31 January 2021 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Epiphany 4 Vienna, VA
“Set Free by Jesus”
Text:
Mark 1:21-28; Deuteronomy 18:15-20; 1 Corinthians 8:1-13
Introit:
Psalm 32:1-2, 5-7, 10
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
There was in their
synagogue a man with an unclean spirit.
|
M |
ark says that so matter
of factly. Like he was reporting
that this man had a cold, or was having a bad day. But
how much worse for this man, I’m sure. For with an unclean spirit, you
can’t just go to bed and wake up the next day for a fresh start. You can’t just
take two aspirin and feel better. This was the headache, the nightmare, that
wouldn’t end.
Until
Jesus came along . . . The great physician of body and soul.
The unclean spirit knew
it. It knew who Jesus was and what Jesus could do. The people in the synagogue
that day were amazed, but the unclean spirit was terrified at being in the
presence of the Lord of hosts. The Almighty in human flesh
and blood. The Lord of all creation, in a little
synagogue, in a little city, in a little country, with people of little
account. Not where you’d expect to find God.
Yet there He was. Teaching them. That’s like the President teaching a
High School civics class. Or the head of NASA teaching you
how to fold a paper airplane. Don’t they have more important things to
do? Doesn’t Jesus have more important things to do? Well, no. This is exactly
why He came. This is exactly what He came to do. To set
people free. And not just people en
masse - an anonymous horde. But each person, each individual, important.
Now, Mark doesn’t tell us
what Jesus preached in the synagogue that day. But I’ll bet it was this very
topic - that He has come to set us free. Because we
read in Scripture that’s what Jesus so often preached. He would point to the
words of the Old Testament prophets that spoke of captives being set free - the
blind healed, the deaf given hearing, the lame walking - and then He would say:
these words are being fulfilled in your hearing (Luke
4:21).
But that day in
Capernaum, those words were not just fulfilled in their hearing, but in
their sight. They saw it happening. Jesus setting this
poor man free from the unclean spirit, and taking captive the unclean spirit.
And so being that promised prophet greater than Moses that we heard
about today. Which was hard to imagine - a prophet greater than Moses? Moses
had led the people out of their 400 years of slavery, captivity, and oppression
in Egypt and into the freedom of the Promised Land! But Jesus would do more
than that. Something greater than that. Leading us out of a slavery, captivity, and oppression that began
at the beginning of time and into life as His children. His free children. In a Promised Land that would last
forever.
And Jesus would do that
by becoming the captive Himself. Allowing Himself to
be taken and crucified. Trading places with us. Taking our sin, condemnation,
and death upon Himself, so we could be cleansed and
free. And you are free. For you are forgiven.
For still today, the
Almighty, the Lord of hosts, the Lord of all creation, is not where you’d maybe
expect Him to be - far away in heaven, taking care of the really big and
important things in the world, like global warming and world peace. He’s in a
little church, in a little city, with people of little account. Here. For you. To speak to you. To heal you. To set you free. Which should
cause us - as it did the people in Capernaum that day - to be amazed.
Oh, we don’t hear unclean
spirits crying out and convulsing people. But do not be deceived. The Word
spoken here is no less powerful. For it is the same Word of the same God.
Perhaps the problem,
then, is not that we doubt the greatness of God, but the greatness of our
slavery, captivity, and oppression. The greatness of the sin
in our lives. The man with the unclean spirit - surely, he knew! No one
wants an unclean spirit. No one wants to be oppressed or possessed in this way.
But what are the sins
that oppress or possess you? The things you know are wrong, the things you know
you shouldn’t do, and think, and say, and desire, and yet . . .
We heard of one example
today in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians. There was a controversy in the
church there, about whether it was proper for Christians to eat meat which had
been sacrificed to idols. Some of the Christians thought No! Absolutely not!
While some on the other side thought: Why not? They’re not real gods! That
hasn’t done anything to the meat. And it’s good meat!
