Why Bother?

It’s Ash Wednesday. Millions of Christians will be going to worship Ash Wednesday by my new clever nameservices and mass this day (or evening) to mark the begining of Lent.

Is observing Ash Wednesday a requirement for Christians? Is it a harmful and archaic ritual  that Christians should dispense with? Or is there some good purpose for the lives of Christians in attending Ash Wednesday services? 

 

 

.

“Shorts and Cheap Clothing”

This is an excerpt from a sermon by Pastor Charles Spomer and presented on The Lutheran Hour, June 2, 2002 

 

Why is it that, try as I might to have a stronger faith, I am so often wavering? Why is it that when I attempt to build a foundation for faith, I only find my house washing away with the sand? It must be that I am not obedient enough to God’s righteous demands of me, or I haven’t given myself deeply enough to the working of God’s Spirit, or I haven’t denied myself and emptied myself enough for God to fill me, or I don’t have enough faith in God or His Word. Is the cure for this that I must plunge deeper, reach higher, run stronger, beat myself longer, read more Scripture, or pray more fervently?

Is that the way to come up with more pleasing fruit, the kind Jesus talks about in Matthew 7? This covering of righteousness, or clothing, seems to be the most costly because it demands the most of me and takes the most out of me. But while it appears to be one thing on the outside, in reality it is another thing altogether on the inside. What appears costly is truly cheap, and what appears to be cheap because it costs me nothing, is the most precious and costly.

If I plunge deeper, reach higher, study more and pray more and so forth, while that seems to be costly, on my part it is cheap and shoddy, precisely because it is my part. St. Paul in Romans states, “There is no difference. For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” No difference between what and what? No difference between Jew and gentile, between those whose lives were dedicated to obedience of the Law from the Deuteronomy lesson, performing the sacrifices God required of His people, worshiping Him and studying the Scriptures, and those who didn’t? All that expensive stuff of obedience for nothing? Absolutely! Why? Hadn’t God required it? Absolutely! Hadn’t they tried to do it for God’s glory? Absolutely! But they had ALL fallen short of the glory of God, both those who tried obedience and those who didn’t. The problem is that God demands and expects absolute obedience. Absolutely! Best effort is not acceptable. “I’m improving, progressing, moving along in my walk,” is not acceptable. For God requires, demands, and rightly expects absolute and immediate perfection in obedience to all that He has commanded. And His absolute demand is not only in relation to what we do but, most importantly, to what we are. He requires perfection not only in what we do, but in what we are.

So any effort made by a person who is not and cannot be perfect, cannot and never will be perfection, no matter how Herculean the effort we put forth. The clothing of our efforts is itself cheap, tawdry, raggedy, filthy, unfit to cover a person who is sinful and disobedient in nature. That clothing, if you will pardon the bad metaphor, is like trying to cover a pair of ugly legs with a pair of shorts. They will never bring forth fruit fit for the glory of God always falling short.

The confirmation class youth was correct. “Beware of false prophets who come to you in cheap clothing.” The clothing of the righteousness of our own making seems to us to be as costly as silver or gold, but is indeed cheap, coming up short, and worthless as a filthy rag in the sight of the God who demands perfection. And the false prophets who demand perfection, or tout the perfection of life as the sign of one’s salvation are ferocious wolves. The fruit they bring forth in life may appear to be holiness and righteousness, good deeds, the glory of God. But all of that falls short and deceives us into thinking that God is satisfied, even delighted with what it is we do and have done. They would point us to ourselves and to our efforts, our growth in holy living, as if we were perfectable. But we continually fall short and are well aware of it in ourselves no matter how much we may deny it. And that is where we get eaten up. Our doubts about our faith, about God’s goodness, the effectiveness of God’s Word loom large because we have been directed toward the wrong thing, toward things which seem important and costly to human understanding and thinking. But God directs us toward the stumbling block of Christ.

God does something which appears to be worthless, coming up short. He gives His Son into death, ignominious, torturous, tragic death on the cross for crimes He did not commit. Jesus, the Son of God, willingly gives up His life for the unrighteous, worthless sinners, enemies of God, you and me. He takes on Himself our sins and dies under their weight, because of them. He dies in our place because we have a desire to be clothed in the cheap clothing of our own works and merit, wanting God’s favor because we have done something or accomplished success in God’s sight. He died because we have denied the power and effect of our sin, despite the fact that we know we have fallen short.

