Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by doing so you will save both yourself and your hearers. (1 Timothy 4:16)
Wednesday, 23 March 2016
Wednesday, 16 March 2016
Midweek Lent Service 5 [Mark 15:1-5; John 18:28-38a] (16-Mar-2016)
This sermon was preached at Pilgrim Lutheran Church, Magill, 7.30pm.
Click here for PDF file of sermon for printing.
Click here for PDF file of sermon for printing.
Grace,
mercy and peace be to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
You
say that I am a king. For this purpose I was born and for this purpose I have
come into the world—to bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth,
listens to my voice.
Prayer: Dear Lord
Jesus, bless all of us with your Holy Spirit, to me that I may preach well, and
to all of us that we may hear well. Amen.
In trying to
finding about Jesus’ life and his suffering and death, we have four books in
the bible where the history is recorded: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. In our
mid-week sermons during Lent this year, I haven’t been sticking to one particular
account of Jesus’ suffering, but I have been going back and forth between the
different gospels.
Today, some people
don’t think this is the right thing to do, but that we should just stick to one
gospel and go with just that. It is said that we should let each of the
individual writers of the New Testament speak by themselves, and let their
unique voice come through. And I must agree, there is a lot of benefit in doing
that. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John all have their unique features. And so,
sometimes trying to bring the four gospels together, and harmonise them is
frowned upon, because it breaks up the flow of each of the four writers.
But we have to be
careful about this, because we have to realise that there is another author
that is at work in the Gospels, apart from the four evangelists, and that is
the Holy Spirit. St Peter writes in his second letter: No prophecy was ever
produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along
by the Holy Spirit. Each of the four evangelists—Matthew, Mark, Luke and
John—were all carried along by the Holy Spirit, or as Paul writes to Timothy,
what they wrote was breathed out by God, or inspired by God.
But also, in that
same chapter, St Peter says something else about these writings. He says: We
did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty. Each
of the evangelists were writing down what they and the apostles actually saw
and experienced. They weren’t writing down myths and stories, but they were eyewitnesses
of [Christ’s] majesty. So it’s important to read each version of the
events, but it’s also important to draw them all together, since there is one
voice of the Holy Spirit inspiring them all, and there is one unified history
of the events that actually happened. And that’s the most important thing: that
everything that we’re talking about actually happened. St Paul writes: If
Christ were not raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in
vain. And also he says: If Christ had not been raised, your faith is
futile and you are still in your sins. Also, we can say, if Christ had not
actually suffered, died, and endured what he did for us, then our preaching is
in vain, your faith is in vain and you are still in your sins. What a wonderful
thing it is then, that the events that we are reading about tonight did
actually happen, which means our preaching has power and a point, your faith is
real and is precious in the sight of God, and you are not still in your sins,
but they are completely and totally washed away and forgiven.
So let’s come to
our readings for tonight. Tonight we’ve read both from Mark 15 and John 18.
Let’s go through the gospels, and get the series of events.
First, at the
beginning of Matthew 27, we read: When morning came, all the chief priests
and the elders of the people took counsel against Jesus to put him to death. We
read a couple weeks ago about how the high priest tore his robes and accused
Jesus of blasphemy, and then the Jewish council declared: He is worthy of
death. So if they already decided this, why did they now need to take
counsel against Jesus to put him to death? Well, the reason is given in the
next verse, where it says: And they bound him and led him away and delivered
him over to Pilate the governor.
Now, if they wanted
to put him to death, why didn’t they do it themselves? Why did they need to
bring him to Pilate? Well, you see, Rome had invaded Judea and the whole region
around that area. We notice in the background all throughout Jesus’ life that the
Romans are constantly there. We don’t see this in earlier times, like during
the life of Abraham, or King David—the Romans weren’t a significant empire back
then. So when Jesus was born, we read that Joseph and Mary had to travel to
Bethlehem because the Roman emperor, Caesar Augustus, wanted to take a census.
We also see during the life of Jesus all kinds of Roman characters: Romans
soldiers ask John the Baptist how they should live, we read about Romans
centurions asking Jesus questions and asking him for miracles, and also we read
about many people, like the apostle and evangelist Matthew, who wrote the first
gospel in the New Testament, and also the little man Zacchaeus, who were
tax-collectors, who collected tax not for the Jewish nation but for Rome. Even
when Jesus is on the cross, a centurion is there and says: Truly this man
was the Son of God.
So we can see that
in the life of Jesus the Romans are constantly there in the background.
However, when Romans invaded particular countries, one of the things that they
would do to control the people was to take away their right to give a death
sentence. If a particular nation’s leaders, whether it was in Judea, or
Lebanon, or Syria, or wherever, wanted to put a person to death, they had to
take them to the Roman governor. And so this is what happens in our reading.
The Jewish leaders take counsel to put Jesus to death, and so instead of being
accused of murder by the Romans, they tried to work out how they could
manipulate the politics and have it done officially. So they take Jesus to
Pontius Pilate, who was the Roman governor for that region. Here Jesus takes
upon himself all the sins of dodgy, crooked politics, of cooked up
conspiracies, whether it be in government, in the workplace, in the church, or
wherever, and he takes it all with him to the cross. He suffers it, and he pays
the price for it.
We also read in the
Gospel of John: They themselves [that is, the Jewish priests and elders]
did not enter the governor’s headquarters, so that they would not be
defiled, but could eat the Passover. Now, Jesus and his disciples had
already eaten the Passover, but there was also a festival of Unleavened Bread
that was going during this whole time. The Jewish people did not enter into the
house of Gentile people, but kept them separate, but still, they are happy to
make use of Pilate for their purposes, but they stay outside.
Next Thursday
night, Maundy Thursday, is a special day in the church calendar where we
remember Jesus’ Last Supper with his disciples. And instead of celebrating the
Passover each year, like the Jews, we Christians now celebrate it every Sunday,
or as Jesus says, as often as you drink it. There’s no set time. Instead
of eating lamb of bread with herbs like the Jewish people, Jesus has given something
new to the Passover—he invites us to take bread and wine, to bless it, and
receive his body and blood. Jesus himself is the Lamb of God who takes away the
sin of the world. Instead of painting blood of a lamb on our doorposts, like
the Jews did in Egypt, we drink Christ’s blood into our own bodies, and paint
his blood on the doorposts of our hearts and minds and souls. You might like to
go through Exodus 12 where it gives the regulations for the Passover, and see
how each of them is fulfilled and transformed in the Lord’s Supper. St Paul
says in 1 Corinthians 5: Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Let
us therefore celebrate the festival, not with the old leaven, the leaven of
malice and evil, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.
So here we see the
Jews bringing Jesus to Pilate, but staying outside to keep themselves holy. But
it’s not Pilate’s house that makes a person unholy, it’s what comes out of
people’s hearts. Jesus says: What comes out of a person is what defiles him.
