Thursday, June 19, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (June 19, 2025)

Greetings!

SUMMER SCHEDULE 

Divine Service is Sunday at 10:00 AM.
Sunday School & Adult Bible Classes resume in September.

          The summer schedule will run from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend. There will be no Sunday School or Adult Bible Class. Divine Services will be at 10:00 AM.
          If you will be away for the weekend, alternative local options include St. Paul's (17810 Farmington Road, Livonia) which offers a service on Thursdays at 6:30 PM; St. Peter's (1343 Penniman Ave., Plymouth) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM; and Peace (9415 Merriman Ave., Livonia) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM.
          If you are traveling, consult the WELS Church Locator to find a WELS church near your destination. You may want to call to confirm the worship time(s) as their schedule may change for the summer months.

CALENDAR: For a calendar of events and meetings, click here.

SUMMER SERMON SERIES
          On the Sundays in July and August, we will meditate on the Lord’s Prayer.

ROAD CONSTRUCTION
          Be aware that west-bound traffic on 9 Mile Road is closed between Haggerty and Meadowbrook. There is no known date for the end of this project.

          Update: Paving on west-bound 9 Mile Road continues.

OPEN FORUM HIGHLIGHTS (June)

>    The renovation of the kitchen at the church has been completed!  A few additional amenities are expected.  A portable coffee bar will likely be purchased in the near future.  Many thanks to Bob W., Ken D., Mark H., Jim D., Ken R., and probably others.

>   Our Evangelism & Stewardship Committees met to set up some tentative dates of interest:

            Family Fun Night with a Food Truck – August 7 (6:00 – 8:00 PM)

            BBQ Thursdays – We are looking for some people to host an evening in your backyard with members of Good Shepherd.  It is a relaxing evening among friends.

We welcome members to join us and to help plan these various events. Even if you take charge of one event, that will benefit us all.

>  Options to replace the windows in the chapel got one final look.  The windows, original since 1991, are single-paned and should be replaced with double-paned windows.  Regardless of any replacement for the windows, they will need to be re-caulked.  Action, based on feedback, will likely take place in July.    

>  We plan to replace the existing water fountain with a filling station.

>  Members are encouraged to invite and bring friends to church.  If someone is reluctant to come to church, the pastor is willing to meet people in a different setting to address any questions or concerns people have about church, the Bible, or other matters.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from  June 8, 2025: 
Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, June 8, 2025

SUMMER OFFICE HOURS
          The pastor will be a little looser in observing formal office hours in the summer (usually, Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon). During the summer months, it is more enjoyable to read outside than in the office, weather permitting. Call or text to confirm any meetings with the pastor (248-719-5218).

INTRODUCTION VIDEO FOR GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH
          Here is a video to introduce people to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Novi. Share it as much as you can.

DO YOU LIKE US?
          Look for Good Shepherd on Facebook. Then “LIKE” us for updates and other postings. Be sure to share posts with friends.

SHARE THIS POST!
          We desire as many as possible to rejoice in the Gospel which we proclaim and confess. Share the information from our weekly email blast, links to our web page, and even to the pastor's blog to let others know that we have a space in our congregation for them!

In Christ,
Pastor Schroeder

==================

SUMMER SCHEDULE
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG
www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com 

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Sermon -- Commemoration of the Council of Nicaea (June 15, 2025)

ACTS 20:17-21,28-32

WE CONFESS NOT WHAT SEEMS REASONABLE, BUT WHAT IS REVEALED.

In the name + of Jesus.

     We might like to think that there was a golden age in the Christian Church when God’s people had everything right and there was great harmony.  But that is not true.  There have always been enemies both outside and inside the Church.  St. Paul mentioned “the trials that came to me due to the plots of the Jews” (Acts 20:19).  When Paul came to a new city, he went to synagogue to declare that Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ they had been waiting for.  He had fulfilled all God’s promises and died as the atoning sacrifice for our salvation.  Many received that message with great joy.  Others fought fiercely against him.  They slandered him, attacked him, and drove him from various cities.  In addition, the Roman government persecuted Christians because they refused to confess, “Caesar is Lord.”  We are not surprised that those outside the Church would attack it.

     When St. Paul met with the pastors who served the church in Ephesus, he warned them, “I know that after my departure savage wolves, who will not spare the flock, will come in among you.  Even from your own group men will rise up, twisting the truth in order to draw away disciples after them.  Therefore be always on the alert” (Acts 20:29-31)!  These attacks are more dangerous and damaging because they rise up from within.  Pastors and teachers, who were presumably trustworthy, perverted the words of God.  They did not reject God’s word, but twisted it to make it say what they wanted it to say.  Sometimes this twisting is done with evil intent; sometimes it is because they themselves have been deceived.  Our Lord calls us to be alert, not to be swayed by any pastor no matter how nice he is or how smoothly he speaks.  We must cling to the word of God and let nothing budge us from the sure teachings of God.

     In 313 AD, Emperor Constantine passed the Edict of Milan which legalized the Christian religion.  Constantine not only legalized Christianity, he was converted to it.  All good news for the Christian church, right?  But it was about this time that a pastor from Alexandria, Egypt, began teaching a new doctrine.  His name was Arius.  In short, Arius taught that Jesus is not really God.

     The way Arius taught this was so deceptive because of how reasonable he made it all sound.  Arius argued that, if Jesus is the Son of God, and if the Son was begotten of the Father, then there was a time when he did not exist.  After all, I did not exist in 1950.  My beginning is usually marked by my birthday.  So, if God the Son is begotten of the Father, then he had a beginning.  If he had a beginning, he is not eternal.  If he is not eternal, then he is not really God.  Perhaps he had a special status, but not God from eternity.  Arius’ logic appealed to many.  Arius even drafted hymns to reinforce his teaching.  Arius’ teaching threatened to divide, if not destroy, the Christian Church. 

     Emperor Constantine took action.  Perhaps it was because he had a legitimate concern for the Christian faith.  Perhaps it was because he wanted to retain unity and harmony in his Empire.  Probably a bit of both.  In any case, Emperor Constantine summoned bishops from all over the Roman Empire to convene at a city called Nicaea which is in modern-day Turkey.  So, 1,700 years ago this week, more than 300 bishops gathered to address Arius’ teaching and some other issues that were threatening to divide the Christian Church.  Their goal was to maintain the unity of the Christian confession.  They were to confess not what seemed reasonable, but what was revealed.

