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Sermon for 03.19.23 “Our faith and calling”

Lent 4, March 19, 2023
Text: Ephesians 5:8–14
Theme: Our faith and calling
Other Lessons: Isaiah 42:14–21; Psalm 142; John 9:1–41 or 9:1–7, 13–17,
34–39

A. In the Name of the Father…Amen.
B. The Epistle lesson from Ephesians 5 serves as our sermon text for this
morning.
C. Grace, mercy, and peace be yours from God our heavenly Father through
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
D. Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us pray:
Ø Holy God, hear my prayer.
Ø As I walk this spiritual life, I relentlessly question You.
Ø You heal someone’s beloved, and I ask, “Why not this one too?”
Ø You shower food upon some who hunger, and I complain that my stomach is
growling.
Ø Forgive me.
Ø Forgive me for my doubts and my limited sight.
Ø Open wide before me the expanse of Your grace, the embrace of Your love,
and the wonder of Your healing power.
Ø In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, I pray. Amen.
Introduction

A. “What is truth?”
1. This question was asked of Jesus by Pontius Pilate hours before our
Lord’s crucifixion (John 18:38).
2. Jesus told Pilate that he came to “bear witness to the truth,” saying
that “everyone who is of the truth listens to my voice” (John 18:37).
3. Pilate wasn’t interested in finding out what truth was.
4. In a cynical, somewhat annoyed manner, he reveals what he thinks about
the ability to discover truth in this life.
5. He thinks it’s silly.
B. A similar attitude is very much alive and well in our time.
1. Objective truth is on trial again.
2. The secular opinion is that truth is manufactured in the heart of man.
3. Truth is what you make it to be.
4. This leads to a diversity of perspectives on life, with no unifying
foundation.
5. How does a society function when truth is based on individual opinion?
6. What is truth when truth can be different from person to person?
7. When there can be more than one truth, how can there be unity?
C. In our text from Ephesians, Paul shows that Christian teaching upholds
objective truth when he exhorts his hearers regarding their manner of life.
1. He says they were once like Pilate, a people who were living in
darkness, apart from faith in Christ.
2. Now, however, they have heard the Word of God, they have been baptized
into Christ, and so he calls them “light in the Lord.”
3. In verses 8 and 9, he says:
A. “Walk as children of light (for the fruit of light is found in all that
is good and right and true).”
B. Paul teaches that once an individual comes to faith in Christ, that
person knows not only what is true but also what is right and good.
C. Today, let’s dig into our text more deeply, especially into these three
fundamental virtues, and see how they define what it means to Walk as
Children of Light.
D. To walk as children of light means:
1. First, that we should walk in a way consistent with all that is good.
2. Second, it means we should walk in a way consistent with all that is
right.
3. Third, to walk as children of light means we should walk in a way
consistent with all that is true.
I. We should walk in a way consistent with all that is good.
A. God alone is good.
1. He is the source and originator of good, that is, of all moral
excellence and purity.
2. The Scriptures make this quite clear.
3. In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth, he looked
and:
a. “saw that it was good” (Genesis 1:12).
4. Throughout the Old Testament, it was clear to the ancients that good
comes from God as a gift and blessing.
a. In Psalm 73, we read that:
1. “it is good to be near God” (verse 28).
b. In Psalm 84, we read that he withholds:
1. “no good thing . . . from those who walk uprightly” (verse 11).
c. In Psalm 109, we read that his:
1. “steadfast love is good” (verse 21).
5. In the New Testament, Jesus makes God’s goodness abundantly clear when
he asks:
a. “Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone” (Mark 10:18).
B. Though God alone is good, Paul teaches the Ephesians that by Baptism and
faith in Christ they have been brought out of spiritual blindness and now
can see what “good” is!
1. Before they knew Christ, the Ephesians did not know.
2. Formerly they were lost and their lives were lived in pursuit of carnal
things.
3. We read at the beginning of Romans how low the Gentiles became­:
a. to worship idols and even engage in unnatural relations.
b. The way of the Gentiles before Christ was not good.
4. Then the prophets, apostles, and Christ himself brought to the world
“news” from this “good God” that of course came to be called “Good News!”
5. That news was of the only true God, who forgives and saves through the
atoning sacrifice of his Son, Jesus Christ.
6. Because of Christ’s suffering and death for the sins of the world,
Gentiles were able to go from unbelief to belief, from darkness to light,
from bad to good.
C. Pilate, standing near and talking to Jesus, was a Gentile living in
darkness who scoffed at the idea of Christian virtue.
1. His decisions were not based in virtue but on convenience, even if it is
wrong.
2. Look at the world around us today.
a. Who is seeking what is morally excellent? Who is seeking what is
objectively good?
b. The basis for much decision-making in popular culture these days is
subjective;
1. that means, it comes from within the human heart.
2. “Whatever seems good to me, that I will do!” says modern man. It seems
silly to the unbeliever to seek what is good from outside of self, because
an upstanding moral life based on an objective ethic does not necessarily
indulge the flesh or fill the bank accounts.
c. In fact, it may do the opposite!
1. For example, some Christians have quit their jobs in order to separate
themselves from immoral decision-making.
2. Other Christians have remained and are outspoken for the cause of what
is good and received harsh treatment in return.
3. Nevertheless, Paul teaches that walking as children of light is to seek
the good that God has taught and shown.
II. We should walk in a way consistent with all that is right.
A. God alone is right.
1. When Paul teaches the Ephesians to pursue that which is “right,” he is
not teaching them to seek what is “correct” as much as he is teaching them
to pursue justice and righteousness.
2. When considering the rightness or righteousness of God, we immediately
think of God as judge or arbiter.
3. In fact, the Scriptures reveal God this way in many cases.
4. Again we appeal to the Psalms.
a. Psalm 7 states clearly:
1. “God is a righteous judge” (verse 11).
b. Psalm 50 says:
1. “The heavens declare his righteousness, for God himself is judge!”
(verse 6).
c. And in Psalm 75, we read:
1. “I will judge with equity” (verse 2).
B. A proper understanding of “righteousness” is central to understanding
the entire Bible.
1. God who created the world was filled with sorrow when his creation fell
into sin.
2. Nevertheless, God judged Adam and Eve according to their sin in the
Garden of Eden, saying, ultimately:
a. “By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, till you return to the
ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you
shall return” (Genesis 3:19).
