29 March 2023
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Lent 5 Midweek
Vienna, VA
“Crosswords”
In the Name of Jesus. Amen.
He saved others; he
cannot save himself.
Did you hear that? Those
who mock Jesus do so by acknowledging the truth: He saved others.
He saved those they didn’t think were worth saving. He saved those they
didn’t want to be saved; who were too sinful. It’s not that He couldn’t, it’s
that He did. He gave sight to a man born
blind. He raised a four-day-dead Lazarus from the tomb. How dare He! For this, He must die.
And look - He
cannot save Himself.
Well that’s not quite the truth. He could,
but would not. But to those mocking, that’s the same
thing. To them, if He could, He would. That He doesn’t is proof that He can’t. Because first and foremost in this world and life you take care of
yourself. You use your resources for yourself.
That’s true of a sinful
world, a world curved in, bent in on itself. My needs
come first. My wants come first. But the sinless Son of God in human flesh isn’t
like that. He isn’t like us; He is what we should be. So He used His power for
others, and for that, He is crucified.
And as He is, crucified,
things go on as normal, really. Sinful men continue acting as sinful men, and
Jesus continues acting as the God merciful,
gracious, and abounding in steadfast love. They mock, He forgives. They
take, He gives. They rise up against Him, He continues
to serve them, even those who are doing this to Him. Father, forgive them.
He gives hope. Today you will be with me in paradise. He does not
hate for He cannot hate. He feels the full burden and weight of their sin, and
the sin of the world.
But there are a few things not normal. A few people who Jesus’ love has
changed.
The first is the thief
on the cross next to Him. Who began this day as a condemned criminal with no hope. Who lashed out at Jesus with the others, but then
changed his tune - his mocking becoming confessing, his confessing becoming repentance, and his
repentance becoming hope. And he who began this day a condemned criminal with
his arms outstretched on the cross, ends it a beloved son in the arms of his
God.
The second person is the
centurion - the soldier probably in charge of what was happening here. When
he saw how Jesus died, he said, Truly,
this man was the Son of God. Perhaps when he saw how Jesus died, he
realized he was not really the one in charge here after all. The one in his
charge was really in control, dying on his own terms. He was laying down His
life, not having it taken from Him. Father, into your hands I commend my
spirit. This man was unlike any other.
And then there was Nicodemus,
who before had come to Jesus at night and
had a rather confusing and unsettling conversation with Him. Nicodemus never
did crawl back inside his mother, but apparently was born again anyway,
lovingly serving the One who had so lovingly served him that night. He no
longer cared what the others thought, if it was night or not. He would help lay
Jesus in the tomb.
And then there’s one more
. . . one more person Jesus’ love has changed . . . you. For you Jesus carried His cross so that you could be
unburdened of your sins. For you Jesus was stripped of His clothes so that you
could be clothed with His righteousness. For you Jesus had the charge against
Him written and hung over His head so that the sins which hang over your head be removed and your name written in the Book of Life. For
you Jesus was reviled so that you be honored. For you
Jesus left father and mother to hold fast to you, His Bride, the Church. For
you Jesus was forsaken so that you never be. For you
Jesus thirsted and received sour wine so that you who thirst for life be given the drink of His sin-forgiving, life-giving Blood.
For you Jesus was laid in the tomb so that there is no place your body may go
that He hasn’t already been there. For you Jesus was pierced that you may be
healed. For you Jesus’ tomb was guarded and sealed, so that you have no doubt
of His resurrection to life again.
All
this for you, so how can you not be changed? The Word of God and the
Spirit of God working through the Word work in your heart so that like Nicodemus you be born again, like the centurion you confess Jesus as the
Son of God, and like the thief on the cross you look to Jesus for the life you
need. And all you need, you have. The gift of God’s Son for
you, the gift of God’s Son to you. His life
that you have life.
We hear the story of
Jesus’ passion every year, and we need to. We need to wonder and marvel at all
He has done for us, to rejoice that He has, and to grow in faith and trust in
Him, that we may grow in love toward others. That as Jesus has done for us, so
we may do for others. Not because you have to, but because that is the change
that has been worked in you. The change from sinner to saint,
from selfish to giving, from outcast to son or daughter of God. That things not go on as usual for you and your life, but
that you be different. Raised to a new life in this
old world, and so not the same. Jesus, as the Son of God, was different, and
you, as sons and daughters of God are different, too.
So only five miles from where Jesus was born and
laid in the wood of the manger, Jesus is hung up on the wood of the cross and
dies. But because of that short distance, the distance we have fallen from God,
the chasm of sin which separated us from God, has been overcome. As we heard on
Sunday, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1). The Passion of Christ
means the forgiveness of our sins. The Passion of Christ means we have a
future. The Passion of Christ means everything.
So we come to Holy Week. And we know the truth: He
saved others; - he saved ME - because he DID not
save himself.
Behold the life-giving cross, on which hung the
salvation of the world.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.