Blog Archives

Can You Hear Him Now?

Devotional and Discussion Thought of the Day:photo

17  But it is in that way faith comes, from hearing, and that means hearing the word of Christ. Romans 10:17 (NJB)

24  Some of them were convinced by his words, but others would not believe. 25  So they left, disagreeing among themselves, after Paul had said this one thing: “How well the Holy Spirit spoke through the prophet Isaiah to your ancestors! 26  For he said, ‘Go and say to this people: You will listen and listen, but not understand; you will look and look, but not see, 27  because this people’s minds are dull, and they have stopped up their ears and closed their eyes. Otherwise, their eyes would see, their ears would hear, their minds would understand, and they would turn to me, says God, and I would heal them.’ “ 28  And Paul concluded: “You are to know, then, that God’s message of salvation has been sent to the Gentiles. They will listen!” Acts 28:24-28 (TEV)

123      Meus es tu—you are mine, the Lord has declared to you. To think that God, who is all beauty and all wisdom, all splendour and all goodness, should say to you that you are his…! and then, after all this, you can’t bring yourself to respond to him!

His name is Paul, but most people in the USA who would quickly recognize his voice, have no idea of who he is, or what he does outside of five words.

But say those five words, and they will picture him, his glasses, his short hair cut, the blue jumpsuit and the arm which is glued to a cell phone, which is glued to his ear.

He is always asking, “Can you hear me now?”  Over and over and over again.

But he isn’t the only one.

The quote from Acts above is replicated in the gospels, it is retold in Paul’s writings, and some would say it originates in the Isaiah.  But the first people to hear it, dwelt in a garden, and daily, physically, walked with God.   Can you hear me know Adam?  Eve, are you listening?

They weren’t.  The people of God in the time of Moses didn’t hear Him that well, in fact, they asked not to hear Him, for to hear God is a scary, intimidating thing.  We are afraid of what we will hear. We are afraid of what he says, and like children or teenagers, we become good at hearing what God tells us, is beloved children.  We busy ourselves with things, some of which we believe will earn His favor, but which simply exist to keep us from listening from being still and knowing that He is God.

We hear Luther’s “A Mighty Fortress” and want to make it the anthem of a church at war with evil in the world, rather than the cry of one who is broken, abused, neglected and oppressed, who finds rest and sanctuary in Christ.  ( Remember, Luther writes that based on Psalm 46, not Revelation)

Will we listen when Jesus calls us to His side, to unite with Him in death, to come to Him because we are weary and burdened, so we can find rest and healing?  Will we listen to the Holy Spirit, not described as a Warrior General, as a spiritual Chuck Norris/Bruce Lee/Yoda, but as the Comforter and Consoler. Will we listen to a God who attributes are love and mercy? (cHesed, Ellios, agape)

Will we listen and hear, and let the word of Christ dwell in us,

Or will we claim there was a bad connection, that the email was lost, that we didn’t get the Lord’s message, or understand His desire?

Will we here Him say,

1   “Do not be afraid—I will save you. I have called you by name—you are mine. Isaiah 43:1 (TEV)

Hear Him, dear people of God… and live!


(1)   Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 635-638). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

The Better Way to Be a Success

Devotional Thought of the day:DSCF0066

30  Do we all have the gift of healing? Do we all have the ability to speak in unknown languages? Do we all have the ability to interpret unknown languages? Of course not! 31  So you should earnestly desire the most helpful gifts. But now let me show you a way of life that is best of all. 1  If I could speak all the languages of earth and of angels, but didn’t love others, I would only be a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. 2  If I had the gift of prophecy, and if I understood all of God’s secret plans and possessed all knowledge, and if I had such faith that I could move mountains, but didn’t love others, I would be nothing. 3  If I gave everything I have to the poor and even sacrificed my body, I could boast about it; but if I didn’t love others, I would have gained nothing. 4  Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud 5  or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. 6  It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. 7  Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance. 1 Corinthians 12:30 – 13:7(NLT)

100      Charity succeeds always. Without charity nothing can be done. Love, then, is the secret of your life… Do love! Suffer gladly. Toughen up your soul. Invigorate your will. Make sure that you surrender yourself to God’s will, and efficacy will follow.

We live in a environment that is consumed with the ideas of success.  From being successful in business, to being successful parents, to crafting that special meme that gets a bazillion likes, to even being on a successful weight loss program, we lust after success.  As pastors, there are people that measure our success by how much we agree with their favorite theologian or theological system.  There are others who will measure us by whether our church grows at a certain rate.

