Jesu Juva
“Cling to the Word”
Text: Matthew 15:21-28 (Romans 11:32; Psalm 28:6)
Grace,
mercy, and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
What do you do when
what you experience in life does not seem to line up or agree with the Word of
God? When what is happening to you even seems to contradict the Word of God?
The Word which says
that God will provide for you (Matthew 6:25-33), but you’ve been in need for so long?
The Word which proclaims that God will be with you always (Matthew 28:20), yet you’ve never
felt so alone? The Word which teaches that you are a child of God (Galatians 4:4-7), baptized into Him,
and that He will never leave you as an orphan (John 14:18), yet your Father has
never felt so far away? The Word which trumpets that you are forgiven (Acts 10:43), yet you look at
yourself and inside yourself and see nothing but a miserable, wretched sinner,
and feel so unworthy and dirty and unclean? The Word which
promises you every good (Romans 8:28),
yet so much of what you receive seems anything but good?
How do you reconcile
the Word which says God will always hear and answer every prayer (John 16:23), yet when you pray
you seem to be like this woman we heard about today, whose prayers are met only
with silence and rejection?
What do you do? Such
times are hard, when Word and world conflict. But that is the reality we live
in. This woman’s reality. So by considering her, we
see ourselves.
So first of all
consider: why was she there? Well, because her daughter was severely
oppressed by a demon. Maybe for some time now.
And how do you fight against a demon? She needed help. . . . You
know how it is, for demons are pressing hard, attacking, luring, and tempting
you too. Into all manner of sins. What are they for you, that you wrestle with? Maybe
severely. And your strength is not enough. You’ve tried, and failed. Fallen back into the old ways, the old sins, the old bad habits and
despair. You need help too.
But do not overlook
this fact: why was she there? Because first Jesus had
come to her. The Son of God had come down from heaven in the flesh,
and then Jesus went to her, to her area, to the district of Tyre
and Sidon. First, the Lord of all invaded the enemy’s territory to help, to
rescue, and to save. . . . And again this is true for you as well.
We have not a God who is far off, but a God who is near, who comes to us in our
own flesh and blood, that we come to Him.
But still there is
more, for why was she there? Because not only was Jesus there for her,
but she heard about Jesus. Someone told her. Someone preached to her.
Just as the angels proclaimed to the shepherds and John the Baptist pointed the
crowds to Jesus, so she had been told this good news. Or maybe she heard Jesus
herself - His preaching with an authority not of this world. . . .
You’ve heard that word, that preaching, too. That here is
hope for the hopeless, help for the helpless, and freedom for the possessed.
And so you’ve come too.
And so with great
boldness and in great desperation and with great hope, she comes to Jesus. And
she gets . . . not what we expect. Not, I’m
sure, what she expected. Not what Jesus’ track record indicates she
would get. She gets . . . this. The silent treatment,
rejection, insult. Sand kicked in her face. Shoved to
the back of the room. Acknowledged only to be
rejected.
For this woman, the
Word she had heard and what she was now experiencing were two vastly different
- and seemingly even contradictory - things.
But she does not
believe her experience. She does believe whatever emotions are surging from her
heart. She does not believe the demons whispering to her to go away, that see?
Jesus does not want to help you. No, she clings to Jesus. She clings to the
Word and promises of God about Him. That Jesus is the Lord. That
Jesus is the promised Son of David. That as Paul
would later proclaim, Jesus has come to have mercy on all people.
Including Gentiles. Including
Canaanites. Including her.
And because of that,
Jesus holds her up as an example of great faith. For this is
what faith does - it clings to the Word and promises of God. Even when our emotions and experiences and other people in this
world - even disciples - tell us otherwise. Because
everything else is unreliable. Everything else in us and in this world
has been tainted with sin. For sin isn’t just the bad things we do, it is the
disease that infects our minds and our emotions so they don’t work as they
should. That we think wrongly and interpret our emotions incorrectly and when
left on our own, will think wrong things of God, too. And you can be sure the
devil and his demons take full advantage of that, to deceive us and mislead
us in false belief, despair, and other great shame and vice (Small Catechism, explanation
to the Sixth Petition).
