6 November 2022
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Feast of All Saints
Vienna, VA
Baptism of Abigail Ivy Killian
“Hope that Does Not
Disappoint”
Text:
Revelation
7:9-17; Matthew 5:1-12; 1 John 3:1-3
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
What the world cannot achieve, Jesus has. We
heard today of John’s great vision of heaven, of a great multitude that
no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and
languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white
robes, with palm branches in their hands. Our world seeks such unity
and peace, but these noble goals continue to elude us. Wars continue,
favoritism continues, hatred, prejudice, and bias continue. There are the haves
and the have nots, the ins and the outs, the smart people who agree with me and
the stupid people who don’t, and so those the world wants and those the world
thinks we’d be better off without. Even when we get a
taste of unity and peace, like after a national tragedy, it doesn’t last long. So this
great multitude is found nowhere on earth. There is instead division. And not
only in the world, but in our country, in our communities, even sometimes in
our families.
We long for this unity and peace. But even our
best efforts fail. We fail. We sin. We add to the division. Our sinful nature
gets the better of us and we lash out. Or maybe it was a comment we made - live
and in person, or on social media - and we didn’t realize the hurt it would
cause, but it did. Sometimes for us to get ahead we have to put down others, we
think - and so we do. Or maybe it was what that person did to me -
unforgivable! Meaning: a divide that is permanent; irreparable. Because this
world is filled with sinners - sinners like you and me - this vision of heaven
will never be reality on earth.
Unless . . . unless there was some other way we
could be united and at peace. If there was someone who could
heal the hurts. Politicians always promise to do that. They are this
election cycle, too. But they never do. For they can’t,
really. But what if there was someone who could . . . Someone who could
forgive the unforgivable. Someone who could love the
unlovable. Someone who could bring us together despite
our differences. Someone who knows us at our very
worst, and could make us our very best. Someone who didn’t care where we
were from, what funny accent we had, what color our skin.
Someone who could bring together what sin has divided, and help
us see others as He does - not as opposition, but people who are scared, lost,
confused, overwhelmed, hurting, lonely, who just need someone. Someone to love them. But not the kind of love that loves
you as long as you’re useful and then kicks you to the curb, but the kind of
love that loves you when you’re lying in the gutter, beat up and thrown out,
and lifts you up and provides for you. Someone who
would do that . . . well, He would have a great multitude around Him,
don’t you think?
Oh, He would have His detractors, too, to be
sure. Those who don’t approve of that kind of love, that kind of care, who want unity and peace only on their terms. They might even
try to get rid of someone who would go against their wishes and the way they
think things should be done. Crucify Him, even!
But what if even that couldn’t stop Him? If He came back from the dead and continued His work, but now on an
even larger scale than before? Uniting not only people on earth, but
heaven and earth, the living and the dead! And not only in one place, but in and from every
pulpit, altar, and font around the world. His message, His peace, His
hand, His forgiveness, His life, extended to every time and place. Wouldn’t
that be something? Something glorious! And someone worthy of praise for doing
this! For His blessing and glory and wisdom and
thanksgiving and honor and power.
But isn’t that what we just sang! This
is the feast of victory for our God. . . . Power and riches and wisdom and
strength and honor and blessing and glory are His. And isn’t this what we
just saw, the hand of God, the water of God, and the Word of God taking
a sinner and making her a saint? Taking an enemy and making
little Abigail His child. Isn’t this what we heard earlier when
we confessed that we lived this week again at our worst, and He lifted us up
and we heard Him say: I forgive you all your sins, all your worst, all
your shame. And isn’t this what we’re anticipating, coming to this altar in a
moment to open our mouths and be fed by the one who has united us here
like this. And who not only unites us together here, but wants us united with
Him forever.
So isn’t this here what we long for? Here
is the unity and peace we need. Here is the forgiveness and love we need. Here
is heaven on earth. Here is that great multitude on earth,
together with the angels and archangels and all the company of heaven,
known and seen with the ears and eyes of
faith. Because here is Jesus. The someone we need, the someone to do what we cannot and
could never do, the someone who unites us to each other because He has united
us all in Himself. Here is Jesus for that. Here is Jesus for you. What the
world cannot achieve, Jesus has.
So blessed are we. We heard that over and
over in the Gospel today - blessed are we. Not because we have everything we
want - because, quite frankly, some of those things listed there for those who
are blessed I’d rather not have or be! I’d rather be rich in spirit than poor
in spirit. I’d rather not mourn or be meek. I’d rather not have to hunger and
thirst for righteousness, have to put myself out and be merciful, have to play
the peacemaker, and I’d really rather not be persecuted, reviled, or spoken
evil of! But in this world of sin and death; of division, not unity; of strife,
not peace - this is our reality. The reality little Abigail was just born into.