This morning I even saw a recognition of success that was scary.  It was given to an abortion clinic by Planed Parenthood that exceeded their prior year to date tally.  I am not sure I would call that success.  For that matter most of what we call a success, I am not sure is all that successful in the long run. Wealth, prosperity, a killer hot body?  Which of those will have importance after we’ve gone?

Even more, we are driven not to fail at what we do.  We will move mountains to avoid it, to not have to confess that our plans didn’t work out the way we thought they would.  People will strive to succeed to avoid failure, and they will strive to cover up their failures, neglecting to make them valuable by learning from them.

This even happens in the church, and its been a problem for a long time.  Look at the letter to the church in Corinth, they are consumed by it!  .  I’ve done things that failed miserably.  In other things, some consider me successful. I am not sure there either.

When I feel successful, is when I hear people singing (\with conviction and heart praising God as they recognize His love for them.  (that’s true even when they sing off-key… sometimes more so!)  When they approach the altar to receive the Body and Blood of Christ Jesus. When a family and friends gather around as someone is baptised, receiving all the promises of God..

Success as a human being is ultimately measured by love.  Can you love, even love your enemies?

The reason that is the measure?  It’s not because it proves you are saintly, a person of great will and wisdom. It’s not because you are more special, or gifted, or even obedient.

It’s because such loves demonstrates the work of Christ in your life, that you walk with God, that you have been given the power and the desire to do God’s work.

Success is found in knowing His love…. the love that the Holy Spirit reveals to you in the word of God, and through the sacraments.

You want to be successful?  it is simple, though as Escriva says, it is tough and requires great strength to trusts in Christ Jesus….and as the apostle Paul says, it is the better way…..

The way of Love, the way of Christ.

 

Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 563-566). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

What is Salvation? It May Be More Than You Think!

Devotional and Discussion Thought of the Day:photo

32  And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto myself. John 12:32 (ASV)

24  But my life is worth nothing to me unless I use it for finishing the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about the wonderful grace of God. Acts 20:24 (NLT)

32      Coming closer to God means being ready to be converted anew, to change direction again, to listen attentively to his inspirations—those holy desires he places in our souls—and to put them into practice.   (1)
Too often in our messages, salvation is seen as one step, what theologians call justification.  God calling His people to Him, drawing them to the cross.  There He cleanses them from sin, frees them from bondage to Satan, and from the fear and anxiety that death causes.

There is nothing we can do, nothing we can say or think that makes this part happen.

Yet salvation is more than this, far more than this.

Salvation includes the life we have been given in Christ.  It is not just justification, but sanctification as well.  It is being made holy, being set apart to live a life God has designed. A life that gives us a hint of eternity, for in this life, we walk in Christ, and He lives and ministers to others through us.  It is a friendship, a partnership in achieving the will of God in this world, preparing people for eternity.

It is living a life that is amazing, and is costly.  We are called to bring the same message to the world that Paul did, as the Holy Spirit who drew us to Christ, draws others to Him by using us as their guides.  Bringing peace where there is no peace.  Watching people reconcile, to God, and then as that settles their souls, to each other.

As they join us in celebrating the wonderful mystery of God’s love and mercy for us, this incredible grace.  That He has placed in us holy desires which He empowers us to find satisfied, as we minister in the stead, by the command, and with Christ.

This is salvation, this is finding ourselves in the presence of God, of finding that He has come to us and transformed us.

AMEN.

 

  • Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 350-352). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

You Must Love… and Why That is Good News!

Discussion and Devotional Thought of the Day:The Good Shepherd, carrying His own.
26  He said to him, ‘What is written in the Law? What is your reading of it?’ 27  He replied, ‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbour as yourself.’  28  Jesus said to him, ‘You have answered right, do this and life is yours. Luke 10:26-28 (NJB)

10  We are God’s work of art, created in Christ Jesus for the good works which God has already designated to make up our way of life. Ephesians 2:10 (NJB)

37      When you love somebody very much, you want to know everything about him. Meditate on this: Do you feel a hunger to know Christ? Because…that is the measure of your love for him.  (1)

Maybe it is a politician, or maybe it is that star whose public acts would make you think she has absolutely no sense of morality.  Maybe it is your neighbor who infuriates you, or maybe someone at church, even your pastor.

We get frustrated by them, they prove they are unworthy of trust, and our language when we speak of them gets animated, and it becomes obvious that we are against them.  We might justify ourselves by saying we don’t hate them, but it is sure that we don’t love them.

For we wouldn’t treat them the way we do, in our thoughts, in words (both they heard and those we say to others) and in our deeds, if we loved them.

