Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Sermon -- Ash Wednesday (February 18, 2026)

RETURN TO ME!

ZECHARIAH 1:1-6

In the name + of Jesus.

     Throughout the Wednesdays in Lent, we will be hearing from the prophet Zechariah.  Zechariah’s message is a reflection of Israel’s past, to the present population of Jerusalem, with an eye on the future Messiah.

     Israel’s past was not pretty, and Zechariah acknowledges that.  “Our forefathers did not listen, nor did they pay attention to me, declares the LORD.  Your forefathers—where are they now?  And those prophets—did they go on living indefinitely?  But my words and my statutes, which I commanded to my servants the prophets, caught up with our forefathers, didn’t they” (Zechariah 1:4-6)?

     The people of Israel wandered away from the Lord and his word.  They were negligent in their worship and self-serving in their lives.  Some ignored the word of the Lord.  Others lived in open rebellion against it—worshiping idols, engaging in licentious behavior, and oppressing the poor.  The Lord was not content to let the people of Israel forsake the covenant, so he sent prophets to them again and again.  Those prophets were mocked, threatened, and killed.  After years and years of stubborn rebellion against God and his prophets, the Lord acted in judgment. 

     As he had threatened through Moses, the Lord raised up an enemy nation which destroyed their nation, killed many, and carried others into exile.  That captivity lasted for decades.  Finally, God raised up a new nation which granted the release of the captives.  The Persian King Cyrus issued a decree that enabled the people to return and to rebuild Jerusalem and the temple.  But those who came back were lax in rebuilding the temple and restoring proper worship.  Later, King Darius renewed the decree.  Nevertheless, the people were still negligent.  They were committed to building up their own homes while the house of God remained in ruins.

     It is to these people that Zechariah was raised up to proclaim the word of the Lord.  “The LORD was very angry with your forefathers.  Therefore, now you are to tell this people that this is what the LORD of Armies says to them.  Return to me, declares the LORD of Armies, and I will return to you, says the LORD of Armies.  Do not be like your forefathers, to whom the earlier prophets proclaimed, ‘This is what the LORD of Armies says.  Return, return from your evil ways and from your evil deeds’” (Zechariah 1:2-4). 

     The people of Israel may have returned to Jerusalem, but their hearts had not returned to the Lord.  They were embracing the very same attitudes which resulted in the exile of their forefathers.  Their return to Jerusalem began with noble intentions.  But once they returned and had to rebuild Jerusalem from scratch, they focused on their homes and businesses.  While those were important, the people lost sight of what they had returned to Jerusalem for.  The Lord was an afterthought.  Life got in the way of faith.  Homes got priority over church.  Commerce trumped over the sacrifices.  The stomach became more important than their hearts.  So, the Lord sent Zechariah to proclaim, “Return to me … and I will return to you” (Zechariah 1:3)!

     How is it possible that the people of Israel did not learn the lesson from their fathers?  Their captivity had lasted seventy years!  If their fathers had not died in Jerusalem due to starvation, disease, or the sword, they died in captivity.  Even though a new generation returned to Jerusalem, it was no easy endeavor.  Just the journey was dangerous and expensive.  When they returned, Jerusalem was a ruin.  There were no homes and no walls for protection.  Fields needed to be cultivated again, and vines and trees needed to be tended.  This journey required a commitment to the Lord and to restoring right worship.  How could they forget so quickly?

     There is nothing new under the sun.  Every year, we return to the Lenten season, and every year we hear the word of the Lord again declaring, “Return to me!  Repent of your ways.”  The call is not because you are criminals who need to be scared straight.  It is because, like those Israelites of old, we become absorbed in daily living.  We are too busy to pray or to contemplate God’s word.  To be fair, we are usually busy.  Few people spend their days with nothing to do.  So, life gets in the way of faith.  Homes get priority over church.  Commerce trumps over prayer.  We hunger for entertainment rather than meditation.  So, Zechariah still proclaims the word of the Lord, “Return to me” (Zechariah 1:3)!

     One of the disciplines of Lent which is often avoided by Lutherans is the practice of fasting.  In the Roman Catholic Church, people were taught that a failure to fast was a sin against God.  There were even specific foods that were forbidden on certain days.  We are all familiar with the fish fries which are the alternative to eating meat.  But there were also butter days and cheese days and so forth.  Since consciences were burdened by failing to keep commands that God has not made, the Lutherans exposed the practice as wicked.  We are not to treat traditions—even laudable traditions—as the commandments of God.  No one is going to hell because he eats a bacon double cheeseburger in Lent.

