On December 5th, the Service consisted of the Confessional Service (pg 47-49 in The Lutheran Hymnal), which is a preparatory service to receive the Lord’s Supper. Following the Lord’s Supper and the Benediction, we had our annual hanging of the Greens Ceremony. The Confessional Service does not have a sermon but a confessional address. Immediately following is the confessional address. (A “real” sermon was preached for the Monday, December 6th Service. The sermon for that service follows the confessional address.)
Dec 5th (based on Romans 15:4-13)
In our Epistle reading, the Apostle Paul asks us to do the impossible! We hear that we’re supposed to all think the same thing, be like minded, praise the Lord with one mouth, and receive one another as Christ has received us! Thanks, Paul! Thanks for another impossible mandate for us to do!
In ourselves, the unity Paul tells us to have is impossible. But Paul encourages us–not to love one another in ourselves–but in Christ. And that’s the secret. That’s the mystery of how it’s done. It’s all done in Christ.
And Paul goes on to say even more. Everything in the Scriptures is written to give us hope and comfort. The Bible isn’t a “handbook” for life or a “guide” for daily living. That’s only true if you’re a Pharisee. The Bible, the Word of God, is the manger that brings you Christ. The Scriptures are about Christ, and Jesus even says as much in John, chapter 5. That’s why they are written for our hope and comfort.
The Word, in all its forms, delivers Jesus to us. For only Jesus has fulfilled God’s promises to save us from our sins. The Word in the Scriptures, the preached Word, even the Word in the Sacrament, give to us the Word Himself–Jesus Christ–to rescue us from our sins. That’s why we have hope and comfort.
So be in the Word! The Holy Spirit breathed Jesus into you in the waters of Baptism. He is preached and put into your ears in Holy Absolution. He comes to you in His Supper. It is in these ways, by getting ‘Jesused’ more and more, we become more “like minded” and can glorify God with “one mouth.”
Paul writes that we should “receive one another just as Christ received us.” How does Christ receive us? He receives us with all our sins to wipe them all away. That’s how we are to receive one another. God has forgiven you in Jesus Christ, so don’t withhold His forgiveness from others! Forgive others and do good to them despite what they actually deserve! That’s what Jesus does with you.
And when you find yourself falling short of being a bright light of Christ to others, flee to the one place where the Word, Jesus Christ, is the center of everything. Here, Jesus is the center of it all. Here, the Word Himself is preached and the Sacraments are given out. Here, you get ‘Jesused.’
So come even now to receive the Word Himself in His body and blood. Come to receive, not only eternal salvation, but also the hope and comfort that Christ gives you. Come now to where the Word, Jesus, is the center of it all. Receive Him now in His Supper. Amen.
Dec 6th (based on Luke 21:25-36)
Intro
Rejoice, O royal priesthood! Lift your heads, O saints of God! Look and see that your Salvation is coming. Be no longer downcast and disheartened. Today–despite what your eyes of experience tell you–our Lord Jesus Christ tells us to see a hidden reality with our eyes of faith.
Jesus says that it is springtime. How can this be? The fig tree is in bloom. And so summer will soon be here. Yes, God is still God. He is still in control.
Jesus says this, despite the mountains of worldly evidence to the contrary. The world says it is but a bleak December. The days are short and are getting shorter. The nights are long and cold and getting colder. The trees are stripped bare. The last golden hues of autumn have fallen to the ground and blown away with the biting, winter winds.
Main Body
And who has not felt this bleakness in his own life–this spiritual depression of December? Who has not looked out on a gray December day and thought, “That’s me. That’s how I feel! My heart has more darkness than light, more cold than warmth.” Who here has never been abandoned and betrayed? (Probably, everyone but Kaeden, but even for Kaeden, as young as he is, it will come.) Who has not felt disgust at himself for his own betrayals? Who has never increased the bleakness in another’s life?