There on the cross God has done the impossible. He has exchanged the precious life of His son for the worthless lives of His creatures who separated themselves from Him. He has taken the shame of punishment and death in their stead, and paid the price for their sin. He has given the most costly sacrifice which paid for sin once for all, accomplishing our freedom, and has given that freedom from death and guilt of sin freely, and free of cost to us. The costly becomes free! We are not clothed with our own efforts, which accomplish nothing. It is not because we have plunged deeper, reached higher, run stronger, beaten ourselves longer, read more Scripture, or prayed more fervently, but we are clothed with the righteous accomplishment of Christ on the cross and His merit which has worked everything perfectly for us. Christ has paid for the sin of all mankind. Peter tells us in his first letter that we were not redeemed with silver or gold which perish, but with the precious blood of Christ. God’s favor, or grace, to us is not cheap clothing, but costly. God’s favor or grace to us is free. It has cost Him, and He has gladly born that cost and not required repayment by us.

God has not let it up to us to lay the foundation of the house which will stand up to the storms of floods of life. He Himself has laid that foundation in Christ. Even its delivery is not C.O.D. but free. But, again, in God’s own fashion, the delivery is made in ordinary ways, which seem cheap to us sinful human beings that are looking for the spectacular. God comes to us in human words, in the very words concerning Jesus Christ and His death, which pays for sin, restores us to God’s favor, and therefore destroys the hold that death has on us. God comes to us in words concerning Christ’s resurrection which assure us that Christ is indeed risen from the dead, and because He is risen, we, too, shall rise from the dead on the Day of Judgement and live with Christ forever in heaven.

Words don’t seem that powerful. They are too ordinary. Where are the big building blocks I am supposed to use to build my house of faith? Where is the spectacular experience and sensation of something fantastic happening? Where is the overwhelming response I have? Where is that fire of the Spirit, being taken out of myself and transported to a higher plane? Since those things look to me and to what I expect, they are cheap clothing. It is in the ordinary words of the message of Christ’s forgiveness, the Word of God which accomplishes God’s purposes; not ours. The costly clothing of the precious blood of Christ which covers sin is brought to us in that Word of God.

The precious and costly robe of the blood of Christ is brought to us in the unassuming washing of Baptism. Baptism, that action which many regard as insignificant and merely symbolic because it has nothing to do with our action, will, or decision, is the washing of rebirth and renewal of the Holy Spirit says Paul in Titus 3. In Romans 6 He instructs us that we “who were baptized in Christ Jesus were baptized into His death.” The precious blood shed in shame on the cross is brought to us to effect forgiveness and new birth in that action of baptism. Why? Because of the pomp, the ceremony, the pastor? No! Those are cheap things which perish. It is because the promise of God connects us in that washing to the cross of Christ and more! No less than the apostle Peter in his first letter tells us, “Baptism now saves you also. It saves you by the resurrection of Christ.” Since the death of Christ is brought to us in the washing of baptism, it is the death of the power of sin over us. The resurrection of Christ is also worked in us there in that washing of new birth as the new creation which the Holy Spirit alone can produce is brought to life in us. It does this not because it is we who perform it, but because God is the one who baptizes us. Baptism, which appears to be nothing, clothes us in the costly clothing of the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Another gift of God which seems to be cheap and nothing in the estimation of human reason is the Holy Supper of our Lord. Holy Communion is seen by some as ineffective because it is simply a ceremony and involves nothing of our action, except our remembrance. It can be nothing more than bread and (God forbid) wine, because nothing else makes sense to my cheap understanding. In truth, it has nothing to do with our having plunged deeper, reached higher, run stronger, beaten ourselves longer, read more Scripture, or prayed more fervently. This Supper is nothing less than Christ Himself coming to be with us and in us. It is His promise (and He cannot lie) that together with the simple and ordinary bread and wine which appear to be nothing, He gives us His precious body and blood which were delivered for the forgiveness of our sins. This forgiveness is delivered free and freely here, unqualified as we are to receive it. Nevertheless, we receive Christ and His gifts here by faith, trusting His Word, “given and shed for you for the forgiveness of sins.” We receive that costly clothing of the precious blood of Christ for our rescue from sin and death. God looks on us sinners with His favor because of Jesus’ righteousness and sacrifice for us. He sees the precious robe of Jesus on us.