     Perhaps this issue sounds like pastors debating over doctrinal minutiae that has no real significance in day-to-day life.  Tomorrow, you will head off to work, give diligent attention to your responsibilities, and go home.  You will prepare a meal, eat, and clean up.  You might take a walk, mow the lawn, or scroll on your phone before going to bed.  Not once will you think about the theological wranglings that happened at Nicaea 1,700 years go.  I don’t say that as a rebuke, but understanding reality.

     In the same way, we don’t really give our attention to major events which have affected our lives.  We don’t think of the Magna Carta, the Revolutionary War, or the Battle of Midway.  If these events had turned out differently, our lives would be significantly different, too.  So also with the Council of Nicaea.  From it, we have received a confession of the true, Christian faith.  From those bishops, we learn to confess not what seems reasonable, but what is revealed.

     The Council of Nicaea thwarted a heresy which would destroy the Christian faith.  If Arius was right and Jesus is not true God, then you are damned.  If Jesus of Nazareth is not true God, then it was a man who went to the cross and died.  All his claims are lies.  All his promises are useless.  Even if we say that Jesus of Nazareth was a holy man, then he earned his place in the kingdom of God, but he has done nothing for you.  This is what the Lord says: “Truly no man can ransom another, or give to God the price of his life” (Psalm 49:7).  If Jesus is only a man—even a special man, given special gifts by God—then he has done nothing to help you. 

     This is what the Council of Nicaea addressed.  They did not vote on whether or not Jesus is God as The DaVinci Code asserted.  They did not invent doctrine.  They turned to the Scriptures to see what God had revealed there.  Arius trusted in reasoning; the bishops confessed what was revealed: Jesus is Immanuel, God with us.  Jesus declared, “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30).  Since there is only one God, Jesus’ claim is that he is God.  Jesus told the Pharisees, “Before Abraham was, I am” (John 8:58).  That means he is eternal.  Only God is eternal; therefore, Jesus is God.  Even Jesus’ enemies understood his claim.  That’s why they tried to stone him for blasphemy.  Most important of all is that Jesus declared he would suffer, die, and rise on the third day, just as the Old Testament had prophesied.  And then he did it.  The Church did not invent these things.  The apostles witnessed them and then recorded them.  We confess not what seems reasonable, but what is revealed.

     The Council of Nicaea drafted a confession to determine which pastors were faithful to the Christian faith and which were not.  It was the first draft of the Nicene Creed.  (This confession was updated and adopted at the Council of Constantinople in 381 and is our current Nicene Creed.)  To confess what Scripture reveals, the Nicene Creed is more detailed than the Apostles’ Creed.  The bishops at Nicaea confessed that Jesus Christ is “God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father” (Nicene Creed).  Arius would never make this confession.  Nor do Jehovah’s Witnesses or Mormons today.  This confession is a symbol of the true Christian faith.  We confess not what seems reasonable, but what is revealed.

     The spirit of Arius still persists within Christendom.  It is the spirit of using one’s reason to try to unravel the mysteries of God.  It is the desire to make God and the Bible agreeable to our way of thinking.  The prayer is, “Make it make sense!”  But reason does not always mesh with what God has revealed.  For example, the Bible teaches that God “chose us in (Christ) before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him.  In love he predestined us for adoption to himself as sons through Jesus Christ” (Ephesians 1:4-5).  Now, if God chose some for salvation, reason concludes that those who were not chosen to be saved were chosen by God to be damned.  That sounds reasonable.  But what has God revealed?  “God our Savior, who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Timothy 2:3-4).  God is not willing that any should perish, so he certainly did not predestine people to be damned.  We confess not what seems reasonable, but what has been revealed.

     When we use our reason to rule over the Scriptures, the result is dangerous at best and destructive of the faith at worst.  Your defense of your sins seems reasonable to you because if you are determined to do something, it makes sense to you.  “I had good reasons to lie, to cheat, to blame God, to curse my neighbor.”  Why?  “Because: reasons!”    Everything we think, say, and do makes a confession.  The question is: Whose word are you confessing?

     To confess means to say the same thing.  To confess the Christian faith, we say the same thing as God reveals in his word.  When God’s word reveals, “You are a sinner,” we confess, “I am a sinner.”  When God’s word reveals that Jesus, the Son of God, came to take away our sins, we confess, “I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and my Savior.”  When God reveals that he created the universe in six 24-hour days, we confess, “I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth.  I reject evolution which says he did not.”  When Jesus tells us regarding the consecrated bread and wine, “This is my body.  This is my blood,” we confess, “It is the true body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ under the bread and the wine, given to Christians to eat and to drink for the forgiveness of sins.”  When God reveals that marriage is a union of one man and one woman, we confess, “Marriage is the life-long union of one man and one woman.  Anything that differs from it is wicked.”  When God reveals that the pastoral office is limited to men, we confess that only males may serve as pastors.  When God reveals that we are to forgive those who sin against us, we pray, “Forgive us our trespasses, as we also forgive those who trespass against us.”  We confess not what seems reasonable, but what is revealed.

     Granted, sometimes what God reveals is hard.  It may offend your reason.  It certainly offends our culture, which has instructed and influenced us more than we would want to admit.  Much of what our culture teaches us seems reasonable because so many people live by it and defend it.  But the question is not, “Is it reasonable?”  The question is, “Did God reveal it?”  We confess not what is reasonable, but what is revealed. 

     In 325 AD, about 300 Christian bishops met to make a bold and faithful confession of the Christian faith.  That also meant condemning what stood against the faith.  It meant forsaking what seemed reasonable to maintain what is revealed.  We pray the Holy Spirit will instill in our spirit the same conviction to the Scriptures in word and deed.  “And now I entrust you to God and to the word of his grace, which has power to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all those who are sanctified” (Acts 20:32). 

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (June 12, 2025)

Greetings!

SUMMER SCHEDULE 

Divine Service is Sunday at 10:00 AM.
Sunday School & Adult Bible Classes resume in September.

          The summer schedule will run from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend. There will be no Sunday School or Adult Bible Class. Divine Services will be at 10:00 AM.
          If you will be away for the weekend, alternative local options include St. Paul's (17810 Farmington Road, Livonia) which offers a service on Thursdays at 6:30 PM; St. Peter's (1343 Penniman Ave., Plymouth) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM; and Peace (9415 Merriman Ave., Livonia) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM.
          If you are traveling, consult the WELS Church Locator to find a WELS church near your destination. You may want to call to confirm the worship time(s) as their schedule may change for the summer months.

CALENDAR: For a calendar of events and meetings, click here.

SUMMER SERMON SERIES
          On the Sundays in July and August, we will meditate on the Lord’s Prayer.

ROAD CONSTRUCTION
          Be aware that west-bound traffic on 9 Mile Road is closed between Haggerty and Meadowbrook. There is no known date for the end of this project.