Amid the muted gray of winter, which continues getting grayer, He, the Lord of Life, the Lord of Light comes. Jesus steps into your bleak darkness and confronts death for you in full force. He calls to you, “Turn from the darkness and come to Me for light. For your life is more than the bleakness you feel. Listen now and I will tell you why!”
And from there He goes to face the darkness of the cross, the darkness of death, and the darkness of a sealed tomb. All the darkness and bleakness of the world, the world’s sin, disease, pain, death, and betrayal fall heavily on Jesus. He takes them all. He takes them into Himself. He lets them have their way with Him. He offers Himself as the sacrifice and goes down in darkness to death.
And at that moment, when the Lord of Life died, Jesus’ disciples thought their life was over as well. They plunged into the darkness even further. They thought, “If death and betrayal could have their way with Jesus, then what hope do we have?” But they had forgotten His promise. They had forgotten that He had to die for the sins of the world, that He had to take the world’s darkness into Himself to destroy it.
And then on Easter day, Jesus arose and put the bleakness of winter behind Him. In His wake, He brought the springtime of life. So do not believe your eyes, beloved. Do not believe the calendar, or the world, or your own emotions. They lie and deceive you. It is not winter. In your soul, it can never be winter again.
The Lord is arisen! Life and light are now yours! Everything is now new: including you. For you were buried in the flowing, life-giving waters of Baptism. You are now a child of Christ’s tomb. In Baptism, you were drowned with Jesus in His death. But even more, you were also pulled up to everlasting life in His resurrection.
As Jesus says, the fig tree is now in bloom. The springtime of the new creation draws near. So hold on; the summer of eternal life is near. The Lord will soon return to end the bleakness and darkness of this world–once and for all!
You have much reason to rejoice, even amid your many sorrows. For the signs of sadness we constantly see, don’t simply point to the end of the world. If they did, who could ever rise beyond the gloom of death? No, the signs pointing to the end of the world point to even a greater reality: God’s eternal reign and your eternity in His under His kingship!
So don’t think the bleakness of this world only points to the end of the world. Don’t believe the signs of the world’s end are simply happening by chance. When you hear creation groan and creak, when dread fills your heart because you feel within you what is happening around you–remember that this is the Lord’s doing. He is allowing these events to happen.
God does this–not to frighten you–but to keep you focused on your goal: eternal life with Him, you true home with Him under His benevolent rule. The Lord lets events happen to entice you to long for His kingdom. The Lord loves you and will not abandon you to eternal despair. And He has sealed this promise in His own blood.
So every time you come to the Lord’s House, to His Divine Service, lift your head to see eternity. With joy, look forward to your Lord’s return, for this is where God comes to you on earth. Oh, what you experience here in the Divine Service is but a pale shadow. It’s a wisping foretaste of what awaits us in eternity, when we will have true communion without the darkness of sin clouding our way.
And so we long for our Lord’s final coming. That’s why we pray with the whole Church that this Advent might be our last. Pray that Jesus’ rule and reign finally come in all its fullness. Pray that this world of darkness is sent away, and the new Light appear. Pray with the saints of all time, “Maranatha, our Lord come!”
But until then, God does not leave us abandoned and forlorn. For here in the Divine Service we receive God unlike anywhere else. We hear His words of forgiveness; we taste His grace in His body and blood. Here, we receive the mysteries of the Gospel–and so here, we receive the Spirit of God.
By these holy mysteries of Word and Sacrament, the Spirit strengthens us to strive and struggle, to persevere and endure the darkness of our winter. The Spirit gives us patience and trust, all so we can press on to receive the fullness of the Lord’s kingdom.
For we achieve our goal, not by our own strength and might, but in the Holy Spirit. He is in the Church, giving Himself to us. That’s how we receive what we have been created to have, to live under Christ’s kingly rule.
Conclusion
That’s why it is always springtime, even in the winter of our sins. You have reason to rejoice, and this day, you have reason to hope for even more. For the Lord Jesus has done this. And He gives it all to you as He gives you Himself. So come now to receive your Lord as He comes to you in His body and blood. Amen.