This sermon was preached at St Matthew's Lutheran Church, Maryborough, 8.15am, and Grace Lutheran Church, Childers, 10.30am.
Grace, mercy and peace be to
you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
The Sabbath was made for
man, not man for the Sabbath. So the Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath.
Prayer: May the words of my
mouth, and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord,
our Rock and our Redeemer. Amen.
Today in our reading, we
have a very important passage, which speaks of two events where the Pharisees accuse
Jesus of breaking the Sabbath. The first part of the reading is where Jesus and
the disciples were plucking grain and the second is where Jesus healed a man on
the Sabbath.
Now this
reading actually has many very important things in it, and many things that are
very relevant for today.
The first
thing that we’re going to talk about is what we call law and gospel. In
our reading today, Jesus and his disciples are accused of breaking the law. The
Pharisees say: Look, why are they doing what is not lawful on the Sabbath?
The whole of the Scripture can be divided up into two basic doctrines or
teaching: the law, and the Gospel. Both the Law of God and the Gospel are God’s
eternal perfect word. The law teaches us what we should do, and what we
shouldn’t do. The law threatens punishment for those who break the law, and the
law promises rewards for those who keep the law. But we human beings are
sinners, and we are unable to keep the law perfectly. And so the law also shows
us God’s wrath and judgment against sin. Jesus says: You therefore must be
perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect. He says: Truly, I say to
you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from
the Law until all is accomplished. Whoever relaxes one the least of these
commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the
kingdom of heaven, but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great
in the kingdom of heaven. James writes: Whoever keeps the whole law but
fails in one point has become accountable for all of it. The law doesn’t
make sinners, but it finds sinners and exposes them, and shows us who we really
are.
Now, on the
other hand, there is also in the bible another teaching or doctrine, which is
called the Gospel. The Gospel teaches us not what we should do or what
we shouldn’t do, but points us to Jesus and what he has done for us. Jesus entered
into the world, he suffered, and died, and he took the weight of every single
one of our sins and failures and weaknesses upon himself, upon his own
shoulders, and he made a complete and perfect payment, and sacrifice, and
atonement for every single one of our sins, and for our entire sinful condition.
And he defeated the power of death by rising from the dead on Easter Sunday.
And this word of the Gospel is spoken on earth in the church to us right in the
midst of this life, in holy baptism, in the Lord’s Supper, in the words of
absolution or the forgiveness of sins spoken by the pastor, in the pulpit when
pastors preach the gospel, and in all of our Christian conversations where we
encourage each other and speak the message of Christ to one another wherever
God places us. This Gospel is received by us completely without any works,
without any contributions on our part whatsoever, and is given to us completely
and totally freely. The Gospel doesn’t find saints, but it makes people saints
through the word of the forgiveness of sins. When God looks at us, he sees all
of our sins covered over by the righteousness of his Son.
Now, when we
talk about Law and Gospel, we’re not talking about the Old Testament and the
New Testament. The Old Testament has both Law and Gospel in it, and the New
Testament has both Law and Gospel in it. But also, Law and Gospel is not “nasty
talk” versus “nice talk”. When we say that we should love another, that’s nice,
but it’s law—it’s not Gospel. The fact that Jesus has shown his love to us by
dying and rising for us to give us eternal life—that’s Gospel, not law. But the
death of Jesus is nasty stuff, it’s not very nice, but it saves us.
Now, I’d like
to come back to the law. There are three things that the law does. Firstly, God
gives his law for the well-being of human society. The law stops the world from
being completely crazy and falling apart. People know that they shouldn’t
steal, shouldn’t lie. They sip their hot drinks, or they will burn their
tongues. They drive on the appointed side of the road or they will have a car
crash. This is just the rules, it’s the way the world works.
But also,
God’s law shows us our sin and it accuses us. The law is like a mirror, and we
look into it and we see where we have failed. The law shows us our need for
forgiveness.
And also,
God’s law is a guide for our Christian lives. It shows us how we should live as
Christians, and what the Holy Spirit’s will is for our lives.
So we have
these three ways in which the law works. Sometimes we call them the three uses
of the law: for the well-being of society, to show us our sin, and to guide us
in our Christian life.
Now, in the
Old Testament, we read about Moses going up to meet God on the top of Mt Sinai
and God gives him the Ten Commandments. Now, if you’ve read the books of
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy, you’ll find there a lot of laws
that we no longer keep today, for example, laws about sacrifices, about what to
eat, and all kinds of laws about worship, and so on. And we might think: “I
thought, Jesus said that not one dot will pass from the law. Why don’t we do
those things anymore?” The reason is this: when Jesus came, and when he died,
and rose, and sent the Holy Spirit, there were many things that were no longer
applicable or needed. For example, we don’t sacrifice lambs and bulls and goats
anymore in a temple, because Jesus sacrificed himself as the Lamb of God who
takes away the sin of the world.