     But the pendulum has swung the other way.  Many Lutherans have been taught to avoid fasting altogether—either because we don’t have to do it or because it is Roman Catholic.  Today’s Gospel lesson, however, shows us that fasting, prayer, and repentance all go together.  When Jesus instructed his disciples, he said, “Whenever you pray” (Matthew 6:5).  It is not an “if” but a “when.”  God’s people will pray.  Likewise, Jesus said, “Whenever you fast” (Matthew 6:16).  He assumes God’s people will fast.  Repentance is not optional, and fasting, repentance, and prayer all go together.  It is not a commandment; rather, it is discipline for our sinful flesh. 

     St. Paul referred to this when he wrote to Timothy.  “Train yourself for godliness.  For bodily training is beneficial to an extent, but godliness is beneficial in all things, because it holds promise both for life now and for the life to come” (1 Timothy 4:7-8).  Fasting is bodily training.  We learn to control our desires instead of letting our desires control us.  Fasting usually regards food, reducing the number of meals from three to 1 ½ or 2 meals.  Fasting disciplines us so that our stomachs do not control us.  But perhaps you would do better to withhold something else from yourself—social media, entertainment, caffeine—whatever you crave.  Of course, wicked desires should always be put to death. 

     “Bodily training is beneficial to an extent” (1 Timothy 4:8).  We need not despise it.  If you find that it is hard, you discover that your cravings have more control than they ought.  If you fail, you need not quit.  Return to your fast.  You are not sinning against God if you sip coffee, eat chocolate ice cream, or check who posted what on Facebook, but you are learning that such discipline is work and that the flesh is weak.

     When Zechariah called the people of Israel to return to the Lord, he was not calling them away from criminal activities.  They were not committing atrocities.  And while they could argue, “We are not doing what is evil,” the Lord would retort, “But you are failing to do what is good.”  Farming and family, commerce and industry all have their place.  But they become idolatry when they are placed above the Lord.  It is evil when the First Commandment gets demoted.  That is why Zechariah called out, “This is what the LORD of Armies says.  Return, return from your evil ways and from your evil deeds” (Zechariah 1:4).  Even activities that are noble and pious will not save you.  While it is good to be a diligent worker, a dutiful child, and a decent citizen, that does not save you.  While it is laudable to cross yourself or to be marked with a cross of ashes, that does not take away your sins.  While it is right to pray, to fast, and to give alms to the poor, these do not atone for sin.

     Return to the Lord your God.  Devote yourself to his word and sacraments.  For, these deliver to you the salvation that Jesus Christ has won for you.  “Return to me, declares the LORD of Armies, and I will return to you, says the LORD of Armies” (Zechariah 1:3).  The Lord does not delight in the death of the wicked—to the point where he offered up his own Son as a sin offering.  Jesus’ pure motives have atoned for our impure desires.  Jesus’ faithfulness has atoned for our failings.  Jesus’ steadfast devotion to his Father has atoned for our misplaced devotion and priorities.  Jesus substituted his innocent life on behalf of all the guilty.  To cleanse you of all unrighteousness, Jesus poured out his innocent blood.  To paraphrase Zechariah, “Because of our ways and our deeds, the LORD of Armies has done to [Jesus] just as he planned to do to us” (Zechariah 1:6).  Jesus has appeased the wrath of God.  He spares you from the terrible judgment.  Jesus, and Jesus alone, has secured God’s blessing upon you.

      Once again, we being a Lenten journey to the cross.  We have made this journey before.  There are few, if any, surprises.  We offer our prayers.  We hear of Jesus’ sufferings and death.  We look forward to the joyous resurrection.  For now, we heed God’s call, “Return to me.”  For we have not overcome our sins.  We continue to fight against our cravings.  We still become distracted so that prayer and meditation become a chore to cram into our schedules instead of a joyful part of our day that we spend with our Lord.  It is to be a time of peace when God speaks to us in his word, and when we carry to him all our concerns, worries, and fears. 

     “Return to me, declares the LORD of Armies, and I will return to you” (Zechariah 1:3).  He will return to you with blessing and grace and comfort and peace.  The blood he shed for your forgiveness is given to you once again.  The body which bore took your punishment is given to you again.  Here, the Lord strengthens you to engage in the discipline.  Here, the Lord summons you to pray because the flesh is weak.  Here, the Lord pardons all your faults and failings.  Again, to paraphrase Zechariah, “Because of [Jesus’] ways and [Jesus’] deeds, the LORD of Armies [will do] to us just as he planned to do to us” (Zechariah 1:6).  His plan is to raise you up from the dead.  Dust and ashes will give way to immortality.  And the feast will go on without end.

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

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