And what’s coming out of their hearts here? A hatred for God’s only Son. In
fact, we would want to go into Pilate’s house to make ourselves holy, because
Jesus is in there. And instead of being in the Jewish temple, where the curtain
is torn in two, wouldn’t we rather be at the foot of the cross where Jesus is,
and let his blood drop down on our heads? That’s the place to find holiness,
not with these priests and elders, who think they are so respectable. It says
in Hebrews: Jesus suffered outside the gate in order to sanctify the people
through his own blood. There let us go to him outside the camp and bear the
reproach that he endured. So let’s not stay here with the priests and
elders and respectable who don’t want to go inside Pilate’s dirty house, let’s
go wherever Jesus is to be found, whether it’s in a palace or a mud hut or
wherever there are people who listen to the voice of their good shepherd. There
is no dirtiness where Jesus is, all sin and filth is paid for and scrubbed
away—only purity and cleanness and holiness. And through the forgiveness of
sins, Jesus gives us his own cleanness, his own purity, not because we are
clean and pure, but because he is. He covers up our dirtiness, with the white
clean robes of his righteousness and purity.
So now we read
about where Jesus is accused by the chief priests to Pilate. First of all, we
read in John that Pilate does the proper and right thing and asks them for
their accusation. He says: What accusation do you bring against this man? At
first, we read in John that the Jews were a bit annoyed by being addressed like
this. They say: If this man were not doing evil, we would not have delivered
him over to you. They want Pilate simply to accept their authority on the
matter. And also, they don’t need Pilate deciding for them what is right and
what is wrong. They already think of themselves as the moral guardians of
society, and don’t think that they are answerable to anyone, let alone a Roman!
But of course, we know, that this man was not doing evil! Perhaps the
priest and elders felt as though their plans to put Jesus to death that they
had talked about that morning were being hindered and foiled.
But in Luke we also
read, that they must also have brought some actual accusations to Pilate. We
read: We found this man misleading our nation and forbidding us to give
tribute to Caesar, and saying that he himself is Christ, a king. Well the
first thing is a lie: they see we found this man misleading our nation. Jesus
would only be misleading people, if he were not telling them the truth. But
Jesus is telling them the truth, so he is not misleading them, but he’s leading
them to heaven. Jesus doesn’t says: I am a liar who is, who is leading you to
death and hell, but he says: I am the way, and the truth and the life. No
one comes to the Father except by me. He is leading people on the narrow
way that leads to life, not the broad way that leads to death. So the second
thing they say is also a lie that Jesus was forbidding us to give tribute to
Caesar. Jesus never said that, but when he was asked about this, he took a
coin in his hand, showed them the picture of Caesar on the back and said, Give
to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s. If Caesar wants his
money back, give it to him. But God wants your very selves, your very lives,
your bodies, your souls as a holy and acceptable sacrifice to him: so also,
give to God what is God’s. Everything we have has always belonged to God. But
the third thing they say is true that Jesus was saying that he himself is
Christ, a king. However, even though it’s true, the Jewish people didn’t
believe him, and they accused him of lying. But in actual fact, he is the
Christ, he is a king. He is our prophet, our priest and our king.
So in John we read
that Pilate wasn’t interested in dealing with tha matter. So he says: Take
himself yourselves and judge him by your own law. The problem with this is
that Jesus is actually their judge, and he will judge the whole world by God’s
law. So the people reveal the real reason why they have brought him, not
because of justice and fairness and because they wanted to observe the law, but
they say: It is not lawful for us to put anyone to death. When they say,
it is not lawful, they were allowed to put someone to death for various
reasons given in the law of Moses. But it was the Romans who had brought in
this restriction on them—so the Jews essentially say to Pilate: We’ve done our
job, but we need you to do the rest. But do you see the catch in what they say.
They don’t say: it is not lawful for us to give a person a fair trial, they say
it is not lawful for us to put anyone to death.
They’ve already got
the whole thing cooked up! They don’t need Pilate to give a fair trial, they
just want Pilate do what they want and to put him to death.
So John writes: The
Jews said to [Pilate], “it is not lawful for us to put anyone to death. And
then he adds: This was to fulfil the word that Jesus had spoken to show by
what kind of death he was going to die. Now, we all know that people can
die in all kinds of way: sickness, accident, or whatever, but also they can be
killed, and put to death. Jesus already says in advance that he is not just
going to die of old age, or have an accident, but he is going to be put to
death, he is going to be executed. And not only is he going to be executed, but
Jesus prophesied in advance that he knows the exact way in which he will be
executed. Now through history there have been all kinds of ways that people
have been executed, and mostly different countries used one way of executing
people at a particular time. So sometimes there were firing squads, or in some
states in America today, there are lethal injections or previously, the
electric chair. In Saudi Arabia today, there are beheadings. This was also done
in merry England with King Henry’s wives. Also, at the time of the French
revolution, there was the guillotine, and then in different countries,
sometimes people were hanged. It was common among Jews to stone a person to
death, and this actually happened with Stephen, which we read about in Acts 7.
In fact, in John 8, when we read that Jesus said that he already existed before
Abraham, it says: They picked up stones to throw at him, but Jesus hid
himself and went out of the temple.
This is not the
right time for Jesus to die, and so he doesn’t allow it. But also it’s not the
right method. Even we read earlier, when Jesus preached in his hometown in
Nazareth, that the people tried to throw him off a cliff. But this also wasn’t
the right time for Jesus to die, or the right method. In Matthew 20, we read a
very clear prophecy where Jesus says: See, we are going to Jerusalem. And
the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priest and scribes, and they
will condemn him to death and deliver him over to the Gentiles to be mocked and
flogged and crucified, and he will be raised on the third day. Do you see
here how Jesus clearly says that he will be crucified! And crucifixion
was something that Jews didn’t do—this was a Roman thing, and was a
particularly cruel method of execution reserved for rebels, for people who were
trying to sit people up against Roman rule.
And so, we see that
the Jews hand Jesus over to the Romans, and that Jesus had already prophesied
this in advance. Now, it’s not as if anyone there, whether it was the priests
or Pilate, or whoever, was forced to do what they did. The fact that Jesus prophesies
it, doesn’t mean that God had them all on a string like a puppet. However, they
all had a sinful nature, sinful flesh. They were created by God in his image,
just like all of us, but because of sin, the devil has so corrupted everything
about us, that we are unable to do anything good, unless God works it. And so,
God works something good here—it’s just like with Joseph and his brothers. They
dumped Joseph in a pit and sold him off to Egypt, but God raised him up to be a
prince in Egypt. Joseph says: You meant it for evil, but God meant it for
good. In the same way, even though crucifixion is a bad thing, and it is
the evil hearts of people that invented this cruelty and contrived that Jesus
should be killed in this way, Jesus himself, as our true God, was working all
of this for good, fulfilling his own prophesy, and taking on the sin of the
whole world and paying the price and atoning for it.
