Thursday, December 30, 2021

Update from Good Shepherd (December 30, 2021)

Greetings!

REGULAR SCHEDULE

Divine Services are at 10:00 AM on Sundays.

Services will be posted on our YouTube channel, usually on Mondays.

Sunday School and Adult Bible Class are Sundays at 8:45 AM.

Our Adult Bible Class is studying “Great Chapters of the Bible.”  That schedule can be found here.

CLICK HERE for a calendar of events and meetings.


PRIVATE CONFESSION & ABSOLUTION
          On Monday, January 3, Private Confession & Absolution will be offered without appointment. You may come to church between 6:30-8:30 PM to be absolved of any sins that particularly grieve you. Private Confession & Absolution is available throughout the year by appointment.

BIBLE INFORMATION CLASS
          Bible Information Class will begin on Monday, January 10 from 7:00-8:30 PM. This is a class to answer basic questions about the Bible and its main teachings. It is a worthy review for long-time members and an excellent opportunity for people with spiritual questions to get answers. The schedule can be found here.
          To register, contact Good Shepherd at (248) 349-0565 or email welsnovi@aol.com. NOTE: If Monday evenings conflict with your schedule, ask about alternative times and days.

ADULT BIBLE CLASS – GREAT CHAPTERS OF THE BIBLE

          While the various teachings of God are scattered throughout the Bible, the Bible sometimes documents a particular teaching in an extended portion of Scripture. They give us a great deal to ponder for our understanding, comfort, and guidance. A greater knowledge of these chapters provides a greater defense against false doctrine and a greater appreciation of God’s promises and instruction. Classes are Sundays at 8:45 AM.
          A complete schedule of 
“Great Chapters of the Bible” can be found here
Upcoming lesson include:
          Jan 9        Leviticus 16 -- The Day of Atonement
          Jan 16      Isaiah 52:13-53:12 -- The Suffering Servant
          Jan 23      Psalm 73 -- I Envied the Wicked
          Jan 30      Romans 8 -- God is For Us

NOTE: There will NOT be Sunday School or Adult Bible Class on January 2.

GAME NIGHT!
          On Saturday, January 15, Good Shepherd will host a game night. In addition to various board games and card games available, we will have a game that will involve all people. It will be an interactive game to test your knowledge over general information and meaningless tidbits. Prizes will be given to the victorious. Snacks will be provided. We will meet at 6:30 PM. All are welcome.

CHURCH UNDECORATION
         If you have a few minutes to spare, we will need people to put away the Christmas decorations after church on January 2. While we may be sad to see Christmas go, we are soon entering the Epiphany season and we want to be prepared for that. Your help is appreciated. Many hands make for light work.

BIBLE MATTERS – A discussion group
          Bible Matters is a topical discussion group that enables God’s people to become more comfortable in discussing matters of the Christian faith and more confident in defending the Bible’s teachings. We encourage open dialogue and welcome bold questions. All are welcome to consider how God’s word addresses various topics. Topics will be select portions of our Sunday morning Bible Class. The full schedule of our winter sessions can be found here. The short list for upcoming discussion is here:

          Jan 5            Psalm 1                             Delight in the Word of the Lord
          Jan 12          Genesis 3                          The Fall and the Curse
          Jan 19          Isaiah 52:13-53:12          The Suffering Servant

Bible Matters meets on Wednesdays at 6:30 PM. 


GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
     Several services have been uploaded to YouTube.  Feel free to share the videos. 

Christmas Eve: Good Shepherd Novi Christmas Eve Service 12-24-21 - YouTube
Christmas Day: Good Shepherd Novi Christmas Day Service 12-25 - YouTube
Sunday, December 26: Good Shepherd Divine Service, December 26 - YouTube

OFFICE HOURS
          Office hours are Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon. The pastor will be in his office unless a meeting has been scheduled elsewhere (consult the weekly schedu
le). The pastor is also available by appointment. Call or text (248-719-5218). You may also email (welsnovi@aol.com), but the response may be slower.

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

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

REGULAR SCHEDULE

DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM
Sunday School and Adult Bible Class resume on Sunday, January 9 at 8:45 AM.

Bible Matters resumes on Wednesday, January 5 at 6:30 PM.


GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

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

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

A GOD-LIVED LIFE: Join Us

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

          We are in the middle of a series of sermons with a Stewardship emphasis. Stewardship, ultimately, is about our entire life. We use what God gives us to his glory and for the good of our neighbor. Over the next few months, we will consider the various ways we use the gifts God gives us as is God-pleasing.
          Each month, I will be sending out an email to further encourage what we pondered on the first Sunday of that month. In this way, the thoughts do not perish by that Sunday evening, but each one can give intentional consideration how he or she may put into practice what was proclaimed as a God-pleasing way to serve him.
          For the month of December, we continue to consider what it means to have A Life of Hospitality.

A LIFE OF HOSPITALITY

Week #4      Join us

            When Jesus called Matthew to be his disciple, Matthew hosted a feast.  Naturally, he invited Jesus and, by extension, his disciples (perhaps six men at this time).  But then Matthew also invited his coworkers, colleagues, and acquaintances.  The Pharisees referred to these people as “tax collectors and sinners” (Matthew 9:10). 

            I suppose Matthew could have rallied his friends and brought them into the synagogue with a friendly, “Hey, let’s go to church!”  But based on the Pharisees’ assessment of them, I think we can guess what kind of reception they might have gotten at a synagogue.  So, Matthew invited them to meet Jesus in a less threatening venue—his home. 

            Perhaps a non-church venue would be better suited to our friends.  More and more, people are not going to church.  Reasons vary, but church might seem like a very intimidating place.  They don’t know the people.  They are unfamiliar with the service.   Will they be embarrassed by getting the whole stand/sit/kneel thing wrong?  Do they fear that they will be treated with contempt, like “tax collectors and sinners”?  Is there still some recognition that they would be standing on holy ground and sacred space, and such recognition is startling?  While we want everyone to join us in God’s house, that may not be the first step in bringing people to Jesus.

            Your pastor is not Jesus.  That will forever be true.  But perhaps you can arrange a meeting between your friends and your pastor outside of church.  Matthew brought his friends over to his house.  That seems like a friendly place to arrange a meeting so that people can learn more about the grace God bestows upon sinners.  It also provides a more comfortable setting for people to ask penetrating and even challenging questions about the Scriptures.  At church, it might seem disrespectful (though it shouldn’t—where else can you get better answers?).  And a Divine Service is not really set up to allow for a Q & A during the sermon.

