Trinity 16 Jesus Touches Your Coffin

Luke 7:11-17 Jesus Touches Your Coffin

Luke 7:11-17 Jesus Touches Your Coffin

Luke 7:11-17

Raising the Widow’s Son in Nain

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

The Lord has written, “Jesus presented the resurrected man to His mother.”  Thus far the text.

Let us pray: Creator Father, whom Jesus presents us to You as Your children, visit us this morning by granting us Your Holy Spirit and granting us the faith of Your Son; in the name of Jesus.  Amen.

Funeral processions have the right of way.  Family and friends drive in procession to the cemetery to bury a loved one.  Oncoming traffic pulls off to the side of the road....and waits. It is a sign of respect.  

Just this year, Irene Meyer and Lillian Graf, such blessed memories of them, received this respect.  I rode with them to the cemetery. Traffic stopped. Their graves were sanctified with the living Word of God.  They now rest until the Day of Resurrection. Thanks be to God.

Jesus has something to say about funeral processions, whether Irene’s or Lillian’s or the many loved ones with whom you processed to the cemetery for the committal service.

The boy from Nain is being processed to the cemetery.  His widowed mother is in that procession as well as family and friends and half the town of Nain.  It is a procession of death.

But there is another procession.

Jesus and many of His disciples are processing toward Nain.  It is written that in Jesus is Life and the Life is the Light of men.  Jesus is the Light that entered into this darkened word and the darkness does not overcome the Light.  Jesus is leading the procession of Life.

A procession of death meets the procession of Life.  They both stop.

Notice here the kindness and generosity Jesus show this widow.

This widow has not done anything to deserve such kindness or generosity.

This widow has no reason to expect she will go home with her son after the funeral so she didn’t even ask for it.

This widow does not know who Jesus Christ is other than one of those people who pulls over for a funeral procession and then goes about their own life.

This widow didn’t prepare to meet Jesus.  She is leaving the city for the cemetery to bury her son as she did not long ago to bury her husband.

Jesus Christ shows kindness and generosity out of sympathy toward her.  Jesus remains the God of grace.

No one believe that Jesus is kind and generous.  This fallen world is blind. And as you know, even today some keep driving passed a funeral procession or speed through an intersection to avoid a funeral procession.  No one believes that Jesus is kind and generous.

Why?  Because the devil is the god of this world (small “g” god).  The devil has great power on earth so that we do not see the work of God or recognize Him to be kind and generous.  As the Lord has written in 2 Corinthians 4:4, 4 whose minds the god of this age has blinded, who do not believe, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine on them.

Therefore we do not appreciate neither the Lord’s kindness nor His generosity.  We misuse His mercies. We are unthankful for the good things He does for us.

This is our repentance for this morning.

Think of our living bodies for we are not dead yet.

Irene, of blessed memory, appreciated her body before it became weakened and painful but appreciated her body all the more after her loss.  And she gave thanks to God.

Lillian, also of blessed memory, appreciated her eyes before her sight ebbed away, along with her hearing, but appreciated them all the more after she lost them.  And she gave thanks to God.

At times, God permits some of us to fall into anxiety and need to the point that it seems like creation has no God (big “G” god).  In seems like a cold world when blindness, paralysis, or death touch us such as the widow’s son. For we are all creatures of the Creator.  And God can do with us, His creation, as He wills. This is true.

But again, why?  Why does our Creator God touch us with such curses?

Our Creator Father does it in such abundance  - ONLY - that we may continually experience His kindness and generosity.  That we may fear nothing but losing Him. That we who like the widow deserve nothing good, who do not expect anything good so we don’t ask or pray for His kindness or generosity, who don’t know the Lord’s in His kindness and generosity like we should, and don’t prepare to meet Jesus in the midst of misfortune, yet His is still good to us.

There was another mini collision of death and life recorded in John chapter 9.  It is written:

Now as Jesus passed by, He saw a man who was blind from birth. 2 And His disciples asked Him, saying, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  3 Jesus answered, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned, but that the works of God should be revealed in him. 4 I must work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day; the night is coming when no one can work. 5 As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.”

What a blessing!  Jesus healed the blind man and Jesus has already touched your  coffin because you are baptized and continue to believe in Jesus.  Jesus is still in the world. Let us who are unable to recognize Jesus’ kindness and generosity in our good fortune at least know them in our misfortune.   And give thanks to God.

