3 December 2023
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
The First Sunday of Advent
Vienna, VA
“Rending the Heavens”
Text: Isaiah 64:1-9; Mark
11:1-10; 1 Corinthians 1:3-9
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Oh that you would rend the heavens and come down, the prophet Isaiah
prayed. Come down with fire, fear, and trembling!
Maybe Isaiah was thinking of something like what
happened with Moses, when God came down and spoke to Moses out of
a bush that was burning with fire and yet not consumed. Come down like that!
We need saving.
Or maybe he was thinking of what happened during
the time of Elijah, when the fire of God came down and consumed the
sacrifice Elijah had prepared, while none of the 450 prophets of Baal could get
their god to do anything. A resounding victory, proving who
the true God is.
Rend the heavens! Tear open the heavens! The nuclear option. Show ‘em whose boss, God. Perhaps you’ve thought that, too.
Wished that, too. When sin and evil
and the enemies of the church and the truth seem to be winning. A little
shock and awe might just be what they need. Use your power, God! Squash ‘em! Do something to put your enemies in their place. So
they know they can’t mess with You and get away with
it.
The problem is . . . the God we
want to rend the heavens and come down and bring the hammer down on
others, is the God who should rend the heavens and come down and bring them
hammer down on us! For as Isaiah went on to say, We have all
become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a polluted
garment. That is, even our best actions and good works are polluted
with sin and deserve the fire of God. Though we don’t always
see it that way. The sins of others are usually worse than ours, we
think. Or maybe we’re just better at hiding them. Or have better excuses. Or
our sins are just more respectable, more socially common, or even legal.
When Isaiah wrote this, it was the Assyrians who
were the problem. And just about any nation, when compared against the
Assyrians, would come out looking better! The Assyrians the roughest, toughest,
rudest, crudest, meanest and most proudly violent nation up to that time, and
maybe even up to our time. They struck fear in everyone, and flexed their
muscles without mercy. Including upon God’s own people, Israel. . . . Well
that’s not right! We’re not as bad as them! No one is as bad as
them! Rend the heavens and come down, God! Burn
‘em up, God! Smash ‘em!
Give ‘em what they deserve!
Well, God will. He has a day and a time set for
that. But you don’t want to be the nail under that hammer when that day comes!
And at that time, Israel would have been. Their idolatry, wickedness, and evil
were at all time highs, and rising. They might
not have been the 9 or 10 the Assyrians were on the vileness scale, but is 7 or
8 anything to brag about?
So God was using the Assyrians for a little tough
love for His people. Yes, the big, bad Assyrians! For better a few hammer taps
now to bring His people to repentance than the smashing blow on the Last Day.
And as big and bad as Assyria seemed, that’s really all this was. Though
it seemed a crushing blow, it was just a few hammer taps when compared
to what the Last Day will be like. So even though Assyria thought they were the
world power second to none, their day would come. So Isaiah ends with a plea
for mercy. Kind of his own kyrie . . .
But now, O Lord, you are our Father;
we are the clay, and you
are our potter;
we are all the work of
your hand.
Be not so terribly angry, O Lord,
and remember not iniquity
forever.
Behold, please look, we
are all your people.
Please look. The Lord does. Nothing escapes His
knowledge, though maybe it sometimes seems that way. Though
maybe at times it seems as if the Lord has overlooked you or forgotten me.
He sees. He knows. And He acts. For He would, in fact, answer
Isaiah’s plea. He did rend the heavens and come down
. . . He just had a different idea how. Not the nuclear option, but
the merciful option. Not fire and
fear, but meekness and weakness. He would come not with the power of the
sword, but with the power of His Word. His Word made flesh. And when the
time came for that to be revealed (for until that day, Jesus looked and acted just
like any other boy and young man from Nazareth) . . . when the time came for
that to be revealed, Mark tells us that when Jesus was baptized, God did,
in fact, rend the heavens! The heavens were torn open, he
says, rended, and the Spirit
descended on Jesus like a dove (Mark 1:10-11). Now God would use His power. Now
God would vanquish His enemies.
And though by this time Assyria was long gone,
the enemies behind that enemy remained: sin and evil, death and decay, satan and his demons. You see,
these are the real problem, not Assyria. Nations come and go, people come and
go, but the enemy remains the same. The enemy that really isn’t interested in
nations, except as a mans to
an end - he’s interested in you. In bringing you
down. Down in sin. Down to
hell with him. To rend your heart and your conscience
and dump all of his lying nonsense and wicked ways into your heart and mind.
