8 March 2023
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Lent 2 Midweek
Vienna, VA
“One Man. Alone.”
In the Name of Jesus. Amen.
They would all be offended and scattered. The
Shepherd would be one man. Alone.
Peter thought he could be one faithful man. Even
if all the others deny you, I never will, he said. But he would. He
could not be what he wanted to be.
Peter, James, and John would all fall asleep.
Jesus would pray, one man. Alone.
He alone would drink the cup His Father gave Him.
He alone could.
Judas was one man, but not really. He came with a
detachment and officers from the chief priests and Pharisees. He
could not be one man. Alone.
Jesus was one man against the power arrayed
against Him. One man from whom a simple spoken word conquered
all the might of man. Until He gave
Himself into their hands. To fulfill the word that of those you
gave me I have lost none. He would not lose even one man.
Peter again tried to be one faithful man, not
this time with his words but with his sword. But in drawing the sword he was
not being one man, alone, but acting as all men do.
Then the disciples fled,
every one of them, as prophesied. Leaving Jesus one man.
Alone.
A certain young man followed along, but ran away,
leaving Jesus one man. Alone.
So Caiaphas had it right, more right than he knew
- that it would be expedient that one man - one man, alone -
should die for the people. But not just expedient, more than that: God’s
will. That Jesus should die for us. One man. Alone.
And that one man is enough. That one man who is
more than just one man, but the one and only Son of God in human flesh. One man
for all, that all men might be saved in Him, in the
one man. Alone.
Alone is one of the great words of the
Reformation. By grace alone, by faith alone, by Scripture
alone, by Christ alone. But all of those alones, grounded in this
one man, alone, on the cross. God’s grace by Christ alone, our faith from and
in Christ alone, and Christ revealed to us by Scripture alone. Everything that
came before this flowing to the cross, and everything that comes after
flowing from it. This is the turning point not just for Jesus, and not
just for Scripture, but for all of history. Many might deny that today, but it’s
true nonetheless.
Tonight we see all the weakness of men, and the
strength of the one, of Jesus. Peter talks a good game, but can’t back it up.
Peter, James, and John succumb to the tiredness of their bodies. The weakness
in Judas was his greed, of the chief priests and Pharisees their hatred and
fear. Peter is weak a third time, the weakness of relying on the power of the
sword when the word of Jesus is far more powerful. The word
of Jesus that can call down from heaven twelve legions of angels. And Annas and Caiaphas show just how weak people in power truly
are.
And in all that you probably heard yourself. For we are the weak ones, too. We talk a good game, but when
it comes time to stand up for Jesus, to confess Jesus in the face of
persecution, opposition, or oppression, do we? Or does
fear get the better of us? Tiredness is commonplace in our busy and
getting-ever-busier world. How often do greed, hatred, or fear make us do what
we ordinarily wouldn’t do, exerting their strength over us. Do we rely on
things of worldly strength rather than God’s all-powerful word? And if you have
to keep worrying about your power, are you really powerful or weak? Even a
strong steel beam becomes weak when corrupted and corroded over time, like what
the corruption and corrosion of sin has done to us.
But over against all the weakness of men is the
strength of the one man, alone, Jesus. The one strong enough
to stand alone. The one strong enough to pray.
The one strong enough to believe His Father’s will is good. The one strong
enough to cause all the might of men to fall down to the ground like drunken
dominos, and the one strong enough not to, but allow Himself to be arrested. The one strong enough to love and heal His enemy and not hate him.
The one strong enough to die for all people, for all the
world, for you. For as we will hear later this Lenten
season, He is the one strong enough to forgive.
Tonight we see all the weakness of men, and the strength
of the one, of Jesus. It doesn’t look that way, of course. Jesus looked weak
and men looked strong. But the same word of Jesus which could call down from
heaven twelve legions of angels calls us to repent. And for
the same reason. Jesus would not save Himself and calls us to repent
that we might be saved.
For that’s the other thing going on in the story
tonight - people trying to save themselves. Trying to save
their pride, trying to save their position and power, trying to save their bank
account, trying to save their lives. But they’re going about it all
wrong. For as Jesus said, he who saves his life will lose it, but he who loses
his life and instead relies on Christ, will save it.
So this Lenten season bids us, as we sang, to Go
to Dark Gethsemane (LSB
#436), and
to Go to Dark Calvary, too. To see our Saviour,
to hear our Saviour, to see and hear the one man,
alone. The one who is strong to save.
And this Lenten season bids us to go to the Font,
to go to the Altar, and to go to the Table, and see and hear and taste our Saviour. To hear the forgiveness of our sins and to taste
and see that the Lord is good. For this one man, alone, is good. And has come to make us good.
And so we have hope. And we begin to fear, love,
and trust in God above all things. We begin to rely on His Name, not ours. We
begin to treasure and keep His Word in our hearts. And we begin to love our
neighbor - not because of who our neighbor is, but because of who we are. In Jesus. Because He took our weakness and
gave us His strength. And gave us Himself to dwell in us. That we never be alone. No matter who
you are or where you are, as a baptized child of God, you never go alone, for
the strong one dwells in you and you in Him. So we confess, not run. We pray,
not sleep. And we love, not strike. Because we are not
one man, one woman, alone. We are one in Him, and so never alone.
Never alone. Which
sounds pretty good.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.