The Second Sunday After the Epiphany

Sermon 1-14-2024 The Lord God Is with You and Reveals Himself to You by the Preaching of His Word

A Word to Hear
When God Seems to Be Silent
Sermon Theme: “Speak, for your servant hears.”
Text: 1 Samuel 3:1–10 (11–20)
Be assured that you can learn daily who the Lord is and how he speaks.
The times were dark. External enemies threatened the people of God. Worse, the sons of their divinely-appointed judge, Eli, were without the character to succeed their father. But in the tabernacle, under the care of Eli, there was a youth, perhaps twelve years old, named Samuel. In the past, the Lord had spoken to Israel through the prophets, but now he seemed to be almost silent.
One night, however, as Samuel and the world slept, that was going to change. The Lord of Israel had formed that nation for the purpose of bringing his salvation to all of fallen humanity, and Samuel was to be the Lord’s next spokesman. Before he could speak, though, Samuel needed to learn and to say,
“SPEAK, FOR YOUR SERVANT HEARS.” Lord, teach me who you are. There are no true atheists.
Everyone has a god to whom they turn in trouble and need. Every culture has a religion, because humanity seeks to understand a God that they know must exist. That god might be anything the fallen mind of man wants—power, money, self. But the true God is known only in his revelation of himself.
Ancient Israel had come to depend on the Word of the Lord through prophets and visions. That Word had become rare, so it was no wonder that Samuel did not recognize the voice of the Lord and three times mistook his voice for Eli’s voice (vv 4, 6, 8).
The reason was that “Samuel did not yet know the LORD, and the word of the LORD had not yet been revealed to him” (v 7).
The greatest need of all people in every age is to know the Lord. Samuel was not alone in his need to learn who God is; so many of the people of Israel had forgotten the Lord who had given them this land.
Our times, too, are dark when it comes to knowing the Lord. Any vestiges of our Western societies reflecting Christianity or its values are gone.
The Church is mocked, lampooned in the media; basic tenets of the sanctity of human life and male and female identities are officially rejected in legislatures and courts.
We are persecuted subtly and more and more openly. We may wonder if God is near to hear us.
This is always true: No person can find purpose until he or she knows the Creator. Lord, teach me how you speak.
To know the voice of God, we must go where it is he speaks. Consider this familiar passage from Hebrews: “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom also he created the world” (Heb 1:1–2).
In our day there are many false prophets who claim to speak for God. But to learn what his voice sounds like, we must go to where we can hear him, and not someone else, speaking.
Holy Scripture, the very Word of God, is where we learn to recognize his voice. We read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest that precious voice of the Shepherd. Yet the Lord has not left us without a human voice to speak on his authority and in his name. That is how we hear the absolution spoken—by the pastor. Lord, teach me what to say. All the prophets bore witness to the same message. From the promise given at the fall in the Garden of Eden (Gen 3:15) through John the Baptist, every word and every act of God in the life of Israel prepared the way for the Messiah. When that One promised long ago was born, he came to be the final Sacrifice for all of mankind. The world needs a message of salvation and hope, and that message is found only in the Christ. He alone brings salvation by bearing all sin, shedding holy, innocent blood to cleanse us, entering our tomb, and then breaking forth on Easter with the glorious message, “Christ is risen!”
This is the message for which Samuel and all the prophets longed and which has been so richly poured out on you and me. In your Baptism, your own resurrection of the body is guaranteed.
In the blessed Sacrament of the Altar, you receive the food of immortality, Christ’s very body and blood. In the eternal words of the Holy Absolution, you hear the very voice of God: “Your sin is forgiven.”
All of God’s redeemed are sent to speak with his own words. You are redeemed by Jesus Christ, the Holy One promised by the Word of God through his chosen prophets. You and I do not look forward to a promised One who is yet to come, as did the ancient people of God. We look back to the historic life, death, and resurrection of Jesus for us and for all the world.
This truth of who Jesus is and what he has done is what we are taught to speak—no matter what our vocation might be. Some are called to the vocation of pastor and preacher. But all are called to witness wherever God puts you—in your home, your school, your workplace, your neighborhood. You speak what you have heard the Lord say through his prophets, apostles, and pastors: “Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world.”
Our days may be as dark as the days of Samuel, but just as in the former days, so today and into the future here on earth, that hope and peace from God is present as light in the dark. So live in his light until the day he calls you home to heaven where there is no need for sun or stars, because the Lamb is the light. Amen.

