Divine Service

Easter Sunday Service

KJV Mark 16:1 And when the sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, had bought sweet spices, that they might come and anoint him.

The women went to the tomb to honor the body of Jesus, assuming He was dead even though He predicted many times that He would be killed and rise from the dead. They doubtless felt dead themselves on their way to the tomb, heavy with grief and sorrow. Still, they wanted to finish what would have been done normally.

All this could have been changed, if God had willed it to be simpler and more obvious to everyone. But God permits us to feel the sorrow before we experience the peace that comes with His Gospel.

The followers, except for Jesus, still had faith, but they were shaken by events and scared of the overwhelming power of the Roman Empire, not to mention Jewish hostility. Before they entered the area, Doubting Thomas predicted they might all die there together (Gospel of John).

Lacking faith, the women would have run away. Lacking faith, the disciples would have scattered instead of staying together. But their faith was limited because they had yet to see the prophecies fulfilled. At this point they were so blinded by grief that they no longer knew the Passion predictions and acted as if Rome had won. At this point Rome would have seemed all-powerful and God...not so much.

Needless to say, we often trudge along as if the tomb were still sealed, Jesus lifeless inside. What is our excuse? We listen to the unbelieving world and commune with its spirit. One writer said, wisely, "We are all influenced, whether we admit it or not."

 

So the women and the disciples are not only the key figures in this great drama but also our examples, both bad and good, examples to teach us how we are with a faltering faith and also how we are with Resurrection certainty.

2 And very early in the morning the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the sun.

Here we have an exact moment. The sun was just starting to rise on Sunday, the first day of the week. My Adventist relatives thought we had to worship on Saturday, but the Christian Church changed the day of worship to Sunday, to honor Jesus' resurrection. In fact, they treated each Sunday as Easter and sang hymns as the sun rose.

The Church of Wishful Thinking always wants to make Christian observances pagan because our culture borrows from various languages and traditions. They yammer about Easter being the name of a pagan god, which is true, but we do not worship Oster.  We use Easter as short-hand for The Resurrection of Our Lord.

Easter eggs borrow from the Oster myth, and there is a substitute Christian legend about eggs turning rainbow colored. All that is harmless. What hurts the true Christian Church is having pastors and district presidents who lure kids to church with "live rabbits you can pet," as if Easter itself lacks no power to draw people.

The more we make the Christian faith appealing to the masses, the less appeal it has, because the malls and pizza parlors can do this better than we can. By participating in their style of promotion we demean and water down the Gospel until it is only a happy-chappy philosophy.

Today we act as if Sunday is just another day, and Easter is just another Sunday.

3 And they said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre?

This lid to the tomb was a very big problem. It was not a boulder, as some artists paint it, since no one would have been able to move a boulder large enough to seal a tomb. The custom was to use a flat round rock that fit in a groove, to be rolled aside when needed. However, that still required a lot more upper body strength than all the women had.

Nevertheless, they had set out with the right materials for their duties without stopping to question that weighty problem. They were so anxious to honor Jesus in death that they did not consider that their task was going to be impossible at that hour. No one was going to be at the tomb of a criminal executed for crimes against the Roman government (the cross) accused of blasphemy (the religious point of view). Jesus was doubly accursed in the eyes of the public, and no one wanted to be associated with Him.

4 And when they looked, they saw that the stone was rolled away: for it was very great.

This rationalistic assumption is made by non-Lutherans - He was allowed to leave when the angels rolled the stone away. Some paintings show angels moving the stone and Jesus leaving at that time.

The human nature of Jesus did not limit His divine nature. We do not think of God as being locked up inside a church building when the doors are closed. Nor was Jesus ever confined by the limitations of His body. When crowds surrounded Him twice, He passed through them. When the tomb was sealed, He left. When the doors were locked shut "for fear of the Jews" He twice entered the chamber where the disciples were hiding.

This is the mystery revealed to us by the Holy Spirit in the Word. He who fashioned the universe was lying in a manger. The Son of God, who created the mountain ranges, could not be sealed in by the very stone which He made as the Creating Word.

Thus we have Holy Communion, even with the doors locked and the windows shut. Yet Jesus is present in His human and divine natures, promising and giving us forgiveness of sin in the Sacrament.

So the stone was rolled away - not for Jesus - but for the women and later the disciples and everyone else. Roman soldiers guarded the tomb, to make sure no one disturbed the grave or caused some kind of fraud. When the angels rolled the stone away, they saw emptiness and ran in terror.