That we not only become unrighteous, but so much so
that we don’t even know what good looks like anymore. And look around.
Look around at what is being called “good” in our world today. Is it? Really? Or with all our righteous deeds like a
polluted garment, as Isaiah said, do we now look at polluted garments
and think them clean? That would be a problem. And it is. Consider how
your own thinking has changed . . . and the inroads satan has made in your life . . .
So God rended the
heavens and came down.
The Father sent His Son in the flesh, and then He sent the Spirit upon Jesus
that day in the Jordan. And with the power of His Word, those ancient enemies
were being overcome. The sick and diseased were healed at His Word. The
lepers were cleansed at His Word. The demons were expelled at His
Word. The dead were raised at His Word. Sinners were forgiven at
His Word. But all of that was prologue to the real work of the Word - when
the Father sent His Son to the cross. When all the sickness and brokenness
of the world would be heaped on the Word made flesh. When all the sin of
the world would be heaped on the Word made flesh. When death would
swallow up the Word made flesh. When like with Israel and Assyria, all
the sin and evil, death and decay, and satan
and his demons seemed to win. When the cries of the people of Hosanna!
as Jesus entered Jerusalem would, by the end of that
week, become just cries, tears, sorrow, and sadness. When the people would
again ask, God, what are you doing? Why are you doing this?
Israel asked that when Assyria came in and
conquered them. God, why are you doing this? Some asked that, as
we heard today, when the disciples went to get the colt Jesus rode into
Jerusalem on. And the disciples certainly asked that when a lifeless Jesus was
taken down from the cross and laid in the tomb. God,
why are you doing this? And the answer we heard today is the answer to all
these questions of all these times: The Lord has need of it.
But there’s a second part to that answer: The Lord has need of it . . . to Hosanna!
us, to save us.
For just as the Lord used evil Assyria not to
destroy His people but to save His people, to bring them back to Him in
repentance and faith, so He uses evil death to save His people from death. To
break the grip sin and death held on us not by rending the heavens, but by
rending the tomb, that by His resurrection, not only He, but all of us, too, be
victorious. That our ancient enemies be defeated once and for
all. So Lord, why are you doing this? Because we
have need of it!
And all that we need, our Father has promised to
provide. It may not be how we think or what we think or when we think, but He
will, and it will be better than we think. Better for
the long-term, for eternity. Better that we not try to do it on
our own, but rely on Him. Better not to make us feel good about
ourselves, but turn to Him in repentance and faith. Better that we see our
polluted garments as polluted garments, and the righteousness of Him,
His ways, and His Word. Better in that we not learn how to forgive
ourselves, but hear that He forgives us. That’s what we need, and that’s
why He does all He does. For no other reason than to Hosanna! us.
And so it is as true for us as it was for the
Corinthians Christians that Paul wrote to when he said: you are not
lacking in any spiritual gift, as you wait for the revealing of our Lord Jesus
Christ, who will sustain you to the end, guiltless in the day of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
You are not lacking. All you need, you have.
In any spiritual gift. In any
gifts of the Spirit. By which he means first and foremost not
cool, unusual stuff people might be able to do, but the gifts of the Spirit
they had and we have here: the gifts through which the Spirit comes and works
and gives us the gifts of heaven: Baptism, Absolution, Gospel, and Supper.
These are what sustain us to the end, guiltless
in the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. All we need, we have. As Jesus rends
the heavens and comes to us today, not on the meekness and
weakness of a donkey, but in the meekness and weakness of water, words,
and bread and wine. But then and now, for the same reason: to Hosanna!
you.
And then when our Lord rends the heavens
one last time and comes down on the Last Day, all the Hosannas! cried out by a multitude of mouths across a multitude of
centuries will once and for all be fulfilled as the King and the kingdom comes.
Until that day, we live in repentance for our sins and faith that all that our
Lord is doing He is doing for us. That Assyria is not winning, He is. The evil
cannot win, He has. That our polluted garments are cleansed
by His blood. And that here our Father has provided all we need.
If you want to try to rend the heavens and get to heaven on your
own, you can, though I don’t think you’ll get very far. Better is to
know Him who did, and who will again. And who, when He does, will take you
home.
So Saviour of
the nations (LSB
#332), Saviour of all sinners, Saviour
of me! come. That’s our Advent prayer. And that
is Jesus’ Advent joy! To do just that. To Hosanna you.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.