b. As the world now lived in a state corrupted by sin, the Creator was
entirely “right” to judge and sentence the sinner harshly.
C. However, this divine judge was very quick to make declarations that were
laced with grace and mercy for the sinner.
1. In fact, already with Adam and Eve, though they were judged according to
their sins, God spoke words of mercy that related to the promise of a
Savior (Genesis 3:15), words we focused on a few Sundays ago.
2. Throughout the biblical text, we learn more of the Creator God, who is
judge.
3. His judgments are not made with hostile force and cold indifference.
4. Rather, justice is sought not only with regard to what is right but also
with regard to what is merciful.
5. So the Creator God shows amazing grace as the gift of his Son is
announced, a Son who was given willingly for the sake of the lost sinner.
6. As the Messiah was promised to the world, yes, already to Adam and Eve,
the declaration of righteousness was modified.
7. Now, the sinner did not have to appear before the angry judge according
to his own works or merits.
8. Rather, the sinner was given an advocate to stand next to him:
a. even in his place as substitute, taking the death we deserved upon
himself.
b. That advocate was the Son of God, the Savior, Christ Jesus.
D. Our God, who is judge therefore, is not one whom we should flee from.
1. But he is one to whom we should run to.
2. In Isaiah, we read of this judge making a declaration:
a. “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow;
though they are red like crimson, they shall become like wool” (Isaiah
1:18).
3. Paul makes a parallel statement in Romans when he writes:
a. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are
justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus” (Romans 3:23–24).
4. It is this “good” and “right” God who has brought the Gentiles from
darkness to light, and in so doing has called them to that which is right.
E. Knowing the righteous God who has acted with mercy on behalf of the
sinner for the sake of the cross of his Son, Jesus Christ, the Gentiles are
now given a very clear understanding of what it means to walk as children
of the light in all that is “right.”
1. This “walk” is going to be consistent with justice and mercy, with sound
judgments and compassionate decrees, with attention to the Law of God and
also a focus on the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
F. Understanding what is “right” in light of the Lord, the Gentiles are now
given an ethical standard by which to live.
1. When Paul tells them in verse 10:
a. “Try to discern what is pleasing to the Lord,”
b. they should realize this is something they can do!
c. Knowing this God and his nature, attitude, and disposition toward them,
they can know and learn day by day what is pleasing to him, and knowing
what is pleasing to him will help them in exposing (verse 11) the opposite,
that which does not please him.
III. We should walk in a way consistent with all that is true.
A. The knowledge of that which is good and right will go a long way for the
Gentiles in helping them live out their Christian calling.
1. But Paul speaks of one more virtue in verse 9 that will help them still
more, a virtue that Pilate thought was so far from anyone, but a virtue
that is close to us in Jesus Christ our Lord: that which is true.
2. We should walk in a way consistent with all that is true.
B. It’s an ironic moment in time when Pontius Pilate, a man born of Adam,
looks into the eyes of the God who created him and asks, “What is truth?”
1. Jesus, of course, is truth in the flesh.
2. The Bible again speaks of our God as a God of truth.
3. Appealing yet again to the Psalms, we read in Psalm 43:
a. “Send out your light and your truth; let them lead me” (verse 3).
4. In Psalm 51:
a. “Behold, you delight in truth in the inward being, and you teach me
wisdom in the secret heart” (verse 6).
5. And in Psalm 119:
a. “The sum of your word is truth” (verse 160).
C. The language of truth, like goodness and righteousness, is not only left
in the Old Testament, but sounds forth clearly in the New, especially as it
relates to Jesus.
1. John the apostle writes of truth as a theme in his Gospel.
2. Beginning already in chapter 1, he says:
a. “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his
glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth”
(verse 14).
3. Just a few verses later, he writes again:
a. “For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus
Christ” (verse 17)
4. While these texts are clear, nothing is more clear than what Jesus says
in John 14:
a. “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father
except through me” (John 14:6).
b. The Scriptures make it clear.
c. God alone is the source of all truth.
d. And if the world is to know truth, then it must know Jesus Christ, the
truth of God incarnate.
D. Paul says that walking as children of light must also include walking in
the truth, that is, in the facts and realities of life.
1. How does one walk in truth, or live in reality or understand the facts
of life?
2. Jesus answers this question again in John 8, saying:
a. “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know
the truth, and the truth will set you free” (verses 31–32).
3. Jesus clearly teaches that the Word of God is truth, fact, and real,
even as he prays in the High Priestly Prayer:
a. “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth” (John 17:17).
b. The Word of God is one of the means through which the Holy Spirit works
to bring people from darkness to light.
c. It is God’s Word which the Gentiles received through the preaching of
Paul that led them away from that which was unfruitful, dark, and shameful.
d. God’s Word exposed the dark ways of the unbelieving Gentiles so that
they could see and live in the light of the truth.
E. What a struggle we have in our day with debates over what is true and
real!
1. Truth has been so obscured that we get angry and frustrated even
thinking about the ways:
a. A boy calls himself a girl.
b. A girl calls herself a cat.
c. An unborn child is called a “product of conception.”
d. Standing up for your beliefs is called bigotry.
e. And on and on it goes.
2. It has become increasingly clear that the Christian faith and worldview
are under assault by that which is false, dark, and evil.
3. The world today is living in a very similar manner to that of these
Gentiles before they were brought into the light of Christ.
F. But Paul’s words in our text are for the Christians.
1. He is not barking at the Gentiles; he is exhorting God’s chosen, his
elect in Christ.
2. He is:
a. Calling
b. Reminding
c. teaching them—teaching you and me—to live out their rightful calling—our
rightful calling—and walk in the light of the Lord that he clearly made
known to us and continues to make clear to us in Holy Scripture.
3. The calling of which Paul spoke to the Ephesians was not based in the
mind of man but in the mind and will of God, who created, redeemed, and
sanctifies.
4. He exhorts the Ephesians to consider their walk and to be wise in their
day, knowing that the days are evil and that Satan will ever continue to
attack those who confess Jesus as Lord.

