11 September 2016 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Pentecost 17
Vienna, VA
“Our Searching,
Rejoicing, Forgiving Lord”
Text: Luke
15:1-10; Ezekiel 34:11-24; 1 Timothy 1:12-17
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Jesus not only receives
sinners and eats with them, as the Pharisees and the scribes
grumbled - He goes looking for them! And not just a little. He searches
until He finds them, and finding them rejoices over them. And He doesn’t just
rejoice privately, or in some small way, but calls together everyone he can
think of and holds a party. A party perhaps like He was in when the Pharisees
and scribes were grumbling against Him. From outside. For they weren’t going in there, with them. But Jesus
wouldn’t be anywhere else.
So to help them - and us
- understand His joy, and that we have it with Him, Jesus tells two stories of
finding. About a lost sheep and a lost coin. And
notice how He begins these stories: What man, or what woman, doesn’t
do this? He asks. Because we do. This is exactly
how we act. Now, I haven’t gone searching for a lost sheep, but I have gone
searching for my dog when he escaped our backyard. We drove, we walked, we called, until we found him. And if I lost a hundred
dollar bill, I’ll bet I’d search for that for a pretty good amount of time. And
the last time I preached on this text, I talked about the time I lost my
wedding ring and how I didn’t really care about anything else until I found it.
And how happy I was when I did. We do those things. The Pharisees and the
scribes did those things. Who doesn’t, or hasn’t, done those things? Jesus
asks. So we understand the searching and the joy of finding.
And yet
the Pharisees and scribes were grumbling when Jesus was doing the exact same
thing. Why? Because they’re sinners. There’s a
difference.
The
lost coin, the lost ring, not their fault. Even a lost sheep
- maybe it just wandered off by accident, or got trapped or stuck somewhere, or
was just too dumb. But them. They’re sinners.
It’s their fault. They ought to know better. Or maybe they do
know better and just don’t care; they just keep on sinning anyhow. So why would
Jesus rejoice over a bunch like that? Who don’t deserve His search, His finding,
or His forgiveness.
But maybe that last
statement reveals something too - about us. The coin, the ring, the sheep or
dog, mean something to us and have value to us. And so we want them back. But
perhaps we do not value other people as much. Especially
sinners, and especially those who have sinned against
us. Maybe we’d respond the same way as the Pharisees and scribes if we saw
Jesus in a room filled with abortion doctors, child molesters, and whatever
other vile and heinous people you can think of and celebrating with them! What’s
He doing? Doesn’t He know who they are? perhaps we
would grumble too. So perhaps part of what Jesus is doing here is getting us to
take a look at ourselves and ask: do I value my coins and sheep, my ring and
dog - my possessions - more than I value my neighbor? And if so, it’s not just them
sinners that need to repent, but this sinner too.
And if that’s so, then
to realize that we too are in that room - or at least, Jesus wants us in
there with Him. Rejoicing in the love and forgiveness He has for you. For the things of this world are not what Jesus cares about - it’s
you. And it always has been. Since the beginning of time, when Adam
and Eve sinned and plunged God’s perfect world into sin, ruining it for all
time, it was not the world God was concerned for - but them. He came searching
for them in the Garden, to find them, forgive them, and promise them a Saviour.
It’s a promise He
repeated many times, also through the prophet Ezekiel, as we heard today. Behold, I, I myself
will search for my sheep and will seek them out,
He says. For just as in Jesus’ day, with the Pharisees and scribes caring more
about their coins and sheep than the people, the priests and leaders in the Old
Testament had often done the same thing - trampling the people and pushing them
aside and caring only for themselves and what they could get. So God said, I
will send them a shepherd, My
servant David. He shall feed them and be their shepherd. A good one.