          Update: Paving on west-bound 9 Mile Road continues.

OPEN FORUM HIGHLIGHTS (June)

>    The renovation of the kitchen at the church has been completed!  A few additional amenities are expected.  A portable coffee bar will likely be purchased in the near future.  Many thanks to Bob W., Ken D., Mark H., Jim D., Ken R., and probably others.

>   Our Evangelism & Stewardship Committees met to set up some tentative dates of interest:

            Family Fun Night with a Food Truck – August 7 (6:00 – 8:00 PM)

            BBQ Thursdays – We are looking for some people to host an evening in your backyard with members of Good Shepherd.  It is a relaxing evening among friends.

We welcome members to join us and to help plan these various events. Even if you take charge of one event, that will benefit us all.

>  Options to replace the windows in the chapel got one final look.  The windows, original since 1991, are single-paned and should be replaced with double-paned windows.  Regardless of any replacement for the windows, they will need to be re-caulked.  Action, based on feedback, will likely take place in July.    

>  We plan to replace the existing water fountain with a filling station.

>  Members are encouraged to invite and bring friends to church.  If someone is reluctant to come to church, the pastor is willing to meet people in a different setting to address any questions or concerns people have about church, the Bible, or other matters.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from  June 8, 2025: 
Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, June 8, 2025

SUMMER OFFICE HOURS
          The pastor will be a little looser in observing formal office hours in the summer (usually, Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon). During the summer months, it is more enjoyable to read outside than in the office, weather permitting. Call or text to confirm any meetings with the pastor (248-719-5218).

INTRODUCTION VIDEO FOR GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH
          Here is a video to introduce people to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Novi. Share it as much as you can.

DO YOU LIKE US?
          Look for Good Shepherd on Facebook. Then “LIKE” us for updates and other postings. Be sure to share posts with friends.

SHARE THIS POST!
          We desire as many as possible to rejoice in the Gospel which we proclaim and confess. Share the information from our weekly email blast, links to our web page, and even to the pastor's blog to let others know that we have a space in our congregation for them!

In Christ,
Pastor Schroeder

==================

SUMMER SCHEDULE
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG
www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com 

Monday, June 9, 2025

Worship Notes: The Nicene Creed

NICENE CREED – 1700TH ANNIVERSARY

A short, simplified version:

            In 325 AD, Emperor Constantine called a council of Christian bishops from around the Roman Empire to meet in Nicaea (modern-day Turkey).  Several issues were addressed in order to come to a consensus and maintain unity within Christendom.  One issue of particular urgency was the teaching of a bishop from northern Africa named Arius.  Arius was teaching that Jesus Christ was not truly God.  He reasoned that, if the Son of God was begotten of the Father, there was a time when he did not exist.  This teaching affects the salvation of mankind and the heart of the Christian faith.  So, bishops convened in Nicaea from roughly June 12 – July 25.  They drafted a creed to confess what the true Christian faith is.  All but two of the attending bishops signed on to this creed.  They did not invent a doctrine, but formally composed a statement that confessed correct doctrine.  The Christian Church still confesses that statement today; it is the Nicene Creed.

A longer, more extensive version:

The Council of Nicaea: How the Early Church Sought Unity — With the Help of an Emperor

By Joel Elowsky

1,700 years ago, there was a newly united Roman Empire headed by a young emperor from Serbia named Constantine. The horrific persecution of Christians under Diocletian (A.D. 303–313) had just ended, and decrees pronouncing toleration of Christians had been issued by Galerius in 311 and by Constantine I and Licinius with the Edict of Milan in 313. In 312, Constantine had made his famous defeat of Maxentius at the Milvian Bridge: During the battle, “he saw with his own eyes the trophy of a cross of light in the heavens, above the sun, and an inscription, CONQUER BY THIS, attached to it.” Later that night, Constantine had a dream where Christ told him to mark this cross on the shields of his soldiers. Was this a sign of a new age, with a new emperor favorable to Christianity?

The debate over Constantine’s actual conversion continues among scholars. I see no problem with the account as written and believe it is authentic. Yet whether the emperor’s conversion was sincere or not, something had changed in the empire — and Roman emperors knew the power of faith in the public sphere. By the early fourth century, even before Constantine ascended the throne, Christianity had already grown into a force to be reckoned with. But with the growth also came tension and division. It was important to keep the empire united not only politically but also in matters of faith.

Divisions in the Church

The Diocletian persecution had put Christianity to the test. Divisions had developed in the church over what to do with those who had denied the faith under threat of torture or death. During the persecutions, while Bishop Peter of Alexandria languished in prison, Bishop Meletius of Lycopolis in Egypt began ordaining bishops. Meletius was part of the rigorist camp who thought the church was too lax in its requirements for readmission. He thought those he ordained could help right the ship of the church and bring it back to a purer form.

Another division in the church had deeper roots. It dated back at least to the second century and concerned when to celebrate Easter. Churches in Asia Minor and Syria followed the Jewish calendar, celebrating Easter on the 14th day of Nisan, the day when the Jews celebrated Passover. It could occur any day of the week. These Christians celebrated Easter on this date because the events of the Passion and resurrection recorded in the Gospels took place around the time of the Jewish Passover. Churches in Rome, Alexandria and Palestine, on the other hand, celebrated Easter on whatever Sunday followed the Jewish celebration of the Passover. They insisted that Easter always be celebrated on a Sunday, the day of the week when Christ rose from the dead. It was an important question for the church because pagans, like Porphyry and the second-century philosopher Celsus, had ridiculed the church for not being able to agree on the celebration of one of its most important commemorations.

While these issues were important, trouble was also brewing on another front that would occasion the calling of the Council of Nicaea. An upstart presbyter in the Alexandrian suburb of Baucalis named Arius had charged his bishop, Alexander, with false doctrine. The historian Socrates reports that Alexander had embarked on too ambitious a theological discussion of the unity of the Trinity in front of his presbyters and the rest of the clergy. Arius publicly challenged him, asserting that Alexander was espousing the heresy of modalism, ignoring the distinctions of the persons in the godhead.

Arius was concerned that the distinction between the Father and the Son was not being maintained. There could be only one creator and originator of all things: God the Father, who had no beginning. Arius challenged Alexander with a logical syllogism: “If the Father had begotten the Son, the one begotten had a beginning to his existence; from this clearly one must conclude that there was a time when the Son did not exist. It then follows necessarily that his substance arose out of nothing.” Arius believed that the Son was a creature — different from the rest of creation, but a creature nonetheless — whom God created to bring the rest of creation, including us, into being.

