1 April
2010
St. Athanasius Lutheran Church
Holy
Maundy Thursday Vienna, VA
“Precious Words: For You”
Text: Jeremiah 31:31-34; Luke 20:7-20
[This is
(mostly) a sermon I preached three years ago. In preparing for this day, as I
went back and read this sermon, I like it so much that I decided to proclaim it
again - with a few small changes.]
Grace,
mercy, and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ. Amen.
The
prophet Jeremiah proclaimed to God’s people that “the days were coming . . . when the Lord would make a new
covenant” with them. But like everything else that Jeremiah
prophesied, the people didn’t much care. They had more important things to do, more
important things to worry about, more important things to give their attention
to than this crazy prophet who never said anything good to them, but kept
telling them to repent and return to the Lord.
They were a people of God turned
worldly, with their own prophets telling them what they wanted to hear, and using
God instead of worshiping Him. This is what God means when He says they
broke His covenant. It wasn’t just that they sinned, or broke a few rules here and
there – it was that while He
was to them a faithful husband, providing for them and caring for them, they
were adulterous and unfaithful. They turned their back to Him. They ignored His
Word. They were unfaithful to Him.
And so God would give His idolatrous
bride to the false gods she prostituted herself with. He would not force her to
stay with Him. And so He withdrew His husbandly protection and allowed the
armies of the nations to conquer them and take them into exile. For if other
gods they want, then other gods they shall have.
But God took no delight in this. No
gloating, no “I told
you so!” In fact, even before
it happened, God planned to bring back His bride. He would not, could not,
abandon her forever! For though He withdrew His protection, He could never withdraw
His love. No, a new covenant I will make, God says. Not like the old
one. I will not just give them my Word, I will put it in them. I
will renew my vows to them and they to me: I will be their God,
and they will be my people. And last (but certainly not least): I
will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.
And though God’s people ignored these words when
Jeremiah first spoke them, how precious would they later become! For what
unfaithful husband or wife, returning to their spouse, would not want to
hear those words: I forgive you. And not only forgive you, I will forget it.
I will never bring it up again!
Well dear brothers and sisters in
Christ, tonight those words are spoken to you!
To you who (like the people in
Jeremiah’s time)
get so caught up in the things of this world and life that you have little time
for God and His Word. To you who have sinned in thought, word, desire, and
deed. To you who have been unfaithful and sought your life, pleasure, and good
in the things of this world. Repent and return. For tonight, your Lord comes for
you and says: I forgive you.
For tonight is the night of Jeremiah’s new covenant. This is the
Passover above all others that Jesus desired to eat with His disciples. The
Passover that would change all Passovers. Tonight is the night when the
bridegroom will lay down His life for you, His bride, that death pass over you
and descend upon Him. Tonight is the night when He will be exiled, and you
brought home; when He will be broken, that you may be made
whole; when He will be condemned, so that you will be forgiven.
Tonight is the night when Jesus not
only gives you His Word, but puts it in you. For before He lays down His
body and blood on the cross, He lays it on the Table, for His disciples to eat
and drink. This is My body. This is My blood. The Word made flesh put in
us, that we may live in Him. And be again one flesh with Him. All your sins
forgiven, and forgotten. Tonight is the night.
And while our Lord promises to
forgive and forget, He call on us to remember. Not our sin, but all that
He has done for us. His faithfulness. Do this in remembrance of Me.
To remember the
grace of God that is uncaused, unasked-for, unprecedented, and unlimited.
The grace of God in coming down from
Heaven and being born a man.
To remember the grace of God in finding the lost sinner, welcoming the
outcast;
healing
the blind and the deaf; the leper and the lame;
raising
the dead, and having compassion.
And to remember that all of this is
for you.
To remember the grace of God in that
what I did not deserve, God provided.
What I did not ask for, God gave.
When I did not seek, God
came.
To remember that God would not, could
not, abandon you and me. But came for us, and renewed His vows to us: I
will be your God, and you shall be my people. Not just for a time, but
forever.
Take eat. Take drink.
This is the new covenant. For you.
Tonight, that new covenant in His
blood is here for us. Indeed, it is here for us every Sunday. For we need it.
The siren song of satan and sin is strong, but the love of our Saviour even
stronger. Calling us back. Forgiving our sin, our rebellion, our
unfaithfulness. And never bringing it up again.
And so tonight our Lord goes as it is
written of Him.
It is the night on which He was
betrayed – handed over to
sinful men.
But He wanted that, for is
that not what He does for us here?
Handing Himself over to sinful men
and women.
Then it was to be consumed on the
cross;
now it is to be consumed
by us.
But for the very same reason:
To forgive my iniquity and remember
my sin no more.
How precious those words!
Promised through the prophet Jeremiah
some 600 years before Jesus came.
Tonight delivered.
In the Name of the Father, and of the
(+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.