Tuesday, October 2, 2012

The Church Season of Trinity - The 10th Sunday after Trinity


The Church Season of Trinity
The Tenth Sunday after Trinity
Our Savior Lutheran Church, Midland, MI (August 12, 2012)
Readings:       
            Psalm 92
            Jeremiah 7:1-11
            Luke 19:41-48

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Grace, mercy and peace be to you from the Father
and the Son and the Holy Spirit, Amen

The text for today is as recorded in the New Testament Lesson from 19th chapter of St. Luke, especially the following verse:

Luke 19:41–44, ESV

And when he drew near and saw the city, he wept over it, saying, “Would that you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For the days will come upon you, when your enemies will set up a barricade around you and surround you and hem you in on every side and tear you down to the ground, you and your children within you. And they will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not know the time of your visitation.”
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit

            In all of the Bible, Jesus the very Son God, weeps just two times.  Jesus weeps at the death of His friend Lazarus, that’s one and Jesus weeps here for Jerusalem the city of God that’s two.  And in the case of Lazarus He was raised from the dead, but Lazarus died again.  And what about the City of Jerusalem?  About 30 years after Jesus weeps, Jerusalem falls too, in a bloody massacre of about one million people.  These people hid from the Romans who had surrounded the city and then camped out while they waited for the people inside the walled city to starve.  As the four year Roman siege played out, those inside the tall walls of Jerusalem ate all the food, then began eating dung, then ultimately ate other humans beings as well. And when the city fell the Romans took no prisoners.

            Lazarus lived and died and Jesus wept for His friend, But the Word of God caused Lazarus to live again, but ultimately Lazarus died.  Jerusalem was the light on the hill, the Holy city but it was dying in its transgressions.  Jesus wept and Jerusalem ultimately dies.  So is our faith futile?  Do we pray in vain? How do we make things better?

            I recently read as essay by a pastor expressing his thoughts on whether his aging parish would live or die.  I found the essay so compelling and so appropriate to this Gospel lesson that I will read part of it today:

            Six years in, I feel utterly powerless and mostly exhausted. You try to rally the troops and lead some charges, not realizing that many of the troops [in the congregation] have been on many charges and are too tired to do it anymore. But a few go with you, maybe against their better judgment. Probably as many more want you to fail. And the mass don’t pay any attention.

            After a while, you can’t do it anymore. The politics within the congregation continues. The numbers decline in church and school. There’s no time to go after the sheep who never join the rest of the flock by the pulpit and the altar. There are no volunteers to help give rides to church or check on why others aren’t attending. They’re overwhelmed with the inroads the enemy makes into their areas of responsibility—their children, grandchildren, sick parents and spouses.

            And yet—the death of a congregation can be averted—can’t it? Should we always chalk it up to God’s hidden will? Or does God sometimes allow the congregation to decline because He wants His congregation to seek Him? He hides Himself, desiring to be sought? He wants the congregation to examine herself, to fast and pray for the lost sheep, to listen attentively again to His Word? “In their distress they shall earnestly seek me…” Where is that verse?

            Even with dying people we counsel them to accept God’s will as coming from the hand of a gracious Father. “He who did not spare His own Son, but gave Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?” Yet we also do not stop praying for the recovery of the dying—[always adding] if it is God’s will.

            Often with the elderly it isn’t easy to know what to pray for, particularly if they’ve been suffering a long time. And yet, I’ve seen families who—with good intentions, out of love—keep telling a dying family member, “It’s okay, grandma…it’s okay to go see Jesus now.” But they don’t realize that sometimes it is not okay; it’s not because grandma doesn’t want to go. She’s wanted to go for days or weeks; she is tired of the pain.

            But God is not ready yet. He says, “No”. But we keep telling grandma it is alright to go now, as though grandma decides when she lives and dies. Because death is inevitable, we don’t want our loved ones to have to keep fighting it forever. But burying a church? It’s different. There are young people and old people in a church. There are those who are tired and those in the midst of their years; and there are children and infants from whose lips God has ordained praise, to silence the foe and the avenger.

