Sermons

"Seriously, Let's Do This" – Luke 4:14-21

Luke 4:14-21

Then Jesus, filled with the power of the Spirit, returned to Galilee, and a report about him spread through all the surrounding country. He began to teach in their synagogues and was praised by everyone.

When he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, he went to the synagogue on the sabbath day, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."

And he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant, and sat down. The eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. Then he began to say to them, "Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing."


Imagine what life would be like if the message of scripture is true.

Imagine what life would be like if you read scripture expecting to be confronted with truth that would challenge and inspire your personal goals, relationships, abilities, values, and decisions.

Just imagine.

Religious people like me, we think we like scripture, but the truth is we like the idea of scripture. We like the stories, the captivating characters, the wise sayings, the dramatic turns, the beautiful poetry, the scandalous behavior; and we especially like the parts that reinforce what we already think we know–the parts that give us the “warm fuzzies.”

The religious people in the synagogue on the day Jesus read from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah also liked scripture; at least, they liked the idea of scripture. They liked being seen reading or listening to scripture. It made them fell and look righteous.

Jesus read the scripture from Isaiah and spoke about releasing the captives, giving sight to the blind, and bringing good news to the poor. The verses sound wonderful when someone reads them. These are warm and fuzzy words that make us feel good. “Yes, bless the poor and bring sight to the blind! How wonderful.”

But then Jesus took it too far; he shook the warm fuzzies out of the hearers hearts by boldly asserting, “The words you just heard…well they’re actually true!”

Which means that everyone who heard these words of truth were going to have to do something about it. After all, we dare not be confronted with the truth and go on living as though the truth doesn’t make a difference.

Well, we don’t have to use our imaginations to figure out what happened next; a few verses later these same religious people from the synagogue marched Jesus to the edge of a cliff dead set on throwing him off. All because Jesus had the audacity to read the scripture and proclaim its truth.

Religious people like the idea of scripture, but we’re scared to death that it might actually be true. The implications are terrifying.

What if Jesus truly prefers hanging out with sinners over righteous folks?
–Does that mean we should be spending our time and energy with different people?

What if Jesus truly expects us to give away everything we own to the poor, so that we can follow him?
–Just how much of our consumer comforts are we willing to give away?

What if our faith truly can move a mountain?
–Does that mean our combined faith and action could actually solve some of the world’s most oppressive problems?

What if it’s true that the gates of hell truly will never prevail against Christ’s church?
–What outrageous risks would our ministry take if we knew we couldn’t fail?

What if the meek, the poor, the merciful, the hungry, the peacemakers, and the persecuted truly are blessed?
–Does that mean seeking comfort in material possessions leads us away from God’s blessing? We tell ourselves material possessions are proof of God’s blessing!

What if Jesus truly expects us to turn the other cheek when we are struck?
–After all, there are some things that are unforgivable, right?

What if God really does love and accept us, even though we’ve done nothing to deserve it?
–Are you willing to admit you are worthy to be loved and to love others you’d prefer to ignore?

What if Jesus’ promise about the resurrection of the body, both his and ours, is actually true?
–Does that mean heaven is here, on Earth?

Imagine if Jesus would appear before us on any given Sunday and tell us scripture we just heard is actually true. I doubt our reaction would have been much different than the religious people who marched Jesus to the edge of a cliff ready to throw him off. We, too, might eventually become so frustrated with and offended by Jesus, that we’d nail him to a cross and watch him die.

If you’re not following my point, imagine it like this. Imagine Jesus was running for president of the United States. Imagine the issues his campaign would prioritize:

  • forgiveness of all individuals and nations who have committed atrocities against the United States citizens;
  • encouraging Americans to give away all their possessions so that everyone has enough;
  • a pledge that America would only be great once every other nation in the world had access to the same resources we enjoy;
  • a ban on the death penalty (I imagine that’d be a big one for Jesus, given he was crucified at the hands of the local government and dominant religious institution);
  • caring for the entirety of God’s creation, including the animals, waters, mountains, and sky (and you thought President Obama was tough on the coal industry!);
  • and I can’t imagine Jesus would be looking to the government to distribute handouts–he seems pretty clear it’s our job to support each other.