Conclusion

A. Not many years ago, a Lutheran pastor was putting his children to bed.
1. The daughter was banging on the bathroom door, appealing to her brother
to let her in.
2. “Stop that!” the father called out.
3. To his son in the bathroom, he said, “Open the door. We’re all waiting
to get in and brush our teeth!”
4. When the father came closer to the door, he could hear that the water in
the sink was running much stronger than necessary.
5. So he called out again, “Son, open the door and turn off that water!”
6. No response.
7. The father got serious.
8. “Son, open the door or I’ll take it off the hinges myself!”
B. Soon after, the father, the daughter, and now a small crowd gathered
around the outside of the door to see what was going on inside.
1. A hand was heard on the doorknob, the lock was clearly released, and the
door began to open.
2. To the surprise of all, water flooded every corner of the bathroom.
3. The father yelled at his three-year-old son, “Where did all of this
water come from?”
4. From chin touching chest, and a thoughtful expression on his brow, he
slowly looked up and answered his father and pastor, “God?”
5. Immediately, the father’s stern demeanor and high shoulders relaxed into
a more casual posture.
6. “I guess that’s true, son,” he said.
7. With siblings now laughing behind him and attempting to keep the smirk
off his own face, the father continued, “Water does come from God, but the
mess came from you!”
C. Though Paul exhorts the Ephesians in today’s text to walk as children of
light (Ephesians 5:8), it’s a challenge for us sinners to try and put good
and right and true together all at the same time, isn’t it!
1. We often end up standing ashamed like the little three-year-old drowning
in his own mess.
D. Though virtue remains on trial today in our world and our society and
Pilate’s question continues to ring from generation to generation, we have
received a word from the only reliable source of wisdom and knowledge in
life.
1. The triune God, who is himself good and right and true, has given us his
Son—even to death on the cross—so that we might have these virtues
illuminated before our eyes.
2. Not only that, but the Son of God has brought us into his marvelous
light by Baptism into his name, that we might not only know virtue but also
live virtuous lives.
3. May we, like the Ephesians, boldly cling to the Word of Christ and
pursue that which is good and right and true in our day, to the glory of
God and in service to our neighbor. Amen
E. Let us pray:
Ø Great God of all creation, who am I that you are mindful of me?
Ø You who set the stars in motion, who launched waves crashing against the
shore, who knows the heights and depths of the world.
Ø Why do you bother with me?
Ø You count the hairs on my head and call me each by name.
Ø You give me Your wisdom and You uphold me by Your Spirit.
Ø You tend to me and care for me, and I do not understand why.
Ø I cannot grasp Your love for me, O God, for it is unlike me to be that
loving and forgiving.
Ø Remind me once again of the sacredness of my ordinary, day-to-day life.
Ø By your Spirit, teach me to live truly as beings little lower than
angels.
Ø In your mercy, O God, forgive who I am and bless who I will be.
Ø I pray in the peace that only God, the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit
can give. Amen.
F. The peace of God, which transcends all human understanding, guard your
hearts and minds in Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
G. In the Name of the Father…Amen.

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Services

Lenton Mid-Week Service March 15, 2023

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Reaching Out

We Are On Our Way to the Promised Land

It is the year 1450 B.C. in ancient Egypt. We can feel the excitement in the air as the children of Israel just learned that the pharaoh has consented to their freedom to leave Egypt and return to their homeland, the land of Israel. They were on the way to the Promised Land! To top it off, the local people gave them valuables – gold, silver, and jewelry, so glad they were to get rid of these troublesome people, and their troublesome but powerful God. The children of Israel were thrilled to leave because they were leaving a life of slavery – of long days of heavy labor, building the pharaoh’s monuments.

As they headed into the desert – men, women, children, with all their worldly belongings, their exuberance began to wear thin as they experienced heat with no shade and thirst with little water. Some even wanted to go back to Egypt and its stability, even though it would be returning to a life of slavery.

When they finally arrived at the edge of the Promised Land, they sent in 12 spies to check out the land and its inhabitants. When the spies returned after 40 days, their reports are ominous. Ten of the spies were freaked out by the inhabitants, saying: “There we saw giants, and we were like grasshoppers in their sight.” Numbers 13:33

But Joshua and Caleb, the other two spies, tore their clothes and exclaimed: “The land we passed through to spy out is an exceedingly good land. If the Lord delights in us, then He will bring us into this land and give it to us, ‘a land which flows with milk and honey.’ Only do not rebel against the Lord, nor fear the people of the land, for their protection has departed from them, and the Lord is with us.” Numbers 14:7-9

But the majority prevailed, and refused to enter the Promised Land in spite of God’s promises to deliver it to them. God responded with righteous anger at their unfaithfulness. After seeing miracle after miracle in their deliverance from Egypt, they rejected God’s guarantee of safety and victory, and embraced disbelief when the Promised Land lay just before them. So God decreed that this generation would wander in the wilderness of Sinai for 40 years and die in the desert, so their children could enter the Promised Land. When their children grew up and entered the Promised Land, God gave them victory after victory.

