15 September 2024 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Pentecost 17
Vienna, VA
“From Fear to Faith, from
Death to Life”
Text:
Mark 9:14-29
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
They were failures. They couldn’t do it. A father
in distress brings his demon-possessed son to them, and they failed. They
couldn’t cast it out.
They had done so before. Not too long before
this, Jesus had sent the disciples out two-by-two, and
specifically with authority over unclean spirits (Mark 6:7). And they went out and
they cast out many demons. Heady days, those. Days that must have filled the disciples with confidence.
But how quickly things
change.
Now, they failed. They were failures. Had this authority, this
power, left them? What were they doing wrong? They must have been uncertain,
confused, and maybe a little scared. Scared of the demon.
Scared of the crowd that was turning ugly. Especially
since Jesus was not with them. Where was Jesus when you need Him?
You’ve know how that is. You’ve felt that way,
too. There are times in your life when things are going well and you’re a
success and filled with confidence and sure that Jesus is with you. And then
there are times like this . . . when things have turned, they’re not
going so well anymore, and you’re a failure - or feel like a failure. And fears
creep in. And you wonder, what happened? What did I do wrong? And is Jesus not
with me anymore? Where is Jesus when I need Him!?
Where was Jesus anyway, when this
was going on? Well, He was with Peter, James, and John. He had taken just those
three and gone away, up on a mountain, and showed them His glory when He was
transfigured before them - remember that story? Jesus shone like the sun and
was speaking with Moses and Elijah. It’s quite a contrast, isn't it? A glorious
scene going on up there, and an ugly scene going on
down here . . . with demons and fighting and confusion.
That’s the scene Jesus steps into. Regular Jesus, not glory Jesus. And after a few questions, He
brings order out of chaos. Just as in the beginning, when God spoke and
brought order out of the chaos in creation, so here the Word of God made flesh
speaks, and brings order out of chaos. There is peace, not confusion. There is
life, not death. A happy ending, we might say. But it wasn’t easy . . .
And not just for this poor boy who was being
tormented by a demon, but for his father. It’s hard when suffering comes upon
you; it’s even harder to watch someone you love suffer. And
especially your child. You’re the parent, the protector, the provider,
and you feel so helpless. And maybe guilty, or at least distressed, when you
can’t do anything about it. So this father turns to Jesus. He’s desperate.
Please, if you can do anything, have compassion on us and help us.
Notice: us. Not just my son. Us. This is
tearing him up, too.
If you can . . . Jesus responds to that. It’s a mild
rebuke, really. For the father doesn’t really know who Jesus is, the almighty,
creator God in human flesh. Somebody powerful? Yes.
A miracle worker? Surely.
A prophet? Probably.
That’s why he brought his son to the disciples in the first place. So don’t be
too hard on him. Jesus wasn’t. This father knows and he doesn’t know. He’s
hopeful, but not sure. He really doesn’t know what’s going on! All he knows is
that this is his son! And his son needs help! Rescue! Lord, I believe;
help my unbelief! Don’t just save my son; save me, too.
And Jesus does. Both the boy and his father are
set free and given life again. The boy set free from his demon, and the father
set free from his confusion and fear.
And then Jesus deals with His disciples. They,
too, need help. The fighting and chaos were done, but their fear and failure
remained. Why couldn’t we cast it out? And Jesus responds: This
kind cannot be driven out by anything but prayer. Which I don’t think
means this was some kind of super demon! But more like Jesus asking them: Why
didn’t you pray? Why didn’t you ask for help? And then right after this, as
Jesus moves on with all twelve of His disciples, Jesus speaks about the
cross. That the Son of Man is going to be delivered into the hands of
men, and they will kill him. And when he is killed, after three days he will
rise. But, Mark tell us, they did not
understand the saying, and were afraid to ask him. They still don’t ask.
They still have fear. They still are confused. They are, in a way, just like
that father. They could each say, too: Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!
Which really is a perfect summary of our life as
Christians, isn't it? We are saint and sinner, believer and
unbeliever, confident and fearful, strong and weak, certain and
doubting, all at the same time! At least I see that in me! I suspect you, too. And how often we feel that we’ve failed. That
we are failures. As fathers and mothers, as children,
as disciples and Christians. We’ve sinned. We’ve fallen short. We’ve
made a mess of things, of life. And we try to do better. Maybe like the
disciples, you did in the past. But now . . . And maybe you’ve
wondered a time or two, Jesus, where are you? Where are you when I need you?
And maybe you, too, have cried out: Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!
I can’t do this. I need help.