There is absolutely no chance Jesus would ever be elected President in our country which is ironic given how so many people are quick to erroneously call America a “Christian" nation. Keep this in mind next time these candidates try to impress you with their faith, like, oh I don’t know, if a candidate says his favorite book is the Bible but can’t remember anything in it.

If you’re too sick of politics to even entertain this idea of Jesus running for President, here’s another way to think about it: Imagine if after every gospel message and every sermon, Pastor Mark and I concluded with the words, “Seriously, let’s do this!”

After worship there would be fewer people telling us how they enjoyed my sermon. Instead people would give us the stink eye, mumble under their breath, and go out of their way to avoid shaking our hands. Because when you really listen to what scripture is telling you, when you really hear what we've been proclaiming on Sunday mornings, when you realize that we have been encouraging you to live in a way that honors the truth of scripture, you would be offended.

For example:

Forgive others…. seriously, let’s do this! All of us in this sanctuary harbor hatred against a particular person or group of people. Take strength from the fact that God has forgiven you all your wrongs. That strength makes it possible (not easy, but possible) to forgive even those people who have not sought your forgiveness, even those people who insist they’re right and you’re wrong. By forgiving others we heal the wounds in our soul and continue the chain-reaction of grace that began with God’s promise of forgiveness for all people.

Heal people… seriously, let’s do this! Maybe none of us have performed a miraculous healing such as restoring sight to the blind. But we can absolutely heal people. For example, we can support the ELCA’s quest to eradicate Malaria – a deadly and completely preventable disease. Don’t push it out of your mind because it only affects people who live on a different continent. Be a part of the solution!

Free the oppressed… seriously, let’s do this! We can encourage our organizations, governments, and clubs to accept all people regardless of their gender, race, religion, ethnicity, or sexual orientation.

Proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor… seriously, let’s do this! People in our society desperately need to hear that we are loved. Why do you think it is that we are so busy stuffing our lives with items that we can purchase? We have been convinced that the only way to be happy and loved is to look a particular way or own a particular thing or drive a particular car, etc. So many people live without any understanding that they are loved. But it’s not true. God loves them. And the only way they’ll ever know is if we tell them and show them.

If I haven’t offended you yet, hang in there, I have one more thing to say: Obviously, not everything in scripture is true.

If everything is true, then men would have multiple wives, there would be no football (it’s forbidden to touch the skin of a dead pig), eating shellfish or pork would be an abomination, we’d stone people for heinous crimes such as walking too far on the Sabbath, women would not cut their hair (but they would refer to their husbands as “Master” and work solely in the home), and God would smite cities on a whim.

That fateful day in the synagogue in Nazareth, Jesus could have read from the scroll of Leviticus or Numbers or Deuteronomy – any of the books dealing with religious laws designed to distinguish the Hebrews from other tribes and nations.

Instead, he selected the scroll of the prophet Isaiah – a prophet who proclaimed justice. Jesus says that at least this much of scripture has been made true: bringing good news to the poor, releasing the captives, giving sight to the blind, freeing the oppressed, and proclaiming God’s unrelenting love and favor for all people.

At least this much of scripture remains true today. This means we have a lot of work to do.

Seriously, let’s do this.

Amen.

"Bath-tism of Jesus" – Luke 3:15-17, 21-22

Luke 3:15-17, 21-22

As the people were filled with expectation, and all were questioning in their hearts concerning John, whether he might be the Messiah, John answered all of them by saying, "I baptize you with water; but one who is more powerful than I is coming; I am not worthy to untie the thong of his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his granary; but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire." Now when all the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased."


My youngest son, Kyle, came home from his church preschool with a take-home lesson featuring an image of Jesus standing waist-deep in the river, with John standing beside him, and a dove descending from the sky. He proudly informed me that he learned Jesus was “bath-tized in the river.”

Bath-tism – a cleansing soak floating in the gentle waves flowing water. I think that’s an outstanding theological insight for a soon-to-be-four-year-old.