There is a vital parallel with our own lives. Many people are still enslaved – not by cruel taskmasters as in Egypt, but by the seductions of the world, the lusts of the flesh, or the lies of the devil. They are attracted to darkness rather than light, and embrace a life of sin, thereby trapping themselves in this life and into eternity. But we can become free of the slavery of sin, for Christ paid the price to set us free. “For you did not receive the spirit of slavery leading again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption, by whom we cry: ‘Abba, Father.’” Romans 8:15
In like manner, many people are wandering in their own wilderness, perhaps moving from one religion or philosophy to another, or one relationship to another, always seeking fulfillment and knowledge but never finding the Truth of Christ. Perhaps they too, like the children of Israel, were given an opportunity to go into the Promised Land – a life of peace in Christ in the Kingdom of God, but were too afraid or unwilling to repent of their sins, die to self, and receive Christ. They resisted the promptings of the Holy Spirit, unwilling to pay the entrance price to the narrow path that leads to eternal life in heaven.

Finally, there are some – a smaller number, who took the narrow path and made it into the Promised Land – a life in Christ, led by the Holy Spirit, and responding to God’s call on their life, carrying out the work that He has set before them.

So which of these spheres are you in – a life of slavery, wandering in the wilderness, or in the Promised Land, as a follower of Christ in the Kingdom of God? The Lord is calling those of us who are enjoying life in the Spirit – the Promised Land, to reach out to those who are enslaved or wandering in the wilderness and help them find the Way to Christ. But we need to act, for time is short, tomorrow is not guaranteed, and eternity is forever.
To God be the glory
Board of Evangelism

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Third Sunday in Lent 2023

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Sermon

Sermon for 03.12.23 “The Lord is with us”

Lent 3, March 12, 2023
Text: John 4:5–26 (27–30, 39–42)
Theme: The Lord is among us
Other Lessons: Exodus 17:1–7; Psalm 95:1–9; Romans 5:1–8

A. In the Name of the Father…Amen.

B. The Gospel lesson from John 4 serves as our sermon text for this morning.

C. Grace, mercy, and peace be yours from God our heavenly Father through
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

D. Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us pray:
• Holy God, I wander off.
I am distracted by shiny things, and I get lost.
Merciful God, You come to find me.
Lost and afraid, I become stubborn and hard to deal with. Loving God, You
pick me up and brush me off and take me home.
You are the light of the world, so give me eyes past this present darkness.
I will wander again, but for the moment, I am safe and forgiven. And so I
thank you. Amen.

Introduction

E. “Is the Lord among us or not?”
• That was the question the people of Israel asked Moses in the Old
Testament lesson from Exodus 17:7.
• They were weary of running,
• they were tired,
• above all, they were thirsty.
• “Give us water to drink” seems like a reasonable request, doesn’t it?
• Yet under their request lies:
a. a complaint,
b. a grumbling,
c. a desire that they would get:
1. everything just the way they wanted it,
2. when they wanted it,
3. and how they wanted it.

F. This same attitude was what the Samaritan woman at the well was used to
seeing.
• People came from all over to draw water from the well.
• It was Jacob’s well, after all.
• People would come from all over in that desert climate to rest and be
refreshed in the waters of Jacob.
• When Jesus comes and sits down by the well, this woman thinks he is just
like all the others.
• Now, in a way, he is like all the others.
• But ultimately, this woman learns who Jesus is, and what the living water
he offers will really give her.

G. To the Samaritan woman, Jesus seems like everyone else.

H. Jesus is wearied from his journey (verse 6).
• His travel,
• his behavior,
• his every other manner make him appear like everyone else.

I. The woman expects him to be like everyone else.
• The woman is surprised that he would even converse with her, far less ask
for water.
a. John 4:9 (NASB95)
9Therefore the Samaritan woman said to Him, “How is it that You, being a
Jew, ask me for a drink since I am a Samaritan woman?” (For Jews have no
dealings with Samaritans.)

J. After six men in her life, she was perhaps only used to everyone wanting
from her what they wanted, when they wanted it.

K. In some ways, we, too, think Jesus is like everyone else.

L. Deep down, we think he operates as everyone else does:
• that he gives us what we want if we do what he wants us to do.
a. A “give and take” relationship.
b. The Lord God is the big “vendor machine” in the sky.

M. Oftentimes, we do not depend on God until we need to depend on Him.
• When human options fail, it is then we find ourselves ready to turn to
God.
• We in turn treat Him like He is the “last resort”

N. Thus our Lord is just another business client or perhaps a conversation
partner for our curiosity, but not a loving, intimate friend and brother.

O. Jesus reveals himself to the woman (and us) as the Living Water.

P. In asking her for water, Jesus acknowledges her humanity:
• he needs the same things she needs.

Q. And Jesus’ words go beyond what the eye can see or what the ear can hear.

R. He is the one who gives living water.
• John 4:10 (NASB95)
10Jesus answered and said to her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it
is who says to you, ‘Give Me a drink,’ you would have asked Him, and He
would have given you living water.”

S. He is the Messiah.
• John 4:25–26 (NASB95)
25The woman said to Him, “I know that Messiah is coming (He who is called
Christ); when that One comes, He will declare all things to us.”
26Jesus said to her, “I who speak to you am He.”

T. He is the Savior of the world.
• John 4:42 (NASB95)
42and they were saying to the woman, “It is no longer because of what you
said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves and know that this
One is indeed the Savior of the world.”

U. The Lord Is among Us, Giving Living Water.

V. In fact, we recognize him as the Living Water.

W. Just as Jesus revealed such things to the woman, even so he reveals them
to you today.
• Jesus acknowledges your basic human needs by showing his own.
• He is not a business client or an object of curiosity but one who became
as we are to redeem us:
a. even by dying as we must.

X. This revelation changes what you see before you.
• You no longer see Jesus as someone with whom you must make a deal, but,
in faith, as one who loves you.
a. Instead of “give and take”, the Lord gives…and gives…and gives even more.
b. We receive what He gives with joy and thanksgiving.

Y. This frees you to look to Jesus as the sole source of love, and also to
see your own Samaritans as children of the heavenly Father.
• Regardless of where we were raised as children,
• Regardless of the color of our skin,
• Regardless of what circumstances have happened in our lives,
• Our Lord loves us and gives us the best!!!

