Weekly Devotional
October 29, 2012
God’s Peace be with you all.
For our devotion
this week, I offer a Reformation Day Sermon by a good friend
and colleague of mine, The Rev. Dr. Sam Zumwalt, STS.
This was a sermon that he preached several years ago,
and one I like to pull out and read every now and then.
Please take some time and read through it.
FREEDOM FOR OTHERS
“If you stick with this, living
out what I tell you, you are my disciples for sure. Then you
will experience for yourselves the truth, and the truth will
free you.”
It was her 18 th birthday, and she
was more excited than she had been in years. In just a few
months she would be moving out of her parents’ house. In
just a few months she would be in her own place with no one
telling her when to come home and no one telling her to
clean her room and no one asking if her homework were done
and no one asking what’s that she was wearing and no one
asking how old that boy was that wanted to take her out. Ah,
free at last!
At the breakfast table she announced
to her parents that she was an adult now. She said it in a
way that her parents could see that she regarded this
announcement as more important than Abraham Lincoln’s
Emancipation Proclamation – more important than Luther’s
posting of the 95 Theses on the church door at Wittenberg.
She was an adult now -- living in anticipation of that day
when the family home would be in the rearview mirror –
living in the sure and certain confidence that she would
never again be told what to do by anyone.
Now a smarter father would have
smiled to himself, not wanting to spoil the moment. A
smarter father would have said to himself that she will
learn the truth soon enough. A smarter father would have let
the moment go. But this father was younger and more
reactive. Filled with emotion, he just couldn’t bridle his
tongue.
With all the grace of a prosecuting
attorney, he responded to his only daughter: “So…you’re an
adult today? Well, who pays for the roof over your head?
(“You do, Daddy.”) And who pays for most of the clothes you
wear? (“You do, Daddy.”) And who pays for your car, your
gasoline, and your insurance? (“You do, Daddy.”) Good
answers! When you’re an adult, you pay your own way. (“Yes,
Daddy.”) So…Happy Birthday, sweetheart, you’re 18…not an
adult!”
Now he was right, of course. But his
timing was awful! No separation anxiety there! No fears of
his little girl going into the world on her own there! This
was truly a man of reason…just like all parents of teenage
daughters. It’s tough to let them go.
Fast forward five years. The
daughter is married, pregnant with her first child, working
full-time, and working on the degree she put aside for a
while. She phones her father. “Daddy! (“Yes, darling.”)
“Remember when you said that you’re an adult when you pay
your own way?” (“Yes, sweetheart.”) “Well, I’m adult now.”
(“Yes, you are, and I’m very proud of you.”) “Is it OK if I
wish I weren’t an adult anymore?” (“Yes, honey, we all have
days like that.”) “And somebody is always going to be trying
to tell me what to do?” (“Yes, darling, that is indeed the
truth.”)
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There is always someone
trying to tell us what to do. Sometimes it’s your so-called
friend who tries to get you to join in something you know is
wrong. Sometimes it’s the person you’re dating who tries to
pressure you into being someone you’re not ready to be.
Sometimes it’s your coach or your boss trying to get you to
do something you know is illegal. Sometimes it’s your spouse
trying to get you to buy something you can’t afford.
Sometimes it’s your government trying to get you to agree to
something that goes against the clear teaching of the Lord
Jesus. And that’s just the external forces that you’re
dealing with!
The greatest battles rage inside of
us. It’s easy to give in to the sweet siren song of our old
selfish self. It’s easy, in the moment, to forget about the
consequences of choices. We easily pretend that freedom
means never having to think about our choices. Who ever
thinks that blowing off studying to go play will result in
losing the chance at a scholarship? Who ever thinks that
saying yes will result in an even greater loneliness and
lower self-esteem than before? Who ever thinks that you can
die the first time you try some drugs? Who ever thinks that
going to that party will end up with being arrested? Who
ever thinks that giving in to a troubled child is like
handing the child a gun and some bullets? Who ever thinks
that dumb financial choices today will haunt us for years to
come. And so we lie to ourselves. We pretend that our
actions have no consequences.
We are in bondage to sin and cannot
free ourselves. That’s what Jesus is telling his opponents
then and us opponents now. Because we don’t like to be told
what to do, we ignore the good and gracious will of our
Heavenly Father. Because we think that freedom means no
authorities other than our own self-serving consciences, we
stumble foolishly into heartaches – while God weeps over His
stupid broken creatures that flutter and flail in the very
net of sin in which we have become ensnared.
We are in bondage to sin and cannot
free ourselves. In the Garden of Eden the serpent is the
forerunner of all those scholarly experts that keep trying
to convince us that wrong is right. In the Garden of Eden
both the woman and the man are the first of God’s people to
choose an alternate reading of God’s expressed will. With
the tempter’s encouragement and their own self-centered
hermeneutic, they re-imagine God as an all-loving Friend who
could never say “No” to disobedience. They silence their own
troubled consciences with serpentine taunts: “Don’t be such
a silly fundamentalist. God is far too loving, welcoming,
and inclusive to say ‘No’ to disobedience!”
