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Lectionary Meditations

“My Name’s Pit” – a Reflection on Luke 16

“The master commended the dishonest manager for his shrewdness. For the sons of this world are more shrewd in dealing with their own generation than the sons of light.”

How in the world does Jesus tell a story where a liar and cheat gets praised? That is the question that has vexed generations of moralists concerning the story of the dishonest manager. The problem comes in when focus on the story so much that we don’t listen to Jesus. He tells us what the point is – the dishonest manager is shrewd, while so often Christians are not.

Consider – that rotten cheat was utterly honest about his situation. He had played things fast and loose, and now the noose was around his neck. He was stuck in a pit, and there was no way he was going to dig his way out – so he didn’t trust in his own power. Instead, he sponged off the master’s name, wealth, and credit, and that is how he survived.

Now, consider us Christians. Here we are, people who have received the gift of life and salvation from Christ Jesus. We are baptized children of God… and yet, what so often is our gut reaction when we have gotten our hand caught in the cookie jar of some sin or vice? We deny that we did anything wrong, or we blame our neighbor, or we promise to do better, or we make vain promises about how we’ll behave in the future. All of these are foolish things. So often we try foolishly to talk our way out of our sin.

This is why Christ Jesus calls us to be shrewd – this is why we are to fix our eyes upon Christ Jesus and remember that we live only by the forgiveness, life, and salvation that He gives. We don’t need to posture or plot; rather we confess our sin and He is faithful and just to forgive us. God grant us wisdom and shrewdness to remember this!

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Catechesis

Exploring the ‘Sanctified’ Conference Hymn- Part 5

Taste and see the bliss of heaven known by saints around the throne, where the Lamb, in closest union, lives to love and feed His own. From His riven side forever flows the purest stream of love, love that robes us with the raiment worn by all who feast above. -LSB 572, Verse 5

The Lord’s Supper is not simply an individual meal. As we approach the communion rail, we partake in a meal that unites the body of Christ past, present, and future. Yes, this is forgiveness for you, but it is also forgiveness for all who confess the name of Christ and His saving work. This is another great joy and blessing in Holy Communion. We commune with those in our own physical church building of course, but we also commune with Christians around the world and all the saints who have died in the faith. Every Sunday, you are surrounded by the people of God who sit in His presence- grandparents, parents, siblings, etc…. In some Roman Catholic and Lutheran churches, the communion rail is shaped in a half circle. This symbolizes fact that we are only a part of the attendance at communion. The rest of the circle is completed by those who we cannot see, who are no longer with us here on earth, but who are in the presence of God and still attend to His Word and receive His gifts in the courts of heaven.

These gifts that Christ freely gives to us He gives out of love. As John 3:16 tells us so beautifully, it is God’s love for His creation that brought Him down to earth in the person of Jesus Christ. All that Christ did during His ministry here, He did because He loves us and does not want us to spend eternity enslaved to the powers of sin, death, and the Devil. His sufferings and death on the cross put Him through the greatest pain man could ever experience on this earth. Yet all this was done because of His great love toward us.

When the soldier pierced Christ’s side after He was already dead, blood and water came flowing out. The blood that flows from Christ on the cross washes away all our sins and makes us holy before God. This blood clothes us with the righteousness of Christ: the righteousness He won for us. With this new garment of salvation, we can now come before God and receive His gifts both here on this earth and in heaven after our time on earth has ended. This is how we are saved and can know that we will be with God in heaven. Just as God promised Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden that He would send a savior to crush the power of the Devil, so now God promises to us that all who are clothed in the precious, redeeming blood of Christ will enter into His eternal kingdom and live with Him forever.

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Lectionary Meditations

You Call That Fruit? – A Meditation on Matthew 7:15-23

“You will recognize them by their fruits.”

You’ll know them by their fruits. That’s what Jesus tells us – that false prophets will be easy to spot by their fruits. Here’s the problem; we hear “fruits” and simply think “works”. If someone is nice or does something neat, surely they’re spot on theologically, right?