Over the next five years, the controversy escalated. In the meantime, Constantine became sole emperor in 324, defeating Licinius, his rival in the east who had been persecuting Christians. With this new and hard-fought political unity, Constantine was concerned about the theological dispute taking place in Alexandria. Thinking all of this was simply an argument over words that could be solved through negotiation, he sent his representative Bishop Hosius of Cordoba to Alexandria to try and resolve the matter. Hosius was not successful. Constantine decided to try something that had never been done on the scale he was envisioning. He wanted to call a church council that would include all the bishops of the empire.

The Great Council and the Nicene Creed

The historian Eusebius notes there was some urgency to hold the council: “All hurried eagerly to Nicaea as if competing in a race,” hoping for peace to be restored quickly to the church and the empire, and also eager for a chance to see this emperor who was so favorable toward the church. Somewhere between 250 and 318 bishops attended. These bishops were accompanied by acolytes, deacons, presbyters and others too many to count — perhaps as many as 2,000 — from “Europe, Africa and Asia.” There were also many laymen who were skilled in the art of philosophy and debate, each “eager to advocate the cause of his own party.” Priests and people were invested in this theological debate. It garnered as much attention as the Super Bowl or March Madness does today.

The council was convened sometime around May 20, 325, for preliminary discussions. It most likely officially opened around June 19 or 20. Bishops were seated according to rank and lined the palace hall on both sides, having the decisive vote (votum decisivum) in all matters of church discipline and theology. Constantine entered last, preceded by friends and members of his family, but no military entourage. He addressed the assembly, expressing his deep concern over the division in the church, and implored the bishops to find peace, just as he had brought peace to the land. Just like in the Roman senate, he had no vote. But according to Eusebius, he most likely participated in debate. And there was plenty of debate before the council and during the proceedings.

The key issue of the debates concerned Arius and his insistence that the Son was a creature of the Father, albeit highly exalted. The chief point of contention was the term homoousios (the Son being “of the same essence” with the Father). The Arians rejected this term, believing that it parceled out God’s essence into different entities so that God was no longer one. Further, they argued, since the Son had become incarnate and suffered, this meant He was subject to change; therefore, He could not be God. The orthodox countered that homoousios was the only term that could speak to the unity and equality of the Son with the Father. The Son is “not only like, but also inseparable from the essence of the Father. He and the Father are one [John 10:30].” God took on flesh and suffered in order to change our nature, not His.

After many days of debate, they settled on the wording of the Nicene Creed, utilizing many of the same phrases that had appeared in a creed earlier that year at a council held in Antioch. They sent it to Constantine, noting that there were 18 or so detractors among the Arians. Most of these promptly signed after Constantine threatened them with exile. Arius was exiled, along with a couple of other bishops, and his writings were ordered to be burned (which is why we have to rely on his opponents for most of what we know about his teaching).

We assume the council lasted until July 25, with most bishops staying around to observe the celebration of Constantine’s 20th anniversary as emperor. At the conclusion of the council, the creed was adopted, with threats of banishment for those who disagreed. The council also decided that Easter would be observed on the first Sunday after the vernal equinox. In order to resolve the Meletian schism, the bishops resolved to recognize the ordinations Meletius had performed, although the clergy would be of secondary rank in the churches of their diocese. They also insisted that Meletius not ordain any new clergy. There were 20 disciplinary canons issued as well, concerning clergy misconduct, church discipline for those who had lapsed during the Diocletian persecution, church structure and oversight, the readmission of heretics and schismatics, and liturgical matters. A letter detailing the decisions of the council was sent to Egypt and presumably the rest of the churches. Constantine held a closing banquet and sent the bishops home with parting gifts according to rank, guaranteeing them safe passage home.

Constantine and the bishops had achieved their desired unity through a combination of persuasion and force. The peace was short lived, however, as often happens when there is a forced consensus. Within a decade or so, Arius had been welcomed back, Constantine was baptized on his deathbed by his Arian bishop, and a new era of disunity ensued with Arian emperors and their bishops enforcing a pro-Arian interpretation of Nicaea over the next 50 years. Athanasius faced five exiles for his staunch defense of Nicaea. A second ecumenical council was called by emperor Theodosius I at Constantinople in 381 to resolve the divisions and expand the third article of the creed to take up the subject of the Holy Spirit, where a similar fight occurred over His divinity.

Copied from: https://witness.lcms.org/2025/the-council-of-nicaea/

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Sermon -- Pentecost (June 8, 2025)

JOHN 14:23-27

THE HOLY SPIRIT WILL TEACH YOU ALL THINGS.

In the name + of Jesus.

     When the day of Pentecost came, all the disciples were together in one place.  They were waiting for the fulfillment of Jesus’ promise—the coming of the Holy Spirit.  When the Holy Spirit came, they did not see him.  Of course not.  He’s a spirit.  But the Holy Spirit made himself known by signs.  There was the sound of a violent wind which blew through the place where the disciples were.  There were tongues of fire which rested upon the heads of the disciples.  And the disciples were able to speak fluently in languages that they had never learned and probably had never heard before. 

     The reading of these events is exciting stuff.  We are always eager to hear about the miracles in the Bible.  We might envy the people who witnessed them.  We might especially envy the prophets and apostles who did them.  But the miraculous signs on the day of Pentecost do nothing for you now.  Their speaking in foreign languages doesn’t benefit you.  The flames of fire do not help you.  But the Holy Spirit did grant a blessing which benefits you and the whole Christian Church to the end of time.  Jesus told his apostles, “The Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and remind you of everything I told you” (John 14:26).

     This promise is significant because of the confidence it gives.  St. Paul wrote that the Church has “been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the Cornerstone” (Ephesians 2:20).  Everything about our faith, our salvation, and our hope rests on Jesus Christ.  He is the rock on which the Church is built.  But Jesus never wrote a word of Scripture.  He designated the apostles to preach and to record all that he had taught.

     Critics of the Bible insist that it is a flawed book.  Since it was written by sinful men, we are told that it contains errors and contradictions.  Now, if the Bible is filled with errors and contradictions, then we have to determine what in the Bible is true.  This puts man in judgment over God’s word; we tell God what is true and what is not.  That’s bad enough.  But many more problems arise.  What about your faith?  If the Bible is in error, what can you believe with conviction?  Do each of us get to decide for ourselves what is true?  And if we all have different truths, is anything true?  In the end, you can make the Bible say whatever you want it to say.  You will expound your opinions and slap God’s name on it.  This is blasphemy because it misuses God’s name, and it is idolatry because it makes you your own god.

