Jesu Juva
“Confidence!”
Text: Psalm 23
(1 John 3:16-24; Acts
4:1-12; John 10:11-18)
Alleluia! Christ is risen!
[He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
I would like to know when David wrote the 23rd
Psalm.
Was it after his confrontation with Goliath? Or
maybe after he survived that period of time when King Saul was after him,
trying to kill him. Those were certainly times when he walked through the
valley of the shadow of death.
Or was it was after he had committed adultery
with Bathsheba, and then murdered her husband in his attempt to cover it up and
get away with it, and then when the son born of that tryst died? That was
certainly a time when his soul needed his Saviour’s
restoring forgiveness, and when he needed to be put back on the
path of righteousness.
Or was it after he survived the mutiny of his son
Absalom against his kingship by fleeing to the land of the Philistines and
pretending he had lost his mind? That was a time when the Lord was providing
for him, preparing a table in the presence of his enemies.
Or maybe it was when Samuel anointed his
head with oil as king of Israel.
Or maybe it was at the end of his life, when he
looked back at all of this and perhaps wondered: How did I ever survive? I
shouldn’t be here! Either because of my own sins or the sins of others, I
should have been dead long ago! Surely I had a Shepherd all along - even when
it didn’t seem like it; even when I was being really stupid and sinful. Surely
goodness and mercy has followed me all the days of my life.
Now think back on your life. You probably
already have been, as I’ve been going through David’s life. And it really
doesn’t matter how old or young you are. Think about the sins and stupid things
you’ve done, the dangers you’ve avoided or survived, the times you’ve wandered
or rebelled. What or who are the Bathshebas,
Goliaths, Sauls, and Absaloms
in your life? That pepper your past? Should you even be here? Should you
still have the privilege of being a child of God?
And the scary part of it? We don’t even know the
half of it! So how good, indeed, to have a Good Shepherd.
David, a shepherd himself, knew something about
that and what it meant to be a shepherd. It wasn’t an easy job, just sitting on
the hillside and soaking up the sun while the sheep grazed. It meant watching
out for the young and the old, caring for the rebellious and the tame, finding
good pasture and good water, binding up the injured, looking for the lost, and
even killing the beasts that came upon his flock, looking for an easy meal (1 Sam 17:34-35).
Yes, David thought, David realized, that is what
the Lord was to him. Watching out for him in his youth and in
his old age. Giving him the Law when he needed it, when his sin needed
confronting; and then giving him the refreshing food and drink of the Gospel,
the forgiveness and life he needed. Searching for him and bringing him back
when he wandered and rebelled, and caring for him and binding him up when all
seemed hopeless and lost. Standing between him and the
satanic wolf looking to devour him, and then fighting the Goliath of death for
him. So that in the end David could confidently say not only has goodness
and mercy followed me all the days of my life, but this too: and
I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
Now, such confidence might seem foolish when you
consider David’s life and our lives. How inconsistent we are, how often stupid
and foolish, prone to wander into other pastures where the grass seems greener
and the sheep look like they’re having more fun. How sheepy
we often are. Knowing ourselves, maybe we shouldn’t be so confident . . .
Or, maybe such confidence seems far away from you
and beyond your grasp, when one little word or wrong look from a doctor can
make you tremble. When you see what is happening to Christians around the world
and to religious freedom in our own country, and you feel timid and weak, like
a sheep under attack and without a shepherd. Such confidence, perhaps, seems
impossible for you.
And when you look at yourself, at your heart and
at your life, that is exactly the conclusion
you should come to. Our hearts do condemn us when held up
next to the holiness God requires and desires of us, and so we should not be
confident at all.
But listen to what the apostle John told us in
the Epistle today: whenever our heart condemns us, - as it
rightly does - God is greater than our heart, and he knows everything.