Yet, right after mentioning “fruits” Jesus talks about folks who are able to say, “Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name” and says that they are condemned! What in the world is going on here?

You tell a tree by its fruit. If you see an apple, you know it came from an apple tree. You see a peach, it came from a peach tree. And if we are looking for a Christian, the fruit we’d expect is Christ Jesus. Christ’s forgiveness and love and mercy – or even all the fruits of the Spirit that Paul mentions later on. The fruit that comes from Christ should give you Christ and His mercy.  It should be the fruit of the Cross.

The false folks pointed to themselves and their own works – see what we did! See all that we did in Your name and for You, Jesus… look at MEEEEE! That’s not good fruit; that’s the selfish, self-centered and self-praising trash sin always produces. But the fruit that we ought to seek that we should long for is this: Christ Jesus died for you, and so your sin is forgiven. The fruit we ought to seek sounds like, “take and eat, this is My Body; take and drink, this is My Blood.” That way we know we are getting the real deal.

Because that is the will of the Father – that Christ Jesus wins you salvation from sin, and that this salvation is given to you again. God wills that mercy and love from Christ be poured into you over and over again by His Word and Spirit, that you are returned again to your baptismal grace. That’s the good fruit – Christ, not our works. Listen and look for Christ, and ignore the works righteous bragging of the ravenous wolves.

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Catechesis

Exploring the ‘Sanctified’ Conference Hymn- Part 4

Lamb of God, once slain for sinners, Host, who spreads this meal divine, here You pledge our sins are covered, pledge received in bread and wine: “Take and eat; this is My body, given on the cross for you; take and drink; this cup of blessing is my blood poured out for you.” -LSB 572, Verse 4

When Jesus breathed His last on the cross, the punishment for sin was gone. God had poured out His divine wrath on His Son against all sins- past, present, and future, and now that all sin was atoned for, God could bestow the gift of the forgiveness of sins upon His people. The Old Testament sacrificial covenant, which had sanctified the Children of Israel and set them apart from the rest of the world, was no longer necessary. No new blood needed to be spilled on altars to atone for sin because the blood of Jesus now covered all sins. All God needed to do was give His people access to this new, life-giving blood. Therefore, Jesus instituted a new covenant just before He went to the cross which would pass the forgiveness He won for His people to His people.

In this new covenant, God comes to His people and brings them justification through the blood of His Son. This blood covers us just as the blood of the old covenant covered the Children of Israel. We no longer need to sacrifice animals on human altars to atone for our sins. Instead, we now come to the altar of God where we receive this cleansing, atoning blood along with Christ’s body in, with, and under the bread and wine at the communion rail. In the Lord’s Supper, God freely offers us the forgiveness of our sins and life eternal and promises that because of Christ’s payment for sin, we can know for certain that our sins are forgiven forever.

This is why Lutherans value communion so highly. Through receiving communion, we gain access to Christ’s salvific blood and are made holy before God. This is not a meal where we fondly remember that Jesus died for us. No! This is a meal that give you eternal life, forgives all your sins, and sanctifies you. My home congregation offers two services, and once I asked my pastor if it was alright to commune in the second service after communing in the first service. He responded by asking me if I had sinned after receiving communion, and when I responded that of course I had sinned, he said that I absolutely could take communion again. The Lord’s Supper is not a question of how many times we go, but a question of whether we need forgiveness. The answer to that question will always be yes on this earth. It is right that we treasure this gift for all the blessings it gives to us.

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Catechesis

Hung Up on the Law

Jesus said to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.” – St. Matthew 22:37-40 (NKJV)

When we speak of “the Proper Distinction Between the Law and the Gospel,” we usually mean by “Law” the Ten Commandments or, if we use Jesus’ summarizing them, the Two Tables: Love God and Love your neighbor. The Gospel, we say, is about what Jesus does. The Law, we say, is about what we do, or at least what we are supposed to do. Thus, the Gospel is about Jesus and the Law is about us.

