8 September 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Pentecost 16
Vienna, VA
“Opening Ears, Hearts,
and Graves”
Text:
Mark 7:31-37; James 2:1-10, 14-18; Isaiah 35:4-7a
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Ephphatha! Be opened, Jesus said. And this
man’s ears were opened.
Imagine what that must have been like. In my
sermon a few weeks ago, I told the story of when my doctor removed two very
large and hard plugs of wax from my ears and how I marveled at how much I could
hear again. (I guess I should have saved that story for this week!) But for this man . . . imagine all that he heard . . . and maybe for
the very first time! A bird chirping. Children laughing. Music playing. Jesus’ voice. Many sounds that we, perhaps, take for
granted. No big deal. But a big deal for this man. Life changing.
Just like the first things the man born blind saw
after Jesus gave him his sight. Or the first time a man who couldn’t walk could
go somewhere by himself and didn’t need to be carried by others. When a leper could return to his family. Or when someone
possessed by demons was set free and was an outcast no more. Imagine what those
days must have been like. The joy. These were big
deals.
I don’t know if we think about them that way,
though. Maybe because we hear these kinds of stories so much that we’re used to
hearing them and take for granted all that Jesus can do. Or maybe because of
all that medicine and technology are able to do for us today. We have
eyeglasses and eye surgery for people who cannot see. We have cochlear implants
for people who can’t hear. We have knee replacements for people who can’t walk.
Medicines that heal sickness and disease. Now, what
Jesus did was greater and more complete than anything we can do . . . but since
we can do so much, maybe the wonder isn’t there for us anymore.
But these miracles of Jesus were truly
life-changing. When you can’t see, when you can’t hear, when you can’t go where
everyone else goes, when you’re sick, what also happens is that you get
separated from others. You can’t join the group that has gathered to marvel at
the eclipse. You’re not part of the group that takes delight in the sound of a
giggling child. You miss weddings, graduations, and other important events.
There’s an isolation that comes with these disabilities, try as we might to
overcome it. Try as we might to be inclusive. Try as we might to make
accommodation. Or to pretend that these disabilities don’t exist by saying that
people are not disabled, they are just differently abled, and
other such word-smithing.
Which on one level is
fine.
If people don’t want to be called disabled, we can certainly use different
words. If that creates a stigma that could be avoided, we should. But on
another level, a deeper level, this matters a great deal. Because if we
normalize these things that sin has caused . . . and certainly, sin has caused
sickness and disease and eyes and ears and legs to not work as they were
created to work . . . If we normalize these things that sin has caused, then we
are, in fact, normalizing sin. And where we see this is in how things that were
almost universally considered sinful in the past, are
so no longer. Everything is normal. Everyone is okay. But it is simply not so.
So what Jesus is doing is not just healing
people, but overcoming sin and its disastrous effects. Healing people is great,
just as medicine and technology today are great. But all those people Jesus
healed, including the deaf man in the reading today, do you know what happened
to them? The deaf man eventually lost his hearing again, and the blind man
later lost his sight again, and the lame man could one day no longer get up and
walk - not because Jesus didn’t really heal them, He did! But sooner or
later, they died. The deafness, the blindness, the lameness, and the sickness
and disease were the symptoms, the signs, of the greater problem: the
sin and death that caught up to them, just as it will one day (unless Jesus
comes again first!) catch up to all of us.
And sin and death we cannot overcome. The death that separates us from our loved ones, and the sin that
divides us from others. The separation of death is pretty obvious. But
let’s think about sin a little more . . . Consider how sin has made us deaf to
the cries of the hurting, blind to the needs of the downtrodden, or if we hear
and see these things, then paralyzed when it comes to actually going and
helping others. Sin truly has disabled us. And this sin that has disabled us
and the death which separates and divides us from each other also has disabled
us spiritually, and separated and divided us from God. And if left untreated,
will do so for eternity.
That’s why stories like we heard today are so
important. Not just because of the marvel of Jesus healing a deaf man, but
because it is a sign of the more marvelous work He has come to do - to
not just treat the symptoms or outward manifestations of the disease, but to
overcome the disease itself. To not just say Ephphatha
to closed ears, but to say Be
opened! to sealed graves.
So to do that, God came. In
person. In a person. In Jesus. And He saw the separation, He saw the devastation,
He saw all that sin had done, and He had compassion. Not that He didn’t know or
see before, but He overcame the separation and division by being born a man
- God and man in one person. And He took the disease,
He took our sin and death, to conquer it. He allowed sin and death to swallow
Him up on the cross, that He could swallow them up in
His resurrection. And He did. And He promised that all baptized into Him would
be baptized into that death and resurrection and be raised in those waters to a
new life.