In Matthew, Mark
and Luke, we read about a short version of the conversation that Pilate has
with Jesus. We read where Pilate picks up the only accusation of the Jews that
was true, that Jesus was saying that he was the Christ, a king. Pilate
says: Are you the king of the Jews? Jesus says: You have said so. It’s
as if Jesus says, “You said it.” It’s one thing for Jesus to say he is the king
of the Jews, but what about you? Who does Pontius Pilate say that Jesus is? Who
do you say Jesus is?
At the same time,
we read that just as Jesus was silent when they were accusing him in the Jewish
council, he also remains silent when the Jewish people accuse him before
Pilate. Pilate must have been wondering: why doesn’t Jesus defend himself?
Well, how you defend yourself against such hatred as that? But Jesus want to
die for you, so he doesn’t try and wriggle out of this. This is his
sacrifice—here he sacrifices his right to reply. Pilate says: Do you not
hear how many things they testify against you? But he gave him no answer, not
even to a single charge, so that the governor was greatly amazed.
Now in the Gospel
of John, we have longer version of what Jesus and Pilate talk about. We read: Pilate
entered his headquarters again and called Jesus and said to him, “Are you the
King of the Jews?” Jesus answered, “Do you say this of your own accord, or did
others say it to you about me?”
Jesus has already
made his testimony before the Jewish people. He doesn’t need Pilate to repeat
things again. But Jesus is not interested in formalities, he is interested in
souls and people’s consciences. You might remember when Jesus said to the
disciples: Who do people say that I am? But then later he says: But
who do you say that I am? This is important for us as Christians: Jesus
asks this question directly to us individually. Who do you say that I am? And
the same goes for Pilate here. Pilate asks a question, but Jesus won’t let him
ask a question on other people’s behalf. Who’s asking? You or them?
So Pilate is a bit
affronted by this. He says: Am I a Jew? Your own nation and the chief
priests have delivered you over to me. What have you done?
Jesus now makes a
wonderful confession of faith. He says: My kingdom is not of this world. If
my kingdom were of this world, my servants would have been fighting, that I
might not be delivered over to the Jews. But my kingdom is not from the world.
We see this already
happen back in the Garden of Gethsemane when Jesus is arrested and Peter pulls
out a knife and cuts someone’s ear off. But Jesus says to Peter, “Put back your
sword.” It’s not the time for this. It’s time for me to go now. But also, Jesus
is telling Peter, this is not how my kingdom works. My kingdom works with the
sacrifice of its king, and this is what’s happening now. Of course, when Jesus
is arrested, we might ask why not only the disciples did nothing, but why
didn’t the angels come down and stop it, why didn’t the ground open up and
swallow these people up who were treating Jesus like this? No—Jesus held them
all back, and said: Get behind me! I am going to the cross, and that cross will
be the most precious thing on earth. For the rest of history, the world will
keep spinning, but the cross will stand still.
And so, Jesus’
kingdom is a kingdom which grows and expands by its citizens being joined to
Christ’s suffering, and being persecuted by the world. And there have been more
Christian martyrdoms in the last century than the rest of history put together.
For example: think of St Stephen. He prayed when he was stoned to death, Do
not hold this sin against them. Now it so turned out that Paul was there,
Jesus answered Stephen’s prayer and didn’t hold Paul’s sins against him, and
came and called him when he was on the road to Damascus. Then Paul went and
wrote the most wonderful books in the New Testament about that very topic: why
our sins are not held against us. This is how the kingdom of God works. It
starts with a group of angry people gnashing their teeth at a faithful
Christian and killing him off. And this is God’s victory over death!
We might look at
the church today and see in our country a significant decline in attendances.
It’s not just here at Magill church, but all over the country, Christians are
weeping and lamenting over this. But before we start trying to work out all
kinds of worldly methods of how to get backsides on seats and money on the
plate, let’s remember for a moment: we are still here, and Jesus has still put
us here for a reason. Jesus kingdom does not run like a business. Jesus says: My
kingdom is not of this world. Jesus is the Lord of the harvest, and
Christians today need to rediscover that they have been given the royal, noble
task of coming before their king and praying for souls. Remember it is not us
who does the converting, even if we might give the most faithful witness and
testimony. It is the Holy Spirit who does this work, and so we should ask for
his guidance and his help how to make us useful in our community as evangelists
today. It might even involve quite some suffering on our part, but this is how
Christ’s kingdom works—not through glory, but through the cross.
I once read about
an old pastor reflecting on church history: apparently in the year 1800, the
church was experiencing very hard times in Europe. The church looked like an
old barren woman, and that her child-bearing years were over. And yet, there
were faithful Christians who were praying on bended knee daily for the course
of history to turn around. The pastor who was reflecting on this said: maybe it
was the prayers of those faithful Christians in those years that enabled the
1800s to be one of the greatest centuries of mission for the church. Some of
the last frontiers of the world were reached for the first time. What’s in
store for our next century? We should also remember today that Jesus is still
with us to the end of the age. And he says: My kingdom is not of this world.
But then Pilate
says to him: So you are a king? Jesus then gives another wonderful
testimony: You say that I am a king. For this purpose I was born and for
this purpose I have come into the world—to bear witness to the truth. Everyone
who is of the truth listens to my voice. Pilate said to him, “What is truth?”
And here we see
Jesus speaking right into our times again. Everything that Jesus did, his
birth, his suffering and death, his resurrection, was for one purpose—to
bear witness to the truth. Jesus says: I am the way and the truth and
the life. And here he says: Everyone who is of the truth listens to my
voice. Satan and lies go together: he is the father of lies. But
Jesus and truth go together—Jesus is the truth.
Pilate rejects the
truth. He says: What is truth? Is there really such thing as truth? This
is the world which we live in today. Nobody believes that there is such a thing
as truth—only what works. If it feels good, do it. What’s true for you is not
necessarily true for me. And so the crucifixion of Jesus begins all over again!
No—this is our first prayer: that we would have a hunger for truth. Because a
hunger for truth is a hunger for Jesus, even if we don’t know it yet. But when
we do know it, then this hunger is called faith. We trust Jesus and his word
that it is true. And Jesus prays to his Father before he dies: Sanctify them
in the truth, Lord. Your word is truth. And then, in our prayers for souls,
we pray that they would also have a hunger for truth and come to a knowledge of
the truth. One of the most wonderful passages about prayer and about conversion
is where Paul says to Timothy that God that prayers for all people is good,
and it pleasing in the sight of God our Saviour desires all people to be saved and
come to the knowledge of the truth.
So in conclusion
for this sermon tonight, and for our Lent series this year, let’s praise our
Saviour Jesus Christ for everything that he endured for us. What we have read
about over these last few weeks is true, and is written for the salvation of
our souls. Jesus Christ had suffered, died and rose again for me and for you.