            While we want people to join us for church, it might be more hospitable to have them join us for a dinner, a barbeque, or a cup of coffee.  If they join us for some aspects of life, they might be less hesitant to join us for what really matters.  Of course, this means that we will eagerly extend the invitation.  And it means, if you think it is helpful, that you will tell your pastor, “These people have questions.  Can you join us, too?”  As much as possible, your pastor will be glad to.

            Invitations are easy.  “Hey, why don’t you join us?”  Our friendship is not phony, so whether it leads to church attendance and membership won’t matter.  We pray it does, though.  “Join us” is a good start.

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Private Confession & Absolution -- Monday, January 3 (6:30-8:30 PM)

Private confession and absolution will be available at church from 6:30 - 8:30 PM on Monday, January 3. No appointment is necessary. Just stop in. If this rite is new to you (and it is for many who attend here), the pastor will walk you through the rite so that you understand and appreciate it more. Private confession and absolution is always available by appointment throughout the year.

Why Private Confession & Absolution?
The answer follows:

When Lutherans hear someone speak of Private Confession and Absolution, the response is usually a knee-jerk, "That's Roman Catholic!" Though that may be a common perception, the perception is because either it was taught wrongly or understood wrongly. Consider what the Lutheran Confessions teach about Private Confession and Absolution.

Our churches teach that private Absolution should be retained in the churches, although listing all sins is not necessary for Confession. For, according to the Psalm, it is impossible. "Who can discern his errors?" (Psalm 19:12) -- Augsburg Confession, Article XI

What is Confession?
Answer: Confession has two parts: the one is that we confess our sins; the other is that we receive Absolution, or forgiveness, from the confessor, as from God Himself, and in no way doubt, but firmly believe that our sins are forgiven before God in heaven by this.

What sins should we confess?
Answer: Before God we should plead guilty of all sins, even of those that we do not know, as we do in the Lord's Prayer. But before the confessor we should confess only those sins that we know and feel in our hearts.
-- Luther's Small Catechism, Part V

These are basic confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. They are catholic, insofar as they are Christian. But they are not Roman, insofar as the penitent is not obligated to orally confess every sin in order to be forgiven of it and insofar as one's forgiveness is not dependent upon some action on the part of the penitent. The forgiveness is based on Jesus' sufferings and death for the penitent who has been baptized into his name.

Since the practice of Private Confession and Absolution is a Lutheran practice, it would be good for Lutherans to practice it. It is good for the penitent who is grieved by a particular sin to confess it so that he can hear Christ say through the mouth of his minister: "I forgive you." It would be good for the one who is burdened to be relieved of his burden by Holy Absolution. It would be good for this practice, though foreign to many in my corner of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, to be restored. And so it will be.

Private Confession and Absolution has always been available to all members by appointment. In order for this practice to be restored and perhaps put to better use, there will be dates on the calendar set aside for anyone who would like to drop in and make use of this means of grace. These will be set up about 4 times per year. Private Confession and Absolution will still be available by appointment in addition to these scheduled times.

It is anticipated that Private Confession and Absolution will roughly follow this regular schedule.
          A day around Epiphany (Epiphany is always January 6)
          The Monday of Holy Week
          A day around Labor Day weekend
          A day after Thanksgiving weekend (should coincide with the 1st Saturday going into Advent)

The next scheduled date and time for Private Confession and Absolution will be Monday, January 3, 6:30-8:30 PM. Appointments are not necessary. You need only drop in. All participation is voluntary, as Absolution cannot be forced upon anyone.

Of course, this will be new to pretty much any member who decides to make use of it. If you happen to come in, the pastor will walk through the rite with you and explain the various parts of it, especially including the "private" part, namely, that this confession is to Christ and, therefore, remains his business alone. The pastor will not report any confession or even the names of those who come for confession. Finally, the point of this is not for a pastor to learn everyone's dirty, little secrets. (His life is easier if he remains ignorant. But God's people do not call a pastor to be ignorant; they call him to absolve in the name of Jesus.) The point is for the guilty and the grieved to find relief and receive forgiveness, or absolution.

Monday, December 27, 2021

Something from ... St. Athanasius on the Incarnation of our Lord

St. Athanasius (c. 293 - May 2, 373) was the bishop of Alexandria, Egypt.  He was a staunch defender of the two natures of Jesus and of the Trinity.  He suffered exile five times for his firm defense of the Christian faith.  He also wrote several defenses of these crucial doctrines of the Christian faith.  Below is a quote regarding the incarnation of our Lord, that God became a man.

Athanasius reflected that God's love for his creation compelled him to redeem it.  He was not content to let sinners go merrily into their own condemnation.  But in order to redeem us, the Lord had to become one of us.  Therefore, to rescue us from sin, evil, and death, the Lord took upon himself our very human nature.  He does this to fulfill God's Law so that it will not condemn us, to give himself into death so that death gets its fill, and to rise from the dead so that death is powerless.  This is the love of God for sinners--he becomes one of us to redeem all of us.  From Athanasius:

"But now he comes, condescending towards us in his love for human beings and his manifestation.  For seeing the rational race perishing, and death reigning over them through corruption, and seeing also the threat of the transgression giving firm hold to the corruption which was upon us, and that it was absurd for the law to be dissolved before being fulfilled, and seeing the impropriety in what had happened, that the very things of which he himself was the Creator were disappearing, and seeing the excessive wickedness of human beings, that they gradually increased it to an intolerable pitch against themselves, and seeing the liability of all human beings to death--having mercy upon our race, and having pity upon our weakness, and condescending to our corruption, and not enduring the dominion of death, lest what had been created should perish and the word of the Father himself for human beings should be in vain, he takes for himself a body and that not foreign to our own." -- On the Incarnation, paragraph 8 (taken from "On the Incarnation" in the Popular Patristics Series, translation by John Behr.  St. Vladimir's Seminary Press: Yonkers, NY.  (c) 2011.)

Bible Matters, a discussion group: Winter Session

          Bible Matters is a topical discussion group that enables God’s people to become more comfortable in discussing matters of the Christian faith and more confident in defending the Bible’s teachings. We encourage open dialogue and welcome bold questions. All are welcome to consider how God’s word addresses various topics.

