22 January 2023 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Epiphany 3 Vienna, VA
Sanctity of Life Sunday
“A One Man March for Life”
Text:
Isaiah
9:1-4; 1 Corinthians 1:18-25; Matthew 4:12-25
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
The people who walked in darkness have seen a
great light;
those
who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shined.
Those are familiar words. We hear them on
Christmas Eve every year. Isaiah’s prophecy of the coming
Messiah. Matthew confirms that interpretation for us today. That Jesus’ coming
is the light in the darkness. Light in a land of deep
darkness.
When Isaiah first proclaimed and then penned
those words, Israel’s darkness was deep indeed. They
had been drifting farther and farther away from God, worshiping false gods, not
trusting God to protect them and provide for them and instead making unholy
alliances with the nations around them. And it would all soon come to an end.
God was bringing in the Assyrian army to conquer them, and their nation would
be no more. Strong medicine. But medicine.
For God had sent prophet after prophet to His people, but
they would not listen, would not return, would not repent. So time to
bring out the big guns - literally! - so that with no
thing and no one else to rely on, His people would return to Him. And live. God
was acting for their life.
Perhaps we could say the same today, some 2,700
years after Isaiah first proclaimed those words. For 50 years now, thousands of
people have walked in darkness - the darkness of the disregard for life
in our country. For 50 years now, there has been a March for Life - like there
was on Friday, two days ago - because of the darkness of abortion. But it’s not
just abortion. The darkness is deeper than that. It is a darkness of which
abortion is just a symptom. It is the darkness that says: that life
doesn’t matter. Or worse, that we would be, I would be, better off
without that life. Whether that life is a baby still developing in
the womb, or an elderly person in need of much care, or a disabled person in
need of patience and understanding, or a spouse contemplating divorce, or a
person who is suffering, depressed, or suicidal and thinks she would be better
off, the world would be better off without her, or that person we just can’t
get along with, that person on the other side of the political aisle, that
person who keeps getting in my way . . . This darkness looks at some people as
disposable, as unnecessary, as an infringement on what I want, on my happiness,
on my self-fulfillment. So they have to go. They have to be cut off, cut
up, or cut out.
But there’s another darkness,
too, related to this first, that says: that life doesn’t matter, so
rather than getting rid of that person, I can use that person to get
what I want. This is the darkness of sexual abuse, rape, sex trafficking, identity theft, phishing, scamming,
slavery, theft, murder. That life doesn’t matter, but my life does, so
all’s fair. Game on. No regrets. Every man for himself.
These attitudes towards
life has
made it very dark in our world. A darkness that seems to keep
getting deeper and keeps spreading farther. A darkness
not only that we’re living in, but that creeps into us and wants
to live in us. That we look at one another and say, or think, or act
like that life doesn’t matter.
But for 50 years now, thousands of people have walked
in darkness because they have seen a great light; because on
us has light shined. The light of the world.
The promised Messiah. The light who
came into this world and said your life matters. He said that with His
birth and with His life, but most of all, with His cross. That your life
matters so much that God the Father gave the life of His Son for your life, and
God the Son laid down His life for your life. And not just
your life, but also that life, that person.
I want them, God says. I love them. They matter to me. Imagine if we saw every
other person like that!
But, Paul said, this way of looking at life, this
word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing. Folly to those in the darkness. Because obviously,
some people matter more than others, some are more important than others, and
there are undoubtedly some people we would be better off without. So to them,
this message of the cross is silly, it’s stupid, and maybe even dangerous.
But, just for the sake of argument, let’s grant
that; let’s agree with that for the moment. That some people
matter more than others, that some are more important than others. So,
when Jesus came, who mattered? Who was important? Who did He hang out with? It
was those people many thought didn’t matter, weren’t important, that the world
would be better off without, or could be freely used and abused. The lepers, the prostitutes, the Samaritans, the beggars. Jesus
turned everything upside down. And, He said, those people you think are
first, and matter more, and are more important are going to be last, and those
people you think are last, they are going to be first. And for that, those
people who thought they mattered and were important showed Jesus what they
thought of Him and His upside-down ways by putting Him on the cross. For, they
thought, there is a life we - and the world - would be better off
without.