Conclusion

Z. In the TV series Undercover Boss, an executive or owner of some company
goes “undercover” to see the real inner workings of his or her company.
• There’s something charming about the thought of a high-powered exec doing
manual labor or entry-level work.
• We’re attracted to people who are willing to stoop down below their
station in life.

AA. Our Lord, however, does not just “stoop down” to do our work.
• He actually takes on our very flesh and blood and “was made man,” as we
confess in the Creed.
• Wearied by his travels, this Lord asks the Samaritan woman for a drink of
water (John 4:7).
• Even after he is lifted up (on the cross), Jesus never loses his
humanity.
• It’s not simply a part of him; it is who he is.
• So when Jesus comes to the woman at the well, he’s not going undercover
to catch her in the act of doing something wrong.
• Rather, he’s come to lift her up
a. and to give her something she can get nowhere else:
b. God in the flesh, for her.

BB. Jesus is come into the world that we may see and commune with him.
• He is the one who gives living water, so that you will never thirst.
• He is the one who knows you for who you are and loves you all the way to
the cross and into death itself.

CC. In Exodus, the people grumbled at the Lord because they didn’t
understand what he was giving them.
• He did not simply come to rescue them from oppressors.
• He came to be their God, their Savior, their Messiah.
• It was true for them, it was true for the Samaritan woman, and it is true
for you.

DD. Because of this, how you look at Jesus and at your neighbors around you
ought to be different.
• You see their basic humanity.
• They are neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, Samaritan nor Galilean,
white or black or yellow or brown or any other color.
• We are all of the same race: the human race.
a. We all bleed red.
b. The same skeletal structure.
c. People filled with emotions, needs, and cares.
• We are human beings, made in the image of God.
• And all of us need the living water, which only he can give.

EE. So come, receive the gifts God gives to you in his own Son.
• He gives of himself freely.
• He bids you come, to eat and drink.
• He calls you his own people, who now worship him in spirit and in truth.
• It is who you are, who he has made you to be in the waters of Holy
Baptism and as we commune with Him in His holy Supper. Amen.

FF. Let us pray:
• Holy God, I am an imperfect person and I need Your love. Forgive me when
I ignore Your children who cry out in distress. Forgive me when I choose
not to see those who remind me too much of myself.
Forgive me when I put rules ahead of people, and choose legality over
kindness and judgment that lacks mercy.
Enable me to see as You see, the wide vistas open to the possibility of
compassion and grace.
O God, hear my prayer. Amen.

GG. The peace of God, which transcends all understanding, guard your hearts
and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

HH. In the Name of the Father…Amen.

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Lenten Mid-Week 3 – Mar 08 2023

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Reaching Out

Plain Talk About Hell

Did you hear the one about the guy who went to a religious fair? At the Heaven booth he was told that heaven is a place of peace and harmony, where angels play harps and sing hymns. But at the Hell booth, he was told Hell is an incredible place, with beautiful women, gourmet buffets, gambling houses where you always win, and servants to satisfy your every desire. So he chose Hell. But when he arrived, he discovered it was a terrible, dark place of suffering and torment. He asked Satan about what he had promised, and Satan replied: “Oh, that was just marketing. Welcome to Hell.” He had just been snookered by The Father of Lies.

So Satan lies. Here are some more of his lies:

* Hell does not exist (and neither does Satan).
* Everyone goes to heaven; Hell is just for demons.
* The idea of Hell was just made up to scare people into coming to church and paying tithes.
* Worship Lucifer, the angel of light, and he will give you power.
* You can always receive Christ LATER.
The New Testament describes Hell as a spiritual place where souls are subject to eternal suffering for their sins and their refusal to receive Christ as their Lord and Savior; for refusing Christ’s offer to take away their sins. Preferring the self-indulgence of sin to self-denying righteousness, they loved darkness rather than light, and rejected the God who created them. Hell is a place of eternal remorse and sorrow, guilt and shame, utter hopelessness, and no mercy, love, or acts of kindness.

Why would God send people to Hell? It is their choice, and He honors their decision. If they reject God while on earth, why would they want to spend eternity with Him? At the same time, God grieves over the lost, “not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance”. II Peter 3:9 (The terms “Heaven” and “Hell” are capitalized because they are real places like Missouri or Canada, but in the spiritual realm).

According to God’s Word, the tragic truth is that most people will not go to Heaven, but to Hell. This is described in Matthew 7:13, in which Jesus described the gate to eternal life being narrow and only a few find it. What does the Word of God say about who goes to Hell? In Galatians 5:19-21, we read: “Now the works of the flesh are evident, which are: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, contentions, jealousies, outbursts of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies, envy, murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like; of which I tell you beforehand, just as I also told you in time past, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.” (That’s because God is holy, and no sin is allowed in His Presence in heaven).

So Hell is real, and Jesus spoke of it as being real. However, He referred to Heaven, eternal life, and His coming kingdom three times as often as He did about Hell. Jesus spoke about Heaven in 10% of His messages and Hell in 3%. That means the other 87% of the time He spoke about living life in harmony with God, loving people, and how we can navigate this life victoriously. Jesus wasn’t obsessed with people knowing about Hell, His desire was for them to know His Father. It isn’t the fear of Hell that saves you, it is knowing Jesus that saves you!

It is highly likely that you and I know people who are in Hell. We also know people who are headed for Hell. They may be family or friends, neighbors or co-workers. One day, each of them will pass through the veil of death and into eternity, where their destiny is set.

We are to be ambassadors for Christ, so let us reach out to the lost with the love and truth of Christ, for Heaven and Hell are real, time is short, and eternity is forever. And always remember – if the whole world knew what the dead know, the whole world would follow Jesus Christ.