But THE major collision occurred not at the city gate of Nain or Muscatine but Jerusalem.  It was there that Jesus, bloodied and condemned to death by crucifixion, headed up the greatest Parade of Life.  To the cross.

Many stopped to watch this procession, this parade, to throw insults instead of candy, to ridicule rather than respect the God of Life who Light is never overcome by the darkness of those who are perishing in their funeral procession to hell.

The Parade of Life is here this morning even as the resurrected Jesus is bodily among us this morning.  Thank God, that today a seven-year-old child knows who is in the Parade of Life. Or to say it more formally, thank God, a seven-year-old child knows what the Church is, namely, the holy believers and lambs who hear the voice of their Shepherd [John 10:11–16]. 3 For the children pray, “I believe in one holy Christian Church.”Paul Timothy McCain, ed., Concordia: The Lutheran Confessions (St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House, 2005), 283.

Lillian Graf's Funeral Service

Lillian Graf (1921-2018)

Lillian Graf (1921-2018)

Funeral Service for Lillian Graf

August 15, 2018

John 10:11-16; 1 Corinthians 15:35-57; Job 19:21-27

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

The Lord has written in Job 10:11, “I AM the Shepherd, the Good One.  The Good Shepherd gives His life for the sheep.” Thus far the text.

Let us pray: Creator Father, You sent the Good Shepherd for us, for Lillian, and He gives us His life.  Grant us to remain within Your flock both now and forevermore; in the name of Jesus. Amen.

We began with a Christmas hymn.  We will conclude with an Easter hymn.  The birth and resurrection of Jesus Christ, THE Shepherd, THE God Shepherd of our body and souls.  Think of all the pastors who have served you over the years. You probably have a favorite or two that stand out.  Yet, Jesus is not being compared to those good pastors as if He is similar but a little better than that. Rather, Jesus is THE God Shepherd.  And thanks be to God for Jesus has Shepherded Lillian from birth and continues to Shepherd her to the day He bodily resurrects Lillian from the grave and forevermore.

Jesus shepherded Lillian’s birth on January 18, 1921.  Her parents rejoiced.

Jesus shepherded Lillian’s new birth in Holy Baptism on New Years’ Day 1922.   The angels rejoiced.

Jesus shepherded Lillian through her early Christian formation culminating in her confirmation in the Christian faith on June 9, 1935.  The church rejoiced.

Jesus shepherded Lillian in Holy Marriage to Henry on February 2, 1940, and continued to bless Lillian with Betty and Judy and Henry and Doug throughout the years.  Her family rejoiced.

Why so much rejoicing?  Because The Shepherd Jesus Christ did something for Lillian that no pastor could do for her, or her husband or her children could do for her.  In fact, Jesus did something for Lillian that no one could except for a gracious and merciful God. Jesus died for Lillian.

There is an old saying that fits here.  

Dying is no child’s play.  It is the good work of God in Jesus Christ.

Jesus prepared Lillian for 96 years to face her 97th year.

Lillian knows better than us that dying is no child’s play.

One day, I stopped by and Lillian was playing cards with her family.  I offered to stop back and that was ok.

Another visit, she was tired but determined to renew her strength.  Jesus communion fed Lillian his body and blood.

Another visit, she couldn’t hear very well.  Jesus forgave Lillian all her sins. That day, I spoke loud and low the confession and absolution and she could hear me just fine.  So could her neighbors at the end of the hall.

Another visit, she was very tired.  I offered to stop back the next day.  She said no. Who knows what problems I’ll have tomorrow.  Jesus prayed for her.

Another visit, she was sleeping in her chair.  I sat on the bed praying for her when she woke up.  She told me which chair to sit in. Even where I should place the chair.  Jesus forgave her sins, prayed for her, and communed her.

Another visit, she was sleeping in her bed.  Jesus prayed for her and sang some hymns quietly to her.  Dying is not child’s play, but thanks be to God that Lillian was shepherded by The Shepherd.  The Good One.

And now Lillian has died to all dying.  She has died to all sickness. She has died to all things that the Good Shepherd calls bad.  All bad is gone.

Finally, Lillian is alive to all things good.  She is more fully alive than she has ever experienced before and, with all the saints, joyfully waits for the restored heaven and earth and the resurrection of her body.  This one right here. The Good Shepherd, the God Pastor, will do it; in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.