25 April 2021 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Fourth Sunday of Easter Vienna, VA
“A New Reality, A New Life”
Text:
John 10:11-18; 1 John 3:16-24; Acts 4:1-12
Alleluia! 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.
Often times, when Jesus
taught and preached, the people did not understand
Him. Sometimes it was because He often spoke in parables, but even when He didn’t,
what He said was so different than their teachers and what they were saying
that the people didn’t understand. Not at first. And what Jesus said today is
one of those times.
Now, that may surprise
you to hear me say that. Because you understand what Jesus is
saying today. You who live on this
side of Jesus’ resurrection. You who have all the teachings
of Jesus in the Scriptures and the teaching of the Apostles He sent out to
preach all that He said and did. So what Jesus said today, that He is the Good
Shepherd, is not only known to you, but well-known and deeply
loved. So much so that just as at Christmas we want to sing Joy to the World,
and just as at Easter we want to sing Jesus Christ Is Risen Today, so in
the hospital or at funerals or other challenging and difficult times, you want
to hear the 23rd Psalm. You want to hear about the Good Shepherd. You want, you
need, that comfort and assurance.
But in first century
Israel, a shepherd who died for his sheep was not a good shepherd, but a
stupid one! Sheep were a commodity. A valuable one, perhaps.
But still, a commodity. Sheep were sheared for their
wool. Sheep were sacrificed and eaten for the Passover. So when the wolf comes,
a shepherd would do his or her best to defend the sheep, but die for them?
That’s insane. The only result of that is a now
undefended flock and a family in mourning. So not only does it make sense for a
hired shepherd to flee, I imagine even the owner of the sheep would,
too. Better to go home with a few less sheep than not to go home at all.
And that the people did
not understand and some considered Jesus insane is, in fact, what John tells us
in the verses around the ones we heard today. Right before it says: This figure of
speech Jesus used with them, but they did not understand what he was saying to
them (v. 6).
And right after we hear: There was again a division among the Jews because
of these words. Many of them said, “He has a demon, and is insane; why listen
to him?” [But] Others said, “These are not the words of
one who is oppressed by a demon. Can a demon open the eyes of the blind” (v. 19-21)?
For that’s what Jesus had
just done - opened the eyes of a man blind from birth. To heal someone who had
lost their vision was one thing; but to give sight to someone who never had it
. . . that was unprecedented. And it was starting to open the eyes of those who
could see, to see Jesus in a new way. Which made those who thought Jesus
demon possessed and insane (like the Pharisees) even more determined in their
opposition, so that if anyone dared to say that Jesus was the Christ, they
would be expelled from the synagogue (John 9:22).
Excommunicated. And you thought cancel culture was a new
thing . . .
You see, the Pharisees
were the ones treating the people like commodities. Shearing
them for profit. Devouring widows’ houses (Mark
12:40). And that was Jesus’ word, not mine. Devouring. Preying upon even poor
widows. They didn’t care for the people but for themselves. They weren’t
even hirelings, but wolves in hirelings’ clothing.
But what if the sheep
weren’t treated like commodities, but like children? And what if the
group of sheep wasn’t just a herd, but a family? And what if there was a
shepherd saw them like that? Because your family is
worth sacrificing yourself for.
Now take that to the next
level: What if there was a God who treated people not like commodities, or
servants, or peons, but like children? And what if there was a God who
looked at people not just as part of creation, but as family? What if
there was a God so utterly and completely different from anything in this world, that He doesn’t look for anything from us because He
doesn’t need anything from us, but does everything for us? Wouldn’t that
be something? A game changer? What would such a God
look like? What would such a God do?
You know. He looks
like Jesus on the cross. Because when the satanic wolf came for His
children, He did not flee. When the satanic wolf came and insisted that the
wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23) and that therefore he
had a right to devour us all, Jesus said: Devour me instead. Devour the
one who made them. Devour their Shepherd. Devour their God. It was an offer satan couldn’t refuse. Because it
was insane! Devour the shepherd and the flock is left undefended. Satan always
knew God was stupid . . . People aren’t worth it. They treat each other like
animals! This was confirmation to satan
that he was right to rebel against such a stupid God. Now he could finish the
job . . .
But Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!] For the Good Shepherd doesn’t just have the authority,
the authorization, the mission, to lay down His life, but it take it up
again - that is, to rise from the dead. And He did. For yes, satan, you are right: the wages
of sin is death. But what if sin was taken away? What if sin was atoned
for? Then death would lose its power, wouldn’t it? Death would be forced to
give up the dead. And all the people you think are just tasty treats would be
children who live forever.