The Baptism of Our Lord

THE BAPTISM OF OUR LORD (7 January 2024) In Holy Baptism, the Triune God Reveals Himself and Recreates Us in His Image

“In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Gen. 1:1). Then, as “the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the waters” (Gen. 1:2), God spoke His Word: “‘Let there be light,’ and there was light” (Gen. 1:3). In the same way, “the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ” (Mark 1:1) brings about the new creation through the waters of Baptism by the same Word and Spirit of God. When John the Baptist came, “proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins,” Jesus also came “and was baptized by John in the Jordan” (Mark 1:4, 9). Although He had no sins of His own, He took His stand with sinners in His Baptism and took the sins and mortality of the world upon Himself. He was baptized into His own death, by which the heavens are opened and the Spirit is given to us. God the Father is well pleased with His beloved Son and raises Him from the dead. As we share His Baptism and are “united with him in a death like his” (Rom. 6:5), we also share His resurrection unto “newness of life” (Rom. 6:4).In Christ’s Baptism, Luther Sees Our Baptism ask the question: What does it mean that “We were buried . . . with [Christ]by baptism into death” (Rom 6:4a)? Perhaps no one has illustrated that better than Martin Luther in our Hymn LSB 406

This is one of Luther’s catechetical hymns; he wrote a hymn for each of the Six Chief Parts of the catechism to help people learn the major doctrines of Scripture. But this one is interesting, because to teach the doctrine of Baptism, he doesn’t choose a doctrinal passage of Scripture to be the text for his hymn. He doesn’t base it on, say, 1 Peter 3:21, “Baptism . . . now saves you,” which we quote in our liturgy of Baptism, or Titus 3:5, “the washing of [rebirth],” or even our text, Romans 6, both of which he himself quotes in the catechism. Instead of using a doctrinal passage, he bases his hymn on today’s Bible story from the Gospel reading.

The title, “To Jordan Came the Christ, Our Lord,” tells you, obviously, that the hymn is about Jesus’ Baptism. And it tells the story very well, doesn’t it? Stanza 1: “Baptized by John.” Stanza 3: “The Father’s voice from heav’n came down, Which we do well to ponder: ‘This man is My beloved Son, In whom My heart has pleasure.’ ” Stanza 4: “The Holy Spirit like a dove Upon the scene descending.”

But within the story, Luther interweaves what Baptism means for us. Stanza 1: “The Father’s Word Was given us to treasure. This heav’nly washing now shall be A cleansing from transgression And by His blood and agony Release from death’s oppression. A new life now awaits us.” Stanza 2: “O hear and mark the message well, . . . Our Lord here with His Word endows Pure water, freely flowing. God’s Holy Spirit here avows Our kinship.” Stanza 4: “That in our Baptism [God] will thus Among us find a dwelling.”

This, ultimately, is the point of Jesus’ Baptism. By being baptized when he himself had no need, he placed himself in our shoes so that by our Baptism, we are then placed in his. That is, he does all that is required for our salvation—obeys God’s Law perfectly, suffers the punishment of the sinners with whom his Baptism places him—and then God declares that by our Baptism, we have also obeyed him perfectly and have already now died as our sins deserve. By our Baptism, we are buried with Christ into death so that “just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life” (6:4b).

Carl C. Fickenscher II, Fort Wayne, Indiana

It is hard to live in this fallen world, but the reality of our Baptism gives us forgiveness, identity, salvation, and hope. Epiphany is indeed our time to proclaim Jesus’ credentials as we head toward Lent and the most important weekend in the history of the world.

This revealing began with a star announcing God’s birth. But it becomes even clearer—and even more dramatic—at Jesus’ Baptism. The Introit previews the event in the Jordan: “Behold my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen, in whom my soul delights. I will tell of the decree: The LORD said to me, ‘You are my Son; today I have begotten you’ ” (cf Is 42:1a; Ps 2:7). The Word of God. The Psalm amplifies: “The voice of the LORD is over the waters; the God of glory thunders, the LORD, over many waters” (Ps 29:3). The Word and water.