The Roman Empire could not eliminate the Son of God. They could not defeat the Holy One with death. Instead, using death, Jesus defeated sin, death, and Satan. The only responses are stark terror and faith.

5 And entering into the sepulchre, they saw a young man sitting on the right side, clothed in a long white garment; and they were affrighted.

We should give the women some credit here. They came to the tomb in one frame of mind. They could have been frightened away, but they stayed to look inside. For that reason they were blessed with the message of the angel. They were scared but did not take to their heels.

It takes so little to frighten us that we should think of these women as quite stout-hearted to look inside the tomb.

We can be afraid and still have faith. Faith in God informs our fears and helps us with self-control.

6 And he saith unto them, Be not affrighted: Ye seek Jesus of Nazareth, which was crucified: he is risen; he is not here: behold the place where they laid him. 7 But go your way, tell his disciples and Peter that he goeth before you into Galilee: there shall ye see him, as he said unto you.

The angelic message is even more astonishing than the empty tomb. Perhaps the faithful would like the angel to say, "You are looking for the Son of God, the Savior." But instead, the ordinary name of Jesus - Jesus of Nazareth - is used. That gives the account precision. They are not looking for a title, but a person. There was great love and faith among the followers, but complete knowledge about that was slowly building. We look at these backwards in time. They developed their understanding.

But our understanding also develops as we continue in faith. We have moments of fear and sorrow, dashing our hopes. But God builds us up again. Through study of the Word and experience we realize what the Gospel really means as we pass through life.

These first phrases to describe their teacher are remarkable:

1. He was crucified.

2. He is not here.

3. He is risen from the dead.

Jesus was killed by the authorities - He was crucified. But He is no longer here, in a tomb. He is absent from the world of the dead.

He is risen from the dead. Once again - great precision is in this message, preventing people from having false assumptions. One is that Jesus never really died. Yes He died. He was crucified.

He is not here - counters the notion that unscrupulous followers stole His body. If that had happened, we would have something like - His body is no longer here. "He" means a living person.

He is, he was - those are verbal clues to police detectives. When they look for a missing person and someone says "He was..." that is a clue that the individual knows that person is no longer alive.

The clarifying statement says it all - He is risen from the dead. I added "from the dead" but that is the only possible meaning.

If Jesus of Nazareth is risen from the dead, the same one who called Lazarus from death, then He is the Lord over all.

8 And they went out quickly, and fled from the sepulchre; for they trembled and were amazed: neither said they any thing to any man; for they were afraid.

The women were having an information and experience overload, passing from sorrow and poor understanding to joy and revelation. Who can take so much at once. They did not stop along the way to talk to anyone but ran back to where the disciples were, to tell them about this great news.

This calls for the rest of the story, so we have the ending of Mark, plus Luke and Matthew and John for post-resurrection stories. We celebrate Easter for a season and the rest of the year because it is central to the Christian message.

Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday

Palm Sunday - Palmarum

March 24, 2018

John 12:12-99 The Triumphant Entry

Pastor Pautz

 

Grace and mercy to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.  Amen.

 

The Holy Scripture for this morning's sermon is from today's Gospel according to John.  Let us hear a portion of that Scripture again. It is written in John 12:17-18.

17The crowd that had been with him when he called Lazarus out of the tomb and raised him from the dead continued to bear witness. 18The reason why the crowd went to meet him was that they heard he had done this miracle.

 

Thus far the text.  Let us pray:

 

Creator Father, Your Son raised Lazarus from the dead and then entered Your holy city Jerusalem to die Lazarus' death and become the atoning sacrifice to save all sinners from death.  Save us, O Father, by sending Your blessed Son, who comes in Your name, to give us His resurrected body and blood to us to eat and to drink for the forgiveness of our sins and so that our bodies may rise on the last day too, never to die again; in the name of Jesus.  Amen.

 

Jesus' triumphant entry into Jerusalem is connected to the raising of Lazarus from the dead.

 

Many people saw the resurrection of Lazarus.  Four days after Lazarus died, Jesus showed up and wept for His friend.  "Move the stone," Jesus said. Martha calmly but sincerely suggested otherwise, "It will stink."   Jesus replied, "Did I, Jesus, not tell you that if you believe you would see the glory of God." So, they rolled away the stone.  Jesus prayed. Then Jesus said, "Lazarus, come out."

 

And Lazarus come out of the grave.

 

And many witnessed Lazarus' resurrection.

 

And every eye-witness was talking and more than a few were plotting Jesus' death.

 

And then it was Palm Sunday.  Six days before the Lord's Passover.