But there is another reality that little
Abigail was just REborn into as
well today. The reality of a Saviour named Jesus. Who
does bless us living in this world of sin and death.
Who blesses us with exactly what we need. With the unity and peace, love and
forgiveness we need. Which is found only in one place: in Him. For this
is the blessing: He blesses us with Himself. And when you receive Jesus,
you also get all that’s His. In Baptism, we receive Jesus. In the Absolution,
we receive Jesus. In the Gospel, we receive Jesus. In the Supper, we receive
Jesus. And with Him, His forgiveness, His life, His salvation are given to us.
His kingdom and His sonship are given to us. And His
family is given to us. So today, we gained a new sister named Abby, and she
gained a whole lotta brothers and sisters in Christ! A great multitude, in fact, from every nation, from all
tribes and peoples and languages. And times.
But Abby got more than that this morning. She
also made a powerful enemy in satan
who is going to hound her relentlessly, as he does you. Who is going to
persecute her for Christ’s righteousness given to her.
Who is going to revile her and persecute her and utter all kinds of evil
against her for belonging to Christ, as he does you. Who is going to try to lure her
and tempt her and convince her that life is better and easier with him. And, well, easier? Maybe. The
world loves its own and those who agree with it. But better? Not a chance. For
while there may be trial, tribulation, trouble, and sorrow now, for a while, in
Christ, there is an eternity of blessing. Of no more hunger
or thirst. Of no scorching heat. Of living
water and no more tears. An eternity of what we so long for: unity and peace. For
what the world cannot achieve - even though satan may lyingly promise
it - Jesus has.
And we celebrate that today, this All Saints
Day. For all the saints are saints because of Him. What the world cannot
achieve, Jesus has. And what we cannot achieve, Jesus has. We could
never be saints on our own. We can never make ourselves holy. Holiness is of
God and is His gift to us in Jesus. So only in Jesus are we holy. Only in Jesus
are we saints. But we are all saints in Him. Saints
who are part of that great multitude - now by faith, but one day by sight.
And today, Abby too. For today she has washed
her robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Yes this little
one, only 35 days old. She cannot stand, and yet is standing around the throne
of God with us. She cannot speak, and yet is crying out in the worship and
praise of God with us. Her parents comfort her, but so does her Father and Saviour. Her parents feed her, but she is also satisfied
with the bread of life from heaven. And she is blessed, not just with
loving and caring earthly parents, but with an even more loving and caring and
eternal Father. Who will do everything for her for eternity.
And what is true for her is true for you. Blessed
is she. And blessed you are. Blessed in this world so messed
up, so lost. Blessed to be in this little outpost of
unity and peace in a world disunited and not at peace, this little outpost
called the church. Where All Saints gather together
every week. Around Jesus, in Jesus, to receive Jesus.
To receive what we could never achieve or do for ourselves. What if there was
someone . . . to give us such a life, and such hope?
Hope that we will see our loved ones who died in
the faith again. Hope for the newborns brought into this world of sin and
death. Hope for the ones the world has no use for. Hope for not only when we’ve
been kicked to the gutter, but when we’ve put ourselves there. Hope for unity
and peace.
That’s exactly what we’ve been singing about
today, paraphrases of what we heard in the Scriptures today! Despised and
scorned they sojourned here; But now how glorious they
appear. On earth they wept through bitter years; Now
God has wiped away their tears (LSB #676). We feebly struggle . . . And when the fight is
fierce, the warfare long . . . But, lo, there breaks a yet more glorious day; The saints - triumphant! - rise
in bright array (LSB
#677). Rise,
because of Jesus and His resurrection that conquers all. Our hope that is greater
than any heartache, trouble, persecution, or deep, dark grave. Hope that will not disappoint. Hope that
is sure and certain - as sure and certain as the empty tomb. Hope that can sustain us against this world at its worst, and even
when that worst has crept into, snuck into, us. Our
someone, the someone we need, is coming for All His Saints, as He does
now with His forgiveness, so He will then, and we will from our labors rest.
You and me, little Abigail, and those we don’t even know who they are, but who
will join us in that great multitude that no one can number. No one but Jesus,
that is.
For He
knows.
He knows each and every one. By name. And there will
be unity, and there will be peace, and there will be joy. And there will be
singing and there will be feasting. But most of all there will be Him. Our someone. Who did this for us.
And we - with all the saints - will be with Him. And that’s all that will
matter.
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.