Sunday, August 30, 2015

The Martyrdom of St. John the Baptist


St. Mark 6:14–29

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit –

Who else but the Church of God sings praise on such a day as the Martyrdom of St. John the Baptist? Who else can confidently call it a feast and sing a Te Deum? The Church sings. And her song is a song of Truth. It is a song learned by hearing the Word of Truth from her Lord’s lips and echoing that Truth back to Him. It is a song raised above every lie born in the darkness of men’s hearts. It is a song of forgiveness and victory in the Lord’s death and resurrection.
Still, on the face of it, the martyrdom of John the Baptist doesn’t look anything like victory. It is a dark and sordid tragedy, filled with politics and back-stabbing, corruption and rash vows, lust, vengeance, wrongful imprisonment and a grizzly spectacle for an execution. It’s hard to hear the song of Truth in this cacophony of sin. But it’s there in John’s preaching. John’s voice rang out in the wilderness. The Law of God resounded in its truth and purity. Repent! Repent, Herod! Repent, Herodias! What you are doing is not lawful. And the hearts of believing Judeans soared at hearing such a preacher. A true prophet of God, proclaiming God’s Law against the wickedness of the elite. And we also rightly delight in the Law of God, in hearing God’s judgments delivered in such a violent and shameless world.
Yet, even as we sing our Amens to John’s sermon, his preaching convicts us too. For like Herod, we have lusted after what is not ours. Like Herodias, we have harbored anger and bitterness. We have been offended by those who speak the Truth. We have defended and rationalized even our most blatant sins. And even though we don’t have a prophet to behead, we have sought to silence God’s Word in less obvious ways. Avoiding the Word of Truth or pretending it doesn’t apply is no less damning than chopping off the preacher’s head. Of course, none of that can actually silence the Truth. Despite his beheading, John’s preaching has come down to us in the Spirit’s Holy Scripture and is still proclaimed from pulpits throughout the ages. Prepare the way of the Lord. Repent.
Prepare the way of the Lord. The Lord who baptizes you with His very own Name. The Lord who baptizes you with His very own Spirit. The Lord who died and rose again in order to give you that Baptism. For Christ didn’t suffer so that you wouldn’t suffer. He wasn’t crucified so that you would be spared the cross. He didn’t die so that you wouldn’t die. Rather Christ suffered, was crucified, and died so that in Him – united with Him in His Baptism – You might be plunged into His same death and so also emerge alive again in His resurrection.
Who is the real forerunner here? In history John was born before Jesus, preached before Jesus, and was killed before Jesus. But in Truth, Jesus is the One who runs before us all. Running into death and hell, dragging sin and Satan down with Him. Running before John and before all His saints, preparing the way for us through death and into life.
Christ is our Head, we are his Body. Can the head rise and leave its members in the grave? No. Just as surely as Christ is risen from the dead so shall we. Just as surely as Christ our Head reunites Himself with His members, so shall the head of St. John be reunited to his body. The saints in Christ do not die in vain. The martyrs give witness to the Truth with their words and also with their blood. They witness to that blood that forgives all sin and gives everlasting life.
This is why the Church still sings a Te Deum and holds a feast on the day of a martyrdom. We praise You, O God; the noble army of martyrs praise You. The holy Church throughout all the world does acknowledge You. The Church is an army for the Lord. But not an army with marching feet and shining swords. This is a singing army. Her weapon is God’s Word – written, spoken, preached, and sung. The holy Church sings the Truth of God as she has learned the song from the Lord Himself, and from His faithful preachers like John. The nations rage, the kings of the earth rise up, believers are killed, and the wicked jeer, making up parodies to mock the Truth. But still the Church sings over the din and disharmony of lies. Satan whispers his twisted tunes of doubt and despair, but the Church sings to soothe the troubled conscience with the forgiveness of sins.
Ultimately, she sings it in preparation for that Day when the whole heavenly host will be united around the throne of the Lamb. You are the king of glory, O Christ; You are the everlasting Son of the Father. When You took upon Yourself to deliver man, You humbled Yourself to be born of a Virgin. When You had overcome the sharpness of death, You opened the kingdom of heaven to all believers. On that Day, John and the goodly fellowship of prophets will rise up, along with the glorious company of the apostles, and with you too, baptized saints of God. All joined and living forever with Your Head, the Lord Jesus Christ, and singing a joyful and everlasting Alleluia.

In the Holy Name of Jesus –

Trinity Lutheran Church, Cedar Rapids, IA
Iowa District East Worship Workshop
August 29, 2015