 

Jesus left Bethany to enter Jerusalem and Lazarus was with Jesus.  The large crowd broke into two groups. One group walked with Jesus.  The other group ran ahead to tell people that Jesus resurrected Lazarus from the dead and that both Jesus and Lazarus were coming to Jerusalem, so a third group formed and was waiting Jesus' arrival.

Jesus' triumphant entry into Jerusalem is connected to the raising of Lazarus from the dead.   But for the wrong reasons.

 

For Jesus knows the week that he is about to face. Jesus knows that is not riding in a king's triumph, but rather in a convicts final procession to the crucifixion. The crowds don't know it, the disciples don't know, but Jesus knows it: he is riding to his death.

 

But Lazarus is there.  Jesus has power over death.  And when someone has that much power...people want a peace of it.  One group wants a king. Another group wants Jerusalem's glory years to return.  Another group wants to see the mighty Romans paraded out of town. Other groups want Jesus dead.

 

You want something too.  Something different than a dead and bloodied Jesus, I suppose.  One group wants confirmation over with so they don't have to study the Holy Scriptures anymore.   Another group wants more programs so more people can get involved so they can feel better about their unbelief.  

 

And yet it is your unbelief that does not want to hear that faith in a dead and bloodied Jesus is your hope for the life of your soul and body.

 

So, repent.  Repent by the Law and believe by the Gospel.  Repent by studying the Holy Scriptures and believe by asking God for mercy.  Repent of attaching strings and demands to your offerings and believe that our Father is taking care of you.  Repent of your plan to spend the congregation's offerings and believe that their use is for distributing Jesus by His means of Word and Sacrament.  

 

Repent and believe that Jesus loves you without any strings attached or for any other purpose that to save your from your sins and give you life, without any merit or worthiness in you.

 

This Thursday, Jesus will tell you again how changed the Lord's Passover to the Lord's Supper so that death will pass over you and you will be freed from bondage to your sin.  This gift will be received by faith.

 

This Friday, Jesus will tell you again how He suffered and died as your sin, so that you will never experience the horror of death even though one day you will die.  This gift is received by faith.

 

This Saturday, too, is a special service.  Jesus will tell you of His descent into Hell and how you are now already mostly resurrected from the dead.  Your soul already experiences eternal life. Only your skin and bones need the renewal. This gift is received by faith.

 

Faith, not in crowds or selfish desires, but in the Annointed One who has power over death because He is the True God who took on your humanity into Himself and died as your sin.  This is the week Jesus accomplished the atoning sacrifice for your sin. That atonement is finished.

 

Now, the delivery of that Good Friday atonement by the Holy Spirit's tools.  Holy Baptism, Absolution, Holy Communion, Holy Gospel for the forgiveness of your sins.  And where there is the forgiveness of sins, there is also salvation and eternal life; in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Fifth Sunday in Lent

the remmington.png

Judica Sunday - extremely rough notes

March 18

Hebrews 9

Grace and mercy to you from God Our Father and the Lord Jesus  Christ.

It is written in Hebrews chapter 9: 11 But Christ has arrived as a high priest of the good things to come. Through the greater and more perfect tent not made by hands, that is, not of this creation, 12 and not by the blood of goats and calves, but by his own blood, he entered once for all into the holiest place, obtaining eternal redemption.

Thus far the text.  

A quick comparison of the material Jewish sacrifices of goats and bulls versus the spiritual Christian sacrifices of prayer praise and thanks.

The Old Testament altar is the place of blood sacrifices.  A lamb would be sacrificed as an atoning sacrifice for sin.  The lamb did the work. It shed its blood. The blood was sprinkled on the ark of the covenant.  The body was burned on the altar for burnt offerings. This is the material sacrifice that was regularly repeated through the Old Testament.  

How were the OT folks made righteous before the Lord? They were saved by faith In the promise connected with the atoning sacrifice.  

The  New Testament altar is a spiritual altar.  The first my altar was the cross upon which Jesus died.  No one notice that that particular cross was an altar. The fact was hidden from all people.    Crosses were common for executions. Those other crosses were not altars. Christ’s cross was different because of the promise and the sacrifice.

Jesus is the promised Lamb of God.  Behold the Lamb who takes away the sins of the world.  Jesus is not a material lamb. Jesus is The spiritual Lamb.  The promised Lamb. The announced One. This Lamb is God Himself.  

No one can see that Jesus is God.  They see a convicted man, not The Son of Man, God in the flesh.  The sacrifice is hidden from sight.

