16 April 2023
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Easter 2
Vienna, VA
“The Confidence to Go On”
Text:
Acts
5:29-42; John 20:19-31; 1 Peter 1:3-9
Alleluia! Christ is Risen! [He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
See? This is exactly what they were afraid
of. This is exactly what they were afraid was going to happen. And it
is. This is exactly why they shut themselves in that room and locked the
doors and windows. The Jewish leaders were after them. They had crucified
Jesus, and now they were after them. The book of Acts tells us how disciples
were being arrested, threatened, imprisoned, and beaten. And more than that,
the Jewish leaders wanted to kill them, just as they had Jesus. It was all
happening. Like the fears you have that show up in your dreams. Like that you
have a presentation at work or school and the day
comes and you don’t have it! Except you wake up and go on. For them, it
was real.
And yet they went on. They were arrested and
threatened, yet they went on. They were thrown in prison, yet they
went on. They were beaten, yet they went on. Not because they
were the ones who woke up from a bad dream, but because Jesus did! Jesus is the
one who “woke up” from the dead after being threatened, arrested, imprisoned,
beaten, and finally crucified. All that the Jewish leaders threw at Him and all
that Rome could do to Him had been done. They were out of ammo. They had
nothing left. And they lost. Jesus was alive, risen
from the dead. So the disciples could go on.
So they could unlock the doors and windows of
that room they were hiding in and go back out. Jesus had come to them and given
them the peace they needed, the forgiveness they needed, and the joy and
assurance they needed. That was real, too. It was no dream. They heard Jesus,
they touched Jesus, they ate with Jesus. And it was
the same Jesus. The nail holes were still there, the hole in His side
was still there - just ask Thomas! But one thing was no longer there - death.
Death had met its match, and lost.
So the disciples who were there that night went
out and told Thomas, and after receiving the Holy Spirit Jesus had promised to send
them, they went to the Temple to tell everyone. Which was like going into the
lion’s den, isn’t it?Why go
there?
Well, they went to the place where the curtain
had been torn in two from top to bottom at Jesus’ death (and perhaps hastily
repaired and replaced by the Jews) to proclaim what that meant - that it was
torn in two because it was no longer needed! God and man were no longer
separated, but had been reconciled, brought together again, by Jesus.
They went to the place also where sacrifices were
offered - to proclaim that they, too, were no longer needed! For the Lamb of God had been sacrificed and His blood cleanses us
from all sin. His blood now poured upon us in Baptism and poured into us
in His Supper. The forgiveness and life we need is the forgiveness and life we
have, in Jesus. They proclaimed these things in the very Temple where they were
and were happening . . . and people were listening. And people were believing. And so the Jewish leaders were fuming.
Perhaps here is a good place to stop in the story
and think a bit about our situation today. Are there things that we, too, are
saying that cause other to fume and rage? Some who may be powerful and some who
may just be loud. Who say: You must say this. You must do that. You must go along
with what we say is right and true and just, or else! And if you dare to
disagree, you must do so quietly and not in our modern-day “temples” - the
public squares, the social media sites - of our world today.
And you know the issues, what is causing this
today. You must not say that marriage is between one man and one woman. You
must not say that men are men and women are women, and that gender is of the
body and not of the mind. You must not say that all lives matter, no matter
what color, no matter if they are in the womb or out of the womb, no matter how
old or weak or confused or disabled they are. You must not say that what
someone thinks is right is wrong. You must not say that Jesus is the only way
to the Father. In fact, do you remember the story of when a lawyer asked Jesus
what the great commandment in the Law was (Matthew 22:35-40)? Today, I think, the expected answer
would be: Thou shalt not judge! Thou shalt not judge what anyone
believes. Thou shalt not judge what anyone does. Or else.
So some people lock themselves in - in their
rooms, in their houses, in their own little worlds - like the disciples did
that night. Afraid. Afraid of what will happen to
them. And if we’re honest, we all at least have moments like that; maybe
more than a few. When we should speak but remain silent. When we should act but
don’t. When our fears get the best of us. Which is why we confess our sin here every week. And this is
one of the things I know I confess every week - maybe you, too? That I have
lived in fear, that I have lived as if Jesus is still in the tomb and lost,
that I have lived more worried about what the world thinks than what God
thinks, that I have lived as if the world and those in the world have power
over my life, whether I live or die.