And that new life in two
ways.
(1.) Ultimately and finally when Jesus comes again and says “Be opened!”
to all of our graves, so that our bodies rise to a new and glorified life that
will never end. (2.) But before that day, that we live a new life these days.
For in baptism, Jesus opens our ears to hear His Word and to hear
the cries of others. He opens our eyes all that He has done for us and
to see the needs of others. And He opens our hearts to confess our sins and
selfishness and to have compassion for others. But not only that,
He also gives us legs that we not only hear and see and feel, but do.
To put our faith into action.
Which brings out the irony
in the story we heard today. For after the deaf man was
healed, Jesus commanded him to tell no one. But he was so filled with
joy that he couldn’t help himself - he had to tell everyone! But we who have
been raised and healed and given new life, and to whom Jesus has said speak and
do and care and go . . . don’t.
Or not as we should, or
as much as we should. And not just with strangers, or the panhandler in the middle
of the street, but how often with our own families? With
those closest to us? Turning away from spouses,
children, brothers and sisters, our fellow Christians. How often do we
fail to repent, fail to forgive, fail to help, and instead selfishly harbor
anger, bitterness, and grudges?
Today we heard from the apostle James, who said
that we show our faith by our works. Well . . . what are your works showing about your faith? Is your life
like the life of the deaf man who was healed, overflowing with joy in your Saviour and the life and forgiveness He has given you? And if not, why not? What sin is still disabling you? What
sin is still separating you from others? What death is gnawing away at your
life?
These are the very things Jesus has come to set
you free from! First in baptism, but after that, too.
To open your ears and hear Him say I forgive you all your sins! and to open your mouths to receive His Body and Blood that
won that forgiveness for you and strengthen you to forgive others. And through
these open your heart and fill it with His life and love. And this is for you
because it is for all. Jesus died and rose for all people - no partiality.
He loves you no less than anyone else, even if in this world you feel
loved less than everyone else.
And when your life on this earth is ended and the
next life begins, think about how you will be like that deaf man. What - and
who - will you hear and see for the first time? For the first time hearing the
song of the angels! Bodies glorified and without sin. It’s hard to imagine, but
a day, a time, an eternity to look forward to.
But maybe we can get a glimpse of all that
already here and now. And not just in church, but in all your life. When you
serve, when you love, when you forgive, you are showing the love and new life
of Christ to others. And showing that they matter. That they are important. That Jesus didn’t
just die for some or love some, but all. Deaf people, blind people, lame people, sinner people, failure
people, stubborn people. People like you. People like me. His ears and
heart are not deaf to us but open to us, and He opens our ears and hearts
toward others. And that’s a big deal. And while the healing of this deaf man
might just seem like one miracle among many, and your life might just seem like
one among many, he wasn’t, and you’re not. Jesus paid special attention to him,
and Jesus pays special attention to you. Jesus healed him and Jesus heals you.
Sin and death no longer rule you or determine your life - Jesus does. The Jesus
who baptized you, the Jesus who said Father, forgive them, the Jesus who
feeds you, and the Jesus who will one day say to your grave, Be opened!
And it will be. And you will come forth to live before Him in righteousness
and purity forever.
That will be a wonder-full day, a day full of
wonder. But so is today. Satan will continue to try to blind you to that, deaf
you to that, but Jesus opens eyes and ears, that we know the wonder of His
love, even in this world filled with sin and death. And if you find yourself a
little short in that department - and who doesn’t, right? . . . A little or a
lot . . . If you are one with an anxious heart, as Isaiah said
today, know this: your God has come. For you.
And that man in this story is now you. You are healed. You are
forgiven. You have hope. You have a future. Difficulties now are preparing you
for a glorious future.
Maybe that’s hard to imagine. Maybe it seems too
far away, and you think you won’t be able to make it. And if you’re looking at
the difficulties, or looking at yourself, or looking at the sins or the sinners
that afflict you or oppress you, then yeah, it’s going to seem that way. So
look somewhere else. Look at the cross. Look to Jesus. Hear His voice. His promises. For the joy and hope and love and life you
need come from Him. And He will give it. Just as He did to a deaf man that day.
A deaf man who received not only hearing, but life. And with life, joy. The joy we want. The joy we need. The joy of Jesus.
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.