20
February 2011
St. Athanasius Lutheran Church
Epiphany
7 Vienna, VA
“Like Father, Like Sons”
Text: Matthew 5:38-48 (Leviticus 19:1-2, 9-18; 1
Corinthians 3:10-23)
Grace,
mercy, and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ. Amen.
What
Jesus is talking about today is mercy. For mercy is what our Father in heaven
is all about. If you’re going
to be like Him in any way, shape, or form, it will be in showing mercy.
In
mercy, He send rain on the just and the unjust, and makes the sun to shine on
both the evil and the good.
In
mercy, He did more than “go the
extra mile” - He came down to
earth from heaven, into time from eternity. And when He did so, He gave much
more than the clothes off His back (though He did that); He gave His very flesh
and bones to death on the cross for the life of the world.
In mercy, He did not resist, but turned His cheeks to those
who struck Him and mocked Him.
In mercy, He gave to all who begged Him, and He promises
still to give to all who call upon Him in truth.
In mercy, He loved sinners, tax collectors, prostitutes,
and those for whom society has no room, and still does.
And in the midst of all that, most of all, in mercy He
utters those words not one of us could be here without: Father, forgive them
(Luke 23:34).
That’s mercy. Jesus showed us that’s the kind of God and Father we have.
And this
is how our Father wants us to be.
Like
Father, like sons.
But He
didn’t just
command us to do these things (though He did) - He has done even more: He has
given you His very Spirit. St. Paul told the Corinthians, “You are
temples of God’s Spirit.” Living, mobile temples. Given new life and the Spirit of
God in Holy Baptism. That you live not according to the spirit and wisdom of
the world, but have the mind of Jesus. That you live in mercy and so show
yourselves to be sons of God. Sons of the merciful one.
Or, to
put that in other words, that you be holy. For holiness is not just that you
don’t do
anything wrong - it’s to be set
apart for something right. It’s to be set apart for mercy. That as living, mobile temples
of the Spirit of God, you take God’s mercy to others - both in the church and out into the
world.
So what’s the problem? Why aren’t you and I holy? Why aren’t we merciful?
Why are we so quick to accuse and
slow to forgive?
So ready to criticize and demand and
so reluctant to help?
So suspicious of others and so slow
to be merciful?
Why do we so blend in with the world
and its spirit and not look more like Jesus?
Why aren’t we:
like Father, like sons?
Yeah, we’re
sinners. That is true, but too general.
Yeah, there’s a lot
of bad people out there, that just might want to take advantage of you and put
you up on a cross. That’s true, too. And maybe you’ve felt
crucified lately.
But let’s cut to
the chase. If Jesus said, “You therefore must be perfect” - the Old Testament reading from
Leviticus said holy, and Luke uses the word merciful (Luke 6:36), but the point is
the same. If Jesus said, “You therefore must be perfect (or holy or merciful), as your heavenly Father is
perfect and holy and merciful,” there’s the answer: we’re not
holy and perfect, because we don’t believe that our Father is holy and
perfect and merciful.
Oh, we say it. We confess it. But we
don’t believe it. Which is why we sin.
We don’t
believe that what our Father is doing is perfect and right for us, and so we
demand what we think is from others.
We don’t
believe He will really provide, and so we keep and hold back from others.
We don’t
believe He will protect, and so we strike out at others.
We don’t
believe He is leading and guiding and directing, that His Word is sufficient,
and so we chase after the wisdom of the world.
We don’t
believe that everything our Father is doing - everything - is good.
Some, yes. All? You’ve got to be kidding!
Have you seen my life lately? Have you taken a look at the
world lately?
This is the very nature of sin, Luther rightly said. We don’t fear,
love, and trust in God above all things.
We believe what we see and trust what we feel instead of
believing and trusting the words and promises of God.
And so, folks, we need to repent.
Not just of our wrong actions and words, although that
would keep us busy enough the rest of our lives!
But of our wrong belief. That we have doubted our Father’s love.
That we have questioned His goodness. That we have denied His mercy.
We need
to repent and begin to think differently, with hearts and minds shaped not by
what the world says is the way things should be; but with hearts and minds
shaped by the Word and Spirit of God.
To
believe that He has given me the spouse and family (or the singleness) that is
perfect for me, and the house and job that is perfect for me, and has led me to
the church and community that is perfect for me.
We see
the imperfections in these things and want better, not realizing (or believing)
that our Father has given us what is not only good for us, but perfect for us. Exactly
what you need.
Maybe
you don’t understand that all right now. I don’t
either. That’s why we believe it. That our Father, who is
merciful, always, and who knows a bit more than we do, is doing what is
perfect for you and me. And He will continue to do so - not because we deserve
it, because we don’t. But because that’s who He is. Our merciful God:
Creator and Redeemer and Sanctifier.
There’s a car
company whose advertising slogan is: the relentless pursuit of perfection. I
think we could say, that’s who our God is, too . . . but
here’s the difference: He
doesn’t just demand it, He gives it.
For He gave His Son that we be perfect - not by what we do
and not according to the standards of
the world, but in holiness, in mercy.
He gave
His Son that we be forgiven every imperfection, every sin, every failure.
He gave
His Son that we have life.
He gave
His Son! You want to know God? That’s God.
Merciful
and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love (Psalm 103:8).
And, you
know, sometimes that love is going to come through fire. Through trials and
troubles, hurts and pains, great difficulties. You have these.
But
these are not signs that God does not love you. On the contrary, they
are signs that He does. For as St. Paul said, through these we see that what He
builds is truly precious - of gold and silver; and that He burns off anything
we, of our own, have built, which really isn’t worth
very much.
And
while that’s hard and not very much fun, where would you be without
it?
How lost
would you be? How far away would you be? Where would your faith be?
Your
Father, in His love, wants you. More than you know. And so He is
building. And what is built by His Word and Spirit lasts not just for this
life, but for eternal life. And then also in those times of difficulty, we are
given opportunities - not only to receive His mercy and forgiveness from
others, but to give them to others. To be the blessing He would have us be for
others. Like Father, like sons.
And so
today, your Saviour has come, once again, to do what He always does - to mercy
you, to forgive you, to give you His Spirit and life as He gives you His own
Body and Blood. The word He spoke from the cross - “It is finished” - that it be finished in you. That
you be perfect. For those two words are, in fact, the same word. What
Jesus completed on the cross, is your perfection. What you need. And he gives
to you here. For God doesn’t just demand these things, He gives
them: mercy, forgiveness, life, salvation. It is finished, that you may
give them to others.
For, as
St. Paul wrote, you are Christ’s,
and Christ is God’s.
And so
in Christ, He is your Father, and you are His sons.
Do not
be afraid to be who you are.
In the
Name of the Father and of the (+) Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.