12 October 2025
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Pentecost 18 Vienna, VA
“Rejoice, O Pilgrim Throng!”
Text: Ruth
1:1-19a; Luke 17:11-19; 2 Timothy 2:1-13
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
Lord God, You have called Your servants to ventures
of which we cannot see the ending, by paths as yet untrodden, through perils
unknown. Give us faith to go out with good courage, not knowing where we go but
only that Your hand is leading us and Your love supporting us; through Jesus
Christ, our Lord.
(Collect for
Guidance in Our Calling, LSB p. 311)
That’s one of my favorite prayers. I pray it, in
fact, every year at our Annual Meeting, as we gather to consider matters for
our congregation - where we’ve been and where we’re going. For the truth is,
while we know where we’ve been, we don’t always know why, and where we’re
going, we don’t know.
When our congregation was formed, who knew the
challenges we would face, the people who would come, even if we would long
survive. A rather large tree falling on our building! And I remember back in
2019, I was preparing for our Annual Meeting and planned a whole effort based
on the number 2020 - seeing with 20/20 vision for the year 2020. Which I
thought was clever. And to which the Lord said, Nope! And sent us a
little virus instead which just blew all my plans out of the water!
Ventures of which we cannot see the ending, by
paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown. Indeed.
And true for your lives as well. Many of you trying
to care for aging and increasingly forgetful loved ones. Dealing with disease,
job uncertainty, family strife, and more. And there are good things that come
into our lives as well that send us off in different directions than the path
we thought our lives would take. Someone once said that we make plans and God
laughs. Better, maybe, to say that we make plans and God makes better
plans . . . even if we don’t think they’re better in the moment.
So give us faith to go out with good courage,
not knowing where we go but only that Your hand is leading us and Your love
supporting us. And again, indeed.
And this prayer was embodied in the folks we met in
the Scriptures we heard today: (1.) Naomi and her family, (2.) ten lepers who
lived on the border of Samaria and Galilee, and (3.) the apostle Paul, who
wrote his words to Timothy that we heard today while bound with chains as
a criminal.
First there was Naomi and her family, forced
because of a famine to leave their home in Bethlehem to go live in the land of
Moab for a time. Which was a bigger deal than we might at first think, because
this was the land God gave you and your people, and for them specifically to
Judah. It took so long to get there. The land was God’s special, promised gift,
a sign of them being God’s people . . . and now they had to leave it. Or die.
And it was ironic because they were from Bethlehem, a name which means “house
of bread” - but there was no bread in their house. So they uproot and go to the
land of Moab - who knows for how long or what will happen there. And while the
Moabites were distant cousins of Israel, they were kind of the black sheep of
the family, for they came from Lot, Abraham’s nephew, after an incestuous
affair with his daughters.
Ventures of which we cannot see the ending, by
paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown.
Oh, there were some good times there - Naomi’s two
sons got married, but not to Israelite women. So that was a worry. Would they
depart the faith for their wive’s gods, Moab’s gods?
And there was sorrow, too. No children for either of her daughters after ten
years of marriage, and then death - three deaths, three widows. When the famine
finally breaks in Israel, Naomi finds out that even though she feared her sons
might be led astray, the opposite has happened - Ruth has become a believer in
Israel’s God. Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.
Our reading for today ended there, but you might
know the rest of the story . . . that the hand of God led Ruth to a husband in
Israel, and Ruth became the ancestor of a rather important man in Israel, named
David. Which also makes her an ancestor of the son promised to David, another
rather important man, named Jesus.
Not knowing where we go but only that Your hand
is leading us and Your love supporting us.
That Jesus then shows up one day on the border of
Samaria and Galilee - a kind of “no man’s land” where ten lepers were
living. Well, if you can call it living. Really, waiting to die is more like
it. Helpless, homeless, and hopeless - that was their famine, their lot in
life. This was a venture, a path, a peril none of them had counted on or seen
coming! Yet here they were.
Jesus, Master, have mercy on us! Maybe they were hoping
just for a little bread to fill their empty stomachs. But Jesus gives them far
more - healing! And while I’m sure all ten were thankful - I mean, who wouldn’t
be thankful for being cleansed from leprosy and rescued from this awful life
they were forced to live! While all ten were cleansed, one gets an
additional gift. Because he was there that day in that place and at that
time, he got to see God in the flesh. The one who had come not just to save
lepers from their disease, but all people from their sins. As a leper couldn’t
go to the Temple, so the Temple had come to him! So he falls at Jesus’ feet
- at the feet of the one whose hand had led him there to that place, at
that time, in that way, and whose love supported him, cleansed him, and
saved him. Not the way he thought, not the way he expected, not according to
his plans. A gift not from a God who laughed at him, but who loved him.