The reality is, every one of us is dying . . . and dying to fill holes in our lives. We need something real to fill those holes within us.

Holy Baptism connects us to Jesus, who fills the holes within us. God gives us very real things to fill our senses and strengthen our faith.

Jesus Christ is the very practical solution to the way sin has made our lives.

Sin is unbearable with it’s many consequences. But, God has a means for bringing you salvation.

When you confess your sins and I announce God’s forgiveness of sins to you, it is not a different forgiveness than you receive in your bedroom, but God wants you to hear it. He wants you to hear that you are really forgiven. In the words of the sermon and the liturgy that we speak together, you hear that you are a sinner, but that you are also saved by God’s grace alone.

The Christian life is not a perfect life. Christians will be at times lonely and afraid, and they will suffer. Sin on earth, both ours and that of others, has made our lives the way they are. But the Christian life is also a life of assurance and hope. As you return to the world this morning, remember your Baptism. It is real water joined to God’s real Word. Baptism has made you alive where once you were dead in trespasses. It has washed away your guilt and has pardoned your regret and shame. Jesus himself has given you the mercy he won for you at the cross. Look to your Baptism daily, for there you will find your identity. There you will find your connection to the history of your people. There you will find life and salvation. Look to your Baptism. There you will find the reality of Christ. There is something you can hang on to in the trials of your daily lives.

Amen.

First Sunday after Christmas

First Sunday after Christmas
December 31, 2023

“Departing in Peace” (Luke 2:22-40)

Are you ready to go? What I mean is, are you ready to leave? No, I don’t mean right now. It would be nice if you’d stick around until the end of the service. But then, at the end of the service, will you be ready to leave? Will you be ready to depart in peace, satisfied and content and ready for whatever comes next?

What makes you ready to leave, to leave any situation? For instance, this year is coming to an end. Are you ready to put 2023 behind you and move on to whatever 2024 may bring? What makes you ready to leave, even to leave this life? That day could happen any day, you know, any hour. Are you ready to go? If the Lord were to call you home, even today, would you be ready? If not, why not? If so, what makes the difference?

Today in our Gospel reading we meet a man who was ready to go. He was ready for whatever might happen next. And today we’ll find out why he was ready to go, what made the difference. This man’s name is Simeon, and I think we all can learn something from him today about “Departing in Peace.”

The situation is this. It’s forty days after the birth of Christ. We’re in Jerusalem. We’re going to the temple. Why? Because forty days after the birth of a firstborn son, the father and mother were supposed to go to the temple and offer up a sacrifice to the Lord. It’s in the Law of Moses. And so Joseph and Mary are taking their baby boy into the temple to do just that.

But there was nothing special about this couple and their baby to make them stand out. No halos around their heads. No angels announcing their presence. Just another ordinary Jewish family coming into the temple. And that’s how it would have appeared to Simeon, too, had the Lord not given him a special revelation by the Holy Spirit.

As our text says: “Now there was a man in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon, and this man was righteous and devout, waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. And it had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord’s Christ. And he came in the Spirit into the temple, and when the parents brought in the child Jesus, to do for him according to the custom of the Law, he took him up in his arms and blessed God.”

Simeon was waiting for “the consolation of Israel,” it says. He was waiting for the comfort the Lord had promised to his people. “Comfort, comfort my people,” the prophet Isaiah had spoken centuries before, and Simeon was waiting and wanting to see the fulfillment of that promise. Now, here it comes. The consolation, the comfort, is being carried in right before his eyes.

The consolation comes in the person of this little baby. The Holy Spirit reveals to Simeon that he is seeing the Lord’s Christ. This is the Messiah, the Christ, the promised deliverer, who will bring in God’s kingdom of comfort and consolation. Promise fulfilled! The Lord had told Simeon that he would not die before the arrival of the Messiah. Now the Christ has come. Simeon thanks God for fulfilling this special promise to him, and so now Simeon–presumably an old man–now Simeon is ready to see death, if that is what is in store for him.