But we are called to love them, it is the way we are designed to live.

So how do we?

Not by our own strength of will, not by our own strength of character.

It can only happen as we love God, and more importantly, as we know we’ve been loved by God.  That is how we change, or more accurately, how God changes us.  For we are His work, a work that results in our works, our lives, our ability to love.

Remember, the command is to love God first! And Escriva’s words are correct, we need to have a hunger to know Christ, and the more we know Him (not just know of Him) the more we will know His love of us.  Being loved by Him will change us, and knowing that love enables us to love as He does.

Even those who are difficult to love.  Even for those whose lives require us to sacrifice greatly in order to love them.  Even those that require incredible sacrifice, whose lives may repel us. Or those whose hatred of us, causes us to struggle to love them.

Is it possible?  Look at Jesus on the cross, forgiving them.  Then look at Stephen, in the pit being stoned, loving those stoning him enough to ask God to forgive their debt.

Its possible, but only in Jesus.

So love them even as Christ loves you!

Oh yes, the reason that loving them is good news, gospel, and not the command of the law?  Here is the reason:

13  It is God who, for his own generous purpose, gives you the intention and the powers to act. Philippians 2:13 (NJB)

Amen!

The Sin Absolutely NO ONE Wants to Talk About

Devotional Thought of the Day:OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

28  Since they thought it foolish to acknowledge God, he abandoned them to their foolish thinking and let them do things that should never be done. 29  Their lives became full of every kind of wickedness, sin, greed, hate, envy, murder, quarreling, deception, malicious behavior, and gossip. 30  They are backstabbers, haters of God, insolent, proud, and boastful. They invent new ways of sinning, and they disobey their parents. 31  They refuse to understand, break their promises, are heartless, and have no mercy. 32  They know God’s justice requires that those who do these things deserve to die, yet they do them anyway. Worse yet, they encourage others to do them, too. Romans 1:28-32 (NLT)

13  Then he added, “Now go and learn the meaning of this Scripture: ‘I want you to show mercy, not offer sacrifices.’ For I have come to call not those who think they are righteous, but those who know they are sinners.” Matthew 9:13 (NLT)

28      Sometimes we hear love described (you’ll have heard me mention this more than once) as if it were a movement towards self-satisfaction, or merely a means of selfishly fulfilling one’s own personality. And I have always told you that it isn’t so. True love demands getting out of oneself, giving oneself. Genuine love brings joy in its wake, a joy that has its roots in the shape of the Cross.  (1)

In the first quote above, there is an incredible list of sins.  If you read the verses before the quote in Romans, there are more sins, more perversions of the relationships that God has blessed us with, in those He has brought in to our lives.

Some will talk of how horrible this sin is, how malignant that one, or that a specific one is an abomination.  Some of us will point out the entire list, indicating that gossip is as bad as any sexual sin, that breaking vows is as bad as murder.  We want sin confronted, the people chastised, preferably publicly!  We all have our pet peeves, those sins that need the full wrath of God poured out on them.  Often arguments are reduced to which sin is worse, which will receive the fullest wrath of God, even as each of us thinks our sin should even reduce the way our mansion in heaven is furnished.

In treating sin and those whose sin we condemn in such a way, we too sin.  I would draw your attention to the last sin in verse 31.  We have become people who are heartless (literally – we refuse to love our family) and we refuse to show mercy.

We refuse to forgive, we refuse to reconcile, we refuse to acknowledge each other as the adopted, cleansed, forgiven children of God whom have been given the gift of the Holy Spirit.  In refusing to show mercy to others, we deny the will of God, which is patient because we aren’t willing that any should perish, but that ALL should come to repentance, all should be reconciled, all should be invited to know the mercy and filial love that Christ has shown us.

In not forgiving, we are asking God to not forgive them, to bind that sin to them and make them face the wrath of God. In not forgiving, in not showing mercy, that is exactly what we are asking. We are denying the very heart of God.

Is showing mercy easy?  No.

Does loving people like they are our family (and in Christ they are, or can be) take the kind of sacrifice, the getting out of oneself that Escriva encourages us to do?  Yes, and it is hard, very hard.

So what that it is hard?

Yes…. that doesn’t negate the need to be merciful, nor to show people love.

We are merciful, because it is God’s desire, and because He has shown us mercy…..

and when we struggle, the aid is just a short prayer…..

Lord, have mercy a sinner!

  • Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 339-343). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

The Need for Families..