A God who also loved the apostle Paul,
though He, perhaps, had a strange way of showing it. Persecutor turned
missionary turned prisoner. It didn’t seem to make sense. I mean, why
would God allow - or cause! - such a great missionary to be locked up? Which is
his irony - the one who imprisoned others now imprisoned himself, bound
with chains as a criminal. This was surely a venture, a path, a peril
he didn’t see coming! But because of his chains, Roman soldiers were hearing
the Gospel and believing. Even people in Caesar’s own household (Philippians 4:22).
And the same could be said about the cross. And Jesus wasn’t just bound
with chains as a criminal, He was executed as a criminal. Those feet
that dared to walk into Samaria, those hands that touched and healed and
comforted, that tongue that spoke truth and forgiveness and life . . .
the one who is love killed in hate, the author and giver of life killed by
those He gave life to, the one who came to save killed by those who thought
they were saving themselves.
That’s what happens when we take matters into our
own hands. When God makes plans and we laugh at them, at Him,
and do what we want. We think we know better, that our ways, our
wants, our truth is better. Better than famine, better than leprosy, better
than prison. Truth is, we don’t like ventures of which we cannot see the
ending, by paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown. I want to know!
And even more, I want to be in control. And because of that, maybe we
get off track. Maybe we need some course correction. And find ourselves in
Moab, or on the border between Samaria and Galilee, or some other place we hadn’t
expected. Or maybe God put us there because someone else needs us there, and we
get to be part of His plan.
So even though we want to know, and sometimes think
we know, better to pray Give us faith . . . and then to go out with good courage, not
knowing where we go but only that Your hand is leading us and Your love
supporting us. Because those hands and that love that went to the cross for
you then rose from the dead for you, and He is continuing His work for you. To
feed you when famines come. To lead you when you must move. To heal you of your
sins. To give you hope when you are locked in hopelessness and despair. To give
you a home here in His Church. To make you a member of His family - not an ancestor
of your Saviour like Ruth, but a descendant of
Him by the new birth of Holy Baptism. Not that your life will be peaches and
cream all the time - of course not! The sin in this world and the sin in us see
to that.
So like those ten lepers, we cry out Lord, have
mercy! And now just as then, He does. We come to this House
of Bread, and our Lord feeds us with the bread that is His Body and the wine
that is His Blood. We come with our weakness and receive His strength. We come
with our sins and He says I forgive you all your sins. We come beat up
and beat down and He says, Me too. That’s why I led you here to this
place, at this time. To be with you. That you be not helpless, homeless,
or hopeless, but find you help, home, and hope in Me.
So we prayed in the Collect of the Day for today: Almighty
God, You show mercy to Your people in all their troubles. That’s what we
heard in the Scriptures today, and in all the Scriptures, of a merciful
God who shows mercy to a world in a world of trouble. That’s our confession of
the truth and our faith. But then we went on to ask: Grant us always to recognize
Your goodness, give thanks for Your compassion, and praise
Your holy name. For we don’t always. We don’t always see the good God is
working, but help me see it, Lord. We don’t always give thanks for what God is
doing in my life, but help me do so, Lord. And we don’t always praise His holy
name for what He is doing, but I need to.
For then maybe I’ll take matters in my own hands a
little less, as I take His Word into my ears a little more, and His
forgiveness into my heart a little more, and His Body and Blood into my
mouth a little more. That what goes into me be also what comes out of
me. His life, His love, His Word, His forgiveness. That on this road of
life, which leads from Judah to Moab to Samaria and Galilee to a Roman prison
cell to Vienna and to who knows where next . . . not knowing where we go,
but knowing that the gracious and merciful hand of the Lord is leading us
and His love supporting us, as we live in Jesus and He in us. As He leads
us - by grace through faith - through this valley of sorrow to Himself
in heaven (Small Catechism, Seventh Petition). And not alone, but with Ruth
and David, Paul and Timothy, and a nameless leper. A rejoicing pilgrim throng (LSB #813), until we are with Him -
our help and hope - forever, home at last.
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.