9 May 2021 Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
The Sixth Sunday of Easter Vienna, VA
“Friends of God in Jesus”
Text:
John 15:9-17; 1 John 5:1-8; Acts 10:34-48
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.
No longer do I call you
servants . . . but I have called you
friends.
Jesus calls His disciples
friends. Marvel at that, please.
And let’s think a little
about friendship today. And not the virtual kind, where being friend only means
agreeing with that person and hitting a button on a computer, but true
friendship, which seems to be a lost art today. A rarity these days, in a dog eat
dog world, a selfish world, a “get all I can” world. True friendship, which is personal, which gives of yourself
for another.
The government does not
call you friend. You are taxpayer, citizen, subject, voter, but not friend. The
government makes laws and expects you to follow them. It has law enforcement
for you if you don’t. And if a politician does something for you, it’s likely
not because you’re a friend, but because he or she wants your vote, or a
donation.
You may be friends with
your boss, but at work, he is the boss and you are the employee. What he or she
says goes, and you are expected to do what you are told.
Pontius Pilate, you may
remember, wanted to be in the exclusive “friend of Caesar” club, but that was
not easy, or cheap. He’d have to earn his way in, and the Jewish leaders were
threatening to torpedo that if he didn’t crucify Jesus for them.
And some of you will
remember when Bill Clinton was in the White House, there was a group of people
calls FOBs - for “friends of Bill.” People who had donated enough to his
campaign that they were given the favor of staying in the White House and
sleeping in the Lincoln bedroom.
Friends today aren’t what
they used to be, and people are suffering for it. In this world today there are
the haves and the have nots. Those above and those below.
The high and the low. The rulers and
the ruled. Masters and servants.
And Jesus has turned all
that completely upside-down!
For in Jesus, the one
above all has come down to us. In person. The Most
High has become the most low. The Ruler of all has put
Himself under the Law. The Master has become the servant. All
for you. He was born not in wealth but in poverty, as one of us. He
lived not a life of privilege but of service. And He laid down His life - not
because He needs your vote, your service, or your money - everything is His and
whatever you have came from Him! There is nothing you
have that He needs. But everything you need He has. So Jesus laid down His life
for you, to provide for you. To give you the life, the forgiveness, the love,
the future you need. But this too: to make you friends. His friends. More than mere
servants, subjects, workers, creatures, or disciples (followers). But friends of God.
Marvel at that, please.
For by nature sinful and
unclean, you are by nature an enemy of God. And born dead in your trespasses
and sins (Ephesians 2), there is nothing you
can do to earn or deserve friendship with God. But as Paul said to the Romans: Christ died for
the ungodly. For one will scarcely die for a righteous person—though
perhaps for a good person one would dare even to die— but God shows his
love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:6b-8). Christ didn’t die for
His friends for their weren’t any to die for! So He
died for His enemies. To give us life and make us His
friends.
And you are, because what
God calls something, that it is. God calls what is not into
existence through His Word. And so if Jesus calls you friend, you are.
Not because you have done it, earned it, or deserved it, but because He has
gifted that to you.
The Jewish leaders
noticed this about Jesus, and didn’t like it one bit! He should be their
friend, not the friend of tax collectors and sinners (Matthew
11:19). But He keeps hanging out with them. He keeps
forgiving them and eating with them and rejoicing in them. But that’s not the
way it works, Jesus! They have to change. They have to become friends of God
and then maybe God will help them. Jesus isn’t doing it right! God would
never do such a thing.
But it’s exactly
what God would do. And did do. It’s not Jesus
who needs to change, but us. It’s not Jesus who is upside-down, we are.
So in His death and
resurrection, Jesus sets things right again. He does what a friend does. The
one who is life dies, that those captive to death might live. The sinless one
becomes sin, that those filled with sin might be righteous. The Son of God is
forsaken by His Father, that we who are estranged from God might be His
friends. And it is so. The empty tomb the proof that death
did not win. The empty tomb the testimony that sin is
overcome. And the empty tomb our joy, that the
one come to be the friend of tax collectors and sinners is alive and
still befriending sinners, hanging out with them, forgiving and eating with
them, and rejoicing in them.