Today we celebrate the baptism, or bath-tism, of Jesus. As you heard in the Gospel message, Jesus came to the Jordan River to be baptized by his cousin, John. And he wasn’t alone. There was a crowd there as well, and the gospel says that every person there was baptized.

But baptized for what? To get their ticket punched so that they could go to heaven? To make sure everyone knew they were full members of the best team?

No, the way Luke tells the story, people were were being baptized by John as a response to his call for the people to repent.

The word repent in the original Greek is more accurately translated, “change your mind.” The crowd wanted to change their mind, change their approach to life, change how they interacted with others, change how they thought of themselves. And so they came to be washed in the flowing water. They came to have the dirt and grime of their lives washed away. They came because they needed help in order to change their mind. They desired a catalyst to ignite a new faith, a new direction, and a new way of life.

It’s up for debate as to why Jesus placed himself among those who were baptized. The orthodox belief is that Jesus was without sin and therefore had nothing for which to repent. Some suggest that Jesus was baptized as an act of solidarity with the people. Or perhaps he found it a fitting way to begin his ministry? Or perhaps he too desired a changed mind?

We may not know why he desired baptism, but we certainly know what happened afterwards:
“As he was praying, the Holy Spirit, like a dove descending, rested on Jesus. And along with the Spirit came a voice saying, ‘You are my son, chosen and marked by my love. You are the pride of my life.’”

In the baptism of Jesus, we “see” and “hear” the good news that God loves Jesus and claims him as God’s own son. We are witnesses to Jesus’ ordination (literally his being “set aside for ministry”). It is this act of solidarity with the fellow baptized, his submission to his cousin John, his ritualistic cleansing, that sets him on the path of ministry where he will heal the sick, challenge injustice, befriend sinners, embrace suffering, upset the earthly order, triumph over death, and change the world forever.

That’s one hell of a bath!

It is why we celebrate the sacrament of baptism in the church two-thousand years later. For in baptism we “see” and “hear” the good news…

  • that we have infinite value and worth;
  • that God desires to be the source and goal of our passion;
  • that God will always seek to draw us back into relationship with God and each other and forgive us when we stray;
  • and that God will be with us all the days of our lives.

Baptism’s importance is not as a one-and-done event or a “ticket to heaven;” but rather as a once-and-forever event enabling us to repent – to change our mind. Baptism is a plunge into cleansing water that clings to us daily in the midst of our struggles and joys.

By taking the time to commemorate and remember our baptisms, we commemorate and remember that someone, out of their love for us us, brought us to the font to be washed with God’s love and forgiveness in the presence of a family of faith who pledge their support and prayer. We are not alone. God is with us. Our brothers and sisters in Christ are with us. The cleansing water of baptism is with us. And we, too, are the pride of God’s life.

For those of us who have been baptized, our calling to live as children of God is not over.

The day the words of forgiveness joined with the waters of baptism and washed over our bodies is the day God ordained us–set us aside for ministry that will give glory to God by healing the sick, challenging injustice, befriending sinners, embracing suffering, upsetting the earthly order, triumphing over death, and changing the world forever.

The day of our baptism has come and gone; God’s promise of salvation was poured over your head and spoken into your ears; God claimed you as a child and told you that you are loved; and yet, there is still work to be done: planting and sowing, healing and comforting, loving and serving, caring and forgiving.

We are called to be open to new ideas and experiences and people so that we may be led to daily repentance – daily changing our minds – with the full knowledge that we are not alone nor will we ever be alone again.

If you haven’t been bath-tized, if you want yourself or your child to be blessed with the eternal covenant of baptism, to be washed in the waters of forgiveness, to change direction and be set aside for ministry in Christ’s name, the invitation is always open.

Ifyou have already been baptized, in order to remind ourselves and one another of God’s baptismal promise and our baptismal vows, I would like you to utilize the baptismal font at the front of the altar. As you come forward later in the service for communion, dip your finger into the water and make the sign of the cross on your forehead and remind yourself, “You are God’s beloved child, called and sent to make a difference in the world.”