It comes out sounding something like this in our theology: We are sinful, so we break the commandments. Our sinfulness means we can’t keep the commandments. If we don’t keep the commandments, we’ll go to hell. Therefore, God sent His Son, Jesus, to keep the commandments in our place and to give His life as a sacrifice that forgives our sins of breaking the commandments. Then, with the Holy Spirit as our Helper, we go and try to keep the commandments. The problem with this approach is that it makes the Law about us when it’s really about Jesus.

Look closely at Jesus’ words above. “On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.” The “Law” means the “Torah” which is what the first five books of the Bible are called. “Torah” means more than just “Law.” It could be translated as “teaching” or “Law and Gospel.” And the “Prophets” refers to rest of the writings of the Old Testament through which the Lord promised the sending of our Savior. So when Jesus says “the Law and the Prophets” He means Himself! That’s because He is the fulfillment of everything written in the Law and the Prophets (Luke 24:27, 44). So, everything in the Law and the Prophets-that is, Jesus!-hangs on these two commandments: Love God; love your neighbor. And the word there really is “hang,” as in “hang on the cross.” Now, consider that Jesus is both true God and true man in one person and all the pieces click together.

The law says we must love God and love our neighbor. In Christ, God and man are together in one person. And that Person, Jesus, loves God the Father above all things. He loves the Father in such a way that He even obeys the Father in dying for sinners! That’s the First Table of the Law. But He also loves His neighbor as Himself, even more than Himself, because He undergoes suffering and death for you! You can’t love others more than Jesus did-dying for their sins when He didn’t deserve to! So there it is. The Law. Love God. Love neighbor. And Jesus hangs on that Law on Calvary. There, He does what you don’t do. And He pays for what you did and haven’t done according to the Law.

So, the Law is not first and foremost about us. It’s about Jesus! Jesus, who perfectly loves God the Father and who perfectly loves and serves His neighbor. The Law pointed to Jesus and it is kept and fulfilled by Jesus. Everything the Law does-command obedience and punish sin-lands on Jesus on Calvary. He truly does hang on the commandments of the Law. So what does that mean for you? Do you have to worry about the Law? Do you have to bother doing and not-doing what it says to do and not do? The Law will always do its job to our Old Adam: crucifying the sinful flesh with its passions and desires. But the Spirit, by whom we have Christ’s forgiveness, dwells in us to bring forth the fruits of faith, namely, obedience and keeping the Law. Or, as St. Paul puts it, it’s not you living but Christ living in you. Or, even better, we learn to see the Law-the commandments-for what it really is: a gift!

You see, rather than just arbitrary rules God throws out there to trip us up and give Him a reason to condemn us, the Law is a list of all the gifts God gives us, beginning with Himself. The real nature of our sin isn’t that we “broke a rule” but that we have rejected a gift. “You shall have no other gods.” But we don’t want the true God. We want other gods. “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” But we don’t like the people God has given into our lives and so we treat them badly and strive to please ourselves with other people. But Christ lives as if there is nothing better than loving God and receiving every good thing from His Father’s hand. And that life of Christ’s is now yours through your baptism into Him.

Sure, the Law is for you and about you, but only in and through Jesus. He is the great filter by which your sins against the commandments are forgiven and in whom your obedience and works are counted as perfect and pleasing to your Father in heaven. What we need to watch out for is getting hung up on the Law as if we could keep it ourselves or as if we could ever please God. Rather, because Jesus hung upon the Law as He hung on the cross, He has kept it for you and made you perfect in God’s sight. Touch the Law apart from Jesus, and it will bring down the damning curse. But in Christ, the Law is for you a gift that is delivered through Christ’s hanging on it and keeping it for you. So no more getting hung up on the Law since Jesus already was…for you!