To God be the glory

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Sermon

Sermon for 03.08.23 “Strange bedfellows: Jehoshaphat”

Lenten Midweek 3
Text: 2 Chronicles 17:1–6; 18:1–3; 19:1–7
Theme: Strange Bedfellows: Jehoshaphat
Other lessons: Psalm 45; Revelation 2:18–28; Matthew 7:24–27
Hymns: LSB 438, 644

A. In the Name of the Father…Amen.

B. The reading from 2 Chronicles 17-19 serve as our sermon texts for this
evening.

C. Grace, mercy, and peace be yours from God our heavenly Father through
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

D. Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us pray:
• God of mercy and love, I know that sometimes I allow myself to be
distracted by things that really don’t matter all that much. I would rather
pursue intellectual arguments than live the Gospel. I would rather debate
my equals than defend the vulnerable. I prefer to think about You instead
of getting to know You. Help me, O Christ. Help me to discern what matters
to You and to the vulnerable You call me to help. Help me to open up my
heart, wide in love and grace, and so be a living example of your Good
News. In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, I pray. Amen.

Introduction

A. “Politics makes strange bedfellows” expresses the idea that people of
differing views and character come together to achieve political goals.
• Alliances are made that would otherwise seem unlikely.

B. And politics isn’t just Washington.
• The politics of business makes alliances to get a good deal.

C. In fact, we make alliances in every arena of life.
• Unfortunately, that makes life a series of compromises.
• It could be said that all life, as with politics, is the art of
compromise.
• The question always is, what and how much is compromised?

A. Jehoshaphat made a marriage alliance with Ahab.

A. We come today to Jehoshaphat, the son of Asa, whom we heard about last
week.
• Jehoshaphat is the great-great-great-grandson of King David, and
succeeded his father Asa to the throne of Judah.
a. 2 Chronicles 17:3–4 (NASB95)
3The Lord was with Jehoshaphat because he followed the example of his
father David’s earlier days and did not seek the Baals,
4but sought the God of his father, followed His commandments, and did not
act as Israel did.
B. 2 Chronicles 17:5–6 (NASB95)
5So the Lord established the kingdom in his control, and all Judah brought
tribute to Jehoshaphat, and he had great riches and honor.
6He took great pride in the ways of the Lord and again removed the high
places and the Asherim from Judah.

B. Recall that at the end of his father Asa’s life, the Northern Kingdom of
Israel was threatening the Southern Kingdom of Judah.
• Asa had paid for outside help, that is, for Syria to attack Israel.
• And so the beginning of Jehoshaphat’s reign was marked by tension as the
new king of Judah fortified the northern border with Israel.
• However, there was no war, and in fact, the surrounding kingdoms feared
Judah and paid tribute to them.

C. Now Jehoshaphat had an idea.
• There was a new king in Israel, and Jehoshaphat saw an opportunity:
a. What’s better than making war with Israel?
b. Making love with Israel!
c. Make love, not war.
d. 2 Chronicles 18:1 (NASB95)
1Now Jehoshaphat had great riches and honor; and he allied himself by
marriage with Ahab.
E. He gave his son Jehoram in marriage to King Ahab’s daughter Athaliah.

B. Jehoshaphat’s alliance with evil brought disaster for Judah.

A. The idea, in case you’re not familiar with the politics of the ancient
world, is that a marriage alliance is often the best and fastest way to
grow the kingdom.
• First of all, it was less likely King Ahab of Israel would attack Judah,
since his own daughter was in line to be queen.
• And perhaps the kingdoms could even be reunited at some point.
• Sounds like a good move, right?
• It worked for countless other kingdoms.
• Why not here?
• What a great idea!

B. But Jehoshaphat and Ahab were strange bedfellows.
• Yes, they were both kings of God’s people. They spoke a common language
and had much in common culturally.
• However, much separated Jehoshaphat and Ahab as well.
• If you don’t remember Ahab, perhaps you’ve heard of his wife, Jezebel;
they were quite a pair.
• They were constantly trying to kill the prophet Elijah.
• They falsely accused their neighbor Naboth and killed him so they could
take his family vineyard.
• They worshiped idols and did all manner of evil.
• And now, by arranging a marriage alliance, Jehoshaphat and Ahab were in
bed together—at least the prince and princess were.

C. 2 Chronicles 18:2 (NASB95)
2Some years later he went down to visit Ahab at Samaria. And Ahab
slaughtered many sheep and oxen for him and the people who were with him,
and induced him to go up against Ramoth-gilead.
A. What a welcome!
B. Jehoshaphat goes to visit his son-in-law’s, and it’s party time!
C. But King Ahab has an idea of his own.
D. King Ahab is fighting Syria and wants to influence Judah to join the
fight.
E. That’s what allies are for, is it not?

D. So Ahab says and Jehoshaphat responds:
• 2 Chronicles 18:3 (NASB95)
3Ahab king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat king of Judah, “Will you go with
me against Ramoth-gilead?” And he said to him, “I am as you are, and my
people as your people, and we will be with you in the battle.”
B. Thus Judah and Israel have been joined as one—bedfellows.
C. The great irony is that they will go to fight Ben-hadad of Syria.
D. Yes, the very same Ben-hadad that Asa, Jehoshaphat’s father, had paid to
attack Israel in the first place!
E. So now Judah is going to fight against the mercenaries Judah had hired!
F. How times have changed!
G. Jehoshaphat thought he was making peace but gets dragged into a war.
H. That’s what happens when you make alliances with men like King Ahab.

E. But that was only the beginning. Ahab’s real plan was to get Jehoshaphat
killed.
• Ahab knew that Ben-hadad, the Syrian king, would try to kill him and thus
end the war quickly.
• Here’s the plan:
a. 2 Chronicles 18:29 (NASB95)
29The king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, “I will disguise myself and go
into battle, but you put on your robes.” So the king of Israel disguised
himself, and they went into battle.
B. With allies like these, who needs enemies?