But it wasn’t just that
disagreement that was the problem, but the lack of love being exhibited. Like
one of those Christians taking a nice, big, juicy, drumstick, going right up
into the face of one of those horrified by this, and ripping off a nice big
bite! Mmmm! So good! And see, I didn’t
break out in leprosy! I didn’t die! Stupid!
Paul’s flabbergasted with
them. (As he often was with the Corinthians!) He says, That’s not how you were taught. That’s not what your freedom
is about. In fact, you’re acting like you’re still captive. That’s exactly what
Christ has come to set you free from! This lack of love for
others. This selfishness that causes you to act like
that. This sin that is dividing you.
What is it for you? What
is the uncleanness, the unclean spirit, in you? Maybe it is your
lack of love and selfishness. So you disobey your parents. Your
legendary temper. Lust. Greed.
Pride. Gossip. Grabbing. Hoarding. Hatred. Ridiculing. Ignoring the needs of others. Or maybe it is your lack of
trust in your heavenly Father. Believing the word of others
over His Word. Loving other things more than Him, so
He’s far down the list of your priorities. Thinking that you’re
the master of your life, you’re in charge of your life, and no one else! What
is it for you?
Truth be told, the Lord
who was in that synagogue in Capernaum and who is with us today, didn’t just
see and doesn’t just see one man with an unclean spirit, but a whole
room filled with unclean people. People He didn’t come to destroy, but to
save and set free. For that’s the way of it with God. He comes not to take you captive,
but to set you free. Not to control, but to love. Not to dominate, but to
serve.
So when Jesus calls us to
repent, it is to set us free from the guilt of our sins. When He speaks
His commandments to us, it is to set us free from the control of our
sins.
Sometimes we maybe see
these things as taking away our life, not giving us life.
For it’s hard to repent! It hurts. It’s humbling and humiliating. And sometimes
maybe it seems as if God’s just being bossy, telling us we can’t do what we
want to do.
But the truth is just the
opposite. Freedom isn’t easy. Go back to Moses and the people of Israel. After
God set them free and they were out of Egypt, and they ran up against problems
and difficulties, what did they often say? We want to go back! We wish we
were still in Egypt! Really? Back
in slavery? Back in captivity? And then
sometimes they’d also say that God just brought them out into the wilderness to
kill them. That’s really what they thought of God? But that’s what freedom
feels like to our old selves; our old sinful selves. And yes, God
is killing that old sinful person in you! So that you
don’t live in that captivity, that slavery to sin, anymore. But live a
new and better life.
So it’s not going to be
easy. Good? Yes. Easy? No. But as we sang in the
Introit earlier, Blessèd is the one whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.
And you are so blessed. For that Word of Absolution spoken to you earlier is
just as powerful and authoritative as the Word Jesus spoke in the synagogue
that day, as if He said to your sin, Be silent, and come
out of him! And just like that unclean spirit, the guilt of your
sin departs. Baptism is the same. When we baptize a person, part of that
liturgy says: Depart unclean spirit and make way for the Holy Spirit.
And it is so, not because I said it, but because those words were uttered in
the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. And you are
set free.
That’s all good. But it’s
not easy. Satan hates this. Satan hates you. And so his lies, his deceit, his
temptations, his flattery, are just going to increase against you. To try to lure you away. To try to make you wish you were
back in Egypt again. So the battle will go on in you. But Jesus will always be
here for you, and with you, in it. You won’t be alone. Again, from the Introit:
Many
are the sorrows of the wicked, but steadfast love
surrounds the one who trusts in the Lord.
Which,
really, should cause us to be amazed. The
Almighty, the Lord of hosts, the Lord of all creation, with you, surrounding
you, little you? Caring about you, who, really, in the grand scheme of
things, really are of no account? YES. Just as He was there
for that poor man in Capernaum that day.
So if you have a cold,
take two aspirin and feel better. If you’re having a bad day, go to bed and
start again tomorrow. But if you are unclean, struggling with sin, oppressed
with your guilt, feeling unworthy, come eat and drink
the Body and Blood of your Saviour. Here is the
medicine you need, from the Great Physician of body and soul. And then go and
live. You are cleansed. You are free.
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.