6 June 2010
St. Athanasius Lutheran Church
Pentecost 2 Vienna, VA
“God
Visits His People to Give Life”
Text:
Luke 7:11-17; 1 Kings 17:17-24; Galatians 1:11-24
Grace,
mercy, and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ. Amen.
Who
would have expected the little town of Nain to be ground zero on the
battlefield between God and anti-God. Between the Lord of life, and the
death-dealing, life-robbing god of this world, satan.
Yet
there it is. Life and death meet. Neither willing to give an inch. Jesus in
compassion, death in its cold finality. The procession stops and the battle
commences. And with only a touch and a Word, life wins. Death, which looks so
powerful, is forced to flee and relinquish its grip on this man. And suddenly
where there was sorrow, there is now joy. Where there was mourning, there is
now faith. “God has visited his people!” they cry. He has come to give
life from the dead.
It
is a preview, a prologue, of what will take place at Calvary. For there, on the
cross, the battle will be taken up again, between God and anti-god, between
life and death. And there, on the cross, just as at Nain, the only son of a
widow will die. For Him there will be no great crowd of mourners - only a few
faithful disciples who take His body down, and a few faithful women who follow
to the tomb to see where He is laid. And death again, will look very powerful
indeed.
But
the victory of life here with Jesus will be even greater! For when death is defeated
in the resurrection of Jesus, it is not just the resurrection of a single son,
like at Nain - Jesus’ resurrection is the resurrection of all. For not just the
son of Mary, but the Son of God has passed through death to life, and left the
power of death defeated once and for all. God has visited his people, and
there is life from the dead.
And
this, too, is what happened in the case of the apostle Paul, who we heard from
in the reading from Galatians. . .
. Now, I know what you’re thinking: Paul
wasn’t dead; he was converted on the road to Damascus when he was still very
much alive. But Paul was, in fact, dead. He was born spiritually dead in his trespasses and sins, just as we. And no
matter what he did, he could not give himself spiritual life. He tried. He
tried harder than any other person. He was doing everything he could to make
sure he was going to have spiritual life and eternal life - persecuting the
church, advancing in Judaism, being extremely zealous for the traditions of his
fathers. But only when he was visited by Jesus on the road to Damascus was Paul
raised from the death of his sin to life.
Was
it really a resurrection that happened to Paul? A new life? You tell me - Paul
went from focusing on what he did, his own efforts and his own advancement, to
preaching Christ and what He had done. And, in fact, so great was this change,
this new life given to Paul, that the people were utterly amazed. All they
could say was: “He who used to persecute us is now preaching the faith he once tried
to destroy.” And they didn’t glorify Paul - they glorified God because of
[Paul]. Because of the resurrection and new life that God gives when He
visits His people.
And
this is what has happened to you as well. God has visited you and given you
life from the dead - not immediately, as He did with the widow at Nain and the
apostle Paul, but more like He did with Elijah and the son of the widow at
Zarephath. There we heard that Elijah took the widow’s dead son, stretched
himself out on the boy three times, and prayed to the God of life for life. And
God gave life, so that the widow then confessed, “the word of the Lord in your
mouth is truth.”
That
is a preview, a prologue, of what takes place here at the Font, when the battle
between life and death is again taken up by God in Holy Baptism. For here, sons
and daughters are brought dead in trespasses and sins - but they are taken up
in the arms of the pastor, have water applied to them three times, and the Word
of God spoken upon them. And the Word of
the Lord spoken here is truth. Like at Nain, with simply a touch and a
Word, death is forced to flee and sin is forced to relinquish its grip on you
- and you were raised and given a new life. For here, in these waters, God
visits His people and gives life. Here in these waters, you were joined
to Jesus and raised in His resurrection. Here in these waters, your spiritual
resurrection is the prelude and promise of your physical resurrection, when in
the end your body, too, will be raised from death to live before God in righteousness and purity forever.
We
sang in the Office Hymn, right before the sermon, “When in the hour of deepest need, we know not where to look for aid .
. .” (LSB #615 v. 1)
That sounds like the widows we heard about today, and Paul, who was looking in
the wrong place - in what he could
do. And how often does that describe us? For all the needs that arise in our
lives, the trials and troubles that never seem to stop coming, the stresses and
challenges that are ever new. And when we are faced with death - either our
own, or of a friend or loved one. Deep needs . . . and we know not where to look for aid. Or maybe we know, but feel
unworthy, or think that we have to get ourselves out of this mess, or even
think that God won’t help. For all of that is what satan wants us to believe.
That you have no place to go; that you have to do it yourself.
We know not where to look for aid.
When I was thinking about that I thought of the oil spill in the gulf, and the
pipe that is spewing oil. And they keep trying all kinds of things to stop it,
but nothing seems to be working. Oh, they’ll get it stopped eventually, but I
thought that is a pretty good picture of us and our sin. When Adam and Eve’s
sin blew the cap off and sin has been spewing forth into the world ever since.
And we can’t stop it. All our efforts and ingenuity fail. We can’t stop sinning
and we can’t stop death. And we know not
where to look for aid. Or we know, but forget. Or we know, but we doubt.
But
did you notice in our readings for today - the widows and Paul, who didn’t know
where to look for aid? God found them.
He positioned Elijah to be with that widow in her grief; Jesus came to that
widow burying her only son; and Jesus came to Paul while he was on the way to
get more Christians. We may not know
what to do, but Jesus knows and comes to us. And the gusher of sin started
in Eden, Jesus plugged with His own body in death. And now he washes us clean
from the filth of sin that has covered us, and sets us free with a new life to
live.
And
so just as the little town of Nain became ground zero for Jesus in the battle
of life and death, so for us ground zero is here, where Jesus is still coming
and visiting His people to give us life. First at the font, but now also at the
altar, as the very body and blood of Jesus are placed into your mouth and
poured over your tongue. Here, as you hear those sin-cleansing words: I forgive you all your sins. Here, where
in your deepest need, your compassionate Saviour comes to you and says: Fear
not. I am with you. And where I am, the jaws of sin, death, grave, and hell
cannot harm you. For I have defeated them all. I have won. And in me you have
life.
And
living that new life given to you, ground zero for the Lord’s visitation also
then becomes wherever the Word of the Lord goes with you - in your home, in
your workplace, at your school. For where you speak His Word of truth, there
our Lord is, and there He is working. Working in the hearts of those who hear.
Working to give life from the dead. Doing battle against sin and death, that
all may have life.
For
when God visits His people, there is life. For widows, for apostles, for you.
Not a life that means the end of troubles, but endures through them. For the
life that your Saviour gives is no mere life, but His life. The life of the
cross, of love, of suffering, of service, of victory. That life is yours in
Him. That life you now live. That life we now live together. A new life, a good
life, a good works life, a forgiven life, a
resurrection life, a Christ life. A life to live now. A life to live
forever.
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.