F. In the end, the plot didn’t work.
• Ahab was the one who was killed, and his blood ended up mixed with water
from a public pool.
• Dogs licked it up, and prostitutes washed themselves in it (1 Kings
22:38).
• Jehoshaphat, on the other hand, would repent and be one of the great
kings of Judah.
• However, the contamination of Judah by marriage to a daughter of Ahab had
a cost.
• The damage had already been done.

G. Jehoshaphat led his people into a compromised future.
• What happens to Judah after he dies and Jehoram becomes king?
• Jehoram is married to Athaliah, the daughter of Jezebel.
• She had no intention of leaving idolatry behind and faithfully following
Yahweh.
• In fact, the Scriptures make this point very clear, that:
a. 2 Chronicles 21:6 (NASB95)
6He walked in the way of the kings of Israel, just as the house of Ahab did
(for Ahab’s daughter was his wife), and he did evil in the sight of the
Lord.
E. Judah suffered terribly under the reign of the bad king Jehoram along
with his wife!
F. Jehoshaphat was indeed one of the great kings of Judah, but he was
seduced by the allure of this marriage alliance with Israel.

C. Yet when we are faithless, God is faithful.

A. This adulteration of the house of David could have destroyed it.
• 2 Chronicles 21:7 (NASB95)
7Yet the Lord was not willing to destroy the house of David because of the
covenant which He had made with David, and since He had promised to give a
lamp to him and his sons forever.
B. From 2 Timothy we hear these words:
• 2 Timothy 2:13 (NASB95)
13If we are faithless, He remains faithful, for He cannot deny Himself.
C. God remains true to his people despite their being charmed into
practicing wickedness and idolatry.

D. The Son of Jehoshaphat’s uncompromising love led to his crucifixion.

A. Jehoshaphat was a good king of Judah, but we need the King who is better
than he; we need a King who will not be lured away—whose commitment to his
people is stronger than his desire for alliances.
• We need the Son of Jehoshaphat, who was uncompromising in his love for
us.
• He refused to bow down and worship the devil to gain the kingdoms of the
world.
• He refused to bend to the Pharisees’ demands to follow their traditions
rather than God’s commands.
• He was not swayed by appearances but truly taught the way of God.
• He would rather go alone to the cross than abandon his mission of our
salvation.
• His only alliance is to his own people, even though his own did not
receive him.

B. Truly we need the Son of David, who would remain faithful to his
faithless bride.
• He would ransom us:
a. we who have often whored after other gods, from the power of Sheol and
redeem us from death (Hosea 13:14).
b. His blood would wash his Church white as snow and present her to himself
in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing by the washing of
water with the word (Ephesians 5:26–27).

C. And yet the Son of God did even more than simply stand by us when we
were faithless.
• He chose his people despite her failings.
• We read in Hosea that he seeks to draw us back to Himself even us, we his
faithless bride.
• He brings us into the wilderness and speaks tenderly to us in Hosea 2:14
when He says,
a. “You are my people,”
b. and shows mercy to us.

D. The Church and her Lord and Husband Christ are certainly strange
bedfellows.
• We are by nature sinful and unclean.
• We look longingly at other gods, fascinated by what they have to offer.
• We have proven ourselves to be easily seduced by pleasures and willing
even to betray our beloved when we feel pressured.
• And yet, Jesus would love his people and give Himself up for her.
• He would bring us back to himself.
• He has joined himself to us, not even death to part.

E. The Son of Jehoshaphat Is Faithful to His People, even when His people
are not faithful to Him.

E. Eternal life is the result of Jesus’ unilateral alliance with us.

A. And so, despite what you see around you:
• that life is the art of compromise
• truly our life is not found in compromise.
• Rather our life is found in Jesus Christ’s one-sided marriage alliance to
us.

Conclusion

A. We are his unworthy bride.
• He is our faithful Husband who loves and cherishes us.
• This promise he has made on His own person, giving us the seal of
Baptism.
• He has no split allegiances, and for this we offer the Son of David our
whole hearts in faith and worship. Amen.

B. Let us pray:
• Merciful God, hear my prayer. When I am down and out, or too weary to do
anything else, I do not offer kindness as often as I might. I admit that I
do not add beauty to the world apart from You. I pay lip service to the
cries of others and sit idly by until the sound fades. Sometimes I get it
right, and sometimes I don’t. I ask for Your mercy and grace, and I ask for
Your help, to give me courage and strength to live as You would have me
live. In the name of Jesus Christ, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, I
pray. Amen.

C. The peace of God, which transcends all understanding, guard your hearts
and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

D. In the Name of the Father…Amen.

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Second Sunday in Lent 3-5-23

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Sermon for 03.05.23 “This is the way”

*Lent 2, March 5, 2023*

*Text: John 3:1–17*

*Theme: This is the way*

*Other Lessons: *Genesis 12:1–9; Psalm 121; Romans 4:1–8, 13–17

1. *In the Name of the Father…Amen.*

1. *The Gospel lesson serves as our sermon text for this morning.*

1. *Grace, mercy, and peace be yours from God our heavenly Father
through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.*

1. *Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, let us pray:*

1. Merciful God, I claim that You sent Jesus to take away the sin of the
world. I am part of that sin. Help me to acknowledge that I
do things that
hurt other people, the creation, mankind, and You. Come into
my heart, Lord
God, and give me strength and courage to be less hurtful and
more loving.
These things I pray in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. Amen.

*Introduction*

1. *The Gospel in a nutshell. *

1. That’s what we know verse 16 from the 3rd chapter of St. John’s
Gospel to be.
2. It is, in many respects, the simplest and clearest expression
of who Jesus is and what he came to earth to do.
3. Quite simply, Jesus came to save the world.
4. Save the world from what?
5. Save the world:

1. from itself,
2. from Satan,
3. from sin, and
4. and from death.