     Now, if Christians would have any concern about the words of Scripture, it is because we know about Jesus’ disciples.  Three times in Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus rebuked them for having “little faith” (Matthew 6:30; 8:26; 14:31).  Several times, the apostles asked Jesus, “ Can you explain the parable to us?”  At least twice Jesus asked them, “Do you not understand” (Matthew 15:16; Mark 8:21)?  And now we are supposed to entrust our eternal fate upon the writings of these men?

     The answer is a definitive, “YES!”  Jesus tells us why: “The Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and remind you of everything I told you” (John 14:26).  The Holy Spirit enlightened them to understand the Scriptures.  The Holy Spirit reminded them of all the words of Jesus and brought to mind all that Jesus had done.  The Holy Spirit also guided them to include in the Bible the very things God wants us to know.  Certainly, they could have added more.  St. John, at the end of his Gospel, wrote, “Jesus also did many other things.  If every one of them were written down, I suppose the world itself would not have room for the books that would be written” (John 21:25).  But the Holy Spirit guided them to write what is “able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus, … and is useful for teaching, for rebuking, for correcting, and for training in righteousness” (2 Timothy 3:15-16).  The Holy Spirit taught them all things.

     Therefore, the Gospels are not merely words about God.  They are the very words of God.  To be more specific, the entire Old and New Testaments are the very words of God.  Every word of Scripture is God-breathed, inspired by the Holy Spirit.  That means every word is true.  There are some who restrict this to only the words of Jesus.  If you have a red-letter edition of the Bible, the red letters highlight the words of Jesus.  [NOTE: If you use a red-letter edition of the Bible, you should be aware that translators debate where the words are Jesus’ words end and where the words of the apostles begin—especially in the Gospel of John.]  Some Christians focus on those red words as if they are superior to everything else in the Bible.  This is why some people issue challenges like: “Do you know what Jesus said about abortion?  Nothing!”—as if the rest of the Bible is not the word of the Lord.  Once again, man puts himself in judgment over God and God’s word.

     Let’s be sure we take the words of Jesus seriously.  He said, “The word that you are hearing is not mine, but it is from the Father who sent me.  I have told you these things while staying with you.  But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and remind you of everything I told you” (John 14:24-26).  The Holy Spirit takes the words which Jesus received from the Father, and he delivers them to you.  The Holy Spirit will teach you all things.  Those things are taught by the apostles whom the Holy Spirit guided as he reminded them of all that Jesus said and did.  This is not only for the Gospels, but it also includes the words of the epistles.  Those also are apostolic writings.  The Gospels record the words and works of Jesus.  In the epistles, the Holy Spirit teaches the Church what is correct doctrine and what is godly living.  He also provides the motivation and strength to live it.

     The Holy Spirit will teach you all things.  So, it is important to know where we find the Holy Spirit at work.  To this day, many people look for special signs in some form or another.  In all these cases, people rely on some experience to prove that the Holy Spirit is at work, to validate their faith, and to vindicate their actions.  To link themselves to Pentecost, some claim that speaking in tongues is proof of the Holy Spirit being at work in them.  But the tongues that people claim to speak today are not the foreign languages that the apostles spoke on the day of Pentecost.  When the apostles spoke, the pilgrims who had traveled to Jerusalem from nations scattered across the Roman Empire could hear the wonders of God in their hometown language.  This is not what happens in Pentecostal churches today.  They claim to speak in tongues of angels.  Since nobody knows that language, no one can prove or disprove the claim.  The devil uses such deception to direct people to the experience I have rather than the revelation God gives.

     The events of Pentecost are striking and exciting.  So, some look for that same excitement to prove that the Holy Spirit is at work.  They see an emotional response as evidence that the Spirit is at work.  Nowhere does the Lord tell you to look to your feelings for confidence or assurance.  Emotions do not teach you anything.  And emotions can be manipulated.  In Toy Story 3 (spoiler alert), all the main characters were about to be consumed in an incinerator.  The drama, the tension, and especially the music brought many people to tears.  People wept over these computer-generated characters which are not real.  In the same way, many churches use music and drama to stir up your emotions to elicit a response.  But emotions fade.  The commitment which gets stoked up also fades with it.  The Holy Spirit is not into emotional manipulation.  The Holy Spirit is into revelation.  He proclaims a God of holiness whose holy love moved him to rescue us from the curse and control of sin.  The Holy Spirit teaches you all things about that.

     That is not to say that the Holy Scriptures won’t produce an emotional response.  When the Holy Spirit reveals the glories of the heavenly kingdom, we can become very emotional—especially if we think of a loved one who has gone on to receive that glory.  When Jesus was feasting at the home of Simon the Pharisee, a sinful woman sat at Jesus’ feet and washed his feet with her tears.  She wept for joy and thanks over the one who had set her free from her many sins.  Jesus did not stir up her emotions to get her to do something for him.  She was stirred up with emotion because Jesus proclaimed forgiveness to her.  It is in God’s word that the Holy Spirit is at work.  That is where he teaches us all things.  That is where the Holy Spirit reveals a compassionate and faithful Savior.  That is where the Holy Spirit proclaims a holy and merciful Father.  And that is why we devote ourselves “to the apostles’ teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of the bread, and to the prayers” (Acts 2:42).  Here, the Holy Spirit teaches you all things necessary for life and salvation.

     The Holy Spirit is the Lord and giver of life.  At the very beginning, the Holy Spirit was hovering over the waters from which the world was created.  The Holy Spirit worked through water and the word of God to produce a new creation.  That is still how the Holy Spirit works.  Through water and God’s word—that is, through baptism—the Holy Spirit creates new life and makes a new creation of people.  The Holy Spirit sustains that life through God’s word.  He breathes into you the breath of life by that word and works a godly life in you for now and for eternity.  If the word is ignored, the Spirit cannot work.  If it is spurned long enough, the Spirit departs.  And if the Spirit departs from your body, you are dead.  That is why we gather to benefit from the Spirit’s work.  He sustains us and strengthens us in the saving faith by teaching us all things necessary for life and salvation.

     The Holy Spirit will teach you all things.  He does not reveal the reason behind everything God does or does not do.  But what he does reveal gives you peace.  The Holy Spirit bestows a peace which the world does not understand, cannot offer, and cannot destroy.  The Holy Spirit reveals that, no matter what happens, Jesus has taken away your sins and has granted you a place in the heavenly kingdom.  No matter what happens, you have a good and merciful Father in heaven who delights in you.  No matter what happens, God is working all things for your eternal good.  No matter what happens, the Holy Spirit is interceding for you with groans that words cannot express.  You do not need the sound of a violent wind, a flame of fire on your head, or an ability to speak Korean to have this peace.  But you do need the word of God, and the Holy Spirit has revealed that.  He will teach you all things for your eternal good.  So, “do not let your heart be troubled, and do not let it be afraid” (John 14:27).