Rev. Mark Buetow is pastor of Zion Lutheran Church in McHenry, Illinois

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Lectionary Meditations

Twisted Guts – A Meditation on Mark 8:1-9

“I have compassion on the crowd, because they have been with me now three days and have nothing to eat.”

They were stupid. They were the wrong race. They were just the worst of the worst. That is how one could be tempted to view the crowd gathered in Mark 8. Jesus had been preaching in the Decapolis, among the gentile nations. And they had followed Jesus out into the wilderness to listen to Him, but they hadn’t brought enough supplies. Now they were hungry, on the verge of fainting. Even the disciples themselves were running low – Jesus had preached so long that they were down to seven loaves.

Jesus, though, doesn’t see foolish people. He doesn’t see them as “other” or any of the many myriad ways we in our sinfulness can come up with to denigrate people, especially when they are inconveniencing us. No, Jesus has compassion. Literally in Greek, His guts are wrenched, twisted. He sees them not on the basis of any sin or strife or folly, but Jesus sees them as people who have been with Him for three days. And He cares for them, so He feeds them.

How does Jesus see you? Does He see you with a harsh and critical eye, like the one that we use to judge our neighbor? Does Jesus look at you and facepalm over the repeated stupidity you show (because let’s be honest, we all have our pet stupid sins that we repeat)? No – He has compassion upon you, because you have been with Him three days.

Paul writes, “Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death?” You too have been with Jesus three days. You have been united to Him by baptism, and He cannot but have compassion on you. He cannot but help to care for you and forgive you your sins. You have Jesus’ love all of your days, even unto the life of the world to come.

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Catechesis

Exploring the ‘Sanctified’ Conference Hymn- Part 3

What these sacrifices promised from a God who sought to bless, came at last – a second Adam – Priest and King of righteousness: son of God, incarnate Savior, son of Man, both Christ and Lord, who in naked shame would offer on the cross His blood outpoured. -LSB 572, Verse 3

The sacrifices and sacrificial covenant of the Old Testament were never intended to be a permanent solution to sin. They were a promise which pointed ahead to the sacrifice that God would send in fulfilment of His first promise to Adam and Eve. For hundreds of years, God’s people waited and watched for the coming of this Savior. As they waited, some of them lost sight of who this Savior would be and His true purpose. When Christ Jesus became incarnate in the womb of the Virgin Mary, was born into this world, and began His ministry, many of the Jewish people did not recognize Him as God. They were looking for a temporal savior- one who would free them from political and religious oppression, and they missed the deeper issue of sin and eternal damnation. They did not understand that all the sacrifices of the priests pointed to this Jesus who now lived and taught among them.

Yet Jesus came to make His people holy before God, not to free them from any temporal condition. Jesus humbled Himself and took on human flesh because this was the only way that sin could be removed from mankind bringing us back into fellowship with God. By living a sinless life, Jesus accomplished what we can never do no matter how hard we try. Imagine never sinning against God or your neighbor. We cannot even begin to comprehend what Jesus’ life would have been like, because we are so corrupted by sin that we cannot escape it even for one moment. Jesus never feared, loved, or trusted in anything apart from God, and He always loved His neighbor as Himself. If He had sinned, He would not have been able to redeem us.

Jesus is the second Adam because He obeyed God’s word whereas the first Adam did not. Adam took the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil and immediately enslaved the human race and the world to sin, death and the Devil. Jesus, the second Adam, perfectly fulfilled the law of God, and through His death on the cross He crushed the Devil, broke the chains of captivity, and freed His people from their sins. How was this possible? When Jesus took on our sin, He became sin for us. When Jesus died on the cross, sin died as well. The wages of sin is death and in Jesus’ death, sin’s wage is now paid in full. With Jesus death, the promise of God to Adam and Eve was fulfilled, and the sacrificial covenant ended paving the way for the new covenant God established with His people.

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Catechesis

The Divine Service: The Gospel of Leviticus

Seven miles they walked with Him. And, in that journey, the incarnate Word of God opened their eyes to the One of whom the Law and the prophets spoke. The Key of David unlocked the Scriptures and proclaimed to them the Gospel—using the Old Testament.

