3 March 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Lent 3
Vienna, VA
“Zeal for You Consumes
Him”
Text:
John 2:13-25; Exodus 20:1-17; 1 Corinthians 1:18-31
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
What if I were to burst into a house and start
tearing it apart as Jesus did? I tip over some tables and chairs, take out a
wall or two, pull down some lights, rip up the carpet - what do you think?
Should I be arrested? Should I have to pay for the repairs? Am I in trouble?
Well, it depends on whose house it is!
If it’s not my house, well, maybe. But still it
depends. I may be a workman there to renovate the house and improve it. That
would be okay. If I weren’t, then I guess, call the cops.
Unless . . . it’s MY house! Then I can do
whatever I want to it. I can tear it apart, I can fix it up, I
can change it, because it belongs to me.
So when Jesus goes into the Temple that day, as
we heard, and begins overturning tables and driving out the animals, some
thought He had no right to do so. He needs to be arrested and have to pay for
the damage He did.
But they were wrong. The Temple was God’s house
and so Jesus’ house! As He said when He was twelve years old and His worried parents
found Him in the Temple with the teachers, Don’t
you know I must be in my Father’s house? And He repeated that
fact on this day as well: do not make my Father’s house a house of
trade.
And the Father’s house is the Son’s house, too. So Jesus had every right to do
what He did, even if the people didn’t realize it.
And this too: Jesus had also come
as the worker to renovate that house. To remodel and renew
it. Soon, very soon now, all those sacrifices would no longer be
necessary or needed. For the once and for all sacrifice of
the Lamb of God for the sin of the world would be offered. So the
Temple, as it was and had been for so long, would be obsolete. It was time for
a renovation and renewal.
So Jesus coming into the Temple that day and
doing what He did tells us not just something about what was going on there,
but something about Him - that once again He is showing Himself
to be the Son of God in human flesh.
The key to this reading is not what Jesus DID,
but who Jesus IS.
Now, the Jews wanted a sign that Jesus had the
authority to do these things - that He was either sent to do this by someone
with the proper authority, or that He had that authority in Himself, as the
owner of the house. Show us! And Jesus’ answer is that He will - His death and
then third-day resurrection will be the sign. He will redeem not with
gold or silver, but with His holy precious blood, and His innocent suffering
and death (Small
Catechism, Second Article). It is His blood, not animal blood, that will cleanse the world of sin. His
death and resurrection will renovate and renew the Church of God, His people.
Which is what this Lenten
season is about.
Renovation. Renewal. Not of a
building, but of your heart. To overturn the idols in your
hearts. To throw out what shouldn’t be there. To drive out the sinful,
shameful, and evil thoughts; the bad practices and habits we’ve fallen into. Not only during Lent, but especially during Lent.
For when God calls us to repentance and comes to clean out our hearts, He has
every right to do so. For He created us, and He redeemed us,
and He sanctifies us. And if you think the Temple in Jerusalem at Jesus’
time was corrupt, with its money changers and sacrifice salesmen, your heart, my heart, is even worse.
Which is what the Commandments show us, which we
heard again this morning. There’s only ten of them,
but that’s enough. Actually, we need only one: the first. Have no other gods.
Fear, love, and trust in God above all things. Every other sin
comes from the fact that I fear, love, or trust something or someone else more
than God. Maybe it’s me - I want what I want instead of what God wants. I get
to decide what’s good for me, not God. Maybe it’s a boyfriend or girlfriend
or a co-worker, and I do what they want me to do because I am more afraid of
what they will think of me than what God thinks of me. I don’t trust that God
will provide so I covet and take. I don’t trust that God will defend so I hurt.
I believe what the world says more than what God says. Shall I go on?
So Jesus comes. Has His Word preached and His
gifts given. His blood-bought gifts. For while zeal
for [His Father’s] house consumes Him, His love for you
consumes Him even more. That’s why Paul said, we preach Christ crucified.
There is the love of God for you. There is the zeal of God for you. There is
the cleansing, renovating, and renewing forgiveness of Jesus for you. There you
see that there is nothing God won’t do to save you. To save you from satan. To save
you from death. To save you from hell. To save you from your sin. To save you
from a sinful and deceitful world. But perhaps most of
all, to save you from yourself. The: I don’t want to lose control, I don’t
want to let go, I want God to serve me, not me serve God, you.