            One member of the congregation, I’ve heard, seems to want the congregation to die. “Why don’t you just let it die in peace!” he’s supposedly said. This often angers me. But we’re in different places. I’m 35 and this is the first congregation I’ve served. This person is 80 something. This person has had enough and no longer has the energy to keep leading charges. Even though I’m worn out, if I was convinced it would accomplish something and I could get anyone to come with [me], I could probably lead scores more charges. Let’s paint this! Let’s convert that! Let’s show mercy here! Let’s study this!

            But if I get this tired at 35, I can only imagine how I’ll feel at 85. I would not give an 85 year old a guilt trip for not wanting to endure radiation treatments or chemotherapy.

            But a congregation doesn’t exist only for 80 year olds, even if they are the majority. What about the 35 year olds? What about the 20 year old mothers in the projects up the streets, and the 7 year olds with no father who don’t know the gospel of Jesus Christ? What about the children who are the age of my son? They are the ones who are going to have to come of age in a country in which the wealth and power we enjoyed have become ruins. They are going to see the collapse of the great tower of Babel built by our great grandfathers, where the church and the Greeks and the Romans were built together in a great city that housed Bach’s music and Luther’s theology as well as Thomas Jefferson and Robespierre and Nietzsche and Freud. All of that is going to be a ruin by the time my son is older. It is already becoming a ruin. But then the barbarians will be scavenging marble from the aqueducts to build fortifications and vandalizing the statues of Apollo.

            It’s easy to preach the pure Gospel at a funeral and say, “Your mother doesn’t have to lead anymore charges. She rests with Jesus.” But, what about for a congregation that wants to die, that wants to be able to die and say, “It was inevitable. It couldn’t be helped. The neighborhood was bad. The old people were bad. The school was bad. The pastor was bad.”?

            How can a congregation want to die? “Why will you die, O house of Israel?” “Whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” Much of the congregation wants to die. Or doesn’t want to avert it’s death.

            Because death is upon it. Sennacherib is surrounding the city. But no one humbles himself before the Lord. The church does not pray and fast or weep in dust and ashes. The congregation does not rouse itself and seek the Word of God. It wants the good days to come back, and if they won’t come back, then nothing is worth working for or saving. Let our children live in the ruins like owls in the wilderness.

            But I think there’s a problem with my preaching and theology, too. I scold the congregation, as though the dead could raise themselves. Or as though the lame could strengthen their own wobbly knees. There may still be time left, but the congregation is no more able to contribute something to its own healing than the mourners are able to comfort themselves. Mourners try to do that a lot. They invent false comforts. “He’s in a better place,” is the one we hear most frequently. The funeral homes print stupid poems up on cards: “When you stand at my grave, do not weep. I am not there. I do not sleep.”

            The first task is to take those [cards] away without giving the impression that you’re sadistic and you hate them (if possible.) But it can be done, if there is compassion. Because no one really believes the stupid poems.

            Probably this has been one of my gravest sins in the ministry—that I foolishly preached and acted as though the congregation had any resources to effect its own repentance. Or as if I had them [too].

            No, neither the minister nor the congregation has the resources to prevent its death. Repentance and renewal in faith and the continued existence of the congregation are in God’s power alone. All of the three depend on His will alone.

            Perhaps I should pray, “Lord, grant the congregation repentance and spiritual renewal. And grant me to preach Your Word rightly, so that I don’t act as if our salvation is in our own hands. And if it pleases You, let the congregation continue to proclaim Your Word and Your mercy to the next generation.

            Jesus wept because men thought they could save themselves, but Jesus knew better.  He knew the cup He would have to drink to save us from ourselves.  The true church that is the congregation of believers will never die, because Christ is always Lord of the Church.  Jesus wept so that you will no longer shed any tears.  Christ is not hidden from your eyes, He is here with you in Word and Sacrament, He is here with you in body and blood. He is here to forgive you to forgive you for your sins, to comfort you in the face of the enemies of this world.  You will not get out of this life without dying, but for you who believe and are baptized this death has already occurred.  There is no reason to weep.  Rejoice Christ makes eternal peace for you.  Amen.

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