17 February 2019 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
The Sixth Sunday after Epiphany
Vienna, VA
Blessed Is a Statement
of Faith
Text:
Luke 6:17-26; Jeremiah 17:5-8; 1 Corinthians 15:12-20
This sermon is a gently reworked encore presentation
from yesteryear.
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Our world tends to judge
things in a very easy and straightforward way. Often, a very
surface and superficial way.
And so, blessed is the
man to whom nothing bad happens. Who attains the desires of his heart, and to
whom life is good. Who does not struggle to make ends meet, and who
others look up to and want to be like. Not
necessarily rich, but comfortable. Not necessarily
religious, but kind and generous.
And the opposite, then,
is true. Woe
to the man to whom bad happens, for whom life is a struggle. For
whom the desires of His heart remain far away, who is
heaped with one misfortune after another. Who is burdened with
sadness and looked upon with pity. Who
no one wants to be like.
But its
not just the
world
that thinks that way. We do it too. For
even as I was speaking those words and describing those people, Im
sure you formed a mental picture in your mind of who I was talking about. Of
who is blessed, and for whom life is woe. We think we know. We
think we can judge such things.
Today Jesus reminds us: not
so fast. Or
how does the old saying go: dont
judge a book by its cover! Blessings and woes may
not be what you think.
Actually, our world
sometimes figures this out, even if its just for a short time. Like
when those who we think are so richly blessed commit suicide or spend their
lives in an unending quest for something they cannot obtain. They
looked blessed, but have an emptiness they cannot fill. Or,
on the other side, when those we think should be sitting in the dust and saying
Woe is me
actually consider themselves blessed like
victims of natural disasters, or those who have lost everything in a fire, or a
person in a hospital battling disease.
At such moments, we
realize that blessing and woe is more than skin deep . . . is more than what we
see . . . is more than what we think. Events such as these that
dont
seem to make sense or fit into our nice, little, well-defined world and how it
should be
cause us to re-evaluate. Which
is good. Which is what Jesus words
for us today would have us do as well. Re-orient. Re-evaluate. Re-think. Where
is your life? Where
are you going? And why?
Its
interesting to think about the scene that day in Galilee, as Jews and Greeks
alike had come to hear Jesus and be healed by Him. Jesus
lifts up His eyes and sees people in all kinds of conditions and places of
life. And
He speaks of blessings and woes. But who is blessed? And
to whom is woe? Careful
(again!) if you think you know! Were the poor and hungry
and sad now blessed because they had been healed? Or
was Jesus now warning them of the woes that often come to those who
think they are blessed? And what about those to whom the woes applied? Were
they of all people most to be pitied (1 Cor 15:19)? Or
perhaps because they had come out to hear Jesus, did they turn to Him and
receive blessing? Recognizing
their need, their true poverty, or the life they had spent in a quest for
something they could not obtain?
Dont
judge a book by its cover. And dont
judge your life by its cover either.
And the prophet Jeremiah
can help us understand this. Perhaps Jesus had the
words of Jeremiah that we heard today in mind when He spoke to the crowd in
Galilee that day. He did know His Old Testament
pretty well. He
spoke it through the prophets, after all! And was quite fond
of quoting it. So what does Jeremiah say of blessings and woes?
Cursed is the man who
trusts in man and makes flesh his strength, whose heart turns away from the
Lord.
Blessed is the man who
trusts in the Lord, whose trust is the Lord.
Or perhaps we could
paraphrase it like this: Blessed is the man whose faith lies not in what
happens to him, but in what happened to Christ. For
such faith is neither captivated nor distressed by the things
of this world, and does not judge by that standard. But faith focused on the
cross of Christ and what happened to our Saviour
there, receives the promises and blessings won by Jesus for us there.
Such faith is like
Jeremiahs
tree planted by streams of water that come times of green and plenty when
life is good . . . or
times of drought and want when each breath of life is a struggle and
strain
is nevertheless well-watered and fed by Christ. The
unseen but deep roots of faith connected to Christ strengthening and
sustaining. Such
a man or woman is truly blessed, though what is seen and on the surface, may
seem exactly the opposite.
And you have been
so blessed. Dont
think so? Remember, dont judge a book by its
cover! Dont
judge your faith or life by how it feels to you, or what you think it is or
should be. And
dont
trust what you can or cannot do, or what you have or have not done, or what you
have or have not gotten or achieved. Trust the Word of the
Lord who says, Blessed in the man whose
trust is in the Lord, whose trust is the Lord. In what He has done.
The Lord who created you,
and then redeemed you, and now sanctifies you. The Lord who became man and entered this wilderness of
sin for you, and took your sin upon Himself. The
Lord Jesus who then entered death for you, that in His resurrection He might
render death powerless. The Lord who did not pull you up by the roots and
throw you into the fire because of your sin (as you deserved!), but who puts
out the flames in Holy Baptism His water which gives you
the faith you need for this life. The
faith that connects you to Him. That drinks of His
forgiveness and life. That endures both blessings and woes, strong in Him.
And so blessed
are you
is a statement of faith, not of sight. And
therefore a statement of the cross a statement that cannot
be proven or deduced, but can only be believed. But
that doesnt
make it weak or uncertain, but in fact, exactly the opposite thats
what makes it so sure! Because it is rooted and
grounded not in anything of this world, which comes and goes and changes so
fast - including definitions of what it means to be blessed! - but is instead rooted in the death and resurrection of
Christ. The death and resurrection of Christ that has
reconciled us to the Father and the Father to us. The
death and resurrection of Christ that has given us new life, and provided all
that we need.
And so yes, blessed
are you who are poor with nothing to hold onto
but Christ!
for yours is the kingdom of God.
Blessed are you who are
hungry now, for you will be satisfied filled with Christs
own body and blood!
Blessed are you who weep
now
in repentance for you shall laugh
in the joy of forgiveness forever.
And blessed are you
when people hate you and exclude you and revile you on account of the Son of
Man! When they see Christ in you. Christ
your life and salvation. Christ your forgiveness and love. Christ,
the firstfruits. Christ,
the Tree of Life, who gives life to us trees, that we may live and produce
fruit. The fruits of faith and good works. In season and out of season. In plenty and in drought. Not
relying on what we see, but trusting in His Word.
So Arise! Shine! For
your light has come (Isaiah 60:1)! Your
Epiphany light today shining on who is blessed. He is. And He who is
blessed says blessed are you. And His Word makes it so.
And so it is true. Blessed are 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.