Martin Luther once wrote, “The Gospel is not Christ.” Norman Nagel continues, “The Gospel is the proclamation of Christ. The proclamation of Christ is the proclamation of the cross, the proclamation of the cross for you.” And, on that road to Emmaus, the risen Christ proclaimed this Gospel to His beloved disciples.

As they traveled through the Scriptures, the Law and the prophets gave witness to how Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection overcame sin, death, and hell for them. Books such as Leviticus pointed to the atoning work the Lamb of God would accomplish for them. And, for you and me.

So, why do we still read from both the Old and New Testament every week? Because it’s all about Jesus! (Luke 24:27) The Old Testament is filled with the promise of our Savior. Jesus is first promised to us in Genesis 3:15. That promise of redemption is repeated throughout the Scriptures and fulfilled in Christ.

In the Divine Service Jesus is working through His Word delivered to our ears to give us the Gospel. The Holy Spirit is working in the reading of the Word to create and sustain faith in Christ. Jesus is giving Himself to us here in the Gospel.

Jesus said that the entire Scriptures speak of Himself (Luke 24:27), which means Leviticus also proclaims the work of Christ for us. The Gospel Leviticus proclaims is the good news of Christ’s redemptive work for our justificaiton and sanctififcaiton.

John Kleinig writes, “Leviticus proclaims the same Gospel that is enacted in the Divine Service of Word and Sacrament, the same Gospel that the church is to proclaim to the world until the close of human history. This book, then is most relevant to the life of the church because it proclaims the Gospel of Christ, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.”

Leviticus is not an outdated, irrelevant book in the Bible. The Word of God is at work bearing witness and proclaiming the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. Jesus is our Great High Priest who removes our sin with His own blood and sacrifice in our place (Hebrews 9:11–14). Jesus’ work on the cross is the peace, guilt, and sin offering—one time for all time (Hebrews 9:25–26).

We may not be walking on the road to Emmaus with Jesus, but Jesus is still at work and present in the Divine Service with His gifts. He is still the Key of David which unlocks our minds to the beautiful Gospel. He has made us His own through His priestly and sacrificial work on the cross given to us richly and continually through Word and Sacrament.

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Catechesis

In The Midst of Death We Live

“Your mother was in an accident, and is at the hospital in critical condition.”  Those were words I never expected to hear. Yet, at noon on Tuesday, October 17th, 2017, that’s exactly what my father told me.  My sister and I rushed to the hospital as fast as we could.  We learned that our mother had sustained unsurvivable injuries.  As the afternoon progressed, we gathered around her bed to pray, read from Holy Scripture, and sing hymns.  We recited the Apostles’ Creed and Lord’s Prayer at 4:30 p.m., then she was delivered into the resurrection.

I never expected to bury my mother at just twenty three years old.  The hospital staff, friends, classmates, and professors had little clue how we dealt with this tremendous loss or were able to continue with our lives amidst our grief.  But, I understand how, for many young people, the same situation would he hopeless, debilitating, and maybe something they would try to run from. I can even understand why they might flee their church or God.  After all, how could God, who we confess, loves us so much, allow something as terrible as this to happen? Our mother was a loving and faithful Christian woman who steadfastly devoted herself to God’s Word and Sacraments and served others in any way she could.  She surely didn’t deserve to be taken now!

However, Holy Scripture speaks a much different message:  We all deserve death. As the Apostle Paul writes, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23).”  Ever since Adam and Eve fell into sin in the garden of Eden, death has been a reality of life here on earth. God told Adam, “for you are dust, and to dust you shall return” (Gen. 3:19b). God has not guaranteed us any minimum number of years in this life. Also, He has not promised that our lives will be easy or pain-free.  We will face trials and tribulations, pain and suffering, and even death as difficult as that may be for us to swallow. The weight of the Law, and how sin uses the Law to kill us, rests heavy upon us. However, thanks be to Christ that’s not the end of the story!