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Update from Good Shepherd (June 5, 2025)

Greetings!

SUMMER SCHEDULE 

Divine Service is Sunday at 10:00 AM.
Sunday School & Adult Bible Classes resume in September.

          The summer schedule will run from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend. There will be no Sunday School or Adult Bible Class. Divine Services will be at 10:00 AM.
          If you will be away for the weekend, alternative local options include St. Paul's (17810 Farmington Road, Livonia) which offers a service on Thursdays at 6:30 PM; St. Peter's (1343 Penniman Ave., Plymouth) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM; and Peace (9415 Merriman Ave., Livonia) which offers a service on Mondays at 7:00 PM.
          If you are traveling, consult the WELS Church Locator to find a WELS church near your destination. You may want to call to confirm the worship time(s) as their schedule may change for the summer months.

CALENDAR: For a calendar of events and meetings, click here.

OPEN FORUM / VOTERS' MEETING

          On Sunday, June 8, we will have an Open Forum after church to discuss plans for our congregation. There are a number of potential building projects coming up. Some are more pressing than others, but we want to present what could be possible. We will also highlight the progress for the pictorial directory. We will present some plans and welcome suggestions and questions to work to improve how we serve each other and our community.
          The Voters will meet following the Open Forum to ratify any plans that the congregation deems worthy. All confirmed men 18 and older are encouraged to attend and be leaders of the congregation.

PICTORIAL DIRECTORY

          The first step in getting our pictorial directory going is collecting information from all our members 18 and older.  You will find a form in your church mailbox which is to be completed and returned to Carol Casmer, our secretary.  You are encouraged to fill it out at church and turn it in right away so that it does not get lost.  If you need to take it home to look up some information, that is understandable.  But please try to return it as soon as possible to limit the number of follow-up phone calls that will need to be made.

ROAD CONSTRUCTION
           Be aware that west-bound traffic on 9 Mile Road is closed between Haggerty and Meadowbrook. There is no known date for the end of this project.  
          Update: As of the morning of June 4, at least a portion of west-bound 9 Mile Road was being paved.

CHURCH COUCNIL HIGHLIGHTS (May)

>    The renovation of the kitchen at the church has enjoyed much progress.  Appliances should be showing up soon.  Many thanks to Bob W., Ken. D., and Jim D, and probably others.

> Our Evangelism & Stewardship Committees met to set up some tentative dates of interest:
               Family Fun Night with a Food Truck – August 7 (6:00 – 8:00 PM)
              BBQ Thursdays
 – We are looking for some people to host an evening in your backyard with members of Good Shepherd. It is a relaxing evening among friends.
          We welcome members to join us and to help plan these various events. Even if you take charge of one event, that will benefit us all.

>  Options to replace the windows in the chapel will get one final look at our Open Forum on June 8.  The windows, original since 1991, are single-paned and should be replaced with double-paned windows.  Regardless of any replacement for the windows, they will need to be re-caulked.  Inquiries can be made to Bob Wozniak.    

>  The parking lot has had some restriping to add some handicapped spaces

>  We plan to replace the existing water fountain with a filling station.


GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
           Services are uploaded to YouTube each week. Feel free to share the videos. Here is the Divine Service from June 1, 2025: 
Good Shepherd Novi, Divine Service, June 1, 2025

SUMMER OFFICE HOURS

INTRODUCTION VIDEO FOR GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH
          Here is a video to introduce people to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Novi. Share it as much as you can.

DO YOU LIKE US?
          Look for Good Shepherd on Facebook. Then “LIKE” us for updates and other postings. Be sure to share posts with friends.

SHARE THIS POST!
          We desire as many as possible to rejoice in the Gospel which we proclaim and confess. Share the information from our weekly email blast, links to our web page, and even to the pastor's blog to let others know that we have a space in our congregation for them!

In Christ,
Pastor Schroeder

==================

SUMMER SCHEDULE
DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM.

GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

PASTOR SCHROEDER’S BLOG
www.LutheranSubject.blogspot.com 

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

A Pastoral Concern regarding Pride Month

Part of the Gospel reading for this Sunday is this: “If anyone loves me, he will hold on to my word. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.  The one who does not love me does not hold on to my words" (John 14:23-24).  

This means that we take the word of God very seriously.  We conform our lives to his word.  We are not permitted to tweak, edit, or recast God's word to conform to our society.  For this, we are called haters, bigots, etc...  Of course, Jesus warned us that we should expect as much from those who do not love him (cf. John 15:18-20).  Since they do not love him, they do not keep his word.

This does not mean that we despise people.  Part of God's word is, "Love your neighbor as yourself."  Unfortunately, that gets spun by many to mean "Accept your neighbor's sins and do not correct him because that would make him feel bad."  

Our Lord gave the church its mission just before he ascended to heaven: "Repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations" (Luke 24:47).  We call sinners to repent.  That's ALL sinners.  All stand guilty before God, and we are to flee from our sins.  If some sins end up getting more attention than others, it likely has to do with how prevalent those sins are.  I could build a sermon around the sin of hiring a hit man to take out a co-worker, but such a sin is pretty rare.  Other sins are more common, such as sins that have an entire month dedicated to their promotion and celebration.  (It should be noted that the Lord condemns pride as a sin in itself.  But pride in one's sins?  That doubles down on sins.)  

Are Christians guilty of being loveless, arrogant, and judgmental?  Sure.  Have they been hypocritical by ignoring their own sexual sins?  Yes.  For these things, Christians need to repent.  But such sins don't cancel out other sins.  All are called to repent.  

In addition to preaching repentance, we preach the forgiveness of sins.  There is forgiveness for all sins (except unbelief, that is, the refusal to love and keep God's word).  There is pardon for the penitent, no matter how egregious one's sins may have been.  Jesus' sufferings and death paid for every sin of every sinner.  Sadly, many don't want forgiveness.  They demand acknowledgement that their actions are good and pure.  We are called on to bless them.  How can we bless what God does not bless?  Romans 1:22-28 has no blessing for unrepentant sinners.

In all this, I find no joy or feelings of superiority over anyone.  If someone is struggling with severe temptations to commit sexual sins, he or she should be shown great mercy and be in our fervent prayers.  But many do not fight these temptations.  They have given way to them.  To see sins embraced is grieving.  To see them flaunted is infuriating as it emboldens more people to defy God's word and despise Jesus.  