Thank you, Jesus.
Amen.
Lord Jesus, we
thank for everything that you endured in your suffering and death, and for
coming to bear witness to the truth. Send us your Holy Spirit that we may be
people of the truth and listen to your voice. Amen.
Sunday, 13 March 2016
Wednesday, 9 March 2016
Midweek Lent Service 4 [Matthew 27:1-10] (9-Mar-2016)
This sermon was preached at Pilgrim Lutheran Church, Magill, 7.30pm.
Click here for PDF file of sermon for printing.
Click here for PDF file of sermon for printing.
Grace,
mercy and peace be to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
And
throwing down the pieces of silver into the temple, he departed, and he went
and hanged himself.
Prayer: Dear Lord
Jesus, bless all of us with your Holy Spirit, to me that I may preach well, and
to all of us that we may hear well. Amen.
In our reading
tonight we read about Judas. The main event that we read about is that once
Jesus has been carried off, and led away to Pontius Pilate, Judas regrets what
he has done in betraying Jesus, and tries to convince the chief priests and
elders to take the money back. He then throws it all back into the temple, and goes
out and hangs himself.
Now, there’s
actually quite a lot in common with what happens in our reading tonight, with
Judas, and what happened in our reading from last week, where we read about
Peter’s denial. Here we have two men, both of whom are Jesus’ disciples, both
of whom are one the twelve apostles whom Jesus chose and sent out as his
representatives and missionaries. Peter denies Jesus, and Judas betrays Jesus.
Now what’s actually
the difference between these two things? Both of these men saw that Jesus was
under pressure, and was being rejected by the Jewish council. And, both of
these men were filled with fear, as they realised that because they had also
spent so much time with Jesus, they could also get themselves into deep trouble
too. Peter was questioned by simple people, maidservants who just happened to
be standing around, and yet, instead of saying, “Yes, I do know Jesus”, he
said, “I do not know the man”.
Judas, on the other
hand, never pretended not to know Jesus. He never denied Jesus like Peter. He
never said, “I do not know the man”. But instead he said, “Yes, I do know him,
and I can show you how to get him.” He had gone right into the lions’ den, and
made an arrangement with the priests about how they could go to Jesus’
favourite place of prayer and capture him.
One thing that
strikes me between Peter and Judas is that both of these men commit a sin
against Jesus, and both of them lament their sin. We read that Peter went
out and wept bitterly. Maybe Judas’s remorse about what he had done was even
greater. We read: He departed, and he went and hanged himself.
Both of these men
regret what they have done. And I don’t about you, but in my experience in
life, both in myself and in being a pastor to other people, there’s a very fine
line between weeping bitterly and pondering suicide. When I served as a
pastor in Gippsland, I served as a hospital chaplain, and I used to go
regularly to visit people in the mental health ward. Many people there wept
bitterly and many people contemplated taking their own life, and a lot of the
time there wasn’t much difference between the problems that these people had.
And yet, what the
bible says about Judas is a harsh sentence, and yet, Peter goes on to become a
wonderful apostle—he preaches the first sermon on the day of Pentecost, he
wrote two letters which we have in the New Testament which are full of
wonderful Christian comfort. Even we read that Peter had to convene everyone
together after Jesus ascended into heaven to choose another apostle to replace
Judas.
So the difference
between Peter and Judas is very important for us as Christians, because we sin
so often, and we come to terms with our sin, and we realise that we have done
wrong, what do we do? Do we weep bitterly, or do we completely give up on life
altogether? Surely, you know from your own experience that weeping bitterly and
the temptation to give up on life altogether are very closely related. So when
we do sin, then we can often look into our own hearts and say, “Well, maybe I’m
going to way of Judas, and there’s nothing that I can do about it.” People
think: what a wonderful thing it is to be a Christian. And we might think about
those words where we look forward to the time when Jesus will say to us: Come,
you who are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world. But then people see all their sin weighing down on
them, and they think well maybe God is sending me to hell, and there’s nothing
that I can do about it.
Listen, this is not
the case. Listen to these words from Romans 15: Whatever was written in
former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through
the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope. Do you see? What
kinds of things are found in the Scripture? Instruction and encouragement.
If you read the bible, and then come to a conclusion where you have no encouragement
and no hope, then you are reading it wrong. The devil doesn’t want you
know your sin—and when you despair at your sin and don’t know where to turn,
then look at the example of Peter and how Jesus promised to pray for him and
reached out to him at the resurrection. Simon, Simon, Satan demanded to have
you that he might sift you like wheat. But I have prayed for you that your
faith may not fail, and when you have turned again, strengthen your brothers. Peter
himself later on in his first letter says: Be soberminded; be watchful. Your
adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to
devour. Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same kinds of
suffering are being experienced by your brotherhood throughout the world. And
after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called
you to his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm, strengthen,
and establish you.
Maybe when Peter
wrote this he had Judas and himself in mind. He knew just how close he was to
being devoured by the roaring lion, the devil. And yet, he says: Resist him,
firm in your faith. Now this is the thing that Peter had, and Judas didn’t.
Both of these men we contrite, they regretted what they had done, both of these
men were sorrow and sorrowful about it. But it’s not feeling sorrow about your
sin that makes you a Christian—it’s faith. Resist [the devil], firm in your
faith. The warning that we see in Judas is that we must beware of lamenting
our sin without faith. Judas had lost his faith, but Peter remembered the words
of Jesus that the rooster would crow after he had denied him three times. Jesus
had also prophesied to Peter: After I am raised up, I will go before you to
Galilee.
So the same goes
for us. We know that we are sinners. We will always sin right until our dying
breath. And our whole life is one where we continually realise this, and we
come back Sunday after Sunday and say: I, a poor helpless sinner, confess to
you all my sins and repent of all the evil I have done. Sometimes in our
life we are going to feel these words more sharply than others. Even St Paul
said: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the
chief. Judas knew that he was a sinner, but he didn’t know that Christ
Jesus came into the world to save them. Do you see this difference?
So we read in
Revelation where an angel says: Be faithful unto death, and I will give you
the crown of life. He doesn’t say, “be remorseful unto death”, but “be
faithful”. Now—I have to be very careful I’m not misunderstood. There is so
Christian faith if we don’t recognise and lament our sin. If we want the
forgiveness of sins, we have to recognise that we are sinners. Jesus died for
no one except sinners. But we are not saved by recognising our sin—plenty of
people recognise that they are rotten people, but have no hope. And so, we read
in Ephesians: By grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not
your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one
may boast.
Now, we might still
think: but my faith is so weak. My faith might not be as strong as Peter’s, but
my faith is weak like Judas. Maybe people think: I want to believe and be a
stronger believer, but I just can’t seem to.
