Sermon Text Mar 24, 2019 — Called to be a Watchman

March 24, 2019                                                                             Text:  Ezekiel 33:7-20

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Do you realize what you just sang?  I hope and pray when we sing we also concentrate on the words.  You just sang in stanza 3 “Assist my soul, too apt to stray, A stricter watch to keep.”  You just asked God to help keep watch over your spiritual condition.  If you were God, how would you answer that prayer?  Send a memo?  Weekly e-mails?  Have a drone deliver a warning?  Why the warnings?  Because you just confessed you would rather have it your way than God’s way.

            Because you are also a baptized child of God, your new nature desires to live a God-pleasing life.  You want to be told when you’ve wandered from the truth.  So, you’ve asked God to help you.  I am standing here to tell you that God has answered your prayer.  I, as your Pastor, have been . . .

“CALLED TO BE A WATCHMAN”

            God called Ezekiel to be a watchman.  Not a watchman perched on the city walls looking for an invader.  Ezekiel was called to be a watchman over the spiritual condition of God’s people.  “So you, son of man, I have made a watchman for the house of Israel.  Whenever you hear a word from my mouth, you shall give them warning from me.  If I say to the wicked, O wicked One, you shall surely die, and you do not speak to warn the wicked to turn from his way, that wicked person shall die in his iniquity, but his blood I will require at your hand.” (v. 7-8)

            I, like every Pastor you have ever had, also have a call to speak God’s warning.  I have been called to pull you back when you turn sports or patriotism or money into idols.  If I see you steal or live unfaithfully.  If your words or posts go beyond the 8th commandment or when you despair and see no way out of the mess you have made.  I remind you that God gets no pleasure seeing you in this condition.

            I have also been called to remind you that you can’t do enough good or procure enough credit on the good deeds side of your ledger to get out of your mess.  You can’t make up for the wrong you did to a neighbor or a friend or a family member.  If you listen to my words of admonition and repent and receive Christ’s forgiveness and then live His words then my job as a watchman can be an answer to prayer.

            But that is not always easy in this moral cesspool we live in.  When we are shown our faults, even by the Pastor and God’s words, our sinful nature thinks, “Does Pastor think he’s better than me!”  Then some leave the church because they make it personal.  God addressed Ezekiel as “son of man.”  I’m mortal too.  A few years back I said from this pulpit that I had done and am capable of doing some horrible things.  Someone who was there that day said that bothered them.  They just couldn’t believe that about me.  Believe it.  I don’t stand up here Sunday after Sunday as the Holier-Than-Thou guy.  I don’t preach law to put you in your place.  The warnings I preach are not my own, they are God’s.  I’m the messenger.  Furthermore, if I don’t call you out when you need it, then the Lord is holding me accountable for your fate.

            I am also called to point you to a way out of your predicament.  “I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live,” says the Lord in our text (v. 11).  I am called not just to have you turn from bad behavior but to turn to someone.  Another “son of man” and that is Jesus. 

            Jesus came in mortal flesh and He too was tempted by the same things that capture us.  They did not capture Him.  He overcame them and through His obedience to the Father He kept the Law perfectly for us.  That righteousness has been credited to you.  As we make our way to Calvary we know what we will find at the top of the hill – A Savior dying for us.  As a baptized child of God you have the power through the Holy Spirit to walk away from your bad behavior and bad choices and bad attitude and I am here to help.  I know you fail.  I fail.  But each week we gather here to be picked up again through God’s Word and God’s Sacrament.  This is why we don’t walk away from the church.  The watchman cannot do his job if the subjects are sitting at home, or having brunch, or at a ball field. 

            The American Heart Association in their materials and commercials would like us all to know the warning signs of a heart attack.  Why do they do this?  So if we see these signs we can do something about them.  In a similar way, then, I serve as a watchman, called to be alert to the signs of spiritual danger in this congregation.  To sound the warning from this pulpit or in my office or at your home.  Then to let you know that something can be done about it through Jesus, the Great Physician of our soul. 