God gives the costly clothing of Christ to cover us. As God has required of us complete and perfect obedience to His law, He has provided it for us and to us in Christ. As God has required of us perfection of being, He has provided it for us in the sinless being of our brother Jesus. Everything God has required of us He granted to us for the sake of the death and resurrection of His Son, Jesus Christ. He has clothed us in the wedding garment required to live in His presence, because of Jesus. He has provided us with faith in Christ by His own Word, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. They are not cheap clothing because they do not require our effort. They are precious clothing because they are the result of Christ’s work for us.

“Beware of those who come to You in sheep’s clothing.'” The false prophets are those who require our action and decision and effort for God’s grace to be effective in our lives. The fruit of that ferocious teaching is the loss of our certainty of God’s favor, the emphasis on ourselves, and eventually losing sight of Christ Himself. Those thornbushes and thistles cannot bring forth the fruit of the Spirit, faith, comfort and joy. Nor can they provide the foundation of life they purport to supply.

The foundation laid in our effort or decision is sand. It shifts as we shift. It slides as we face the storms of life and the rising tides. The foundation of Christ and His promises, as ordinary as they seem, and as much as they are attacked, are the only certainty for us. Look to Christ and His cross. His promise is new birth in your baptism, a solid foundation because its power comes from outside of you. His promise is forgiveness through His body and blood in His Holy Supper, a solid foundation because it is God’s gift delivered to you. This foundation is built on the solid rock of Christ alone, which we also receive through the spoken and written Word of the Bible, and not upon ourselves. He alone will withstand the storms and floods of sin, death and doubt, for He has clothed us in the precious robe of His forgiveness and holiness. Amen

 

________________________________________________________

 

I remembered this one from a while back.  I sometimes listen to the Lutheran Hour while geting ready for church on Sunday morning.

I am pleased that the local non-demon./Baptist radio station now runs The-Lutheran-Hour as part of their Sunday lineup of programming.

 

 

Any thoughts about the sermon?

 

You can read the entire sermon at “Shorts-and-Cheap-Clothing”

 

 

 

.

Psalm 51

10, 11, 12

Create in me a clean heart, O God,
and renew a right spirit within me.
Cast me not away from your presence,
and take not your Holy Spirit from me.
Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
and uphold me with a willing spirit.

 

_______________________________________________________

 

 I often find that I am unwilling.  Unable.

 

But my Lord is always willing to save me, yet once again, and bring me home.

And again, I stray.  And I continue to pray David’s prayer.

 

.

 

 

.

In praise of “going through the motions”

 

By Glen Scrivener of Christ-the-Truth

Isaiah warned us and Jesus repeated it – it’s hypocritical to honour the Lord with your lips while your heart is far from Him (Isaiah 29:13; Mark 15:8). It’s something I pray about every Sunday, “As I preach or pray or sing, may my lips and my heart be set on the Lord Jesus.” But there’s another danger. We can react the other way and disdain anything ‘external’. We say to the world: “I reject ‘works’, I’m all about the inward life.” And so we’re constantly taking our spiritual temperatures. We neglect ritual (as though it always leads to ritualism). And we start to think of faith as a thing – the one really meritorious work! The faith-works polarity becomes, in our thinking, an internal-external polarity. Internal – good. External – bad. We start to imagine that mental acts are good old grace while physical acts are nasty old law. But that’s not how it is. There can be a crippling legalism of the heart (ever felt it?) and there can be a wonderful liberation in gospel rituals (ever experienced that?). Take communion. Please. No but seriously, take it. Because here is a gospel ritual which, because it is external, brings home the grace of Jesus all the stronger. We are not (or at least we should not be!) memorialists. Jesus has not left us a mental duty with the bread and wine as mere thought prompters. We have been left a meal. To chew. And to gulp down. There are motions to go through. And they are the same motions we performed last week. And the week before that. But here’s the thing – these motions are means of God’s grace and not in spite of their externalism but because they are external. Here is a gift that comes to you from outside yourself. And it comes apart from your internal state. But nonetheless it is for you – sinner that you are. So take it regardless of whether your heart is white-hot with religious zeal. Take it regardless of whether you are really, really mindful of the gravity of it all. And as the minister prays the prayer of consecration and your mind wanders… oh well. Don’t ask him to start again. Go through the motions I say. Your heart is meant to catch up with the motions. That’s why the motions were given. Because our hearts are weak and not to be trusted. So allow the Word to come to you from beyond. Allow Him to love you first. Don’t disdain ‘going through the motions.’ For many on a Sunday – those grieving or sick or gripped by depression – they need to be carried along by these motions. And for all of us – if we’re going to be people of grace, we need these externals.