Simeon takes the little baby in his arms and utters this beautiful song of praise: “Lord, now you are letting your servant depart in peace, according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation that you have prepared in the presence of all peoples, a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel.”

And so here’s what it means to be ready to depart in peace. It is to know and experience the salvation that the Lord has prepared and promised. That’s what Simeon experienced when he saw that baby with his own eyes and held him in his arms. Because of this salvation, coming in the person of the Christ child, Simeon knew he was at peace and ready for whatever might come next, even his own death. Now he could depart in peace.

How would that peace, that salvation, come about? That’s where our text goes next. Joseph and Mary marvel at what Simeon says about their baby. Simeon blesses them and says to Mary the mother: “Behold, this child is appointed for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is opposed (and a sword will pierce through your own soul also), so that thoughts from many hearts may be revealed.”

The consolation will come through opposition. The salvation will come through sorrow. The peace will come through a sword piercing Mary’s soul, when she will see her son suffering shame and humiliation and death on a cross. But that is how the salvation will come. Jesus Christ, Son of God and son of Mary, true God and true man, will suffer and die for the sins of the world, winning our forgiveness. And with Christ’s sacrificial death comes the salvation, the peace, and the consolation that we need so very much.

So how is it with you, dear friends? Are you ready to depart in peace? Can you say with Simeon, “Yes, Lord, I’m ready to go, I’m ready for whatever comes next”? Now you may not have laid your eyes on the Christ child being carried into the temple. You may have not held that little baby in your arms. But here’s what you do have. You have the same word of God, the same promise of consolation, given to Simeon. Your eyes have seen, with the eyes of faith, what God has laid before you: the path of peace, leading all the way to heaven, through faith in Jesus Christ. And you have received, and you will receive once again today, the very body and blood of your Savior in his Holy Sacrament. Dear Christian, Simeon has nothing on you. You are just as blessed. You are just as comforted. You are just as ready to go.

You know, this is why the church sings Simeon’s song right after receiving the Lord’s Supper and right before the end of the service. It’s because we can identify with what Simeon experienced. We have received the same Savior. And so we sing Simeon’s song, the Nunc Dimittis: “Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace according to Thy word, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation.” Yes, we can say this too! We can sing this with joy! With joy and gladness we praise God for the salvation that has come to us in the person of Christ Jesus our Lord.

Now we can face whatever comes to us in the year to come. I know for myself, I’m ready to depart in peace. I mean that in a couple of ways. For one, I’m ready to depart this congregation. Today is my last day as your pastor. Oh, I’m ready to leave, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t some heartache involved. There is. I will miss you dear people deeply. The bonds and attachments that are formed over the years are hard to leave behind. But I know that my departing is the right thing to do. And I know the good Lord will provide you with a pastor to preach the gospel, administer the sacraments, and care for your souls. I’m ready to depart in peace.

And the other way I mean that is this: Like Simeon, I’m ready to depart this life, if that’s what the Lord has in store for me. As many of you know, 2023 has been the most difficult year of my life health-wise. This summer I was diagnosed with lung cancer. Then I went through many rounds of radiation and chemotherapy, which took quite a toll on my body and my strength. In the fall, things were looking good. But then the doctors took a PET scan to see how things were going, and they saw two things: One, there was a new spot of cancer on my other lung, and two, they detected a problem in my heart, a bad aortic valve, which will need to be replaced. On top of all that, I had a bout of pneumonia earlier this month. So for 2024, things could go either way. Either the Lord grants me healing and health, or the Lord calls me home to himself. Either way I win!

And for you also, either way you win! Whatever the personal trials and afflictions you are facing, the Lord will be with you on your journey. The consolation, the peace, and the salvation you have in Christ–this is what will see you through! Whether we live or we die, we are the Lord’s. And so in any case, dear Christians, you and I are indeed ready, ready to depart in peace.

Fourth Sunday in Advent

Guest Preacher: Rev. Jonathan Manor, Director of Continuing Education, LCMS

Third Sunday in Advent

Guest preacher: Rev. Dr. Joel Biermann, Concordia Seminary, Professor of Systematic Theology