
First, Last, and In Between
Forgiveness
Nothing But Love
A Different Christ

[Sorry, voice recorder ran out of batteries, so no audio]
In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
“Wherever God’s Word is preached, accepted, or believed, and bears fruit, there the holy and precious cross will also not be far behind.” So says Luther. But Luther didn’t make that up. He didn’t get it from himself. He got it from the Scriptures. He got it from reading the Old Testament and seeing how the prophets were treated. They preached the Word of God that they had been given, and they were not believed; they were hated, mocked, imprisoned, beaten, and sometimes killed. He got it from reading the Gospels and seeing how Jesus, the Word of God in flesh, was treated. He saw how the Apostles fared when they preached Christ, how they were beaten, imprisoned, and martyred. And this is exactly the order of things here in Matthew 16. Jesus is preached and believed; Peter and the Apostles confess that He is the Christ, the Son of the Living God. And then Jesus says to those same disciples, Don’t tell anyone that I am the Christ. And it becomes clear rather quickly why He says that to them. He begins to show them what it means that He is the Christ, and what kind of Christ He will be. He begins to show them that it is necessary that He go up to Jerusalem, suffer many things from the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, be killed, and on the third day be raised. And Peter, who has just confessed that Jesus is the Christ, says, “No! You can’t be that kind of Christ. You can’t go up to Jerusalem, the place of God’s mercy, suffer, and be killed. God be merciful to you! That will never happen to you!” No doubt Peter has the best of intentions. He wants to save Jesus’ life and maybe his own, as well. But if these good intentions are carried out; if Jesus follows Peter, instead of Peter following Jesus; then those good intentions would pave the way to hell not only for Peter but for you and me and everyone else. Peter’s good intentions are the intentions of hell and Jesus says so. He turns His back on Peter and says, “Get behind Me, satan! You are a stumbling block to Me. You are not thinking the things of God, but the things of men.” Jesus has told them what kind of Christ He must be, and Peter does not want Him to be that kind of Christ. He tries to get Jesus to be a Christ who does not suffer, who does not die. Just like the devil in chapter four. In those three temptations, the devil is trying to get Jesus to be the Son of God in a different way. He tempts Jesus to turn stones to bread, instead of trusting that His Father will provide. He tempts Jesus to throw Himself down from the Temple, and test God to see if He would do what He said He would do. He tempts Jesus to get the kingdoms of the world not through death and resurrection, but through worshiping the devil. And Jesus says something very similar to what He says to Peter: “Go, Satan! [Not: go behind Me, as He says to Peter.] You will worship Yahweh your God, and Him only you will serve.” Jesus will not be any other Son, any other Christ, than the one whom the Father has sent. And that Christ must go to Jerusalem, suffer, die, and rise again.
Joy Complete
On Earth As It Is In Heaven
Map and Story
[In advance, I apologize for the audio. I was recording far away from where I was standing. In explanation of why this is a slightly different sort of sermon, it was “VBS Sunday,” and I expected a parents/children from VBS and perhaps other visitors to be present.]
The Answer
Bishop and Christian*, August 2014
August often seems to be a time when things are about to happen: children are about to go back to school, vacations are about to be over, activities are about to start up again, fall harvest is about to begin. Nothing wrong with having a cycle to the year. We all associate particular times in the year with particular things.
But one thing the Church year teaches us is to associate times in the year with the life of Christ. Even in this hot, dry time of the year, the color on the altar and on the pastor is green. The life of Christ that flows to us in Word and Supper never dries up, never gets low, never needs to be restricted. Often, we unintentionally associate the summer time with vacation from every routine, including the Lord’s Day-to-Lord’s Day routine that the Resurrection of Jesus and the Church year instill in us. An unintentional fruit of that unintentional association is that regularly hearing and receiving the Lord’s gifts (whether here at Faith or together with another faithful congregation) can become a casualty of the summer’s irregular routine. It is exactly the routine of Sunday to Sunday that should remain intact no matter what. If we or our children learn to associate going to church with going to school, they will also (perhaps subconsciously) expect to outgrow church like they will outgrow formal schooling. Is this why confirmation instruction is associated, despite our best efforts, with graduation?
If your children are still young, this is encouragement to continue providing for your children’s spiritual formation even during the summer. If your children are grown, you cannot redo things either way. But whether your children are young or have children of their own, the point of these words is this: Christ remains who He is the whole year round. The green of the paraments and vestments and the promises we hear each week are your oasis in the desert of this world: in the dry heat of summer and in the dead cold of winter; in the growth of spring and in the abundance of autumn. He never leaves us or forsakes us, and His promises remain what they are, until things are no longer about to happen, but are all fulfilled. That’s the refreshment that Christ gives, even better than a cold drink of water on a 100-degree day!
Pr. Winterstein
*St. Augustine (354-430 AD), Bishop of Hippo in North Africa, said, “For you I am a bishop [overseer]; with you I am a Christian.”