Which means that any sentence that begins with “it seems to
ME” or “it feels like to ME” frankly cannot be trusted.
Only sentences which
begin with: Thus saith the Lord - only these
are pure truth. Only these are to be relied on and trusted. Only these will
give us the firm and certain foundation we need in a world full of trouble and
strife, changes and chances, danger and need. Especially when
our experiences and emotions are telling us one thing today and something else
tomorrow. God doesn’t change and His Word doesn’t change, and so we have
something outside of our infected, sinful selves to rely on.
That’s what this
woman did that day. She clung to the Word of God and would not let go. And not
only the Word of God she heard that brought her there to Jesus that day, but
also the words that Jesus spoke too. The words that sounded so harsh, yet in
which this woman finds hope. For when Jesus says, “It is not right to
take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs,” the woman
responds: “You say that I am a dog. Let it be. I will gladly be a dog; now
give me the consideration that you give a dog. I ask no more than a dog’s
rights. Give the children what is the children’s; I don’t ask for that. Give me
the crumbs and I will be content with that” (Luther, House Postils, Vol. 1, p. 325).
How different is that
from what we hear in our world today - where so many are demanding rights and
privileges and what they want from God? And when He doesn’t deliver, see ya’!
No, it is not
to those who think they are deserving or worthy that
Jesus gives, but to the undeserving and the unworthy. Not to the Pharisees and
Sadducees, but to the tax collectors and sinners. Not to those who think Jesus
owes them something simply because they are physically descended children of
Abraham, but to the true children of Abraham - those not according to
the flesh, but according to the promise. Children by faith.
Like this Canaanite woman. Like you.
And so she receives.
The mercy she has come for. The mercy Jesus has come to give. Was it a crumb,
was it more? It didn’t matter! Faith doesn’t measure the gift, but receives
what God gives with thanksgiving. Believing that it is good and exactly what we
need.
Faith doesn’t measure
the gift; it is the sin in us that measures gifts. Comparing what God has given
to others and what He has given to me. Judging what God has given to me
compared to what I asked for. But just as we cannot trust our
emotions and experiences, so too we cannot trust our judgments here.
What we think are mere crumbs might be much, much more. Like children rushing
downstairs on Christmas morning, one child receiving a small box and one
receiving a very large box, and immediately the jealousy begins - not even
knowing what those bosex contain! Do we judge God
that way? His gifts that way? His
works that way? His love that way? Lots to repent of there.
Instead, believe the
Word. What the world considers treasure - wealth and power and honors and glory
- these are of little worth, really. They come and go and do not last. But what
the world considers of little worth - the Church, the Word of God, the water of
baptism, the bread and wine of the Lord’s Supper, these are treasures
containing far more than mere crumbs. They contain the death and resurrection
of Jesus for you. They give you the fruits of His cross. They give you those
gifts that will never end - His forgiveness, His life, His salvation, His Sonship, His Body and Blood. And that’s true no matter what
you feel or experience here - you have His Word and promise. For thus saith the Lord: I baptize you. I forgive you. This is
My Body, My Blood. I am coming back. You will be with Me
in Paradise. Sure and certain, these words. Words of
life. Words to cling to.
For no matter what
the devil, the world, or your own sinful nature with its emotions and
experiences wants you to believe, your Father in heaven, your
Saviour Jesus, and His Spirit will not let you
down. The struggles will continue, of that you can be sure. Those
hours of deep need, darkness, and hurt. Such is life in this sinful
world. But as we sang in the Introit earlier: The Lord is my strength
- when I am weak - and my shield - when I am attacked; in Him
my heart trusts - not my emotions or experiences - and I am
helped. And not just given a helping hand, but rescued, saved. For you
are forgiven. It is finished (John 19:30). The Lord has mercied you. Cling
to that When in the Hour of Deepest Need (Office Hymn, LSB
#615).
And every other hour too.
In
the Name of the Father and of the (+) Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.