Listen—you are not
saved by strong faith, you are saved by faith. If it were only people who were
strong in faith that were saved, then St Paul should have said: You have been
saved through strength, not faith! The important thing about faith is not you
who believe, but who you believe in, Jesus Christ, and he is the strong one who
makes your faith strong. If you go up to Cooper Pedy and find a nice opal, the
opal is still valuable whether a football player with massive biceps and big
muscly hands is holding it or a weak tiny little baby is holding it. The opal
is still an opal. Whether you have big muscly football player faith, or baby
faith—Jesus, our precious opal, is the one that saves us. Jesus is our
priceless treasure, as the old hymn says. We have been baptised, so that
whether our faith is strong or weak, we can look to the word that was spoken to
us on that day and the water that was poured out on us, and we can say: That
was God’s work. Jesus is the one who baptised me. And if the devil wants to pester
me, he can just rack off and take it up with Jesus. When the devil attacks your
faith, it’s as if you’re person who works in a call centre for a big company.
When the devil rings you up, you just say to the devil: How can I direct your
call? If you want to make a complaint, you’ll have to take it up with the
manager—I’m just answering the phone. And let me tell you, Mr Devil, Jesus, my
manager, is a lot more powerful that your sorry backside!
Also, St Paul says
in Philippians 2: It is God who works in you, both to will and to work for
his good pleasure. When we have faith, this is God who has worked it in us.
But when sigh and think, I wish I had a stronger faith, then we remember that
God works in us both to will and to work. Our faith is only as strong as
we wish it would be. When we will, when we wish, when we desire to have faith,
that is also faith, because God has worked that desire, that will in you—He
works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.
But let’s go back
to Judas. Actually, one thing before we go back to Judas—let’s talk about
suicide for a moment. The fifth commandment says: You shall not murder. And
that includes killing your neighbour or yourself. Suicide is a sin. But at the
same time, there is nowhere in the bible where it is specifically spelled out
that people who suicide automatically go to hell. But then people think: if we
sin, we need to repent. But if you suicide, then you can’t repent afterwards,
because you’re dead. Well, if that’s the way we think, then baptism, and
absolution, and the Lord’s Supper would have no power at all. Do you think when
you are baptised, that it’s only for my sins of action in the past? I was
baptised as a child—the only sins of action I committed back then were annoying
my mum at night. Do you think that Jesus didn’t die for all the times in the
future when I would continue to annoy my mum, when I was 5 years old, 10, 15,
20, 25 years old? Or what about the Lord’s Supper, given and shed for you
for the forgiveness of sins. Do you think that it’s only powerful
backwards? What happens if you have an argument in the car on the way home from
church? Do you think that all of a sudden the blood of Christ has switched off
its wonderful power? No—the forgiveness of sins works into the past and into
the future. We can tell the devil—get lost! I received Christ’s body and blood
on Sunday, given and shed for me for the forgiveness of sins, and you can’t
accuse me!
Some of you may
have a friend who took their own life. When I was a teenager, at an age when I
was thinking about becoming a pastor, a Catholic priest from St Ignatius Church
in Norwood doused himself with petrol and set himself alight. It shook me up
for years, and has always been a warning to me that even the ministry is not
immune to experiencing darkness. But there’s a difference between losing the
faith, and a time where the devil overcomes a person to such an extent that
they do something like that. If you get robbed by a mugger, is it your fault?
So, we know suicide is a sin, and we Christians preach against it and say it’s
wrong. But there is also something more powerful than sin, and that is Jesus’
suffering and blood and death, and the forgiveness of sins.
Now, back to Judas.
I think sometimes I feel a bit sorry for Judas, as if he has been a bit hard
done by. Many Christians throughout history have been like this too. In
preparation for this sermon, I read about Judas from a commentary from a 10th
century Bulgarian writer, called Theophylactus. Theophylactus was from Ohrid, which
is in modern-day Macedonia, in former Yugoslavia. He was a well-respected
biblical commentator, and he was well known to the Luther and the Lutheran
reformers, and is even quoted in the Book of Concord.
However, he writes:
But when Judas saw that Jesus was already condemned and already sentenced to
die, he repented that the affair had not turned out as he had planned.
Whereupon he hanged himself thinking to [go ahead] of Jesus into [hell] and
there to plead for his own salvation. Nevertheless, know that while he did put
his neck into the noose and hanged himself from a tree, the tree bent and he
survived, as God wanted to save his life, either so that he could repent, or to
make an example of him and to shame him… And he goes on. Some writers seem
to want to put the best spin on Judas, to say that he really was a nice guy,
but he just mucked up a bit at the end.
But I don’t know if
this is what the bible really says about him. In fact, the bible never says
that about anyone. God created us all in his image, but we are all completely
thoroughly corrupted by Satan. We all deserve to be like Judas, but if we end
up like Peter, it is all because of grace.
And so, let’s go
through and see what the bible does say about Judas. A year or so, before Jesus
died, he elected his twelve apostles. And in Matthew, Mark and Luke, these
twelve apostles are all named. In all three gospels, the last apostle to be
named is Judas. All three gospels call him Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him,
or in Luke, who became a traitor. And nevertheless, like all of the
other disciples, Jesus sent them out to preach and gave them
authority over unclean spirits to cast them out, and to heal every disease and
every affliction. In Luke we read that before he chose these twelve
disciples, Jesus went out to [a] mountain to pray, and all night he
continued in prayer to God. And when day came, he called his disciples and
chose from them twelve, whom he named apostles.
How come Jesus
chose Judas even after praying all night about it? We might say that Judas
later changed became a hypocrite, but the bible doesn’t really spell this out.
He might have been a hypocrite right from the beginning, when Jesus called him.
In John 6, we read where Jesus says: “Did I not choose you, the Twelve? And
yet one of you is a devil.” And John says: He spoke of Judas the son of
Simon Iscariot, for he, one of the Twelve, was going to betray him.
So why did Jesus do
this? Well, first of all, it was prophesied long ago that Jesus would be
betrayed. But also, Jesus wants to teach a special lesson. The outward things
that belong to ministry are not actually all that difficult. People might joke
that pastor’s only work one hour a week! I am often embarrassed when people
thank me for conducting a baptism or a funeral—and I often say to them: All I
did was read things out of a book! A pastor could easily get by and not do
much, download their sermons off the internet, and go and spend all week
drinking tea and eating scones. And yet, we read in Acts 6, that the apostles
wanted to dedicate themselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word. The
hard, hard work of the ministry, to bring the people continually before God in
prayer, and to study the word and to apply it to people and to teach it, is a
task that most people, even in the congregation, never see. And so it often
goes unnoticed and unrewarded from a human point of view. But our Father who
sees in secret will reward this kind of work. I remember someone one said that
the best thing a pastor can do is go into his room, shut the door, and pray,
and then let the whole world think that he is incompetent!