 

_________________________________________________________

 

Nice job, Glen!

 

You are another non-Lutheran who gets it.

 

.

 

.

God Set up a Cross

By Pastor Mark Anderson  

 
The ancient world was a vast field of magnificent temples. Only symbols bespeaking power, permanence, and ultimate authority could faithfully proclaim the mystery of divinity. The gods deserved nothing less, or so thought the ancients.

Then God set up a cross.

It was forged by nameless servants of imperial authority. A bare, rude thing. A time tested instrument designed to evoke terror and coerce obedience through the application of unspeakable cruelty. Only the very worst, despised offenders suffered the fate of the crucified ones. The Romans lined roadways with them so that passers by would be forced to carry the weight of pitiful suffering and inhale the stench of rotting corpses. It was about as far from divinty as one could get.

This is the symbol of God’s presence with us?   

Yes.

God set up His cross where the four roads we travel most, meet: guilt, failure, spiritual poverty, and willful disobedience. The gift of God’s cross, the baptism into Christ’s death, is not given until I see that nothing in the world – nothing – can address my sickness unto death except this one, impossible, ridiculous sacrifice. For only by the shame, cruelty and utter godlessness of the cross can the true magnitude of our guilt be measured. The cross proclaims to us what our true position in life really is.  No wonder we flee from it for all we’re worth.

But Christ Jesus did not flee from the cross. He embraced it’s suffering and shame – for you. And three days after they laid His battered corpse to rest, God vindicated His trust and raised Him from the dead.

For Lutherans the season of Lent, therefore, is no occasion for self-conscious schemes of spiritual navel gazing or sentimental musings on self-pity and the like. Lent is no time for half-measures. You may want to give yourself some sort of moral or ethical tune-up during Lent. That’s fine. Your life might need one. But have no illusions that it will somehow earn points with God.

During Lent we return to Holy Baptism, through an active and living faith. There we remember with joy that our lives were drowned with Christ, crucified with Christ (Romans 6), and then raised with Christ. We give thanks to God who forgives our sins and who has brought all our works and all our ways under His judgment and mercy on the cross.

Through Word and sacrament God continues to set up the cross – and the empty tomb – in the center of our lives, and through them release hope and the divine power of His kingdom. And since Christ Jesus embodies hope He rightly calls us to hope – not in our efforts, will or determination, but in Him, the crucified. This is the scandal of the gospel – Jesus appears in the defenseless form of the crucified God to put an end to our pretensions to righteousness in order that we might have a righteousness based on faith. A righteousness won for us, the ungodly, through His death on the bloody cross, where the true glory of God is revealed.

 

_________________________________________________________

 

 

 

Mark Anderson is pastor at Lutheran-Church-of-the-Master , Corona del Mar, CA

 

_________________________________________________________

 

Do you notice what’s missing from Pastor Anderson’s piece?

An appeal to you to do, or think, or feelanything.

 

This is a great example of Christ centered, cross focused Christianity.

Death and resurrection. Both Christ’s, and yours…in Him.

 

Is there anything else that is needful?

 

 

.

 

 

.

Video on praying the Lord’s Prayer

 

videotaped class:

Jim Nestingen on The-Lord’s-Prayer  photo of Dr. James Nestingenand the Catechism

_____________________________________________________________

Thank you, Institute-of-Lutheran-Theology

I only had a chance to watch the first half, but I enjoyed the class very much and learned a few things, besides.