          Topics will be select portions of our Sunday morning Bible Class on Great Chapters of the Bible. Our winter sessions will be:


January 5           Psalm 1                           Delight in the Word of the Lord

January 12         Genesis 3                        The Fall and the Curse

January 19         Isaiah 52:13-53:12         The Suffering Servant

January 26         Romans 8                       God Is for Us

February 2         Ephesians 1                    Chosen from Eternity in Christ

February 9         Galatians 3                     Saved by Faith Alone

February 16       1 Peter 3:8 – 4:19           Suffering for Being a Christian

February 23       1 Corinthians 15             The Resurrection of the Body

March 2 Ash Wednesday Divine Service at 7:00 PM.


Bible Matters resumes on Wednesday, January 5 at 6:30 PM.

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Sermon -- Festival of St. Stephen, Deacon and Martyr (December 26, 2021)

ACTS 6:8 – 7:2a,51-60

STEPHEN: FAITHFUL TO DEATH AND CROWN OF LIFE. 

In the name + of Jesus.

     On Christmas Day, we sang, “Joy to the World,” and for good reason.  God has become one of us to save all of us.  Jesus Christ is our joy, granting us hope, new life, and salvation.  You probably also found joy in family gatherings, gift-giving, festive meals, and other seasonal attractions.  Not everyone has those, though.  Some go through Christmas alone, poor, hungry, or depressed.  If Christmas is only joyful because of the frills, many people have had a joyless holiday.  But if Christmas is about Jesus, then there is joy that cannot be disrupted by anything—not even death.

     Hollywood and Madison Avenue know how to sell Christmas.  It is beautiful, magical, and perfect.  I doubt if anyone’s Christmas ever lives up to what they depict.  So, it is fitting that we honor a series of minor festivals immediately after Christmas which remind us of the harshness of life.  December 28 commemorates the innocents in Bethlehem who were slaughtered by Herod the Great who had hoped to kill the baby Jesus.  December 27 commemorates the Apostle John who was banished to the island of Patmos for his faithful preaching about Jesus.  Today commemorates the first known martyr in the Christian Church, St. Stephen.  These festivals force us to recognize that sadness, oppression, and suffering are part of life even in the midst of a joyful season. 

     In the early church, the apostles were striving to be faithful witnesses of Jesus, but they were getting pulled in too many directions.  They were overseeing the distribution of food to the widows, and that was taking them away from preaching and teaching.  To enable them to devote their full attention to the word of God and prayer, they called seven deacons to care for the poor and needy.  Stephen was one of those deacons.

     Stephen was not an apostle, but he was a confessor of the faith.  Stephen’s testimony about Jesus was bold, faithful, and undeniable true.  The events Stephen confessed were still etched in the minds of people who had interacted with Jesus.  They had heard Jesus preach.  They had witnessed Jesus’ crucifixion.  Though many denied Jesus’ resurrection from the dead, they could not explain Jesus’ empty tomb or how his disciples continued to do the miraculous signs Jesus had done.  Even Stephen “was doing great wonders and signs among the people” (Acts 6:8). 

     Stephen’s faithful confession was met with opposition.  But,” St. Luke noted, “they could not withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which he was speaking” (Acts 6:10).  Stephen showed what Moses and the Prophets had foretold about the Christ.  Then he proved that Jesus of Nazareth had done exactly what the prophets had foretold.  Stephen could also refer to the teachings of Jesus himself.  The Pharisees had heard Jesus say that he would rise from the dead on the third day.  Well, either he did or he didn’t.  You can’t fake a death and resurrection.  So, either Jesus is a fraud or he is exactly who he said he was, and whom Moses and the Prophets foretold.  Stephen’s arguments were so sound that no one could refute him.  They could not deny what Moses and the Prophets foretold.  They could not deny the claims Jesus made.  And they could not explain away the witnesses of the resurrection.  So, they lied.

     St. Luke recorded the tactics used against Stephen—tactics which were also used against Jesus.  They secretly instigated men who said, ‘We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses and God.’  And they stirred up the people and the elders and the scribes, and they came upon him and seized him and brought him before the council, and they set up false witnesses who said, ‘This man never ceases to speak words against this holy place and the law, for we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and will change the customs that Moses delivered to us’” (Acts 6:11-14). 

     Satan still uses these tactics against God’s truth and against God’s people.  He makes claims that have an element of truth in them but twists the facts to make his lies believable.  Perhaps you have heard some of the claims—like Jesus never said a word against abortion or never said he was God or the Bible never uses the word Trinity.  Some Christians, when they are first confronted by these claims, become unsettled.  They don’t know how to answer.  Some may think that, since they don’t have an answer to these claims, there is no answer to these claims.  They fear they have been lied to.

     This is one of the reasons we gather together around God’s word.  We get to ask how to respond to such claims.  We look at the word of God to find answers.  The arguments that might be new to us are not new to the Church.  We come to hear his truth so that we are not deceived by lies.  God speaks in his word to reveal his salvation.  The Lord desires you to have forgiveness, peace, and eternal life.  Those who oppose, however, Christ want to rip salvation away from you.  Beware.

     The Lord reveals his word to you so that you can be confident in his promises.  We continue to grow in that word so that we gain a firmer faith, find greater comfort in times of difficulties, and recognize the lies of all who oppose us.  We also learn how to respond to false claims so that other Christians will not be deceived.  We learn how to give an answer to people who spread lies but have probably never heard God’s truth.  For, those who make the false claims against the Bible have rarely investigated their own claims and have rarely heard what God’s word actually says.  God does not lie to us.  So, when we can say, “This is what the Lord says,” we stand firm on it.  Be faithful, even to the point of death, and you will receive the crown of life.  That is precisely what Stephen did. 

     As we noted before, those who refused to believe God’s word “could not withstand the wisdom and the Spirit with which (Stephen) was speaking” (Acts 6:10).  Stephen did not agree to disagree with those who were disputing with him.  Either Jesus is God in human flesh or he is not.  Either Jesus rose from the dead or he did not.  Either Jesus brings us salvation and forgiveness or he does not.  Either these things are true and Jesus has saved you, or they are untrue and there is no Savior.  There is no middle ground on this.  If people reject these teachings, we dare not look for ways to find common ground with them.  We must not apologize for confessing the truth or accommodate the truth to appeal to those who reject it.