And Jesus knows
that the hard work of the ministry is invisible to the world. And the visible
work is relatively easy—even Judas can do it. And yet, Jesus calls Judas
to do it. Sometimes we end up with pastors in the church, or people in the
church, who are real Judases. All they do is put on a show, but they never take
a stand. It’s easy to be polite, but to love is something much harder, and
something much more noble. It’s easy to give Jesus a kiss, but for what reason
is the kiss given? In love or in betrayal?
And yet, when we
have a pastor or a bishop or leader in the church who is a hypocrite, the words
they speak are still God’s word, the baptisms they perform are still filled
with the Holy Spirit even if they are not, the Lord’s Supper is still the body
and blood of Christ, even if the pastor’s just going through the motions. When
the church is given a person like this, then we are called to pray for them
like any other pastor—the sheep may yet make a shepherd out of their wolf! And
Jesus wants to teach this to the church of all times, by even allowing his
betrayer to be an apostle for a while.
Now, when Jesus
calls Judas a “devil”, it’s a bit like when St Paul says: He who is joined
to the Lord becomes one spirit with him. And when we are joined to the
devil, and actively seek to do his work, then we become one spirit with the
devil. Even Jesus calls Judas, a “devil”. Judas was still created in the image
of God, but he actively and willingly unites himself to the devil’s work and
his plans.
In our Gospel
reading for this coming Sunday, we’re going to hear another thing about Judas,
where Mary, Lazarus and Martha’s sister, pours expensive ointment on Jesus’
feet. We read: Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples (he who was about to
betray him), said, “Why was this ointment not sold for three hundred denarii
and given to the poor?” He said this, not because he cared about the poor, but
because he was a thief, and having change of the moneybag he used to help
himself to what was put into it.
You can see here a
little insight into Judas’s inclinations. He had a lust for money, and of
course, he even betrayed Jesus for money. We know from St Paul that the love
of money is the root of all evil. Jesus himself says: You cannot love
God and mammon. It happens all the time in the church—someone makes a
generous donation to the church, and then what happens? It just gives cause for
everyone to fight! How many examples we might look to today or all throughout
church history where pastors and bishops and cushy church officials pad up
their retirement funds from the church coffers, helping themselves to God’s
money. The end of such people is that they betray their Lord once again. They
sell their birthright for a bowl of soup
And so, with Judas,
one sin leads to another. And he serves for us as a warning, to fight the good
fight against our own sin, and our sinful flesh, before our hypocrisy is
revealed to our shame. It’s easy to put on a show—but Jesus calls us not to put
on a show, but to follow him. There are a few details about our text tonight
that I’m still yet to cover, which we will pick up next week. But let’s leave
it there for tonight.
But let’s conclude
by saying that when we recognise our own sin within us, and when we despair of
ourselves, this is a good thing. The Holy Spirit is the one who convicts us of
our sin. Despair of yourself, but don’t despair of Christ. He has suffered and
died for you, and now he is seated at God’s right hand and is waiting for you.
He has prepared a place for you, and he will never let you go. Amen.
Dear Jesus, we are
your baptised children, and we ask that you would be with us always to the end
of the age. Teach us to know our sin, but also to know you, our wonderful
Saviour. Amen.
Tuesday, 8 March 2016
Friday, 4 March 2016
Midweek Lent Service 3 [Matthew 26:67-75] (2-Mar-2016)
This sermon was preached at Pilgrim Lutheran Church, Magill, 7.30pm.
Click here for PDF version of sermon for printing.
Grace,
mercy and peace be to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
Luke
22:61-62. And the Lord turned and looked at Peter. And Peter remembered the
saying of the Lord, how he had said to him, “Before the rooster crows today,
you will deny me three time.” And he went out and wept bitterly.
Prayer: Dear Lord Jesus, bless
all of us with your Holy Spirit, to me that I may preach well, and to all of us
that we may hear well. Amen.
In our sermon tonight, we’re
going to be dealing with two things: firstly, concerning the spitting and
slaps and mockery that Jesus received after he was condemned to death, and
then secondly, concerning Peter’s denial of Jesus.
Let’s start with the first part.
We were reading last week about how Jesus was on trial before Caiaphas the high
priest and the Jewish council, called the Sanhedrin. After making all kinds of
attempts to gather together false testimonies, two witnesses come forward to
accuse Jesus: This man said, “I am able to destroy the temple of God, and to
rebuild it in three days.” Jesus is asked about this accusation, but
remains quiet. After this, the high priest summons Jesus to testify with an
oath whether he is the Christ, the Son of God. I adjure you, he says.
It’s as if he gave him a bible, and required of him to tell the truth, the
whole truth and nothing but the truth. And Jesus gives the answer: I AM. You
have said so. But I tell you, from now on you will see the Son of Man seated at
the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven.
All the way through the Gospels,
we see Jesus tell all kinds of people to keep quiet about their confession of
faith. Even after Peter says that he is the Christ, the Son of the living
God, Jesus strictly charged the disciples to tell no one. But all of
this was so that Jesus himself would testify to these things before the high
priests himself, and let himself be condemned to death precisely for this
reason. Jesus tells the truth about himself, and he is rejected, and condemned
to death. We read in the beginning of the Gospel of John: He came to his
own, and his own people did not receive him. Here we can see Jesus standing
before his own people, and his own people do not receive him. And so the high
priest tears his robe, and the Jewish council, the Sanhedrin, give to Jesus his
death sentence for blasphemy.
And so tonight, just after all
of this, we read: Then they spit in his face and struck him. And some
slapped him, saying, “Prophesy to us, you Christ! Who is it that struck you?”
We have three things that are
mentioned here: they spit, they strike him, and some slap him.
Let’s think about each of these things separately. No one likes to be spat at:
not only is it shameful and offensive, but it’s also dirty. Spit and phlegm can
spread diseases, and such like. But we read about this in Isaiah 53: Surely
he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. Or as we read in the
Gospel of Matthew, a slightly different translation of this: He took our
illnesses and bore our diseases. So here we see the people projecting their
dirty, filthy spit and phlegm into Jesus’ face.
Now, if it weren’t for sin,
there wouldn’t be any disease. That’s not to say, that if a person is sick in a
particular way, it is a result of a particular sin that they personally
committed. But disease is something that never existed before the fall. It
comes as a result of sin, and it comes about because we have a fallen, corrupt
nature, that is weak and now is not just susceptible to temptation for our
soul, but also for disease for our body.
Jesus’ body is completely free
of disease. Just as he took on our flesh and was without sin, so also he took
on our flesh without disease. But here in our reading, the people spit on
Jesus, and Jesus here bears all the disease in the world, and dies for it. But
he also takes on their sin, because when they spit on him, they do it because
they hate him. This reminds us that in the next life, we will not only be
completely free from sin, but completely free from disease and disability and
corruption. The resurrection of the body in the next life is the complete and total
healing of our bodies which we are looking forward to.