I find great joy in assuring sinners that their sins are forgiven.  But God's command is that forgiveness must be withheld from those who insist that their sins are not sins.  Out of love for Jesus and his word, I cannot budge from this command.  And out of love for Jesus and his word, I will also follow his instruction to pray for the salvation of sinners, whoever they are.

Here are a few other thoughts and a resource to add to this pastoral concern.

A Facebook post from a WELS group:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/2204954201/permalink/10165584894094202/?mibextid=rS40aB7S9Ucbxw6v

A short book which also covers this topic: Gay and God by Rev. Mike Novotny of Time of Grace ministries.

Monday, June 2, 2025

Worship Notes: The Athanasian Creed

Normally, the Athanasian Creed is reserved for Holy Trinity Sunday which is June 15 this year.  However, on June 15 we will celebrate the 1700th anniversary of the Nicene Creed, and it seems appropriate that we would confess the Nicene Creed on that particular Sunday.  So that we do not overlook one of the three main creeds of the Church, we will confess the Athanasian Creed on the Festival of Pentecost (June 8).

The following is a history and an explanation of the Athanasian Creed.


The Athanasian Creed is one of the three catholic creeds.  The word catholic means universal, as in one holy catholic and apostolic Church.  The word creed comes from the Latin word credo which means “I believe.”  Luther said of this creed, “I doubt whether the New Testament church has a more important document since the Apostolic age.”

Although named for Athanasius, the bishop of Alexandria (ca. 296-373), it is almost certain that he did not write it.  Neither Athanasius nor his contemporaries ever refer to it.  But even if Athanasius did not write the creed, he certainly would have ascribed to it.  Athanasius was one of the bishops at the ecumenical Council of Nicaea (A.D. 325) which opposed the heresy of Arius (ca. 250-336).  Arius denied the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ, teaching that he is of a similar substance to God the Father, but not of the same substance.  In essence, Arius claimed that Jesus Christ is not the eternal God.  This belief has resurfaced in modern-day cults such as the Jehovah’s Witnesses and Mormons.  The Council of Nicaea adopted the Nicene Creed to affirm that Jesus is “God from God, Light from Light, true God from True God” and “of one being with the Father.”

The Athanasian Creed first appeared in Gaul (France) late in the 5th century.  Early in that century, Europe was invaded from the east by barbarian tribes, notably the Vandals and Goths.  This event marked the beginning of the Dark Ages.  During this time, the people and the clergy lapsed into illiteracy and ignorance of the Scriptures.  In addition, some of the invaders were Arian in their beliefs.  Out of this confusion came the need for a clear statement of faith.  The result was the Athanasian Creed.

The Athanasian Creed quickly assumed an important role in the orthodox church.  (Much of the visible church was overrun with Arianism.)  Emperor Charlemagne (ca. 742-814), in order to preserve the true Christian faith, decreed that all churchmen had to learn this creed and to be able to teach it to the laity.

The second portion of the Athanasian Creed reaffirms the Nicene Creed regarding the person of Jesus Christ.  However, it begins with a most excellent presentation on the doctrine of the Holy Trinity.  It says no more and no less than Scriptures say, letting the paradox of God’s nature stand (i.e., God is one; God is three).

Confessors of the creed should not be put off by the second to last article which says: “Those who have done good will enter eternal life, but those who have done evil will go into eternal fire” (cp also John 5:28,29).  The article does not teach salvation attained by human works, but simply reflects that our good works (or lack thereof) are evidence of God-given faith (or unbelief).  When we remember that our good works are actually God’s work through us, then we will understand this article correctly (cf Ephesians 2:8-10).  In addition, we remember that are judged based on Jesus’ merits, not our own.  We have been given the credit for Christ’s righteousness.  Therefore, we are heirs of eternal life.

This creed ought to bring us great comfort, as it speaks clearly about our God and his plan for our salvation.  Its clearness and boldness are refreshing in this age of doctrinal confusion.  This is no wishy-washy confession.  It states what the Scriptures teach – there is no God but the Lord revealed in the Scriptures, and there is no salvation outside of the name of Jesus Christ.  All who deny this deny the truth; and all who deny the truth forfeit salvation.

Finally, a study of this creed and the history which surrounds it shows how important it is for us to be familiar with the history of the Christian Church.  When we understand how Christians who have gone before us identified error and combated it, then we will better be able to do the same.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Sermon -- Ascension of our Lord, transferred (June 1, 2025)

LUKE 24:44-53

JESUS’ ASCENSION EXALTS HUMANITY.

In the name + of Jesus.

M: Alleluia!  Christ is risen!

C:  He is risen indeed.  Alleluia!

     Very rarely are departures a happy experience.  Sometimes, people are embittered with each other and go their separate ways angry with each other.  Most times, parting is sad.  When a child heads off to college, a mother will watch with tears until the car disappears.  If a family moves to a new state, they must bid farewell to a familiar town and townsfolk.  The worst is death.  The college student will come home.  That family may return on vacation to visit.  But death is final.  Parting usually produces tears.  St. Luke recorded how the Lord Jesus parted from his disciples.  “While he was blessing them, he parted from them and was taken up into heaven” (Luke 24:51).  Over a period of forty days, Jesus had appeared to his disciples and then disappeared.  But this parting was different.  He was lifted up from the earth and hidden by a cloud.  They would not see him again.  So, their reaction seems strange.  “They worshipped him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy” (Luke 24:52). 

     Perhaps the best explanation for this comes earlier in our reading.  “He said to them, ‘These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you: Everything must be fulfilled that is written about me in the Law of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms.’  Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures” (Luke 24:44-45).  The apostles had witnessed the sufferings, death, and resurrection of Jesus.  They recorded the facts in the Gospels.  But Jesus enlightened them to understand that everything had happened according to plan.  All that was necessary to be done, Jesus accomplished.  The curse of sin has been removed.  Humanity can be spared damnation.  Jesus’ ascension means that humanity has been exalted.

