before Abraham. I am the One who was and is and is to come, with no beginning and no end. I am who I am (Exodus 3:14). I am the one true eternal God.
And here’s why it was necessary for the Christ to be true God: If the person who sacrificed Himself for us were only human and not God, it would not help, because even if He were perfectly sinless, His life would only count as a sacrifice for one other human life. But when Jesus hangs on the cross, God Himself hangs in the balance. Only the eternal God who is also a Man can be the sacrifice for all men. What brings the eternal blessing and victory over all sin and death is that the Seed of Abraham, the Son of the Virgin, is also the true God who gives Himself for us. How can we possibly praise Him enough? How can we possibly wrap our puny minds around this great mystery? By faith we keep it and gratefully bow before it.
But the Jews, along with many others, refuse to do that. Sinful humans will never stop taking offense at Jesus’ Words, never stop throwing stones at Him or slandering Him. And Christ hides Himself from them and leaves their temple. He will only be found by those who receive His Word.
So, let us take care that we never resist Christ’s instruction and force Him to hide His loving face from us. Let us never anger or frustrate Christ with lies or with apathy. Let us always approach our Teacher and Savior with humility, with a desire to learn and understand, with a hunger to receive Christ and His righteousness alone in His Holy Word and in His Blessed Sacrament. In the next two weeks, let us humbly follow Christ our Lord, and by faith see the salvation He won for us on the cross and in the empty tomb. Send out Your light and Your truth, O Lord;  let them lead me; let them bring me to Your holy hill and to Your dwelling!

In the Holy + Name of Jesus. Amen.


Martin Luther’s Sermon: Luther’s Works, Vol. 76, pp.409–414.