Also, there is an occasion in
Mark’s gospel where Jesus heals a man who is deaf and dumb, and Jesus touches
this man’s tongue with his own spit. This is not something dirty, but is
completely pure and perfect, like clean fresh water from a spring, because this
is the Son of God, and everything he does brings healing. Or there is another
occasion in the next chapter of Mark where there is a blind man and Jesus spits
on his eyes. Once again, it’s the same
thing: Jesus has no disease in him, no dirtiness, no filthiness, and so this is
something that cleanses the man and makes him see.
We might also think about the
Lord’s Supper, where we receive Jesus’ body and blood. When we come to the
Lord’s Supper, we remember the occasion where people spat upon this same body
which we receive here, and how Jesus died for our sin. But we also bring to
Jesus in the Lord’s Supper our physical needs. We bring him our sin and place
it in his hands, and we also bring him our diseases, and our weakness, and our
woes. So that’s why we go to people when they are in hospital and bring them
the Lord’s Supper, for their healing. This is even spelled out quite
specifically by St Paul in 1 Corinthians when he is teaching about the Lord’s
Supper. Paul speaks about the possibility where people can receive the Lord’s
Supper in an unworthy manner, which means eating and drinking, without
believing what the Lord’s Supper is (the body and blood of Christ) and
believing what it’s for (for you and for the forgiveness of sins). If we go to
the Lord’s Supper like pigs at a trough, without faith in it and in Jesus’
words about it, then St Paul says, he or she eats and drinks judgment on
himself. And he says: That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some
have died. So also, in the same way, if we receive the Lord’s Supper in a
good way, to our blessings, instead of judgment, we receive forgiveness,
instead of being weak and ill, as St Paul says, we receive it for our strength
and health. Instead of receiving it for death, we receive it for life. And
Christ distributes health and healing when and where it pleases, not to benefit
our sinful flesh, but when and where it benefits his kingdom.
So, in us is disease, in Christ
is healing. One more thing, in light of the people spitting at Christ. Think
about after Jesus rises from the dead, and he goes to his disciples and doesn’t
spit on them, but he breathes on them. Now, normally, if we breathe on someone,
it doesn’t smell good—it smells like our breakfast getting digested. But when
Christ breathes upon them, there is no death in his body, no decay, no rotting,
no corruption. Christ’s breath is like standing next to a waterfall and
breathing in the fresh air. And so, when we spit at Christ: we say: Here you
are, Jesus. Receive our spite, our malice, our anger, our angry spirits. And
when Christ then breathes on his disciples, he says: Receive the Holy
Spirit. If you forgive anyone their sins they are forgiven. We have spat
our sin onto Christ well enough—and Christ then comes to us, we who are so
completely undeserving, and he breathes out his Holy Spirit and his
forgiveness. What a precious gift!
We also see in our reading
tonight, how the people strike Jesus and slap him. This reminds me of something
in the Old Testament. In the book of Leviticus, we read about the Day of
Atonement, where the high priest once a year enters into the Most Holy Place in
the temple (the Holy of Holies), and puts sprinkles blood on the Ark of the
Covenant. (I remember very clearly Pastor Stuart Kleinig, who was a vicar here
in the late 90s, I think, giving a very clear sermon about his on Good Friday
in this church!) Anyway, part of the ceremonies that were to take place on that
day involved a live goat, which is called the “scapegoat”. We use this term
“scapegoat” to talk about someone who takes the blame for someone else, like in
the recent drug scandals in the football and the rugby. So we read from
Leviticus 16: When he has made an end of atoning for the Holy Place and the
tent of meeting and the altar, he shall present the live goat. And Aaron shall
lay both his hands on the head of the live goat, and confess over it all the
iniquities of the people of Israel, and all their transgressions, all their
sins. And he shall put them on the head of the goat and send it away into the
wilderness by the head of a man who is in readiness. The boat shall bear all
the iniquities on itself to a remote area, and he shall let the goat go free in
the wilderness.
Now, we know full well, that
Jesus by going on his way to the cross, is carrying out a Day of Atonement.
It’s not a Day of Atonement once a year as in the Old Testament, but it’s a Day
of Atonement, once for all time. And here in our reading, Jesus is in the
presence of the high priests, and the Jewish council, and what happens: they
strike him and they slap him. It’s just as if they are laying their hands on
the scapegoat, putting all the sin of the world on this one man, and then he is
sent out of the city to die. They, of course, don’t realise what they are
doing, but Jesus does. And he bears with their cruelty and he accepts this
laying on of hands.
Of course, we also read in the
Gospels that children were brought to Jesus, and that he laid his hands on
them and what? He blessed them. When the people lay their hands on
Jesus, and strike him and slap him, they seek to curse him. But when Jesus lays
his hands on us, and reaches out and touches us, he blesses us. This is what he
does when he baptises us, he lays his hands on us and blesses us.
And so, we see in our reading,
that people spit on Jesus, strike him and slap him. It’s our sin that is laid
on Jesus here. Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet
we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. But then when
Jesus breathes on us, and lays his hands upon us, it is for our blessing, our
blessing, our blessing.
One more thing about this first
part: We read that Jesus is mocked. We read even in Mark’s gospel that they
blindfold him, and say: Prophesy to us, you Christ! Who is it that struck
you?
These people obviously don’t
know what prophesy is. And many people today don’t know what prophesy is. In
Deuteronomy 18, we read a wonderful prophesy about Jesus, where Moses says: The
LORD your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your
brothers—it is to him that you shall listen. But just before this, Moses is
talking about the practices of the nations that the people of Israel are going
to drive out when they enter the Promised Land. Moses says: These nations,
which you about to disposses, listen to fortune-tellers and to diviners. But as
for you, the LORD your God has not allowed you to do this.
Do you know the difference
between a fortune-teller and a prophet? One is from the devil, and the other is
from God. One the LORD your God has not allowed you to listen to, and the other
he commands you to listen to. But anyone who has ever gone through and read the
prophets in the Old Testament will know that there is much more to be found
there than simply telling the future. And when God sought to tell his people
about the future through a prophet, then this was a word that came from him for
everyone’s benefit. But the devil also imitates this, but not for our eternal
salvation, but only for this life—it’s a trick. This we call
fortune-telling—palm-reading, tarot cards, mediums, psychics, horoscopes—all of
this is forbidden by God. Now sometimes, we read in the bible about these
things, and the fortune-tellers actually speak the truth. In the Book of Acts,
there is a young girl with a spirit of divination and fortune-telling who
speaks the truth about Paul and Silas, and says: These men are servants of
the Most High God, who proclaim to you the way of salvation. She speaks the
truth, and yet Paul still says: I command you in the name of Jesus Christ to
come out of her. He casts out the demon. So, we learn here, that sometimes
fortune-telling seems to work, and says something that is true. Sometimes
people read their star signs and it rings true. But the question we Christians
need to ask ourselves is not, “does it work?”, but “what power is behind it?”