Or in other words, your condemning heart doesn’t get the last word; your heart
isn’t the final authority - God is. The God who knows your heart and knows your
fears and knows your inconsistency and failure even better than you - He is
your Good Shepherd not because you’re holy but because you’re not. Not because
you canmake it on your own but because you can’t.
Because you need the forgiveness and life that only He can give . . . and does
give. So that when your heart condemns you, there be
another voice that you hear, a greater and trumping word from your Saviour: Do not be troubled. I forgive you.
And so, John can continue: Beloved, if our
heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God; - and there
it is! There is the confidence we need. It’s not something we have in ourselves
or from ourselves, it’s from Him, from His Word through which the Spirit fills
us with faith and hope. The faith and hope that then enables us to live in
faith toward God and love toward one another. Which enables us, John goes on to
say, to [keep] his commandments - not in order to have Him as our
Shepherd but because He is. Keeping them, treasuring them, guarding
them, and doing them, because He is keeping and treasuring and guarding and
caring for us. For He, our Shepherd, through His Word and life and death,
teaches and defines for us what love is, so now instead of being rebellious, we
are free to [do] what pleases him - which is not only doing good
for others because we know He is caring and providing for us, but repenting
when we don’t, and forgiving those who sin against us. And so, John says, whatever
we ask - and what do you think you’re going to ask for when God and His
Word fill your heart? - whatever
we ask we receive from Him! Forgiveness - done. Love - done.
Faith - done.
Done. That’s a good word,
isn’t it? A confidence word. The
same confidence that enabled David to be so sure. The same confidence
that enabled Peter and John to stand before the Jewish council and speak the
truth they didn’t want to hear. Because they knew it was done. That
Jesus’ death and resurrection was done and therefore death was done, their sin
was done, and satan and hell
were done. And even though this world is still a scary place, they knew and
believed in that name - the only name given among men by which we must be
saved. And were confident. For
that name made lame men walk, and would raise them from the dead, if that’s
what it came to.
And that is the name you know as well, and is our
confidence. The name you are baptized into. The name by which
you are absolved. The name of your Good Shepherd.
Your Good Shepherd who saw the satanic wolf setting upon His flock and did
not run away like a hired hand, but who came and stepped in to defend
and protect you, letting that wolf sink his teeth into Him instead of you. To
fill his belly and howl in delight that he devoured the Shepherd, so there is
nothing to stop him from devouring you next. Except that on the third day, as
we are celebrating all this season, the wolf received a rude surprise - the
Shepherd was alive not dead, and could not die again. His teeth were useless
now against the Shepherd, and so the flock He was so looking forward to
feasting upon, is safe.
And so you are safe. For I am the
Good Shepherd, Jesus says. David’s and yours.
I know you that you might know me. That you listen to My
voice and follow Me, for in My flock, My pasture is the good food you need, the
water that refreshes, and safety from the wolf. My pasture is one of
forgiveness and life. In My pasture you shall not want.
I will provide what you need and more - your cup
will overflow.
Though the world is still a scary place and the
enemy is all around, I prepare My table
right here in the midst of it all - take eat, and take drink, My Body and
Blood, the food and forgiveness you need to sustain you.
My rod and staff, My Law and
Gospel, will keep you, and you need fear no evil, not even death.
I went through that valley and came out alive, and will take you
through the same way.
Yes, it’s true - My goodness and mercy
shall follow you, be with you, all the days of your life,
My child. Even in those times it may not seem like it.
And yes, you shall dwell in My house
forever.
All that, those words of Psalm
23, are the promises of God to you. The
promises of your Good Shepherd. There are no maybes in that psalm, no
conditional statements - just promises. What He has done,
and what He will do for you. And that’s your confidence. Not in
yourself; in His Word and what He has done. Not in yourself; in His life and
death and then back to life for you. Not in yourself; in His
faithfulness and consistency. So hear His voice. Follow where He leads. You
have a Good Shepherd.
For Christ is risen! [He
is risen indeed! Alleluia!]
And you are His lamb.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.