1. *But here’s the problem, and it is one which Christianity has sought
to answer since Jesus rose from the dead and ascended into heaven. *

1. *If Jesus conquered death by his death on the cross, why, then, do we
still die?*

*1. God conquered death through Moses and a bronze serpent.*

1. *In order to answer that question, we have to turn to the Book of
Numbers and look at the Old Testament people of Israel. *

1. The children of Israel in *Numbers chapter 21* are wandering in the
desert.

1. They are partway through forty years of wandering, where God teaches
them how to listen to his Word and trust that he will provide
for all their
needs, both physical and spiritual.
2. But the children of Israel are, well, they are dense, slow to
learn, and above all, they are rebellious.
3. They are so rebellious, in fact, that God sends serpents to go
and bite them.
4. Many of them died.
5. The wages of sin is death, as St. Paul reminds us.
6. Later in *Numbers 21* we hear these words:
– *7 So the people came to Moses and said, “We have sinned,
because we have spoken against the LORD and you; intercede
with the LORD,
that He may remove the serpents from us.” And Moses
interceded for the
people.*

1. Moses agreed, because he recognized their repentance, and that they
knew their sin and need for redemption.

1. So Moses prayed to God and God answered him by giving Moses
instructions on how to save the people.
2. The Lord said to Moses in *Numbers 21:8 (NASB95)*
– *8 “Make a fiery serpent, and set it on a standard; and it
shall come about, that everyone who is bitten, when he
looks at it, he will
live.”*
3. So Moses does this.

– And you have to admit, this is rather . . . odd.
– Put a snake on a stick?
– Isn’t that snake the form that Satan took in the Garden of Eden?
– Yes, it is.
– And that is exactly the point.

1. *So two things really stand out in the episode from the people of
Israel.*

1. First: The form of their salvation and life isn’t much to look at.

1. A bronze serpent, not exactly something to give one a lot of hope.
2. That point we can see.

1. The second point is perhaps a little less obvious.

1. The snakes still come.
2. Nowhere in the text do we get Moses leading the snakes away
like the Pied Piper, sending them into the river to drown.
3. God didn’t take away the serpents.
4. He gave the people a way out, a way of salvation, so that even
though they were bitten, the bite did not kill them.
5. Whoever looked upon the bronze serpent in faith, that person in
turn lived.

*2. Now God is conquering death through Jesus.*

1. *Now fast-forward to Jesus speaking with Nicodemus in John’s Gospel.*

1. Jesus uses this event in the life of Israel to show Nicodemus how God
works.
2. God works in the world like this.

1. He doesn’t take death away.
2. Not yet, at least.
3. What he does is send his Son into a world of death, so that he
dies in our place.
4. This is what we hear in verse 16:

1. *God loved the world this way: He gave his only Son so that everyone
who believes in him will not die but will have eternal life.*

1. *To whom did he hand Jesus over? *

1. He handed Jesus over:

1. to *sin, *
2. *death, *
3. *and Satan himself, *
4. the unholy trinity that makes up the evil we all live with each
and every day.

1. *This Is the Way God Loves the World.*

1. Jesus takes:

1. the punishment that you deserve,
2. gives you eternal life, which is his by nature,
3. and sets you up as kings and queens in his eternal kingdom.

1. All because God the Father hands him over to death.

*3. Thus the suffering and death we endure will not endure.*

1. *So for you here and now and today, beloved, you still suffer death
and the effects of sin. *

1. You get sick and injured.
2. Things don’t work as they ought to work as you would like.
3. The serpent still bites at your heels.
4. But Jesus Christ has crushed the head of that old evil foe.
5. By his death, he has destroyed death, so that what we endure and
suffer now is mere aftereffects, rumblings and grumblings from a foe that
has already lost but wants to drag as many down with him as he can.

1. *Make no mistake, dearly baptized children of God. *

1. You are Christ’s, and Satan cannot harm you.
2. Jesus does not come into the world to “tsk, tsk, tsk” at your
sins and failures.
3. He doesn’t come to shake his head and finger at you, urging you
to do better next time.
4. He doesn’t come to give you an example to shoot for, or a
target to reach.
5. His goals are much, much higher than that.
6. Remember again verse 17 from John 3:

1. *“For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world,
but in order that the world might be saved through him.”*

*Conclusion*

1. *Even though Jesus has died on the cross and risen again from the
dead, we still suffer the earthly effects of sin. *

1. We hurt, and we’ll still die, unless Jesus returns first.
2. But God is still loving you (John 3:16)!
3. Perhaps we should think of those lingering hurts as a wound
that’s in the process of healing.
4. As many of you know, I have had to deal with callouses and open
wounds on the bottom of my feet on a continual basis.
5. The doctor works to make it for the wounds to heal.
6. But the wounds will take time to heal.
7. We still live with the memories of the hurt.
8. But at the Last Day, even the scars will be healed.
9. The painful memories will no longer hurt like they once did.
10. That is something really to look forward to!

1. *This is God’s plan for you and for the entire world. *

1. He wants:

1. to save you,
2. to heal you,
3. to comfort you,
4. to love you,
5. and to give you hope that no matter how much the snake
bites, you may lift up your eyes and heart to the cross of
Jesus Christ,
and in that cross, a symbol of shame as much as any
serpent, in that cross
you will find life—real, abundant life that has no end,
because he has no
end.

1. *So come, blessed of God, and receive the gifts of the kingdom of
heaven prepared for you before the foundation of the world.*

1. Come and rejoice in his body and blood, and give thanks for all his
benefits, for the mercy of God endures forever. Amen.

1. *Let us pray:*

1. Merciful and loving God: when I am ungrateful, remind me of Your
grace. When I am oblivious, open my eyes. When I am harsh, gentle my
spirit. When I am apathetic, show me Your suffering children.
When I demean
myself, whisper that I am created in Your image. When I lose
all hope, show
me the empty tomb. Renew a right spirit within me. Shape me
and turn me
around, so that I will live with blessing and grace and
light. In the Name
of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, I pray. Amen.

1. *The peace of God, which transcends all understanding, guard your
hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.*

1. *In the Name of the Father…Amen.*