     Stephen boldly proclaimed the word of the Lord.  Sadly, it was not well received.  When sinners stubbornly reject the word of God, they plug their ears to it.  They may ignore what God says.  They may pretend it does not matter.  They may insist that it does not apply.  In the case of Stephen, they cried out with a loud voice and stopped their ears and rushed together at him.  Then they cast him out of the city and stoned him” (Acts 7:57-58).  Rather than bend to the word of the Lord, they silenced the one who confessed it.  Of course, silencing the word of the Lord does not rob it of its truth.  And rejecting the word of the Lord does not excuse one from being accountable to it. 

     Stephen was faithful, even to the point of death.  His martyrdom ought to embolden us to be faithful to Christ and to confess his word.  Stephen’s compassion for his enemies serves as a model for us, too.  As frustrated as Stephen was that these men stubbornly rejected God’s truth, he did not hate them or curse them.  Even as they were stoning him in rage, Stephen prayed and “cried out with a loud voice, ‘Lord, do not hold this sin against them’” (Acts 7:60).  We do not pray for the death of those who hate us, but that God would enlighten them to see the truth of his word.  We especially pray that God will keep us faithful, even in the face of oppression, hostility, or death.

     There is always a temptation for us to try to make peace with the enemies of Christ.  We have the idea, “If we were not so rigid in our beliefs, they will like us better.  If we bend on the 6th Commandment, maybe they will honor the 1st Commandment.  If we are more open to other ideas, we will gain more for the Church.”  These are all lies.  What do we gain by denying portions of God’s truth?  What portions of God’s truth do we deem expendable?  How much are we ready to flirt with losing the crown of life?  Yes, we could try to find peace at all costs—but what is the cost? 

     If the enemies of Jesus rage against us, if they attack us, if they lie, slander, or even kill us, we need not fear.  Consider the case of Stephen.  The rage against Stephen did not change Jesus’ grace to him.  The murder of Stephen did not affect his eternal life.  The gory death of Stephen did not alter the glory he has now.  Stephen’s name means crown.  What he was named, he finally received.  Just as God made him a Christian and kept him faithful to death, so also God gave him a crown.  Stephen boldly confessed Christ rather than be silent.  Christ joyfully confessed Stephen as his own and gave him the crown of life.  

     When Jesus was an infant, the aged Simeon rejoiced at seeing Jesus and sang, “Lord, now you are letting your servant depart in peace, according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation” (Luke 2:29-30).  He rejoiced that he would have a blessed death thanks to the Savior who had come for him, whom he got to see with his own eyes.  St. Stephen, before he departed this earth, was granted the sight of the glorified Jesus with his own eyes.   Though he died at the hands of those who hated him, he departed at peace with God and had a blessed death.

     You and I also pray for a blessed death.  We see the glory of the Lord who comes to us in the holy sacrament to bless and to save.  No matter how we leave this world—like elderly Simeon at home in his bed or like young Stephen by a brutal murder—we get to depart in peace.  Jesus has secured that for us by living, dying, and rising for us.  We have an incontrovertible word from Jesus which saves us.  He will keep us faithful to him through that word and the sacraments.  He will grant us a blessed death, for he has conquered death for us.  Through Jesus, we will depart in peace.  We shall see his glory.  And we shall receive the crown of life.

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

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Sermon -- Christmas Day (December 25, 2021)

JOHN 1:1-14
THE LIGHT SHINES IN THE DARKNESS.

In the name + of Jesus.

     Every year, critics of the Bible take shots at our Christmas celebration, accusing Christians of adopting pagan customs.  Perhaps the most popular claim is that Jesus was not born on December 25 and that the Christian Church commandeered the pagan festival of Saturnalia for their celebration.  It is meant to deceive Christians into thinking that we really observe pagan festival and slap Jesus on top of it.  Now, if we worshiped the date, maybe they’d have a point.  But we don’t.  The Gospels never record the date of Jesus’ birth.  It does not matter to us if Jesus was born in March, August, or on December 25.  We celebrate that the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. 

     Still, there is something meaningful that Christians in the northern hemisphere celebrate Jesus’ birth in the dead of winter.  In the darkest time of the year, we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ.  Jesus Christ is the light of the world, and that light shines in the darkness.

     St. John wrote, “God is light, and in him there is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5).  The darkness, therefore, is sin.  It is rebellion against God and opposition to God.  The devil enticed the holy people in the Garden of Eden to rebel against God, convincing them that their happiness would increase by ignoring God’s command and taking what God had forbidden.  Instead of bringing them happiness, it produced frustration.  Adam’s frustration caused him to blame Eve for making him a sinner.  Eve must have felt betrayed when Adam threw the blame on her.  Neither of them was happy.  Instead of feeling empowered, they felt ashamed.  Instead of becoming wise, they felt stupid.  Instead of enhancing their lives, their sin produced death.  Everything the devil promised was a lie.

     Sin brought darkness upon the whole world.  Every heart is darkened by sin.  St. John explains how the sin darkened heart both fears and despises God’s light.  “The light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.  For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed” (John 3:19-20).  Fear comes because consciences are afflicted with guilt.  Your conscience bears witness against you for every thought or act against God’s word.  It testifies that you are accountable to God for your sins.  The sinful heart is also angry with God.  Although our very being is dependent upon God—from our birthday to our hometown to the very breath we breathe—we despise the idea that we should have to answer to God for anything. 

     More than that, we also get angry with God because we have to suffer consequences for being sinners in a sinful world.  We become angry at God when people die, when tornadoes destroy homes, or when nations go to war.  We charge God with sinning against us because we believe we deserve better—even though we are the ones who have sinned against him.  The sinful heart both fears and despises God.  This is why Adam and Eve ran for cover when the Lord appeared to them in the Garden.  It is also why they evaded giving God a straight answer when he asked them what they had done.  They thought that avoiding God also meant escaping him.  It did not.  It never does.

     What makes you afraid of God?  I suppose you may be bold and insist that you are not afraid.  But remember, some of the great saints of the past came face to face with God.  Every one of them was petrified.  Moses trembled at the burning bush.  Isaiah was convinced he was damned on the spot.  The miraculous catch of fish did not make Peter rejoice; it made him beg Jesus to go away from him.  The shepherds in the fields did not see God, but his holy angels.  That was enough to make them sore afraid.  It is the light of God’s holiness that reveals just how dark our thoughts and deeds have been.  You may be able to hide your darker thoughts from others, but God sees them all.  Even what we do under the cover of darkness is exposed before the Lord.  This is why even believers feel the terrors of death and the fear of hell.  