But they don’t. They don’t! For just as a risen
and living Jesus came to those frightened disciples who locked themselves in
that room, so He comes to us here with the peace we need, the forgiveness we
need, and the joy and assurance we need. The same Jesus
with the same victory, the same life, and the same gifts.
The same Jesus they thought they had power over. Turns out, they didn’t. He
is the one with the power of life and death. He is the one who woke up from
death and came out of tomb, alive. And now He says to you: I forgive you
all your sins. And He baptizes you into His resurrection and raises you
to a new life with Him. And He feeds you with food that will not and can not perish - His own Body and Blood. And so like the
disciples, we can now go out from this place. We came locked in our fears and
sins, and we leave with His forgiveness and life. Free.
So the Jewish leaders were fuming and wanted to
kill the apostles, still thinking they were the ones who had the
power of life and death. But one of them, named Gamaliel, had some wise words. Don’t
fight against God! If this is from men, it will fail. History shows us
that. But if it is from God, you will not be able to stop it.
Which is good for us to
hear as well.
Those things we see in our world today, the sin which seems so pervasive, the
rebellion against God and His Word and truth, this movement that seems to be
winning, it is of men and so will fail. And what is of God, His Word,
His life, His forgiveness, will go on. It will not, it can not be stopped. Jesus had said the same thing
earlier when He told the disciples: the gates of hell would not be able to
stand against the confession of His Church (Matthew 16:18).
Not that it will be easy. The Jewish leaders beat
the apostles before letting them go. I’m not sure exactly what that means -
were they whipped? Beaten with a rod? Did they receive 39 lashes? Whatever it
was, I’m sure it wasn’t enjoyable. But it also did not stop them. It
could not. In fact, they rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer
dishonor for the name of Jesus. Which is quite a turn
around! From being afraid of this very thing to rejoicing in it! And not
only did it not stop them, it compelled them even more to continue. To go out and go on.
So maybe you will be beaten; tongue-lashed maybe,
at the least. If you are, rejoice and be glad, Jesus said, for your
reward is great in heaven (Matthew 5:12). You are among the blessed who have not
seen and yet have believed. And while we often seek the blessing and
approval of the world and our peers, that, as Gamaliel reminds us, is of men
and so will pass away. And sometimes very quickly! How much better is the
blessing and approval of our heavenly Father, which will not pass away. Which, as Jesus showed us, not even
death can end. For it is not the world or anyone in
the world who has the power of life and death, Jesus does. And that life
He has given to you. You have that inheritance that is imperishable,
undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you, as we heard from Peter
today. For (as Peter also said) you have been born again to a
living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead
through your Baptism into Jesus’ death and resurrection. And He is keeping your
life and inheritance and guarding you, through trials and challenges, through
joys and sorrows, through all the ups and downs you go through. For in a world
that is ever changing, there is one thing that does not: Jesus. The one still coming to us today with His peace.
So what’s going on with you? Maybe it’s something you’re
battling, maybe something that’s happening to a loved one, maybe a fear of
tomorrow and what lay in the future. Satan tries to magnify all these things
and make them look really big and powerful and block out Jesus. Make you think
you’re on your own. Make you try to take him on by yourself. Don’t try it! You’ll
lose. Big.
But Christ crucified is our North Star. Christ
crucified is our guiding light. That is, not just Christ crucified - but
as we are celebrating this season - now risen from the dead. So that is
and must be what shines forth here, in this place, in the Church. That in the
midst of a world and life seeking to block out Jesus, to block out our hope and
joy and forgiveness, we constantly come back to where Jesus is, where the same
Jesus with the nail holes and hole in His side are for us today, to be
re-oriented, to be forgiven, to be raised to life again, to be filled with
confidence and joy. To know that He lives, and if He lives, so do
I, and so will I. For He who unlocked the bars of death and the
grave, can also unlock the fears in our hearts.
So like the disciples, we can go out, and we can
go on. Until one day we go out from this world and go on to that life where
there is only life, where death is no more, sin is no more, and evil is no
more. For that is of God and so - as Gamaliel rightly said - the life and
kingdom that will not, can not fail.
For Christ is risen!
[He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
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.