     Jesus opened the minds of his apostles so that they could see how the entire Old Testament foreshadowed and foretold all that had to happen.  Everything points to Jesus.  Since sin has been taken away, the cherubim no longer prevent the way into Paradise.  Rather, at our last hour the angels come and deliver us into the Paradise of God.  The waters of the Flood had destroyed the whole wicked world, but now the waters of Holy Baptism lift us up from death and damnation and we are kept safe in the ark of the Holy Christian Church.  Just as the Lord had delivered Israel and drowned the Egyptians in the Red Sea, Jesus Christ has delivered us and has drowned our enemies in the waters of baptism.  Just as the Lord fed Israel in the wilderness on their way to the Promised Land, so also our Lord feeds us bread from heaven on our way to our heavenly Promised Land.  Like David who went out to slay Goliath, the Son of David went out to slay the devil for us.  Like Hosea whose wife was unfaithful to him but was redeemed and restored to him, our heavenly Groom redeemed and restored his Church to him.  And on and on it goes.  Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms pointed to Jesus, and he has fulfilled all things.  Therefore, the Father has exalted Jesus and given him all authority over heaven and earth.  Jesus’ ascension means the exaltation of his humanity.

     Every week, we confess about Jesus, “He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God the Father Almighty” (Apostles’ Creed).  To sit at the right hand of God the Father is to possess all honor, glory, and power.  It is hardly a shock to confess that God rules over all things.  It would surprise many that we confess that a man is ruling over all things.  And yet, that is the case.  Jesus became a man to unite himself to humanity and to take up our cause.  He has never stopped being a human being—not when he rose, not when he ascended, and not when he took up his power to reign over all things.  In the same way, Jesus never stopped being God.  He did not make use of his divine powers and majesty except for the miracles he did.  Instead, he willingly suffered and died in weakness to secure our salvation. 

     No longer is Jesus living in weakness and humility.  Jesus’ ascension exalts his humanity.  The man, Jesus, now makes full use of his divine majesty.  What is true of God is true of the man Jesus.  This man possesses all power and majesty.  This man sees all things, knows all things, and is present in all places.  Shortly before he ascended into heaven, Jesus made this promise to his disciples, “Surely I am with you always until the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).  He did not mean that he will be with us in our hearts or in our thoughts.  He is actually with us.  Even though the Christian Church covers the entire world, Jesus is with each and every Christian.  Because this man is omnipresent, Jesus’ body and blood are on the altars of every Christian church on earth.    Jesus’ ascension exalts his humanity.

     I suppose Jesus’ exaltation could be terrifying.  If he sees all things, he sees what you try to get away with.  If he knows all things, he knows the secret thoughts of your heart.  If he is present everywhere, there is no escape from his watchful eye.  If all judgment has been entrusted to him and he judges justly, then he has you dead to rights.  The Bible says, “Death and Destruction lie open before the Lord—how much more human hearts” (Proverbs 15:11)!  You and I might try to defend our sins with clever arguments or appeals to emotion.  Jesus calls evil what it is, and he does not justify it.  Repent.

     Jesus lives and reigns over all things.  He has been entrusted with judging the living and the dead—the man who will either acquit or condemn each man or woman.  But let’s remember what has given this man the right to do so.  Jesus said, “This is what is written and so it must be: The Christ will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day” (Luke 24:46).  Having fulfilled what his Father sent him to do, Jesus was exalted to the highest place.  Jesus’ ascension exalts his humanity.

     But Jesus’ ascension also exalts your humanity.  His death has taken away your sins.  His judgment upon you is nothing to be feared; for he has proclaimed a pardon for all who believe and are baptized into his name.  His continual presence is not something you need to escape.  For, if Jesus is always with you, then his mercy always rests upon you.  There is no place you can go where his righteousness fails to cover you.  There is no headline or tragedy or political action that cuts you off from Jesus’ gracious promises.  Jesus lives and reigns over all things, but he lives and reigns for you.

     Jesus’ ascension exalts your humanity.  That is why he became a man to begin with.  Mankind had fallen into sin which corrupts all things.  Sin corrupts hearts so that we desire what is evil.  Sin corrupts minds so that we are guided by fear or anxiety more than God’s promises.  Sin corrupts governments so that leaders use their power to fight against Jesus Christ and pass legislation that violates God’s word.  Sin corrupts this world so that an avalanche wiped out an entire town in Switzerland.  Sin corrupts our bodies so that the beauty and agility of youth become wrinkles and arthritis.

     Sin has caused people to seek contentment by perverting the body and life God has given us.  God created man with a special purpose and design.  Because of sin, we despise God’s purpose and pervert his design.  God gave us people to love and things to use, but we end up loving things and using people.  This despising of God’s creation has led many to think that God has made a gross mistake with the bodies he has created.  Men insist they are women and women insist they are men.  While this rejection of God and his creation is terrible, it is also particularly sad.  What kind of confusion and discontentment leads young, healthy people to reject their God-given bodies and think that happiness is found in hormone suppressors and mutilation?  What’s worse is that we have a government who supports this perversion and prosecutes those who want to offer correction and relief to confused and deceived people.

     But there is hope for those who are confused.  There is correction for those who have been deceived.  There is even forgiveness for those who have desecrated themselves.  The scars may not be reversed, but the people can be redeemed.  And in the end, even the bodies will be restored at the resurrection.  This is true for all bodies whether sin has affected us physically, mentally, or emotionally.  For, we are all corrupted by sin. 

     But Jesus’ ascension exalts our humanity.  At the resurrection, he will raise us up with bodies that will be perfected.  Our hearts and minds will be purified.  We will be content and happy when God makes all things new.  Our place will be the home of righteousness.  For the Son of Man, the Christ, has paved the way into Paradise.  This man has opened heaven to mankind.  Just as Jesus became man to dwell with us and to unite himself to us, so he will bring us to dwell with him in unity and purity.  He will make our bodies, our mouths, our minds, and our hearts what they were always intended to be.
     Jesus’ ascension exalts mankind.  And you are already being exalted.  You have been rescued from a life that is pointless and purposeless.  You do not need to turn to alcohol, drugs, carnal pleasure, greed, or self-glorification to cope with life.  You do not need some alternate identity or to be validated by social media.  Jesus’ ascension means your humanity has been exalted.  Your identity is found in him.  You are a child of the Most High God.  You are a special creation.  You are unique in your interests, talents, abilities, and goals.  God directs those so that you live for his glory and for the benefit of others.  He designed you for his glory, and he is improving the image of God in you.  It will be confirmed in perfection when you are taken up to dwell with your ascended Savior who redeemed you from sin and reconciled you to the Father.

     Until then, you get to declare the praises of God who exalts you.  This is the mission Jesus gave to his Church.  He told the apostles what must happen: “Repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations” (Luke 24:47).  This is what we are given to do.  Just as we bear the name of Jesus, so also we proclaim it to a world that needs it.  Jesus rescues people from the depravity and depression that come from sin, and he exalts mankind to what God intended us to be.  Jesus’ ascension exalts humanity.  Just as Jesus is with you to the very end of the age, so also you will be his in the age that never ends.

In the name of the Father and of the Son + and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.