But when they put Jesus on the cross - or better
to say: when Jesus ascended the cross - that completely changed the cross. It
was now no longer an instrument of death but of life. No
longer a place of weakness but of strength. No longer
a symbol of hate but of love. No longer a place of
shame but of glory. And no longer a place of
condemnation but of forgiveness. The cross became no longer the place
for a life the world would be better off without, but the place of a life that
the world cannot live without. The place where no matter who
you are, God says: you matter.
So while the word of the cross is folly to
those who are perishing, to us who are being saved it is the
power of God, Paul goes on to say. It is the light of God’s love
shining in a very dark world of sin. It is the word of forgiveness we need for
our own disregard of life. It is the death and resurrection we need, that we
die to our old life and old way of thinking, and rise to a new life and new way
of thinking. And of looking at others. Looking at them
as Jesus did. Treating them as Jesus did. Laying down your
life for them, as Jesus did for you.
Which means that long
before there ever was a March for Life in Washington, there was a March for
Life in Galilee, Samaria, and Judea. A March not of thousands, but a one man March
for Life. When the Word became flesh for the life of the world. When Jesus came to seek and to save the lost. When Jesus
came and did what we heard today - proclaim the Gospel, forgive sins, cleanse
lepers, heal the sick, restore the disabled, and rescue the oppressed. One person at a time. Each and every life
one that mattered to Him. That was worth His time. And then Jesus
marched into the darkness of Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, and then marched with
His cross to Golgotha, where He hung for each and every life, none excepted. Each one worth His own. A one man March for Life.
And life is exactly what happened that day on Golgotha.
For when Jesus died, that meant life for the world. For His
is a kingdom not of this world, and a victory that comes by dying. It is
a kingdom that comes only through death and resurrection. And so a kingdom that
comes to us when we die and rise with Jesus in Holy Baptism. When we die in
repentance and rise with absolution. When we eat and drink that dying and
rising Body and Blood of Jesus in the Supper.
And with this life, Jesus’ life,
and His life-giving forgiveness in us, forgiveness for all of our sins and
darkness, we can then live His life in His light and no longer see others in
the darkness, as disposable or for our own personal use, but now lay down our
lives for others. For if I have to struggle to matter and be important, if I
have to make something of myself, then I can’t do that. But if I know I already
have that, that I already matter and am important to Jesus, then
I can. For my life is safe in Him.
And your life is such a life. Even if the world thinks otherwise, even if you think otherwise.
You matter. And only by knowing that can we see others
that way, and treat them that way. When we’re forgiven, we can forgive.
When we’re loved, we can love. When the light has shined on us in the darkness,
we can then shine that light on others. And you can be a one man, a one
woman, March for Life. In your home, at your work or school,
in your neighborhood or church, with your family and friends, wherever you are.
Shining the light of Jesus’ love and forgiveness. Because you matter, and they matter.
So maybe, just maybe, that’s the way to fight
this battle for life. Not just to tell other people they’re wrong - though
there is a time and place for that. But to show them they matter. And tell them
why they matter. For that, it seems to me, is the way of Jesus. Who, while
we were still sinners, laid down His life for us (Romans 5:8). So while others are
still sinners, perhaps we can do the same. And show them the power of the cross
and the life of the cross. It won’t be easy. It may not be safe. It certainly
wasn’t for Jesus, or for the disciples He called to follow after Him. But it is
the way of life. Of life everlasting. And then, maybe,
just maybe, when you do, you will find your own life. For as Jesus also said: Whoever
finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find
it (Matthew
10:39). Not
how we usually think, maybe not how we usually act! But how we usually think
and act hasn’t been working so well . . .
So, Isaiah says, you people walking in
darkness, there is a great light. You’ve seen Him. You
know Him. He came for you. He died for you. You matter to Him. He is the light
no darkness can overcome. Not even the darkness of death. He is the light no
sin can overcome; He is the forgiver of sins. Your sins.
All of them. No matter what they are, how shameful or
heinous they are. Even when we have not honored and respected life as we
should. When we, each of us, have believed the lies, have been deceived,
has succumbed to the darkness, in our own ways, in our own lives. He took those
sins. All of those sins. He took them away from You
and put them on Himself. He died for them, to set you free from them to live.
And so He is the light that one day, for each of us, will say: Today you
will be with me in Paradise (Luke 23:43). The darkness cannot have you. You matter. You
are mine.
A one man March for Life. And if you know anyone
who needs to hear those words of Jesus . . . maybe you can be a one man
March for Life, for them, too.
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.