We realise that when Jesus starts preaching in the synagogues, who is it that
first recognises him, and speaks the truth about him? It’s the demons, and yet
Jesus still rejects them, and casts them out.
And so, here in our reading
tonight, Jesus is the wonderful prophet that the whole world has been waiting
for. But he is blindfolded, slapped around, and asked to prophesy like it’s a
game, as if Jesus is just another Mystic Meg, or some kind of cosmic
palm-reader. We can see here the devil’s temptations in the wilderness: If
you are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread. And so, the
mockers are saying, “If you are really the Son of God, we can slap you, and you
should be able to tell us who it was.”
Yes, he can. He knows every hair
on every persons head, and not one sparrow falls to the ground without his
knowledge. And yet, he will not play their games, and he will play ours either.
And when all the world’s fun is over, the day of judgment will come, and then
the games will cease. And Jesus will say: Now, I’ll tell you who slapped me.
You all did. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. But we also
know that Christ died for only one kind of person in the world: sinners like
you and me. And he has a wonderful inheritance prepared for us, many rooms in
his father’s house, and he prophesies these things to us ahead of time, so that
we can listen to him and believe him and trust him.
And so, in the second part of
our reading, we read about Peter, where he denies Jesus three times. We read in
John’s Gospel, that Peter was allowed into the high priest’s house by John
himself. Peter had been given special access—he had friends in high places.
Peter was also curious and wanted to know how things would pan out. And through
this curiosity, Jesus actually uses him, because Jesus wants to send the
apostles out into the world as witnesses to his life and his suffering and
death. So Peter is given a special opportunity to witness Jesus’ trial here.
To most people who would have
been there, this is a very simple thing that happens. Three people ask Peter if
he knows Jesus, and Peter denies it three times. Most people wouldn’t have
noticed too much else about what was going on. The first time, we read about a
servant girl who says to him: You also were with Jesus the Galilean. She
talks directly to him about it. But Peter says: I do not know what you mean.
We read: When he went out to the entrance, another servant girl saw him.
Maybe Peter thought that things were getting a bit too hot inside, so he
wanted to go out through the entrance hall. But the girl says: This man was
with Jesus of Nazareth. This time, Peter is not being spoken to, but
accused to others. It’s as if she points to him, and calls out to anyone who
can hear: This man was with Jesus of Nazareth. The pressure is on for
Peter. He denies it with an oath: I do not know the man. I promise you,
he says, I swear to God, I do not know the man. But the third time, someone
says: Certainly you too are one of them, for your accent betrays you. It’s
not enough simply to be with Jesus, but it’s a crime to talk like him.
Sometimes in Australia, we can recognise someone from Sydney, Melbourne or
Queensland, just by the way we talk. And then people from Adelaide go
interstate, and we get asked if we’re English! The same thing happens to Peter
here: he is accused, just because of the way he talks. Maybe when he made an
oath before, he said: Truly, truly, I say to you, I do not know the man! People
think: He’s talking just like Jesus. And now we read: He began to invoke a
curse on himself and to swear, I do not know the man. And immediately the
rooster crowed.
And everyone else carries on as
if nothing has happened. But not Peter and not Jesus. We read in the gospel of
Luke that the Lord turned and looked at Peter. While all of this
spitting and slapping and mockery is going on, Jesus has time to deal with his
little sheep—and he turns and he looks. And we read: And Peter remembered the
saying of Jesus: Before the rooster crows, you will deny me three times. In
Mark’s Gospel, it says before the rooster crows twice. There was already
another rooster crow earlier to warn Peter. But now, Peter is convicted of his
sin. And he went out and wept bitterly.
You know, Peter is such a
loveable character in the gospels. He often sticks his foot in things, he jumps
in the lake without his shirt on and swims to Jesus, he wants Jesus not just to
wash his feet but his hands and his head. Only minutes before he had said to
Jesus: You shall never wash my feet.
And earlier in the gospels,
Peter said: I am ready to go with you both to prison and to death. Though
they all fall away because of you, I will never fall away.
In our reading the people mock
Jesus and ask him to prophesy. But when Peter denies Jesus, he knows that Jesus
prophesy has come true: Truly, I tell you, this very night, before the
rooster crows, you will deny me three times.
There is a wonderful
encouragement that Jesus says to Peter in Luke’s gospel: Simon, Simon,
behold, Satan demanded to have you, that he might sift you like wheat, but I
have prayed for you that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned
again, strengthen your brothers.
You can see that Satan enters
into Peter only as far as Jesus permits. You might think of the book of Job,
where Satan asks to pester Job. Jesus says to Peter: Satan demanded to have
you that he might sift you like wheat. Have you ever felt close to the
devil’s sieve like this? But Jesus says: But I have prayed for you that your
faith may not fail. Peter realises that he has sinned, and weeps bitterly,
not because of him, but because this is in answer to Jesus’ own prayers. Jesus
also prays for us that our faith may not fail. And Jesus allows Peter to deny
him for a reason. Firstly, so that Peter realises that Jesus has to go to the
cross alone, by himself. And no one else, not even Peter, can atone for
anyone’s sins. And only when Peter realises this, can he then be a great
preacher of his Lord and Saviour, and a preacher of the forgiveness of sins.
Jesus says to him: When you have turned again, strengthen your brothers. Peter
denies Jesus, and Jesus prophesies it and allows it, not because Jesus is the
one who causes sin. But Peter is a sinner, and sinners sin. But Jesus also
wants to teach him sympathy and love for others who have fallen and need to
hear about God’s grace. And so this whole denial happens so that Peter can go
and strengthen the brothers. We are often allowed to be steeped into certain
sins for years, sometimes completely unawares, and then when we repent, when we
turn again, we can be of such tremendous use in Christ’s kingdom to help others
with the same problem. Aren’t you strengthened by this? Don’t you realise that
even the great Peter is a sinner just like you?
But he also need a Saviour, just
like you. And so just as Peter denied Jesus three times, after the
resurrection, Jesus goes to Peter and says three times: Simon, son of John,
do you love me? And Peter says: Yes, Lord, you know that I love you. And
Jesus says to him: Feed my sheep. You know that I love you, even though
I let you down. You know that I love you even though I wasn’t there when you
needed me. You know that I love you even though I am a terribly hardened sinner
and I just can’t seem to get any better. Lord, to whom shall we go? You have
the words of eternal life.
Amen.
Lord Jesus, you know that we
love you, and yet we have spat at you, and struck you, and mocked you with our
own thoughts, words and actions. But we also know that you have prayed for us,
that our faith may not fail. Turn us again, that we may be useful in your
kingdom for strengthening others. Amen.
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