            I pray that with God’s power, I will continue to be that blessing to you.  Called to be a watchman.

                                                Amen.     

Sermon Text Mar 17, 2019 — Where To Go

March 17, 2019                                                                                 Text:  Luke 13:31-35

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Have you ever had someone tell you “where to go?”  I don’t mean the directions you get from the local gas station or the GPS that keeps telling you to turn around so it can recompute your route.  I mean someone telling you “where to go” as in a not so friendly manner.  Maybe it was a co-worker telling you “where to go” when you felt they weren’t doing their part of a project.  Could it be a son or daughter who didn’t appreciate your advice and they told you “where to go.”  How about a spouse who didn’t like your tone of voice and they suggested “where to go” which ended up being the couch or the basement for the night.

            Don’t take this the wrong way but I am going to tell you “where to go” this morning.  I pray I do it in a Law/Gospel way and if this makes you feel any better, I am using the words of Jesus in our text to get the point across.   Lord and Savior please tell us this morning . . .

“WHERE TO GO”

            Our text seems to begin with some care and concern.  Can it be?  Pharisees?  “Get away from here, for Herod wants to kill you.” (v. 1)  They are telling Jesus “where to go” and it is not Jerusalem.  Let’s not be duped this morning.  The Pharisees weren’t concerned about Jesus’ welfare as much as they were tired of Jesus’ being there.  Jesus was gathering a large following on their turf…and they didn’t like it, so they are going to tell Him where to go.

            It is just like the world to not want Jesus around.  Herod even wants to end His life.  Amazing how someone so perfect can stir such hatred.  But we see it around us.  Jesus please leave the school and the marketplace and the courts and the government and we, the worldly wise will tell you and your followers “where to go.”  Where do they want us?  In our homes, with our mouths shut.  Or gathered in our churches with a social gospel.  They don’t want God’s Word or to hear what Jesus the Savior has to say.

            Jesus is going to speak in spite of this as He does in our text.  “Go and tell that fox, ‘Behold I cast out demons and perform cures today and tomorrow, and the third day I finish my course.” (v. 2)  Let’s not degrade the Savior into some wimp who is just all about acceptance.  He calls out Herod for who he is – deceitful, sly, tricky, a psychopath.  Herod will be one of the engineers telling Jesus where to go.

            The thing is Jesus knows where He is going.  In our text He must be on His way because He still has miraculous work to do.  But He will return.  He must die in Jerusalem.  Jesus knows where He has to go to get us to where we need to go.  The Pharisees took Jesus’ talk of a “third day” seriously because you may remember they posted a guard at Jesus’ tomb until the 3rd day.

            Where to go?  Where to go?  Everyone is always looking where to go for answers.  They are right here.  In our sin, the devil would like to escort us down the path of “where to go.”  That is someone we don’t want to follow…it might get a little hot.  Jesus instead would like to have us go to quiet waters and golden streets.  He made it possible when He returned to Jerusalem.  He knew He was in a long line of prophets that had been killed and would be killed in Jerusalem.   His death and resurrection would open up for us the “New Jerusalem.” 

            Out of the billions of people on this planet Jesus gathered you and me together as a hen gathers her brood.  We are His.  And somehow, regardless of what’s going on in your life this morning – somehow, if you’re really thinking about it – His gathering you under His wings has to make a difference as you live in world that doesn’t want Jesus.

            As those saved by the cross do we just stand there admiring it as a work of art?  No.  We depart because the Lord wants to tell us “where to go.”  “Go and make disciples of all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”  (Mt. 28:19)  “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation.” (Mark 16:15)  Christianity is not a stagnant faith.  It is a moving faith.  A faith on the move in our actions and words.  The next time you want to tell someone “where to go” point him or her to the cross or to the Bible or to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. 

            See, I told you it would not be so bad.  Where to go?  You know and I know now let’s tell the unbelieving world “where to go”.   Then when we get there let’s look for them on the path laid down by Jesus our Savior.

                                                                                                            Amen.