So where is Jesus? For you, when you need
Him? Well, He’s not in His glory someplace far away, like on that mountaintop.
He came down to us, just as He came down to that father. He came down to us in
our chaos and fears and sins. And He went where He told us He would go - not
to Nazareth or Galilee, but to the cross and the tomb. For there is where He would deal with our demons. There is
where He would deal with our sin and death. And when He rose from death and the
grave, that’s where He deals with our unbelief, too. For the one who
rises from the dead has defeated not just death, but our sins and our demons,
too. Jesus’ empty tomb means that the cross is not defeat, but the means to His
victory.
A victory that is given
to you in Baptism.
That’s why in Baptism, just as Jesus rebuked the demon in that son, so, too,
here it is said: Depart unclean spirit, and make way for the Holy Spirit.
And it is so. Another child, or even adult, is set free, by the water and the
Word the God which brings order out of chaos, which brings freedom from
bondage, which makes a saint out of a sinner, and raises to life from death. I
think it’s interesting that with the son in our story, the father said that the
demon often cast him into fire and into water, to destroy him.
But what the devil uses for destruction, God uses to save. Both
Jesus’ death on a cross, and our being cast into fire and water -
the fire of the Spirit and the water of Baptism. And so this story is
our story, too. The son’s deliverance, our deliverance.
But our’s, even greater. Not
just for life here, for a while; but for life everlasting.
But think a little more about this thought for a
moment . . . what the devil uses for destruction, God uses to save . . . Could
that also be true of other things in your life? Other
troubles and trials, other sufferings and challenges? The devil would
like to use these things to destroy you, drive you away from
Jesus, convince you that: See? He isn’t here for
you! He isn’t here for you when you need Him! And the devil can be very
persuasive. And we fear and we fight and we get all jumbled up inside and out.
But if that, if those very things, cause us to cry
out: Lord, I believe; help my unbelief! And they make us pray,
and we go back to the Word, and I remember that no matter what the devil says,
I am a baptized child of God - not because I deserve it, but because Jesus did
it! - and I come to the altar to receive the Body and Blood of Jesus and the
forgiveness and strength and saving I need . . . then what the devil uses for
destruction, God has used to save us. And if you think the disciples were
frustrated that day, and the father was frustrated that day, think how
frustrating this is for the devil! When your heavenly
Father turns the devil’s works against him.
And then your heavenly Father may lay crosses on
you, too. Not to hurt or harm you, but to save you. That you
not rely on yourself, but turn to Him. And find your hope and confidence
and strength not in yourself, but in the empty tomb. Now it is true what the
psalmist say: Weeping may [remain] for the night, but joy comes with the
morning (Psalm
30:5). And
if you are in the night of weeping right now, that’s not an easy place to be! Just as it wasn’t for the father in our story. But Jesus is
coming. And not just on the Last Day, but even now, here, for you. To forgive
you, comfort you, provide for you, and save you.
So as we sang in the Introit earlier, Be strong, and let your heart take courage,
all you who wait for the Lord! But the waiting can be the hardest part.
So the Lord has given us a Church to help us, and fellow Christians to help us.
Don’t try to do it on your own. Pray for your fellow Christians, and ask them
to pray for you. When you look at this Font, remember here your Saviour came to you and bound Himself
to you and said: You are mine! Hear the great stories of all that He has
done, and His death and resurrection for you, His victory for you, and His
promises for you. And when you come to this Altar, as saint and sinner,
believer and unbeliever, confident and fearful, strong and
weak, certain and doubting, all at the same time - pray those words of
the father in our story: Lord, I believe; help my unbelief! And
then hear Jesus speak to you: take eat, this is My Body; take and drink, this is My Blood. Here is my strength,
here is my forgiveness, for you. You are free. Go in peace.
And while, yes, weeping may [remain] for the
night, the joy of the morning of the resurrection is coming. And that
morning has already begun to dawn. Things may look dark now, but it’s always
darkest before the dawn, isn't that what they say? I don’t know if that’s true
in general, but it is for us as Christians. We live in a very dark world, but
the Son rose, and is rising upon us, until the day the
darkness is no more, and there is only light. And though the night be long and
the darkness deep,
we
Praise
the One Who Breaks the Darkness!
[We] praise the Word
Incarnate,
Christ, who suffered
in our place.
For Jesus died and
rose victorious
That
we may know God by grace.
[So we] sing for joy
and gladness,
Seeing what our God
has done;
[We] praise the true
Redeemer,
. . . the
One who makes us one
(LSB #849
vs, 1, 3).
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.