6 March 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Lent 3 Midweek
Vienna, VA
“40 for Life - Israel:
God’s Discipline for Life”
Text:
Deuteronomy 8:1-10; Hebrews 12:3-11, 18-24
In the Name of Jesus. Amen.
40 days and 40 nights.
Actually, that sounds pretty good! If you’re Israel in the wilderness. 40 days
and 40 nights was a long time for Noah to listen to the roar of the waters from
inside the ark. 40 days and 40 nights was a long time for Moses to be on Mount
Sinai, listening to the Lord. But 40 days and 40 nights for the people of
Israel in the wilderness . . . that was a dream! They would have taken that in
a heartbeat! What they got instead was 40 years.
That’s not how God planned it, of course. It only
took a month - at most! - to go from Sinai to the
border of the land the Lord promised to give them. The trouble started when they got there. Of the twelve spies they sent into Canaan,
to spy it out, to see how they might go in, ten of the twelve told them not
to go. The land was good, yes! Just as God had promised.
But the people in it were too big. They were too powerful. The cities were too
well fortified. Israel would be routed and wiped out! They were like
grasshoppers compared to the people of the land (Numbers 13:33)!
So the people, filled with fear and trembling,
rebelled. They forgot the mighty deeds God had done to bring them out of Egypt.
They forgot how bad things were in Egypt and started making plans to abandon
Moses and go back. And had it not been for Moses’ intercession for them, God
would have wiped them out and started over with Moses and made of him a nation
mightier and greater than Israel (Numbers 14:12). But Moses did
intercede - not because the people deserved anything, but for the sake of God’s
name, that it would not be profaned and belittled, as if God was unable to
finish what He started.
So, God decided, 40 years. One year for each day
the spies were in the land of Canaan. That’s how long the people would have to
wait. That’s how long the people would have to live in the wilderness. That’s
how long God would discipline them, to teach them to rely on Him and turn to
Him. And to trust Him. It wasn’t what God had
planned, but it was what His people needed. And a loving God would do no less.
It would be 40 years from death to life.
And yes, God was a loving God through it all. As
we heard tonight, for 40 years He fed them with manna. For 40 years their
clothes did not wear out. For 40 years their feet did not swell. For 40 years
God provided all they needed. God disciplined them, yes; but He also shepherded
them. He remained with them. He led them and protected them. All
for their good.
Did it have to be 40 years? Couldn’t 40 months
have done the trick? Perhaps. But as with Noah and
Moses and their 40 days, this is the time of God’s choosing. For
this journey, from death to life. 40 years would reflect the greatness
of His Fatherly love and His long-suffering. For again, as we heard: Know
then in your heart that, as a man disciplines his son, the Lord your God
disciplines you. And discipline is love.
It doesn’t always seem that way, though. As we
heard in the reading from Hebrews: For the moment all discipline seems
painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness
to those who have been trained by it. And this you know. From your own experience. As someone who has been
disciplined, and perhaps as someone who has had to discipline another. Maybe
you also know it from sports or music or another activity where you must
discipline yourself - or have a coach or teacher do it - so that you make
progress and improve. You also know it, perhaps, from your Lenten
discipline, meant not as punishment for what you’ve done or not done, nor as
payment to God, but as something to benefit you and strengthen you. It’s not
easy and often not pleasant, but it is good.
Discipline is different than punishment, though
sometimes we use those terms interchangeably. Punishment has to do with
repayment, with retribution. But discipline for teaching, training,
improvement. Sometimes the two overlap, but not always. When it’s happening to
you, sometimes it’s hard to tell them apart. But everything from your heavenly
Father is meant for your good. And the punishment you deserve? Because you do!
That is here (pointing to the cross). Jesus took that for you, in
your place, so you are forgiven. But your Father will still discipline you,
because He loves you. So that, as we heard, we may
share his holiness.
Israel needed a long discipline. It took them a
long time to unlearn bad habits and wrong thinking. They had ups and downs. One
step forward was often followed by two steps back. But through it all their Father was working for them and in them, to help
them.
And so, too, for you. How is God
disciplining you? I know things in my own life that have not been pleasant,
and sometimes downright frightening! But in the end, good for
me. Things that I can now look back and pray a prayer of thanks. Then? At the time? Maybe not! But
now, yes. My Father was rescuing me and turning me and saving me with His
discipline. And your Father loves you enough to do that and keep doing that,
even if it takes 40 years. Because at the end of your journey
through this world, He wants life for you.
And it is the cross that is our focus this Lenten
season that shows us that relentless love of God for us. Apart from the cross -
either looking forward to it in the Old Testament or looking back to it in
these New Testament times - apart from the cross, we could not know the
difference between the punishment of God and the discipline of God. We could
not be sure. And an unknown God is frightening. That’s why all other religions,
which really don’t know the true God, the God of love, are always trying to
appease Him and make Him like them. It is an endless task, and one you can
never be sure you’ve accomplished.
But when we look to the cross, when we fix our
eyes on Jesus, we know who God is and His love for us. We know that we cannot appease
Him, and that we don’t have to. That has been done. The Lamb of
God has taken away the sin of the world. So what we, who are in
Christ Jesus, are receiving now is good. All good. Every good. Even when that good is discipline. And of that
we can be confident. The resurrection the sign and seal of
that.
So again, as we heard in the reading from
Hebrews, we do not live at Mount Sinai, the terrifying sight, trembling with
fear in the presence of God. We live at Mount Zion, with the innumerable
angels, the festal gathering, the church of the forgiven, and of those who have
been sprinkled by the blood that speaks a better word than the blood of
Abel. For the blood we’ve been sprinkled with, the blood of Jesus,
cries out not for vengeance, but for our forgiveness. The forgiveness He earned
and won and now gives to us. That we journey not from
life to death, but from death to life. And if we need
His discipline on the way? God’s discipline for life?
Then thank You, Father, for loving me enough to do that. And not just these 40
days of Lent, but until You bring me home.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.