We are in bondage to sin and cannot
free ourselves. Like the first parents, like Israel in the
wilderness, like Jesus’ religious detractors, we tell
ourselves that we are the people of God permanently held in
God’s mercy and thus once saved always saved – nothing can
separate us from the love of God – there is now no
condemnation – we are free – no one’s slaves. These
scriptural slogans sound so irrefutable coming straight from
the mouths of smiling heretics. But these famous expressions
of the Good News have been severed from their moorings. They
are a disembodied gospel – nonsensical theology – because
there is no need for a Savior when we pretend that our only
bondage is to the worn out prejudicial orthodoxies of the
past.
The weeping God threw the first
parents out of the Garden and signed a death warrant drafted
by the disobedience of the same creatures that He previously
called “very good.” Doubtless the tempter was still
whispering in their ears while they were dying that
formaldehyde is the river of life. Doubtless they were still
telling themselves up to the end that death was a beautiful
gift from God.
The weeping God left the disobedient
people of God in the wilderness until every last one of
them, including Moses, was dead. Doubtless the tempter was
still whispering in their ears that the desert was just a
Promised Land waiting to be developed. Doubtless they were
still telling themselves up to the end that God wasn’t
really saying “No.”
The weeping God left the falsely
confident people of God in their magnificent houses of God
to celebrate themselves to death. Doubtless the tempter was
still whispering in their ears that he knew just the place
where they could celebrate and theologize for eternity (as
C.S. Lewis depicted in The Great Divorce).
Doubtless some are still telling themselves that heaven and
hell and even Godself are interesting metaphors for
a greater truth. Doubtless there are marvelous multicultural
denominational strategies to expand the circle to welcome
and include even more into such a dynamic community of (what
else) love.
Yet the weeping God so loved the
world – including you and me – that He became human in Jesus
Christ in order to take His own death verdict upon Himself.
Not content to do nothing about His
tragically self-deceiving creatures, He took His own
judgment – his own No – upon Himself. The only way that we
slaves to sin can be freed from the net of sin, death, and
evil is by the gracious Sacrifice of God’s only begotten
Son. The only way that we slaves to sin can be saved from
ourselves is to be buried with Christ in the waters of Holy
Baptism – not once, not twice, not partially, not
metaphorically, not symbolically – but buried with Christ
today and tomorrow and the next and the next and the next
until we finally draw our last breath in this body of death!
He is the Truth that will free us.
If the Son of God, Jesus Christ,
doesn’t set me free, I can’t be free. If I insist that I am
not a slave to sin, there is no Truth in me and Christ can’t
free me. If I insist that God doesn’t really mean “No” then
I can never hear the “Yes” spoken to those who claim no
righteousness of their own, those who come to God with empty
hands and broken hearts knowing that we deserve nothing but
eternal separation from God. When I die today with Christ,
confessing my sin and crying out for the resurrection of my
broken life, the Welcoming Father will raise me from the
dead as He has longed to do from before the foundation of
the world. Then, by the power of the Holy Spirit, the Son of
God will live in me and I in Him. He will make of me a new
creation.
What does it look like when Christ
lives in us? It doesn’t look like an 18-year-old’s fantasies
about freedom. It doesn’t look like me getting all of my
selfish needs met while doing no earthly good for others.
The new life in Christ doesn’t look like an MGM-style
celebration of ourselves with all the materialism and
pleasure we can grab along the way. The new life in Christ
doesn’t sound like the tempter’s lies that God doesn’t
really mean “No” when you’re disobedient – just so long as
you’ve been baptized. The new life in Christ looks like a
cross – like the freedom to stick with this, living out all
the things He tells us, by giving our lives away in service
to others and in joyous harmony with our Master.
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Parents have such selective
memories. We often forget those amazing moments when Christ
shows that He is living in a teenage daughter or son.
The teenager didn’t have to be
asked. She woke up her little brother each Sunday morning
and saw that he was showered, dressed, and fed. Then she
drove him to Sunday School and to worship. Despite the fact
that he could be such a little jerk, she adored him and gave
away a lot of her life for him because it was the right
thing to do.
Each Wednesday afternoon she picked
up little brother after school and brought him to the
congregation’s Midweek School. There she served as a teacher
to a roomful of 2 nd graders while her peers were driving
around town in new cars spending their Daddy’s money.
Who would have thought that a
teenager would be set free to serve others? The Son who
emptied Himself of power and glory and gave His life away
that we might go and do the same!
The Rev.
Dr. Samuel D. Zumwalt
St. Matthew’s Evangelical Lutheran Church
Wilmington , North Carolina USA
In our prayers
this week: Gere, Jim A., Ann,
Jerry V., Bobby, Mike C., and Charles
God’s Peace,
Pastor Judson
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