     The devil had blinded Adam and Eve to the goodness of God.  He still deceives people into thinking that God is cheap with his gifts and fickle with his love.  St. Paul wrote, “The god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.” (2 Corinthians 4:4).  But now, the light shines in the darkness.  “The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world” (John 1:9).  Jesus comes to reveal the goodness and mercy of God—not merely proclaimed, but demonstrated.

     At Christmas, God comes to earth and the light shines in the darkness.  Although the devil has blinded the minds of people, “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:6).  The light of Christ shines on us not to expose our wickedness, but to enlighten us.  Jesus comes to show us that the Father is a merciful God who longs to be reconciled to the people he has created.  The Father is a gracious God who wants to restore to mankind the Paradise they had lost.  The Father is a loving God who spares no expense to redeem us from our sin, to pull us out of the darkness, and to bring us back into his wonderful light.  This is what God the Father always has been, but fearful hearts do not want to look at it.  Stubborn hearts insist that it cannot be true.  So, Jesus has come to reveal his divine compassion.  For God loves the world, and he loves it in this way: He gave his only begotten Son so that whoever believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.

     The light shines in the darkness to show us how lavish God is with his grace, and how faithful he is with his love.  If God were cheap with his grace, would he really send his Son into the world to pay for the sins of all people—many of whom still do not care?  If God were stingy with his love, would he really call to sinners again and again, year after year, to come to him for rest for their souls?  And if God were fickle instead of faithful, would he continue to forgive us when we repeat our sins?  Would he remain patient with us in our weaknesses?  Behold!  The light shines in the darkness.  Jesus proves that God is lavish with his gifts, extravagant with his grace, limitless with his mercy, and faithful with his love. 

     “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:5).  This verse reveals that battle that continues to go on around us.  Since the forces of darkness cannot overcome Jesus, they turn their attention on you.  Satan tempts you to think that God is not loving because he does not give you everything you want.  He suggests God is not trustworthy because your life is not perfect.  He sells you on the idea that you are wiser, stronger, and better off when you are not walking in the light of God’s word.  These are the same temptations the devil made to Adam and Eve.  They are not new, but they are still effective.  And they are still lies.

     But the light shines in that darkness.  Jesus Christ is the light no darkness can overcome; so if you are in Christ, you are safe.  And Jesus instructs you so that you remain safely in his care.  Through St. Paul, Christ says, “At one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord.  Walk as children of light (for the fruit of light is found in all that is good and right and true), and try to discern what is pleasing to the Lord.  Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them” (Ephesians 5:8-11).  The light of God’s word shows you what is good so that you do not slip into what is evil, no matter how much benefit or pleasure it seems to promise.

     The light of Christ exposes all the unfruitful works of darkness.  But the devil always makes the darkness look attractive.  He even gives us mottos.  “My body, my choice!” as if God does not have a say.  “Love is love.”  Now, if the devil perverts all of God’s good gifts, don’t you think he would pervert love, too?  He tells you that there is no real harm in promiscuous behavior, especially if both people agree to it.  The devil tells you that you have a right to be angry with others or jealous over blessings you have not gotten.  The devil tells you that you don’t need to be in church to be a good person.  To darkened minds, these are not only attractive, they are sensible.  But consider: Who is telling you that sinful things are good things?  Is it God or the devil?  Is it light or darkness? 

     The light and the darkness continue to do battle, and you are the spoils of war.  But consider: What does each one want you for?  The devil presents himself as your friend, but he seeks to destroy you.  God is your divine Father.  Yes, he sets expectations and he disciplines you, but he seeks your eternal good.  The light of Christ reveals that everything the Father says to you is good and everything he does for you is good. 

     The light shines in the darkness.  It shows you the goodness of God, and it makes you children of the Most High God.  St. John wrote, The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world.  …To all who [received] him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God” (John 1:9,12-13).  God shines his light on you through Jesus.  Through faith in Jesus, God has given you new birth into a living hope.  He has cleansed you of all sin, made you his own, and blesses you with his gracious care.  He provides all that you need for this life and the next.  He proves that he is trustworthy, merciful, gracious, and faithful.  Therefore, you do not need to be petrified of him or despise his word.  Rather, you get to rejoice in his presence and even flee to him for protection and preservation.  Jesus shows you that God is your loving Father who delights in you enough to save you.

     In the dead of winter, life comes into the world.  In the dark world, light shines forth.  You have been enlightened to see that Jesus Christ is the only source of peace, hope, and comfort.  The light shines in the darkness.  The darkness has not overcome it and never will.  If you are in Christ Jesus, you have light and life; the darkness cannot harm you.  

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

Friday, December 24, 2021

Sermon -- Christmas Eve (December 24, 2021)

Our Christmas Eve service at Good Shepherd follows the Service of Lessons and Carols.  There are nine lessons.  A short devotion was given for eight of them.  Two of those devotions are below.

6th Reading           Luke 2:1-7

         Luke 2:1-7 tells us what was visible in Bethlehem at the birth of Jesus.  What was apparent to the eye was nothing spectacular in any way.  A woman gave birth to a baby boy.  It was her first, so that was special, but it was not amazing.

         When the Lord came into the world, he chose to enter in the most common way.  Joseph and Mary had been inconvenienced by the decree of Caesar Augustus.  They were compelled to travel from Nazareth to Bethlehem.  Behind the scenes, the prophet Micah would smile.  The word of the Lord through him would be fulfilled.  But many others had also come to Bethlehem.  No one would have had special pity for Joseph and Mary.  They were like the rest.

         We might get the idea that the moment Mary passed the city limits of Bethlehem she went into full blown labor.  That may make for a more compelling story, but the Bible does not say that.  I don’t know how long they were in Bethlehem, but while they were there, she gave birth.  We also do not need to create a villain.  The word translated “inn” is better translated as “guest room.”  Every house had a guest room.  The family lived in the main room.  An upper room was available for guests.  So, there is no wicked hotel manager who banished a pregnant woman panting in pain as a baby’s head was crowning.  But Bethlehem had swelled with people.  Guest rooms were occupied.  Since there was no space in the guest room, Mary was in the main room which was more private anyway.  She was there, by the lower level where the animals were brought in each night.  There would have been a manger or two there so that the animals could feed if they needed to.  There, Mary gave birth and wrapped her newborn in strips of cloth, like any other peasant would have.