Much like Abraham and Issac did not see the ram of grace caught in the thicket so also no man woman or child looked upon crucified Jesus and saw the Lamb of God entangled in the thicket of our sins.  But there He was.

There is only one New Testament atoning sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins.  That was accomplished on the altar of the cross.

The altar before you is a spiritual altar.  It is not an altar for the atoning sacrifice for your sins.  Your sacrifices are your pray praise and thanks. In that sense, it is an altar.  It is a spiritual altar because it requires faith in Jesus.

There is only one atoning sacrifice for your sin but that one atoning sacrifice is delivered to you from this altar.  You can’t see Christ’s body but the promise of God is that Christ’s resurrected and living body is here for you to eat.  Why? To receive the promise connected to the bread the justification of your sins by faith in Jesus. ( whole burned offering)

Third Sunday in Lent

Third Sunday in Lent

Third Sunday in Lent

Oculi--The Third Sunday in Lent

March 4, 2018

St. Luke 11:14-28

 It is written in the Gospel according to Luke:  14 Now he was casting out a demon that was mute. When the demon had gone out, the mute man spoke, and the people marveled. 15 But some of them said, “He casts out demons by Beelzebul, the prince of demons,” 16 while others, to test him, kept seeking from him a sign from heaven. 17 But he, knowing their thoughts, said to them,.... 20 But if it is by the finger of God that I cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you. 21 When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own palace, his goods are safe; 22 but when one stronger than he attacks him and overcomes him, he takes away his armor in which he trusted and divides his spoil…. 27 As he said these things, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, “Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts at which you nursed!” 28 But he said, “Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!”  thus far the text.

Let us pray:  Almighty Father, who has given the Strong Man Jesus to bear our sin, grant us Your Holy Spirit and protect us in body and soul; in the name of Jesus.  Amen.

In Lent so far we’ve seen Christ’s power over the devil and his kingdom. Today, Jesus’ enemies accuse Him of driving out demons by the prince of demons, which Jesus calls a ridiculous idea that doesn’t make any sense. But we do get two warnings here about what happens when the Lord casts Satan out of us. He will either come back with a brute force attack or he will try to make our religion about something other than hearing and keeping Christ’s Word. A brute force attack is when the devil realizes he’s been cast out by your baptism into Christ so now he comes back with the world and your sinful nature to assault you with all sorts of temptations and vices until you just give up on Christ and stop coming to church and believing any of it at all. You know, using the things and people around us to cause us to fall into misery and mistakes and give up on Christ. The more subtle way is to distract you with something that sounds religious but isn’t really about Christ at all. Like the woman who praised Jesus’ mother. You know, coming to a church for something other than God’s Word and Supper and forgiveness. Beware of these attacks, either head on with full force or subtly and craftily. And repent of wanting to join in these things! Beware and flee to Christ who alone can withstand these temptations and cast out Satan for good. 

You see, now you are a marked person. A target for the devil. And when he comes for you, there is only one thing to do. Give him the finger of God! Jesus declares to His enemies that He drives out demons by the finger of God. We saw the power of God’s finger when the Egyptian magicians couldn’t duplicate the plagues the Lord brought upon Pharaoh and Egypt. The finger of God is not just a metaphor. God actually has a finger. Ten in fact. And hands and feet and human flesh. For Jesus is true God and true man who has come to save us from Satan’s kingdom. He has come to rescue us from our slavery and bondage to darkness and sin. He does so by casting out Satan. And He casts out Satan by being the sin bearer. Satan goes where there are sinners and sins and so Jesus rescues you from the devil by making your sins His own and being nailed to the cross on Calvary and there suffering, bleeding and dying for your sins! His descent into hell is the victory lap around the devil’s kingdom in which He declares Satan’s power null and void. His resurrection is the proof for the whole world to witness that since sin has been overcome, so has death, its curse. 

 So just how do you aim the finger of God at the devil? You start by making the sign of the cross to remind him of your baptism. That you were washed. That he was cast out of you and you brought out of his kingdom already at the font. You hear Christ preached and hear your sins absolved. Those words of Jesus drive the devil away as surely as Jesus standing here speaking in person. You receive Christ’s body and blood so that instead of the prey of a sinner the devil must see in you the Lion of Judah who has overcome sin and death and therefore he must fear to get close to you! Do you see? All the power and might and strength of God against Satan is yours in Christ that the evil foe may have no power over you. Your sins are forgiven. You are God’s child. Death has been defeated. Eternal life is yours. Blessed are you who hear the Word of God and keep it. For Jesus is yours. And therefore the devil can’t have you. In the Name of Jesus. Amen.