It’s a bit like
someone who keeps all their food in a small esky. If they are keeping food in
an esky, there are certain laws they have to keep in order for the food to be
fresh. For example, they will have to go and buy some more ice regularly and
replace it every day, otherwise everything will get warm and wet. But then the
person buys a fridge, and so they just don’t need to buy some ice every day to
keep their food cold. He has something better than an esky now, he has a
fridge! In a similar way, when we say that those old Jewish laws are no longer
needed, it’s not that we don’t care about the law, it’s just that Jesus has
fulfilled the law, and he has given us something better.
And so in the
Old Testament, there are two types of laws: there are laws about ceremonies, or
ceremonial law, and there are laws about how we should live, or moral law. So
all the things about eating, and worship, and sacrificing, are called
“ceremonial laws”, and we Christians don’t follow these laws anymore, because
they are not needed. But then there are also moral laws, like honouring
parents, not murdering, not committing adultery, not stealing, not lying – these
things are about what right and what’s wrong. And as Christians, we should seek
to do things that are right.
So, we’ve
talked about law and Gospel—how God shows us our sin through the law, and also
shows us our Saviour Jesus in the Gospel. We’ve talked about the three ways in
which the law works: the law gives order to society, it shows us our sin, and
gives us a guide for our Christian life. And also, we’ve talked about the
difference in the Old Testament between “moral” and “ceremonial” laws, between
the laws which have to do with right and wrong, and the laws which have to do
with Jewish worship.
All this is
very important when we’re looking at our reading today, because Jesus is
accused of breaking the laws of worship, the laws concerning the Sabbath.
Now, in the
10 Commandments, we have a commandment there about the Sabbath. This is the
third commandment, which says: Remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy. In
Exodus it says: Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you
shall labour, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the
Lord your God. On it you shall not do any work, you, or your son, or your
daughter, your male servant, or your female servant, or your livestock, or the
sojourner who is within your gates. For in six days the Lord made the heaven
and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day.
Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.
Now in the
Old Testament, the Sabbath day is Saturday. Saturday is the seventh day of the
week. And today, most Christians don’t worship on Saturdays, but they worship
on Sundays instead. And we might look at this commandment, and ask, “Why don’t
we keep it anymore?” Well, the answer is, that the commandment does apply
still, in that it is part of God’s law that we should come together and worship
God and hear the word of God. But the command that we are still required to
hold to the particular day is part of the Jewish ceremonial law. We don’t
worship on Sundays because God said we have to worship on Sundays—we do it out
of freedom, as a commemoration of the day when Jesus rose from the dead. So we
see in Act 20, that the disciples gathered on the first day of the week to
break bread. The first day of the week in Sunday. And also when there was a
dispute about these things in the early times, Paul wrote to the Colossians: Let
no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a
festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come,
but the substance belongs to Christ.
So Luther
writes in the Small Catechism and explanation of this commandment about the
Sabbath, where it says: We should fear and love God so that we do not
despise preaching and his word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn
it. The reason why the Jewish people had to keep the Sabbath and not work,
was so that they could worship and hear God’s word and the preaching of God’s
word. And so, now that there is no need to keep the Saturday, it is still
required of us as Christians to come together, hear the preaching and the word,
and learn it. So in Hebrews it says: Do not neglect to meet together, as is
the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the
Day drawing near.
Today, the
Seventh Day Adventists insist that Christians still have to worship on
Saturdays. But then also they feel a need to keep other old ceremonial laws,
like not eating pork, and shellfish, just like the Jews, and then there is no
end to keeping all these various laws. We believe that the Jewish food
regulations, the observance of Saturday, the sacrifices, circumcision, all
belong to the ceremonies of the Jewish people before the Holy Spirit came. But
now that Jesus had risen from the dead and poured out the Holy Spirit on the
church, there is no need for the old ceremonial laws.
In our
reading, the Pharisees accuse the disciples and Jesus of doing work on the
Sabbath, because it says that on the Sabbath they should do no work,
like they do on the other six days of the week. But then the Pharisees—and many
Jews even today—get very fussy about what is defined as “work”. So, for
example, in Israel, the regular elevators don’t work in building on Saturdays,
because it involves the use of electricity. Some Jews won’t turn on a light
switch on Saturday. And in our reading, the disciples were hungry and decided
to pick some grain, and rub it between their hands, because they were hungry.
But the Pharisees all of sudden see red, as if they have a little alarm goes
off, that says: Work! Work! Work! Even in the reading, Jesus was about to heal
a person. And the Pharisees’ alarm goes off, which says: Work! Work! Work!
