18 April 2021 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Third Sunday of Easter Vienna, VA
“Here We Stand”
Text:
Acts 3:11-21; Luke 24:36-49; 1 John 3:1-7
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lleluia! Christ is risen! [He is risen
indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia.
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Hie(r)
stehe Ich!
Here I stand.
Those words were not first
uttered 500 years ago today, but they were most famously uttered 500
years ago today.
A little over three years
ago, we remembered the 500th anniversary of the start of the Reformation. The
day Luther posted his 95 Theses on October 31, 1517.
Last year, we remembered
the 500th anniversary of the writing of what are often called Luther’s three
great theological treatises. Specifically we remembered the one entitled On The Freedom of a Christian.
And this year, we
remember another 500th anniversary, and that is, as the insert in your bulletin
shows, the Diet of Worms. A “diet” was simply a formal assembly of the Emperor
with the princes and bishops of Germany to conduct business. And at the Pope’s
urging, Luther was one of the items put on the agenda. The Pope had already
condemned Luther as a heretic and excommunicated him earlier in the year, on
January 3rd, but he needed the Emperor’s help to enforce his ban on
Luther. (That means: kill him. Because that what you did to heretics.) The
Emperor, however, wasn’t much of a theologian. He was a politician, and with
the Turks marching on his empire and their threat becoming ever more dire, he needed Germany to help him fight them off. Germany, where Luther had become wildly popular. So he
summoned Luther. He would give him a chance to recant. But Luther would not.
And it was on this day, April 18th, 1521, when Luther uttered his well-known
phrase: hie(r) stehe
Ich. Here I stand.
Now, while that’s one of
the best known - if not the best known - things Luther ever said, he
probably wasn’t the first to say it, and he certainly wasn’t the first
to do it. That honor I would give to the Apostles. We heard in the
reading from Acts that Peter had healed a man lame from birth. The people were
utterly astounded, the once lame man wouldn’t him go, so Peter took his
stand - on the Gospel; on the death and resurrection of Jesus. Y’all killed Him, he told the crowd of Jews. But God raised
Him from the dead. What you see is that the miracles Jesus did before
are continuing now, because He is not dead but living. What the
prophets said has been fulfilled. So repent, receive His forgiveness - which is
for you! - and be refreshed with His
forgiveness and life. Here I stand.
But that’s only half the
story. For while Peter was still speaking, the priests and the captain
of the temple and the Sadducees came upon them (Acts
4:1) and arrested them. (We’re actually going to hear
those verses next week.) For, you see, the Jewish leaders had the same problem
the Emperor had - like with Luther, people were believing
the apostles. The group of Christians was now starting to get dangerously large
- they were now up to some 5,000 men, Luke tells us. And maybe more if you
count families. So they brought Peter and John before the Diet (well, they
called it the Council) and ordered them to recant. Well, OK, not to recant, but
like Luther, to stop preaching what they were preaching. To stop preaching this heresy about Jesus and His
resurrection and His forgiveness. So Peter and John responded, in words
that Luther would echo so many years later: Whether it is right in
the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you must judge, for
we cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard (Acts
4:19-20). Here we stand.
Now if you’re like me,
you admire Luther and Peter and John and all the rest of the Apostles and all
the early Christian martyrs for doing that - for standing firm in the face of
danger and death and saying here I stand! But the reason they could is
the same reason we can: because Christ is risen!
[He is risen indeed!] Because Jesus
was the first to stand from the dead. We heard the account
from Luke today, of what happened that first Easter evening, when Jesus
appeared to His frightened and confused disciples and said: Why are you
troubled, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? See my hands and
my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me, and see. Here
I stand! Alive! What are you afraid of?
Are you afraid of your
sins? Don’t be! I was crucified for them and now here I
stand! Alive! They are atoned for and you are forgiven.
Are you afraid of death? Don’t
be! I died and now here I stand! I defeated death for you, so that
though you die, yet you will live.
Are you afraid of satan?
Don’t be! He did his worst and tried to defeat me, yet here I stand! I’ve
stripped him of his power.
Are you afraid of those
who wield earthly power? Don’t be! They tried to get rid of
me and yet here I stand! And they’ll try to get rid of you, too. But all
they can do is take your life. But I give you eternal life, which they can’t
take away.
And why are you troubled
and confused? This is exactly what Moses and the Prophets and the
Psalms said was going to happen. And Jesus taught them. He opened their
minds to understand the Scriptures. So that they, too,
could say: here I stand! And stake everything, even life and limb, on
Jesus’ resurrection.
And they did. Peter did,
when faced with the gruesome death of being crucified upside-down. Here I
stand. And the same John who was with Peter that day when the man lame from
birth was healed and they were threatened by the Council, did as well. He wasn’t
martyred, but he was persecuted and exiled for his stand. Yet even so, and even
after he witnessed or received word of all his brother Apostles killed, he
could write the beautiful words we heard today, to encourage the believers: See what kind of
love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and
so we are. That is, here we stand! The love the Father
has given us no one can take away. We are His children now,
and His children forever. We will not deny Jesus. We will not go
back to the old life of sin. We will not recant. Here we stand!