And that is our joy this
Easter season. Not chocolate and peeps, but forgiveness and life. That because Jesus rose from death to life again, we know that we
will, too. It is the promise He gives us in Baptism: forgiveness and
life. He applies His death and life to us; we die and rise with Him; we are
sheep in His flock; children of God. Which means that the resurrection isn’t
just something that happened some 2,000 years ago, and eternal life isn’t just
something that will happen who knows how many years from now - these are our
reality already now. Don’t think of them in relation to time, but about who
you are. Who you are now, and who you will be forever. A forgiven child of
God, who has a life not even death can end. That is
our joy this Easter season. A new reality. A new life to live.
Which those who are
living the same old life, and all they can see is the same old life, think is
insane. So we heard in the reading from Acts that Peter and John were arrested
for healing a man lame from birth and preaching that Jesus was risen from the dead. Why would you risk your lives for some
useless lame man? And for people who are never going to amount to anything? Be
reasonable! Stop this and save yourselves! But they didn’t have to save
themselves. They’d already been saved from death, by the one who rose from the
dead. So to stop wouldn’t be to save themselves, but
actually the opposite - it would be to sacrifice the life they had been
given and die. So no, thank you. For die now and live forever . . . or live now
and die forever . . . not a hard choice, though sometimes hard to do.
And we heard of this new
life also in the reading from First John: By this we know love, that [Jesus] laid down his
life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for the brothers.
We who live in this new reality and have this new life . . . ought
to. We ought not treat each other like animals. We
ought not see others as commodities. We ought not value what we have or what we can gain or our own
pleasure or how we can increase and move up in the world more than we
value those for whom Jesus died. We ought not . . . but sometimes
do. We sometimes fail to live the new reality, the new life, we have been
given.
The good news is that, as
John went on to say, whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater
than our heart, and he knows everything.
He knows everything. Which not only means He knows what we’ve done . . . He
does, of course. All our living the old life, the old
reality; all our sins, no matter how big or small. He not only knows all
that, but if He knows it all, it means He put it all on Jesus on the cross.
Not one of your sins left out or forgotten or unatoned for. They’re all
on Jesus and so not on you. They’ve all been paid for, atoned for, taken
away, forgiven.
So that’s what Jesus tells
you here every week. Forgiveness isn’t just for one day a week, or course. But
you get to hear these words here every week! Proclaimed to
you, spoken to you. Words we need to hear every week and can never hear
enough: I forgive you all your sins. And then shortly after that, we
sing - we sing in joy This is the feast of
victory for our God! His blood set us free to be people of God. The Lamb who
was slain has begun His reign. That’s your new reality, your new
life. It’s how Jesus sees you, as someone worth laying down His life for. And how you can now see others, as people worth laying down your
life for.
Not that it’s easy! Of
course, it’s not. It wasn’t easy for Jesus either. Or for
Peter and John. And on your own, you could never do it. Not even one
little bit. So you’re not on your own. Jesus gives you His Spirit. He gives you
His Body and Blood. That His new reality, His new life, be not just something
you live in, but that lives in you. He gives it to you, so it can now flow out
from you. And it does, though not perfectly. Some days more
than others. Some days you completely fall on your face. Which is why your Good Shepherd is still your Good Shepherd.
Still feeding, still leading, still guiding, still forgiving, still giving you His gifts and all you need. Making His
reality your reality, and His life your life.
And if the world thinks
you insane for how you live, that’s okay. It’s even good. It’s
God’s good living in you. Testimony that this old world and life is not
all there is. Your eyes have been opened, and others will, too. Maybe because of you. For I have other sheep that
are not of this fold,
Jesus said.
I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will
be one flock, one shepherd. And we could add to that:
one family, one Father, one Saviour, one Spirit.
What if there was a God
who treated people like children? What it there was a God who looked at
people as His family? What if there was a God who was completely consumed
with love for us? A God who serves, a God who lays down His life for us?
Wouldn’t that be something? A game changer? Change how
we live. Change how we die. Change how we view world events. Change how we
react to good news and bad news, joys and pandemics?
What would such a
Christian look like? What would such a Christian do? A Christian shaped by such
love. A Christian defined by forgiveness - received and given. A baptized Christian. A Body- and Blood-ed Christian.
It’s who you are,
child of God! That’s your reality, your life. In
Christ, your Good Shepherd. Christ, your risen Shepherd!
For Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!]
And He has given you a
new life to live.
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.