But that’s the thing - He has! God has
come to serve you. The whole Bible is about God coming to us and giving
to us and helping us and serving us and saving us. And
what could be more clear than this verse: the Son
of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life
as a ransom for many (Matthew
20:28). The
Son of Man did come to serve us, and still is. That’s what the Temple
was all about. God didn’t need that building. God didn’t need to be there in
that. We needed Him there for us. That’s what the Divine Service here is all
about. God doesn’t need any of this - we do. We need Him here for us. And that’s
what the cross is all about. God come to serve us by laying down His life for
us, for our life, for our forgiveness. We needed that, not Him.
So, as Paul goes on to say, talking about the
cross, that God chose the foolishness of dying on the cross,
because yes! What a foolish thing for God to do! Subject Himself
to such humiliation and shame and die for those who sin and continue to sin and
brought death into the world and continue to kill and hurt. Save people like
that? Like you? Yes.
And God chose the weakness of the
cross to shame those who think they are so strong. You strong
enough to do that? Oh, maybe for a righteous person or a good person,
right? But for your enemy? Jesus loves them, loves
you, like that? Yes.
And God chose the lowness and despisedness of the cross, to become like a piece
of garbage that is being thrown out, to rescue you from that same fate. Yes. He
is the source of your life. The God who comes to
serve you.
So we preach Christ crucified, Paul
said. We fix our eyes on Jesus. That’s what we’ve been singing in
the Gradual all this Lenten season. We fix our eyes on Jesus - on Jesus at the
Font, on Jesus in His Word, on Jesus on the Altar. These places where Christ
crucified is for us today. Where His
Body and Blood are for us today. Where His forgiveness
and life are for us today. Where He is serving us
today.
That place was once the Temple. That’s
where God had promised to be for His people to forgive and restore them, to
renovate and renew them. But it was never forever. God had much more and much
greater planned that that! The building, the priesthood, the sacrifices - all
of it! - pointed to and foreshadowed a far greater reality. A
far greater building, priest, and sacrifice than stone, men, and animals.
The building, priest, and sacrifice that would be God Himself, in the person of
Jesus. Jesus is the building: Destroy this temple, and in three days I
will raise it up, Jesus said. Jesus is the sacrifice: Behold, the
Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world! (John 1:29) John said. And Jesus did
not deny it. And Jesus is the priest: Jesus Himself is the priest who offers up
Himself, the Lamb of God, for no one takes [my life] from me, Jesus said
- no one could! But I lay it down of my own accord (John 10:18). So when Jesus came,
when the Lamb of God was offered and took away the sin of the world, the Temple
was no longer needed. It was obsolete. And that’s GOOD! Its time and function
were fulfilled. What it pointed to and prepared for was here. Time for a renovation and renewal.
And the same will one day be true of us here and
this Divine Service. All that we do here is also pointing to and foreshadowing
a far greater reality. When Jesus came in the flesh, the time of the Temple
came to an end. When He comes again in glory, the time of the Divine Service
will come to an end. The dying and rising of Baptism and the Font will be
fulfilled when we who die | will rise to life eternal on that Day. The
communion of the Body and Blood of Jesus and the altar will be fulfilled when
we are ushered into the eternal wedding feast of the Lamb in His kingdom by
the Lamb, the Son Himself! The angels we do not see, we will see. Those who
went before us, we will be with. The Word of God we now hear we will see, as
Job said: I shall see God, whom I shall see for myself, and my eyes shall
behold, and not another (Job 19:26-27). This will all be obsolete. And that’s GOOD!
This is not the ultimate. But each day that goes by, we are one day closer to
it.
So if - maybe better to say when - Jesus
comes here and upsets you, shows you your sin, doesn’t let you go your merry
way and do whatever you want, overturns the tables and drives out the sin in
your heart, drives you to your knees in confession . . . when Jesus does that
for you, don’t criticize Him, don’t question Him, don’t condemn Him, thank
Him. And thank Him mostly by receiving the forgiveness and life, the
renovation and renewal, He has for you and wants for you. And
then living that forgiveness and new life. Preaching
Christ crucified in all you say and do, in how you speak and live. Laying down your life for others as He laid down His life for you.
Living in the faith and knowledge that this life and the things of this world
and life are not the ultimate, the end all be
all - there is a greater, a far greater life, coming. And as we heard
and considered last week: you gonna give up that | to
save this?
No, this is not the ultimate. Jesus going into
the Temple that day reminds us of that. This is all returning to dust. You
are returning to dust. But when your body is destroyed and returns to the dust
of death, when Jesus comes again, on the Last Day, He will raise it up - He
will raise you up - to that life that has no end, just as He is risen from
the dead, live and reigns to all eternity. He has done it! And we
confess it: This is most certainly true (Small Catechism, Second Article).
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.