          When the Lord entered the world, he entered as a commoner. He did not come down from heaven at age 30, appearing out of nowhere. He was conceived in Mary’s womb and gestated there for nine months. He was born in a house in Bethlehem. He was wrapped in swaddling clothes. It was utterly common, but that is the point. Jesus did not come in majesty, but in humility. He came as a common person for common people. He is like us in every way, but without sin. We would not be able to approach him in his bare glory, so he hides it in humble human flesh. The God-head was veiled in flesh. He came as a common person for common people.
          What was visible was common, ordinary, and earthly. What was truly going on had to be revealed, and that is truly amazing. We will hear about that next.

7th Reading           Luke 2:8-20

         What was witnessed at the manger was unspectacular.  But a spectacle of angels has revealed what was really going on.  A great heavenly mystery is hidden behind a common, earthly birth.  God’s glory was hidden in the flesh of Jesus.

         Mary knew what was going on.  The angel had told her nine months earlier that the child to be born is God Most High.  Joseph knew what was hidden.  The angel told him that Mary’s child was Immanuel, God with us.  Now the angel told the shepherds in the fields: A Savior has been born for you.  He is the Christ, the promised Messiah.  He is the Lord—the Maker of heaven and earth, the one who divided the Red Sea, the one who led Israel in a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night, the one who dwelt between the cherubim above the ark of the covenant in the Holy of Holies.  Yes, THAT One is a baby in Bethlehem.  He is Christ the Lord.

         But note the sign: He is wrapped in strips of cloth lying in a manger.  This sign might seem meaningless to you, but it was not meaningless to the shepherds.  When they heard that the Lord was wrapped in strips of cloth, they understood that he was a commoner.  He had come for the likes of peasants, shepherds, and everyone.  This is how the angel emphasized that the good news was for them.  And it is for you.  Christ the Lord has come, for you!

         This is the glory of God which the angels sang about.  We often think the glory of God is that he is holy and all-powerful.  He is that, but no one is saved because God is holy and all-powerful.  Those things are terrifying.  So, Jesus did not come in power, but in weakness.  He came to reveal the true glory of God—that he loves and saves sinners.

         Glory to God in the highest!  There is good news for all people; for you!  A Savior has come.  He is the Christ.  He is the Lord.  He is for you. 

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Update from Good Shepherd (December 23, 2021)

Greetings!

REGULAR SCHEDULE

Divine Services are at 10:00 AM on Sundays.
NOTE: We have discontinued livestreaming our services on Facebook. Services will be posted on our YouTube channel, usually on Mondays.

Sunday School and Adult Bible Class are Sundays at 8:45 AM.

Our Adult Bible Class is studying “Great Chapters of the Bible.”  That schedule can be found here.

CLICK HERE for a calendar of events and meetings.

CHRISTMAS SEASON

          The schedule for the services for the Christmas season is below. Please invite friends, family, or anyone you can invite to our services. Christmas Eve is a particularly popular time for people to attend a service even if they usually never do. Let’s take advantage of that!
           December 24, 7:00 PM           Christmas Eve Candlelight Service
           December 25, 10:00 AM        Christmas Day Festival Service
           December 26, 10:00 AM        Festival of St. Stephen, Martyr
           January 2, 10:00 AM              New Year’s focus

PEERING AHEAD INTO JANUARY
          Bible Information Class will begin on Monday, January 10 from 7:00-8:30 PM. You can already start thinking about whom you could invite to this class. Come with them to make them more comfortable and to review the basics of Christian teaching yourself. A schedule of topics can be found here.
          Bible Matters will resume on Wednesday, January 5 at 6:30 PM. These sessions will be conducted every Wednesday in January and February. They encourage thoughtful discussion about topics which are often debated. We welcome all people, even those who have doubts about the faith or who would challenge the Bible’s teaching. This class also makes us more confident to express and defend the Christian faith to others. Look for a schedule of topics to be posted soon.

ADULT BIBLE CLASS – GREAT CHAPTERS OF THE BIBLE
          While the various teachings of God are scattered throughout the Bible, the Bible sometimes documents a particular teaching in an extended portion of Scripture. They give us a great deal to ponder for our understanding, comfort, and guidance. A greater knowledge of these chapters provides a greater defense against false doctrine and a greater appreciation of God’s promises and instruction. Classes are Sundays at 8:45 AM.
          A complete schedule of “Great Chapters of the Bible” can be found here

Upcoming lesson include:
          Jan 9        Leviticus 16 -- The Day of Atonement
          Jan 16      Isaiah 52:13-53:12 -- The Suffering Servant
          Jan 23      Psalm 73 -- I Envied the Wicked
          Jan 30      Romans 8 -- God is For Us

NOTE: There will not be Sunday School or Adult Bible Class on December 26 or on January 2.

POINSETTIAS
          If you are interested in purchasing a poinsettia for church, please sign up at the church bulletin board in the WEF. You may choose either red or white. Each poinsettia is $7.00. The poinsettias will be used in our Christmas services and may be taken home after Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, or any time following. Checks or cash (please earmark it “poinsettias”) can be put in the offering plate.

GOOD SHEPHERD ON YOUTUBE
          Feel free to share the videos. For other services, do a search for "Good Shepherd Novi." The service from Sunday, December 19 is here. 
Divine Service, Dec 19, 2021 - YouTube

OFFICE HOURS
          Office hours are Monday-Thursday, 9:00 AM – Noon. The pastor will be in his office unless a meeting has been scheduled elsewhere (consult the weekly schedule). The pastor is also available by appointment. Call or text (248-719-5218). You may also email (welsnovi@aol.com), but the response may be slower.

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

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

REGULAR SCHEDULE

DIVINE SERVICES -- Sundays at 10:00 AM
Christmas Eve Candlelight Service – December 24 at 7:00 PM
Christmas Day Festival Service – December 25 at 10:00 AM

Sunday School and Adult Bible Class are on Sundays at 8:45 AM.

Bible Matters will resume on Wednesday, January 5, 2022 at 6:30 PM.


GOOD SHEPHERD’S WEBSITE
www.GoodShepherdNovi.org

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

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

YouTube -- 4th Sunday in Advent (December 19, 2021)

Here is the service from Sunday, December 19, 2021.



Minor Festival -- The Festival of St. Stephen, Deacon and Martyr

               Lutheran worship is liturgical.  While that often refers to an order of worship, it can also refer to the calendar of the Church Year.  The Church Year includes major festivals, such as Christmas, Epiphany, Easter, Pentecost, etc...  Today we recognize a minor festival, the Festival of St. Stephen, Deacon and Martyr.