And when I put it that
way, you know He’s not really talking about David, as in King David, who lived
and died many hundreds of years before Ezekiel - but of the Son of David, the
son promised to David, who would sit on David’s throne forever. Of Jesus. And what Ezekiel prophesied, the
Pharisees and scribes were witnessing. God Himself had come to search for
and find His sheep. And rejoiced when He found them, even the
ones who had wandered time after time. Even the ones who had wandered
for a long time, and the ones who had wandered a long
way away. Maybe especially them. The
greater the lostness, the greater the joy of finding.
And so Jesus, Immanuel,
God with us, came and searched and called. Lepers, tax collectors, prostitutes,
foreigners, no one too lost; no one beyond His love. Even
someone like Saul the great persecutor of the church. He wrote that to
Timothy, about how lost he was, but then this too: Christ Jesus came into
the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost. And if for the foremost sinner, then for all the other sinners,
too. Then for you and me.
For still God is
searching and calling out. Though Jesus is ascended into heaven, still His
Spirit is working through the Word that is proclaimed - proclaimed here, and
proclaimed out there by you - to reach the hearts of those who hear. Who
speaks it matters not, but that all hear of the love and forgiveness of Jesus.
I have been given to speak it here, you have been given to speak it to your
family, friends, and neighbors, but the same Spirit is working through that
Word that all might be saved and none lost anymore.
For Jesus didn’t just
come to eat with tax collectors and sinners, but to die for them.
For just as He took the guilt of all their sins and ours upon
Himself to atone for them on the cross, so also He took all their lostness and ours upon Himself. In fact, so
lost did He become that He was completely separated from His Father on the
cross, even crying out like a lost lamb, My God, My God, why have you
forsaken me? The Son become the sinner. The searcher become the lost. But so that sinners become sons
and the lost be found. Not to continue to sin, but to be set free from sin -
both its curse and its dominion.
And so it is. From Adam and Eve in the Garden, to you here at the Font. From the folks in Ezekiel’s day, to you here at the Pulpit. From the tax collectors and sinners in Jesus’ day, to you here at
the Altar. Jesus is calling and forgiving, you. Not holding your lostness and sins against you, even if you’ve come here
today and repented of the same sin you fell into again this week for the
umpteenth time. He and His angels are are rejoicing
that you are here, found, washed with His forgiveness and fed with His Body and
Blood.
But there is another
story of searching that needs to be mentioned here today, and that is the
searching that began this day, 15 years ago: on September 11, 2001. When Tower
1 and then Tower 2 fell, as well as part of the Pentagon, a frantic search
began - first for survivors, then, after a while, for the lost. It was a
difficult and often gruesome job. I spoke to many of
the workmen at the pile of rubble in New York when they were on their breaks.
They were working 12, 15 hour days. And though they didn’t want to be there,
they also didn’t want to stop - not until the last body, the last of the lost,
was found. But sadly, they never found them all. For some, there was nothing to
find.
On that site today is a
memorial. There are two large holes in the ground, and in the center of those
holes another hole, black, that you cannot see the
bottom of. It’s like looking into a sepulchre. A grave. For those never found.
But the sepulchre that we look into is far different than
that. For the One who wasn’t found there when the women came to look for Him
isn’t missing or dead, but risen and alive. And He who spent six hours on the
cross and three days in the grave, under the rubble of our sin and death which
crushed Him, knows where the body of each and every person is. So that on the
Last Day, when He comes again, the next great feast will begin. That just as
the dead are raised here and now - no matter how or how badly sin has ravaged
us, so the dead will be raised then - no matter how or how badly death has
ravaged our bodies. And just as the flock of David rejoices to eat and drink
with our Saviour here and now - so the flock of David
will rejoice to eat and drink with our Saviour at the
feast which has no end. Our mourning will be turned into dancing, and we
will give thanks to the Lord forever (Introit).
To the Lord, who redeemed
us.
To the Lord, who searches
for each one as if you’re the only one.
To the Lord, who
sinners doth receive (LSB #609).
To
the Lord, in whom we rejoice, and who rejoices over you.
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.