.

Sanctification

“And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ, (as long as you give it a decent effort).(ESV)

Conrail Quality by Luke S.

_______________________________________________________________

…or something like that.

 

Will He really complete the good work that He started in us…all by Himself?

 

Is He a big enough God to handle that?

 

Or… is he a puny god who needs our help?

 

.

Some Old Testament

Ezekiel 36: 25,26 (NIV)  Cherubim by Jepoi Genaldo

 

25 I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your impurities and from all your idols. 26 I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.

________________________________________________________

 

Ok… what do you think that language is referring to?

 

If you answered, ‘Holy Baptism’… go straight to the head of the class!

 

 If you answered anything else, you can sit in the corner with a pointy hat.

 

 

.

‘Feeling good and being positive’

I heard that from a customer in the market where I work, a co-worker, and two family members in the last couple of days. That’s what church ought be about, they said.

“Well…(I said)…it can be”. Mariakirken door by Farl

But the Bible does not speak in terms of positive or negative.

It speaks of going from death…to life.

I told them that they need to find a church where the Word of God is proclaimed in such a manner as to expose you and your ineptness, your unwillingness, to be what God would have you be. And then they need to procalim to you what God has done for you about that problem. And then they need to hand over to you, without charge, the meal that the world does not, and cannot offer, the meal that gives the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation.

I told them that they can be lost. I told them that Jesus will never lose them, be that the troubles and cares of this world, and their own rebellion from God, and the devil, are actively working to seperate you from God.

I told them that they need to go to church and hear the Word and receive the Lord’s Supper and to force themselves to go if they did not feel like going. Because they are dying people and will soon enter the grave and they will then need someone to pull them out of that grave to new and everlasting life.

I hope, by the grace of God, that they find a church door.

 

.

Giving recipes to the hungry?

Beat until light by Patrick Snook

 

Well, isn’t that what is happening in so many churches?

You’ve got someone who is starving to death (spiritually) and you lay out for them your favorite recipe on just how they can get what they need?

Then you add another ingredient to the recipe each week, so there’s no way this much needed, life giving meal will ever come out of the oven and be finished, and enjoyed. It becomes impossible to ever ‘arrive’. 

I’m here to say that that is a terrible way to “help” people.

 

Hand Him over!

 Give them the True Bread which comes down from Heaven, which is the meal that is completely finished for you and ready to “take and eat”.

‘How to’, ‘instructional Christianity’,  just throws gasoline on the fire. It keeps alive the Old Adam and Old Eve. It creates phonies and Pharisees. It drives people to despair. God is not interested in cleaning up the Old Adam and Old Eve in us. He wants to kill them off! He will create in their places, the New Man and New Woman, and He does this through the announcement of the forgiveness of sins for Jesus’ sake. And He does this in His Holy Supper which He lovingly prepares for you with His Body and Blood that was nailed to a bloody cross in your place. And He does this when we speak of Him and the great things He has done for us, one to another. And when we comfort each other in His Name.

This is what people need. They don’t need a ‘program’ that puts them on the fast track, slowtrack, or any other track, to greater obedience or greater spirituality.

If the non-denoms, or the Baptists, or the Roman Catholics, or the Calvinists, or the Mormons even, would hand over this bread that comes down from Heaven for broken sinners, and not put any conditions on it, then I would say “AMEN! Thanks be to God! We are in agreement!” 

To the extent that they do not hand Him over without strings attached, I will always be critical… never judgemental. Their final destination is not my business. The Lord is after the heart and knows each heart individually. He is certainly capable of making someone His own apart from any particular denomination, or church, or institution.

But we want the light of the gospel and the freedom that Christ gives to burn ever more brightly…don’t we?

So we continually place Christ at the center of it all towards that end so that some will hear and be freed from the religious project and the propping up of the self.

Don’t hand them picked-over recipes, that feature ‘what they ought be doing’. 

Hand over the One true and everlasting food that is Jesus Christ Himself and His forgiveness of sins for sinners in need of new life. And keep handing Him over, again and again, and again…in the face of all those who object that that is just not enough.

He, and He alone…is enough.    He is enough.

________________________________________________________________

You got a problem wit dat?

 

.