               “Good King Wenceslas went out on the Feast of Stephen.”  So goes one of the Christmas carols we hear during the season.  The reason it is a Christmas carol has to do with the Feast of Stephen, celebrated the day after Christmas.  Stephen was one of seven men called to be a deacon in the early Church.  Stephen and the others were to assist the apostles in their ministry.  Though the deacons were originally called to help distribute charitable aid to the widows in Jerusalem, that did not prevent them from proclaiming the grace of God in Jesus Christ.  Stephen faithfully and fearlessly proclaimed Christ at the cost of his life.  Stoned to death by the Jewish religious leaders, Stephen became the first martyr of the Christian Church.


A GOD-LIVED LIFE: Be Honest

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

          We are in the middle of a series of sermons with a Stewardship emphasis. Stewardship, ultimately, is about our entire life. We use what God gives us to his glory and for the good of our neighbor. Over the next few months, we will consider the various ways we use the gifts God gives us as is God-pleasing.
          Each month, I will be sending out an email to further encourage what we pondered on the first Sunday of that month. In this way, the thoughts do not perish by that Sunday evening, but each one can give intentional consideration how he or she may put into practice what was proclaimed as a God-pleasing way to serve him.
          For the month of December, we continue to consider what it means to have A Life of Hospitality.

A LIFE OF HOSPITALITY

Week #3      Be honest, even about your sins

            All the people we meet have a past.  Some pasts are more sordid than others, but all people have regrets.  If someone new comes to church, you can be sure that he is a sinner.  Everyone is.  Some are offended that we would confess our sins in church in such strong terms.  (The terms may not seem strong to you because they are familiar, but they are rather blunt to someone who has never considered their sinful condition that deeply.)

            Consider what we confess.  We are by nature sinful.  We did not learn to sin; it comes out of us naturally.  It harbors in our hearts and minds.  We are not sinners because we do sinful things; we do sinful things because we are sinners.  We don’t like it, but we acknowledge that we are sinners.  We manifest that in our thoughts, words, and actions.  We acknowledge that we have done evil.  Yes, we call our sins evil.  We don’t sugarcoat that.  God doesn’t, so why would we?  And we have failed to do good.  We have been lazy, negligent, and even rebellious.  We don’t love our neighbor as we ought.  Again, we are not proud of it; but we admit it. 

            There is relief in standing before God with this kind of honesty.  We don’t have to invent virtues we don’t have.  We don’t have to pretend to be what we are not.  We know what we are.  Our relief is all the greater because we come before God in the confidence that he is ever-merciful.  We know that, for the sake of Jesus, he forgives our sins.

            People who are new to the Christian faith (and even some who have been in Christian churches) might be intimidated because they think their checkered past makes them ineligible to be real Christians.  This is where our honesty can grant them the relief we know.  We can talk freely about our sins, our struggles, our weaknesses, and the temptations that plague us.  Granted, some sins might be a little more sensitive than others.  We don’t have to air out all our dirty laundry.  But we can admit that we still struggle.  We still fail.  We admit that before God.  We can even admit that to others.  This will erase the idea that you have to be perfect to be a Christian.

            But then we also get to confess the truth: It is not our morals or behavior that save us.  Jesus saves us.  It is not our righteousness that gains God’s favor; God’s favor grants us Jesus’ righteousness.  We strive to live as godly people, but that is not where our confidence is.  It is with Jesus, who saves sinners. 

            Jesus came for real sinners, not for phony ones.  We don’t believe in fake promises; we trust in real ones.  The Christian faith allows us to be honest—before God, with ourselves, and with others. 

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Sermon -- 4th Sunday in Advent

HEBREWS 10:5-10

HE GIVES HIS BODY TO SANCTIFY YOU.

In the name + of Jesus.

     Quiz question: What was the first shedding of blood in the Bible?  If you are thinking of Cain’s murder of Abel, you are close, but off by one chapter.  Right after the fall into sin, we read that “the LORD God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them” (Genesis 3:21).  Fig leaves were not a permanent solution.  So, the Lord put to death animals for them.  They shed their blood so that Adam and Eve could be clothed in their skins and have their shame covered.  It foreshadowed what Jesus would later do—shed his blood so that he would cover sin with his righteousness.  Jesus would give his body to sanctify you.

     The second shedding of blood mentioned in the Bible is for worship.  We never hear of any instructions, but God must have given a command about proper worship.  Abel shed the blood of an animal for an offering.  Abel honored the principle which continued throughout the worship conducted by Noah, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: “Without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins” (Hebrews 9:22).  It was always understood by the patriarchs that a body would be slain and blood would be shed.  A sacrificial death was essential to the worship of God—a substitute given on behalf of the sinner.  It proclaimed what the Lord would eventually do for all sinners: “This one dies for me.”

     When the Lord gave details about worship through Moses, he again gave direction for blood sacrifices.  The bodies of bulls, rams, goats, and sheep would be consumed by fire.  The blood of beasts would atone for the sins of the people with whole burnt offerings, sin offerings, peace offerings, and so forth.  Every day, morning and evening sacrifices would be offered.  The animal’s blood would be spilled at the altar.  The animal’s body would be turned to smoke from the altar.  The smoke was a continual sign that the Lord accepted the sacrifices and did not count the people’s sins against them. 

     The offerings needed to be repeated daily, monthly, annually—for centuries.  No matter how much blood was spilled, no matter how many animals were slain, they did not take away the sins of the people.  The writer of the Hebrews quotes Psalm 40 where King David—one thousand years before Jesus—acknowledged that these offerings were not the answer.  “Sacrifices and offerings you have not desired, …in burnt offerings and sin offerings you have taken no pleasure” (Hebrews 10:5; Psalm 40:6).  How could God be pleased with offerings that do not remove sin?  It was never the bare act of slaughtering a ram that forgave sins.  People were saved by faith in God’s promises.  God attached his promises to the sacrifices.  Only faith made their worship of any benefit.  But every sacrifice confessed the promises.  Every sacrifice pointed to what the Savior would finally do.  Abel, Noah, Abraham, and centuries of Israel’s priests made the same confession: The Savior would make the one, perfect sacrifice that would make the full payment for sins, once and for all.  He would give his body to sanctify you.