As soon as Adam and Eve rebelled against God, and dragged all creation down with them, He prepared a plan of Salvation. He promised in Genesis 3:15 that Eve’s offspring would bruise Satan’s head.  This promise was fulfilled in God’s Son, Jesus. Jesus took on human flesh, was born of the Virgin Mary, lived the sinless life that we could not, and then was crucified and died, taking upon Himself all of the sin of you and me and everyone in the world which separated us from the perfection of God.  Even better, Jesus didn’t stay dead! He rose from the grave three days later, defeating sin, death, and the devil, so that we can say with the Apostle Paul, “O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” (1 Cor. 15:55). This is the wonderful, sweet message of the Gospel: That Christ died to take away your sins, my sins, and the sins of the whole world!  How exactly do we receive this forgiveness? The resurrected Christ promises us in Mark 16:16 that, “Whoever believes [the Gospel] and is baptized will be saved.”

I know for sure that my dear mother Lisa was baptized, enjoyed faith in Christ through the Gospel and His gifts, and was received into the resurrection at 4:30 p.m. on October 17th, 2017.  Does this mean that the pain is gone?  Of course not – burying my mother will always be painful.  However, the knowledge that she sees Christ face-to-face in the resurrection and that we will be reunited with her at the wedding feast of the Lamb is a great comfort.  And, more than that at present, we are comforted when we receive Christ’s Body and Blood at the altar in Holy Communion. We commune with my mom and “all the company of heaven” who have passed from this life into life eternal.  That’s what your pastor alludes to when he speaks or chants the Proper Preface and it says, “therefore with angels and archangels and with all the company of heaven…” All the company of heaven – that’s my mom, your mom, grandma or grandpa, and all Christians who die in Christ Jesus.  Remember that the next time you receive Communion. It brings comfort to those who grieve.

For me and my family, at a time of such profound pain, what else could we do but take comfort in the Gospel?  Since we had this comfort, instead of being overcome by grief like those with no hope, we were freed by God’s Spirit and Word to bear witness to Jesus who is our forgiveness, life, and salvation.  In the end, Christ Jesus is all that matters in this life and the life to come. He is my mom’s life and resurrection. He is our life and resurrection. 

by Matthew Kelpe

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Lectionary Meditations

Get Gone God! A Meditation on Luke 5

Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord” – Luke 5:8

Simon Peter may have been a sinful man, but he was no fool. When there was the amazing catch of fish, he knew this wasn’t just a quirk of nature or a bit of random chance – this was Messianic. This Jesus in the boat with him, this boat now filled with fish and sinking, was the Messiah. And so Peter does the only logical thing – he begs Jesus to leave.

This isn’t because he hates God or is an unbeliever. Oh no, to the contrary. Peter is a pious man, and he is well aware of his own sin. And he knows his Scripture well enough to know that sinful men who wander into God’s way get dragged down into death. Quickly. And so at that moment he begs for God to be merciful – and he thinks God’s mercy means God will just go and leave him alone.

That’s not why Jesus had come. He came to put an end to the separation between God and man that sin had brought about. Mercy would not be God stepping away and not smiting sinful man; mercy would be God Himself becoming man and taking up all the sin of the world and smiting it in His own body upon the Cross.

And so Jesus, Peter’s Savior, simply looks at Peter and says, “Do not be afraid; from now one you will be catching men.” Not only am I not sending you out of my presence, Peter, but you will be bringing more and more people into My presence – My merciful and forgiving and saving presence.

And that’s where we are. We are those who have been caught up by God by the power of the Word. And now, we enter His presence knowing that our sin is forgiven by Christ Jesus. And Christ in His true mercy continues to come to us in His Word and in His Supper, so that we would be forgiven and live with Him eternally. Jesus does not depart from you – He catches you and makes you His own!