But Jesus
points out to them that when it comes to needing to eat and drink, there is
still a certain amount of work that we need to do. Every day, we still need to
cook food, and wash the dishes. Jesus says: Have you never read what David
did, when he was in need and was hungry, he and those who were with him: how
they entered the house of God, in the time of Abiathar the high priest, and ate
the bread of the Presence, which it is not lawful for any but the priests to
eat, and also gave it to those who were with him? The Sabbath laws don’t
mean that we should starve, and not eat. Also, when it comes to helping people,
like when Jesus healed the man in the synagogue, you don’t need to wait until
the Sabbath is over. In old times, many Christians often went visiting on
Sundays, which is a good thing. It requires some work to go down the street or
get in your car, but they are doing something nice for people. Jesus says that
if they had a animal in a well on the Sabbath, they would have to fetch it out
and rescue it. That requires work, but the job needs to be done, otherwise the
animal would die. We pastors do our biggest work on Sundays, as did the Rabbis
and priests on Saturdays in the Jewish times. Some people think we pastors only
work on Sundays, and have six days off!
In one of my
previous parishes, there was a dairy farmer who lived near a highway. A couple
of times, his cows ended up on the road on Sunday, and he had to go and get
them all. But he was very apologetic about not being at church. But as we see
in this passage, sometimes even on Sunday, when it’s time for church, there are
some emergency things that just need to be done.
The other
thing we need to realise about the Pharisees is that they were trying to be
very diligent in keeping the law. And that is a good thing. But then they
started to be so particular, that they then thought that helping someone or
even eating some grain was breaking the Sabbath. The reason for not working on
the Sabbath, was so that they could hear the word of God. It wasn’t so that
people would turn to statues on one day of the week. Sometimes Christians have
fallen into this kind of legalistic thinking too. At one time, there was a
dancing craze that started up, and back in those days, dancing was just about
the only occasion when a man or woman would physically touch someone else’s
husband or wife. And sometimes, there were some affairs, and scandals, that
came about because of it. But then some Christians began to forbid all dancing,
including some Lutherans. They went over the top. In some times and places,
there have big problems with alcoholism and drinking. But then some Christians
have forbidden all drinking of alcohol, as if drinking alcohol is a sin. But
it’s not. Jesus himself even turned water into wine at a wedding.
Now in our
reading, Jesus says: The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.
So the Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath. Here we see that there is a
wonderful gift in keeping the Sabbath day. Going to the synagogue or the church
to hear the word of God is not a burden, but it’s a wonderful blessing. It’s a
joy—it’s a privilege. The word of God saves us, and feeds us, and strengthens
us. This is what it means when Jesus says: The Sabbath was made for man, not
man for the Sabbath.
But then
Jesus also says: The Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath. All
throughout Jesus’ life, Jesus kept the normal laws of the Jewish people, like
everyone else, even though he didn’t need to. He did this not to cause offense,
and to fulfil the law. But Jesus is actually the Lord of heaven and earth. He
created the world together with the Father and the Holy Spirit, and he was the
one who rested on the seventh day at the end of the creation of the world. So
Jesus is Lord also of the Sabbath. He is in charge of the Sabbath, in fact,
when we come to church, we come to hear him speaking his word to us. And it
makes no difference to our faith, whether we hear that word on a Saturday, or
Sunday, or Monday, or whenever.
In fact,
there is a tendency among people who want to keep Saturday as the Sabbath and
all the Jewish laws to also deny that Jesus is truly God. That’s because you
can’t be justified by grace through faith on the one hand, and also be
justified by Saturdays on the other hand. It’s easy to forget that Jesus is the
Lord of the Sabbath, and the make the Sabbath more important than even him. These
people end up trying to copy Jesus’ life as a Jew, rather than living in the
wonderful freedom of the Gospel that Jesus won for us when he died to fulfil
that law. Yes, Christians should do good works, and out of gratitude to Jesus,
seek to live a Christian life, and try to live according to the Ten Commandments.
But even our good works need the forgiveness of sins.
And so, let’s
remember the wonderful fact that Jesus is lord even of the Sabbath. Let’s
praise him for coming to meet with us here in this place, on this day, to speak
his word to us, and to feed us with his body and blood. In worship, we don’t do
the work, we just sit there, but he works constantly. He is working to heal and
bless and forgive and encourage, just as he did for the man in our reading with
the withered hand. Amen.
Dear Jesus,
we thank you that you are the Lord of the Sabbath. Fill us with the Holy
Spirit, and teach us to fear and love God, so that we may not despise preaching
and his word, but gladly hear and learn it. Amen.
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