     “Consequently, when Christ came into the world, he said, … ‘a body have you prepared for me’” (Hebrews 10:5).  It is not the sacrifice of a bull, a goat, or a ram that serves as a substitute for mankind.  It is not even another man who can stand in for all mankind.  It is God who comes for all mankind.  But to be a true substitute for mankind, God had to become a man.  So, a body was prepared for him, as we heard in our Gospel lesson.  The Holy Spirit implanted our Lord in the womb of the blessed Virgin.  He was conceived and went through nine months of gestation.  He was born, grew up, and presented his body as the sacrifice which once and for all made the payment for the sins of the world.  It is not a lamb, but the Lamb of God, which was slain for sinners.  He gives his body to sanctify you.

     “Consequently, when Christ came into the world, he said, … ‘Behold, I have come to do your will, O God, as it is written of me in the scroll of the book’” (Hebrews 10:5,7).  Jesus came to do God’s will in two ways.  First, this one lived for you.  He became a man to submit to the Commandments that we must keep.  He had to do this because we have not.

     Our confession is correct: We are by nature sinful.  We cannot turn that off.  It makes itself evident in our thoughts, words, and actions.  We know what God expects of us, and we know that God’s standards are good.  Nothing is ever gained by jealousy, anger, sarcasm, obscenity, adultery, name-calling, or cruelty.  These things are destructive for you and for others.  Yet, the devil convinces us that we benefit from embracing them.  Our thoughts scheme evil against others.  Our words cut people down.  We act to get praise from others, and we get upset when we don’t get it.  We are guilty of the evil God has told us not to do.  And so, we have offended God and hurt our neighbor.  We have failed to do the good God has commanded.  And so, we have grieved God and proved unhelpful to our neighbor.  This is nothing to boast about, much less trying to convince God that we have been good.

     “Consequently, when Christ came into the world, he said, … ‘Behold, I have come to do your will, O God” (Hebrews 10:5,7).  Jesus lived for you.  Here is a man who did all that God commands, and he delighted in doing it!  For it is not the bare act of obedience which pleases God, but the heart and will of the person must be pure to please God.  The devil tempted Jesus to think that abusing his divine power would serve him well.  Jesus despised self-promotion and self-glorification.  The Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve.  Miraculous healings were one way Jesus served others, but far better were the teaching and preaching of Jesus.  He preached what Mary sang about.  He told us that we ought not exalt ourselves before God, as if we are saved by impressing him.  Even so, we are not saved by our humility.  We humble ourselves because we are sinners.  Jesus, however, saved us by humbly obeying every word of God.  We hunger and thirst for righteousness which only Jesus has.  And Jesus is pleased to fill us with good things—his own righteousness.  The holy life Jesus lived he lived for you.  And through baptism, he has covered over your shame with his innocence just as he covered Adam and Eve with the skins of animals.  He gives his body to sanctify you. 

     “When Christ came into the world, he said, … ‘Behold, I have come to do your will, O God” (Hebrews 10:5,7)–not only in his life, but also in his death.  Jesus bore in his body the guilt of all your sins, and then he made his life a sin offering for you.  The body that was prepared for Jesus was destined for the cross.  There he made the one sacrifice which would satisfy God’s wrath and remove God’s curse.  This one dies for you.  His blood was spilled at the cross.  His body was consumed by God’s fiery wrath.  His holy, precious blood pays for your guilt.  His innocent sufferings and death secure your pardon and peace.  Behold, he has done God’s will!  He lived in innocence for you.  He died accursed for you.  He gives his body to sanctify you.

     When he said above, ‘You have neither desired nor taken pleasure in sacrifices and offerings and burnt offerings and sin offerings’ (these are offered according to the law), then he added, ‘Behold, I have come to do your will.’  He does away with the first in order to establish the second.  And by that will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all” (Hebrews 10:8-10).  By doing away with the sacrifices, Jesus relieves you of doubts that you have done enough for God’s salvation.  He takes away the fear of wondering if you ever could do enough.  Salvation does not come by making deals with God or by promising God that you will perform some heroic act for him.  You can’t buy God’s grace; it must be given for free.  And it is!  We do not come to church to do a favor for God.  Rather, we come so that God can deliver his good gifts to us.  It is God’s will that Jesus would do all the work to save you.  “And by that will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all” (Hebrews 10:10).  In Christ, you have been sanctified, that is, you have been set apart as his saints.   

     He gives his body to sanctify you.  The Lord took on a human body in order to exalt our humanity.  Your body is God’s creation.  It is a precious gift.  But because of sin, our bodies grow weak, sick, and will die.  Jesus has corrected that.  Jesus united himself to you by taking on a body.  He gave his body into death to pay for sins.  He had his body placed in a grave in order to burst forth from it.  Jesus rose from the dead with a body that is glorified and will never die again.  Jesus has prepared such a body for you.  These bodies will die and decay.  But they will burst forth from the grave at the command of our Lord.  And just like Jesus’ risen body, your body will be exalted, glorified, and perfected.  Every problem you suffer with your body now is the result of sin.  But Jesus has atoned for your sin, and he will restore your body and exalt you to what God had intended you to be.  He gives his body to sanctify you.

     Jesus became your body and blood Savior to serve you in yet another way.  He does not summon us like Abel to sacrifice the body of a lamb on an altar or to shed its blood.  Instead, it is the Lord who gives his body and blood for you.  Like Abel, we are saved by faith in a promise.  For Abel, God attached his promise to a sacrifice.  But the Lord has put aside the first covenant to establish a new covenant.  Now he attaches his promise to the word and the sacraments.  We still have an altar, and there is still body and blood on it.  But the sacrament is not what you do for God.  It is what God gives to you.  The body which has borne your sins is here for you.  The blood which was shed to atone for guilt is here for you.  The Savior who has overcome death is delivered to you. 

     Here, God delivers to you the gifts which take away sin, which strengthen faith, and which overcome death.  Here, you get to feast upon the living body and blood of Jesus by which you are sanctified and sustained in God’s kingdom.  He gives his body to sanctify you—not figuratively, but truly.  Your sins are not figurative, so neither is Jesus’ forgiveness.  It is the body and blood of Jesus Christ which saves, and here he gives it to you.  Jesus gives his body and blood in a manner that you can taste, smell, touch, and consume for your highest good.  Here, the holy things are given to the holy ones.  Here, those who hunger and thirst for righteousness are satisfied.  Here, the humble are exalted.

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