14 February 2024                                                                 
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Ash Wednesday                                                                                                       
Vienna, VA  
“Dying Christians
or Dying Christians?”
Text: 2
Corinthians 5:20b-6:10; Joel 2:12-19; Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
 
This is who you are (pointing to ash cross on
my forehead).
You are a Christian, marked with the sign of the
cross in your baptism.
But you are a dying Christian, a dust and
ashes Christian, because you are a sinner. And you are not because you happen
to do things called sins, though you do. You are because you were born that
way. You inherited this sinful condition from your parents. And the wages of
sin is death (Romans
6:23). So
unless Jesus returns first, you are going to die.
People usually don’t want to talk about that. It’s
not very cheery. And it’s scary. We don’t want to die, because we were not
created to die. Death is an intrusion into the life that God created us to
have. And an ending of that life. So we put it out of
our minds. Think about other things. Be too busy with life to think about
death. But is that good? Or does that simply make us unprepared to die? Would
it not be better to be ready when that time comes for
each of us? Ready to die a blessed death?
Because try as we might to put it out of mind,
death is not so easily shoved aside or locked in the closet of our minds. It
keeps coming back to haunt us. Death in the news. The death of a loved one. A terminal
disease. The epidemic of fentanyl poisoning. And Ash Wednesday. Every year, Ash Wednesday with its
black paraments and ash crosses. Forcing
us to face facts, to face reality, to face death. This is who we are: dying
Christians.
But, you see, that’s the good news! We’re
dying Christians. And as Christians, we can face death with
confidence. The confidence of the empty tomb. That at
the end of this season of Lent is not death but life. And not
just life, but eternal life. Life that death
cannot end. Life that has overcome death. Jesus’ life.
Because, as we heard St. Paul preach tonight: For our sake - for
the sake of all of us who are dying - he - God the Father - made
him - His Son, Jesus - to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him -
in Jesus - we might become the righteousness of God. And
you know what the righteous do? The righteous rise.
They rise from death to life. To new life.
So if you want life, repent. Repent of yourself,
who you are and what you do, and receive the righteousness of God. That’s
what the prophet Joel calls to us tonight. Return to the Lord your God,
he says, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning. Return to the
Lord, your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow
to anger, and abounding in steadfast love; and he relents over disaster.
The disaster that has afflicted the world as the wages of sin
- death. He relents because He came to do something about it. Or to
paraphrase what Paul said before: For your sake God made Jesus to be you,
the sinner, the condemned one, the crucified one, the dying one;  so that you can be Him,
the righteous one, the living one. To repent, then, is not just to be sorry
for your sin, but to say: I want to be Him, not me. I
want, I need, His life. And when you hear those words, I forgive
you all your sins, that is God saying: yes! Here
is His life. A new life for you.
And you know what people who have received that
new life do? They pray, fast, and give alms. Lots of other
things, too. Good things. But also these things.
That’s what Jesus said. For in His words that we heard today, He didn’t
say, if you pray, or if you give to the needy, or if you
fast; but when you pray, when you give to the needy, when
you fast. These are not new or special commandments; Jesus is describing you
and what you do. Because they are what Jesus did. He fasted during those forty
days in the wilderness. He prayed constantly. And He gave to those in need. He
showed us these are all good and helpful things. And with His life, a new life,
given to you, it is what you do as well. 
Though we mess it up. We’re good at that, aren’t
we? Messing things up! We are tempted to not pray, give, and fast, but
instead set our minds on and treasure and cling to the things that moths
feast on, that age and rust destroy, and the thieves
covet and steal. Or we do those things, but not because of who we are,
but to be who we want to be in the eyes
of others. Perhaps to be considered holy, or sincere, or to be admired, or to
make me think I’m better than those who don’t. Both of
those ways - not doing, or doing for the wrong reasons - is the be the
hypocrite Jesus talked about. Something else to repent of.
But if we just be who we are in Jesus, live as
the baptized, rejoice in His Absolution, be shaped by His mercy, and feed on
His Body and Blood, or in other words, set our minds on and treasure those
things that are eternal - then though we die, yet shall we live. Then
though you may suffer as Paul and his fellow workers did, afflictions,
hardships, calamities, beatings, imprisonments, riots, labors, sleepless
nights, and hunger, none of these things
can take your life. For you have already been given the
unlimited, unmeasured, unbounded life of Christ. The
treasure above all others. The treasure Jesus came to give to you, and
the treasure He is still coming to give to all.
Every once in a while,
Ash Wednesday falls on Valentines Day. For some, that is an odd
combination of days. But not for us. For us, it is
perfect. For as we enter the season of Lent, it is to see
once again the love of God for us in the crucifixion of His Son.
That God so loved the world (John 3:16). That greater love has no one than this, that
someone lay down his life for his friends (John 15:13) - except when He lays it down for His
enemies! For while we were still sinners, Christ died for
us (Romans 5:8). Died, that we be forgiven. Died, that we
might live. Died, that His love raise us to new
life. For love is always about the other, not me. Love gives. And Jesus gives
Himself for you on the cross, that He give
Himself to you here in His Word and Sacraments. That the
treasures of heaven you have already now. 
So this is who we are (pointing to ash cross
on my forehead).
Dying because of my sin. Christian
because of Jesus’ love. His love unknown (LSB #430), unlike any other love in this
world. His love that means that though this is who I am, this is not
who I will be. This is my present, not my future. My future is life. My future
is glory. Yours, too.
So today we repent to let go of the present and
cling to the future. A future that may come sooner than you think! But whenever
it does, however it does, matters not. For we are
looking forward to Easter. Yes, the one that will come 46 days from now
when we rejoice in the resurrection of Jesus. But even more,
to the great Easter when all will rise from death when Jesus comes
again. When no more feasting moths, no more destroying age or rust, no
more thieves, only life. Only joy. Only
Jesus.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.