For that is what Jesus
does here. He comes, as John says, by the Spirit, the water, and the
blood. Speaking to us and forgiving us by His Word, befriending us with
the water of His Baptism, and sitting at Table with us, the Table with His Body
and Blood for us. The Spirit working through all of these
means to give you what you do not have, to make you what you are not, to
overcome that which had overcome you. For Jesus is the one who has
overcome the world, and by faith in Him - that is, the gift of new life
and forgiveness we have received from Him - that victory is ours. And so we,
too, have overcome the world and the ways of the world. To live right-side-up
in an upside-down world. As friends of God.
Friends
who don’t just know God from a distance or through a computer, but know God
personally. The God who came to us as a person. And
still is. The God who speaks to us in the Scriptures, as friend, that we know
Him. For the Scriptures aren’t God’s rule book. They’re
not God saying “Do this” because I said so! Because I’m God, I’m the boss, I’m
the authority. That’s what some people think, and so “friend of God” is a very
foreign concept to them. So if they want to be a friend of God they must follow
the rules; they have to be good and earn it.
But how did Jesus really
use His authority? We heard Jesus speak of that that
two weeks ago, actually, on Good Shepherd Sunday. He came into our world with
the authority to lay down His life and take it up again (John
10:18). To die and rise for us. To
be our friend - for greater love has no one than this, that
someone lays down his life for his friends.
But His love is greater, God’s love is greater,
because He did it to make us His friends. And this is what He has been
teaching His disciples all along. Servants do not know what the master is doing
or why. They just obey. But Jesus has made known all He is doing and why, to make
us His friends. And if you hear all the Scriptures like that, you
begin to have the mind of Christ. To see things in a new way.
To see others in a new way. With no
partiality, as Peter learned. But to see others - no matter who
they are or what they have done - as those for whom Jesus died to make His
friends.
And with such a mind,
such vision, such faith, such a love received, such a joy given, we abide in
that love and love one another. Because that’s who you are.
We show we are friends of the one who befriended us by befriending others. As His life and love and joy abide in us.
And when those things don’t
. . . when by our thoughts, words, deeds, and desires we show that friendship with
the world is more important to us than friendship with God . . . that’s when
Jesus’ friendship shines brighter than ever. Because it’s not one strike and
you’re out - or even two, three, or seven (Matthew 18:21)
- but forgiveness as great and as limitless as the cross. For if you could
discover a sinner too big or a sin too often committed for the cross, then you could worry; should worry. But what is
greater than the God
of the universe, the God who created all things, the omnipotent, omniscient,
omnipresent God, the alpha and the omega, without beginning and
without end, laying down His life for you? You got a sin bigger
than that? . . . I didn’t think so.
So when you fail, when
you fall short, when your sinful and worldly thoughts, words, deeds, and
desires get the best of you, when your friendship runs cold or you put it in
the wrong place . . . the one who calls you friend still does. He
doesn’t unfriend you! He instead says to you I forgive you, My friend. Take and eat, My friend.
Go, you are free, My friend. I don’t burden you with commands, I set you free to live a new life. To overcome the
world by faith - the faith that receives from Me this
new life and friendship that now lives in you, My friend.
Marvel at that, please.
Friend of God.
For it really is quite
extraordinary. In a world that more and more seems to be overcoming the faith,
Jesus says it is our faith in Him that overcomes the world. In a world more and
more hostile to God, Jesus is still calling tax collectors and sinners His
friends. In a world more and more going its own way and accelerating away from
God, Jesus calls us to try a new way. Which is really not new
at all, but old. His way. The way of love. How He created things in the beginning,
before we were injected with a lethal dose of sin and death. So Jesus comes to
make all things new again (Revelation 21:5).
To make you new again.
And again and again. To live a new
life. To live an old love. As
His friends. And you are. Because He said so.
And what He says, happens. What He says, is. And one
day He will say rise, and you will.
For Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!]
And so your life, dear friends
of God, will never be the same again.
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.