And here we
stand. On the death and resurrection of Jesus. On the empty tomb. On every Word and every promise of God
fulfilled in Jesus. On the forgiveness of our sins by grace
through faith.
And here we stand
because this is the witness of the Scriptures - which is not just another holy
book like other religions’ holy books - but the eye witness testimony of
those who saw Jesus die on the cross and then risen from the dead and alive
again. Those who saw His flesh and blood. Who saw Him
eat - which spirits or ghosts do not do. Who put their
fingers into those nail holes and their hands into His side. And who were then
sent by Jesus - apostled by Him - to go tell
the world this fact, this truth - that sin, death, grave, and hell are
defeated. That there is life and salvation in Him who did
that. For them. For all
people.
The
witness of the Scriptures.
That is the rest of Luther’s quote that is so important but often forgotten;
what gave Luther such boldness. And so as you can read on the insert, Luther
said: “I am bound by the Scriptures . . . and my conscience is captive to
the Word of God. . . . It is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. I
cannot do otherwise, here I stand . . .”
Conscience.
You can’t go against conscience. You hear that a lot these days by people
defending what they do and believe. But the truth is that your bare conscience
is not a good and reliable guide. Your conscience, like the rest of you
- your mind, your body, your desires - is fallen. Infected by sin. So when Luther said “it is not right to go
against conscience” it was after he had said that his “conscience was
captive to the Word of God.” For a conscience formed and informed by the Word
of God is a good and reliable guide. A conscience without the
Word of God is not.
Which is why on that
first Easter evening, we read that what Jesus did is open the mind of the
disciples to understand the Scriptures. In their
case, the Old Testament Scriptures. He opened their minds first
to clean out all the junk that accumulated there; all the wrong thinking and
error. And then filled them with the truth of the
Scriptures. And once they had that solid foundation to stand on, once
Luther had that solid foundation to stand on, they could all boldly say: Here
I stand!
And
so for us. Why is it that we, at times, are not able to stand so
firmly? Why is it so hard for us to say: Here I
stand? Why do doubts and fears seem to get the better of us? Is it because
we do not have this firm foundation to stand on, as they did?
What junk has accumulated
in your mind? Thoughts and “truths” of the world that contradict the
Scriptures and so make you uncertain. What fear - of the world, the people in
the world, or of losing what you have in the world - has replaced the fear of
God? What do you love in the world more than God and so cling to that
rather than the Word of God? You see, when our fear, love, and trust is wrong,
then where we are standing is not firm, and may even be
dangerous.
So we, too, need the firm
foundation of God’s Word. It is no accident that the Reformation was launched
after Luther became a professor of the Scriptures at the University of
Wittenberg and spent his time diving into them. They - and the Spirit that
works through them - changed him. And gave him a conscience captive to the Word
of God that could say: Here I stand! Even in the face of all the powers
of the world roaring against him.
And they are what
strengthen and embolden you as well.
To
take your stand on your baptismal identity.
You are not who others say you are, but who God says you are.
To
take your stand not on the fact that you are good, but on the
full and free forgiveness of your sins.
To
take your stand on the Body and Blood of Christ given to you here as
food for body and soul.
To take your stand
on the truth of God’s Word, that what God says is right is right, and what He
says is wrong is wrong, and not the upside-down thinking of the world.
You and I may have to
take such a stand, as Luther did. The truth of the Scriptures is becoming less
and less accepted these days, and less and less tolerated these days. Calling
certain popular sins sin these days is out-of-bounds, and calling Jesus the only
true God and Saviour has been discouraged and
disallowed ever since the earliest days of the church. But here we stand.
Popular or not. Allowed or not. Legal
or not. Our conscience captive to the Word of God.
And
if you don’t? If your doubts and fears get the
better of you? Well, that’s why we come back here every week, isn’t it?
To confess, to repent, and to hear Jesus say to us again, “I forgive you all
your sins.” To have Jesus open our minds again, clean out the junk that has
accumulated in there this past week, and be filled again with His truth. And to receive the food of His Body and Blood to strengthen us for
another week. Another week of temptations, challenges, trials, dangers,
needs, fears, and whatever else satan
can throw at you. For satan
wants to make your life like standing on a ball! So that you’ll
always be off balance and shaky and uncertain . . . and easy to topple over.
But what Jesus does is lift you up off the ground and put you on the
unshakeable, unmoveable, reliable, and steadfast
foundation of His Word. When you’re on a ball, you can’t say Here
I stand! But on Jesus and His Word, then yes! Here I stand! Not
because of me. Because of Jesus. Because of all that
He has done for me.
A lot has changed in 500
years. A lot has stayed the same. But what will not change, and will never
change, is our Lord, His Word, and His promises. The one who said Here I
stand after His resurrection is the one on whom we can now say Here I
stand! In life, in death, and forever.
For Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!]
And hier
stehen wir! We can do
no other.
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.