Brother or Sister in Christ, if you are reading this blog- this message is for you. It is based on a sermon I gave this past Sunday, but is now condensed into blog form to fit an appropriate reader context. I hope you will find this message edifying to your Christian jouney- and if you do not have a church home, consider worshiping with us at Christ Lutheran Irvington.
We are on a journey. We are fellow travelers, who can agree that there is a hard way and an easy way to undertake the journey. Following His baptism in the Jordan River, Jesus was on a journey. Led by the Holy Spirit, Jesus was on a journey of faith. Forty days and nights in the wilderness without food, and under the whim of temptation by Satan.
Satan tempted Jesus with
an easy route through the journey. Satan’s temptation was a fiercely shrewd
attack. It was the same method that worked so effectively with Adam and Eve,
“Is this way God commanded you really the way you should go? If God really
loves you, wouldn’t he want you to have your heart’s desire? Satan tempted
Jesus to replace fasting hunger with satiation, to replace his humble state in
life with all of the riches and power of this world.
Jesus came to the world to
redeem all of the world, and here Satan, who has been the prince of our fallen
world ever since the Fall into sin, here Satan was offering it all to Jesus- if
Jesus would only bow down to him. If you want to save the world what better way
than to enlist the master of all of the world. Don’t the ends justify the
means?
In our faith journey we
have an easy way before us. It is the way of convenience, fast solutions, and a
way of trusting in our own inventions and provisions instead of those of God. It is the way where the ends justify the
means. The hard way before us is God’s way. This is a
way that goes through the cross. It is the only way that we can actually travel
the journey.
Jesus knew the journey to save the world was going to be the hardest of all journey’s. Fasting for 40 days was only just a taste of the difficulty. He would also be betrayed by his own, praying in the garden of Gethsemane for the cup to be taken away, while his disciples slept. He would be beaten and flogged and humiliated, stripped naked , and then crucified.
Lent is a journey for us
as the church. It is not as difficult a journey as Jesus fasting for 40
days. We could not handle such a journey
ourselves. We cannot overcome the temptation of Satan in the way that Jesus
did. Lent is not about trying to match
ourselves what Jesus did for us. If we
could overcome Satan on our own and resist all temptation perfectly we wouldn’t
need a Savior.
The specific journey that Lent is for the church, is to focus on repentance, humility, and self denial. That is why the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod has long practiced refraining from singing Alleluia’s, we are putting aside a mood of celebration, we are being honest with ourselves, that in this world we will still have trouble.
But we can receive the
gift that Jesus has overcome temptation for us. We can receive this gift and
connect ourselves by faith to this gift. That is the journey we take, to leave
behind those things that weigh us down and distract us from receiving the gift
in our lives.
The journey we take is
hard and difficult. It requires everything we have to resist the allure of the
easy ways of this world in favor of picking up our cross and following Jesus. We follow Jesus through the disappointments
and trials of life, through peaks and valleys, we hold on in faith to the
promise that man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds
from the mouth of God. We follow Jesus through the promise that in self denial,
humility, and even suffering we are closer to Jesus.
We do not take the journey
of Lent in order to impress God. Nor do
we take this journey so that we will be considered more worthy in God’s eyes,
or so that we are loved more.
Instead we undertake this
journey to prepare us to resist the temptations of this world more effectively.
We seek to mortify our flesh, as the Book of Concord describes as an essential
aspect of our faith.
In article 26 of the
Augsburg confession the reformers refuted the idea that justification by faith,
being truly Lutheran means there is no to be for Christians no discipline or
mortification of the flesh. “For concerning the cross they have always taught
that Christians should endure afflictions. To be disciplined by various
afflictions and crucified with Christ is a true and serious, not a simulated
mortification.”
“In addition they teach
that all Christians should so train and restrain themselves with bodily
discipline, or bodily exercises and labors, that neither over exertion or
idleness may lure them into sin. But they do not teach that we merit
forgiveness of sins or make satisfaction for them through such exercise.”
This article then
illustrates Christ’s command in Luke 21:34:
4 “But watch yourselves lest your hearts
be weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and cares of this life, and
that day come upon you suddenly like a trap.
And in Mark 9:29 6 And after crying out and convulsing him terribly, it
came out, and the boy was like a corpse, so that most of them said, “He is
dead.” 27 But
Jesus took him by the hand and lifted him up, and he arose. 28 And when he had entered the house, his disciples
asked him privately, “Why could we not cast it out?” 29 And
he said to them, “This kind cannot be driven out by
anything but prayer.”
Can you picture some of
the applications this article about mortification has for us. We mortify our flesh, we put to death the selfish
and sin motivated aspects of our life so that we are not lured into sin by
either complacency and idleness or by over exertion where we become too
preoccupied with our own achievements.
Our calling as Christians
can be significantly stalled by our sinful human nature. We have good intentions in how we live our
callings in life, but pit falls surround us on all sides. In some cases we
think too little of ourselves where we are paralyzed by depression or anxiety.
In other cases we think too highly of ourselves where we commit sins of pride
and selfishness.
With all of these pit
falls we need as much of God’s Word in our lives and as little distractions as
possible. I am mindful this season of
Lent how I might prevent wasting time in the idleness of reading news
headlines, when I could instead take advantage of times of down time meditating
on God’s Word.
Take some moments to think about what calling in life you have struggled to fulfill because of the weight and hindrance of your own idleness, your own self doubts, or even your own pride. What joy awaits you, what blessings to others you could give if through the power of God’s Word you more diligently followed the way of the cross!
The challenge of overcoming our well worn patterns of indifference, selfishness and pride is great, but perhaps instead of complaining or feeling defeated by the challenge we should take counsel in our Lord’s Words that this kind of demon can only come out by fasting and prayer. The spiritual darkness of this time is thick. But the more we are connected to the truth of God’s Word, the more prepared we are for the challenge.
Through the cross we walk a hard way. We would like an easy way where people just came into our lives and said, ‘O what a faithful and loving person, I want to be around her more!’ That is the easy way we wish we had.
We have another way before
us, a way that is going to require courage, persistence, hopefulness and long
suffering, and above all faith in the teaching of Our Lord that the Cross is
the only way of life.
In Christ,
the way of the cross is hard. Yet the
scripture also describes how following Jesus is in essence an easy way because
of its complete fulfillment of all of our needs: 28 Come
to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am
gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
From the gospel of John we hear: “If anyone thirsts, let
him come to me and drink.”
Likewise we hear in 1John the lightness and freedom of following God’s law: For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome.
The way of following Jesus is light
and easy because it is a way free of the sorrows of this world. The way of the world is heavy and burdensome
and difficult for it is a way full of the sorrows of hoping in worldly things
that fall through our fingers like sand dropping in a time glass. The way of
the world involves some who are rich and some who are poor.
How completely different is the way of God’s kingdom! We heard in our Epistle reading from Romans that, “Anyone who believes in him will never be put to shame.” 12 For there is no difference between Jew and Gentile—the same Lord is Lord of all and richly blesses all who call on him, 13 for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” This is the way of God’s Kingdom, an easy and wonderfully simple path to walk. The blessed journey we have been called to.