Devotional Thought of the Day:Concordia Lutheran Church

21  Submit yourselves to one another because of your reverence for Christ.  1  Children, it is your Christian duty to obey your parents, for this is the right thing to do. 2  “Respect your father and mother” is the first commandment that has a promise added: 3  “so that all may go well with you, and you may live a long time in the land.” 4  Parents, do not treat your children in such a way as to make them angry. Instead, raise them with Christian discipline and instruction. Ephesians 5:21, 6:1-4 (TEV) 

19      Be grateful to your parents for bringing you into this world, thus enabling you to become a child of God. And be all the more grateful if it was they who placed in your soul the first seeds of faith and piety, of your Christian way, or of your vocation. (1)

Later this week, my mom and I will take a day and just get away.  It will be one year since my dad passed, and the grief and loss that we feel may indeed well up inside of us. So I have been thinking of family a lot recently.  This morning I came across St Josemaria’s quote you just read in my devotions, All over the news o that the brokenness of some famous athletes’ families recently aired out in front of the world, and an odd comment on facebook recently, sparked off this blog.

The comment this morning that struck me as odd, was the reference to the Virgin Mary as simply a “vessel”, nothing more, nothing less.  It struck me as pragmatic and lifeless, and against the very idea of family as taught in the scripture. For no mother is simply a vessel, a holding place for life for 9 months.

God designed us to be part of families, and while many are dysfunctional… no wait, all are dysfunctional because of sin, that doesn’t mean we should devalue them.  Yet that is what we allow.  Mother’s are reduced to vessels, and holding tanks.  Father’s are thought unnecessary, and of little value.  Children are tossed aside, before and after they are born. Siblings are made to think that rivalry is the norm, rather than a loving family.

This isn’t new – you can’t read scripture without seeing the brokenness of families, and directions about how things really should be. Directions that are critical to be really heard, and by that I mean the scriptural meaning of hear – to absorb and let affect and transform you.  This is not just something that we can take as what theologians call adiaphora, it is not optional.  Nor is it it simply environmental or biological.  As an adopted child, I have met my birth mother, and much of who I am, I see in her.  As well, I see a lot of my adopted parents as well.

It is the relationship of family, even if we struggle with it.

The reason this is critical is simple.  The family is an image of our relationship with God.  He is our loving Father, our merciful Brother.  We are all siblings, whether we note the relationship, or not.

Frequently, we take the image of family that we know, our broken, confused, dysfunctional families, and those we see, and project them onto our relationship with God.  It becomes a fight for who is wiser, or who is in control, who is the authority, who has the rights.  And we treat God like we treat our parents, our children, our brothers and sisters.

If instead of projecting on God’s family what we know from dysfunctional experiences, we let it work the other way?

We would honor our parents, praying for them, hearing them.
We would sacrifice for our family, the way Jesus did for us, knowing that in love, no sacrifice is too great for those who are in His family.
We would value the people God has given us, parents, children, siblings in our families, and in our church families.
We would seek those who are part of this family, yet don’t know it… yet.

We would love.

Lord Have mercy as we worship and love you, as we embrace our families in love.

 

(1)  Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 304-306). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

Remember…..

Devotional Thought of the Day:OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

23  For I received from the Lord the teaching that I passed on to you: that the Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took a piece of bread, 24  gave thanks to God, broke it, and said, “This is my body, which is for you. Do this in memory of me.” 25  In the same way, after the supper he took the cup and said, “This cup is God’s new covenant, sealed with my blood. Whenever you drink it, do so in memory of me.” 26  This means that every time you eat this bread and drink from this cup you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes. 1 Corinthians 11:23-26 (TEV)

15      In these times of violence and brutal, savage sexuality, we have to be rebels: we refuse point blank to go with the tide, and become beasts. We want to behave like children of God, like men and women who are on intimate terms with their Father, who is in Heaven and who wants to be very close to—inside!—each one of us.  (1)

Disclaimer:  This blog is not primarily about 9-11.

there was a massacre once, the slaughter of the innocent, that we should not, will not, cannot forget.

It was ultimate act of depravity, the ultimate act of violence, and it is something we have to remember, not because of the violence, not because of the savagery, but because in that very act, we are given hope.  Even in that death, we are given life. Even in that savage, torturous, incomprehensible act, we find our rest an peace.

There is no greater paradox.

Paul instructs the church to remember not just the act above, but the One who was brutalized and killed.  In Greek the work translaeted “to remember, to not forget, to memorialize, etc”  is much stronger than just give him a passing thought.  It is related to words like repentance (to have a new mind) and the root where we get paranoia.  It is something that deeply affects and is rooted in the mind.  Not just knowledge, not just a passing thought, but something that burns into our mind and soul, that causes in us a change.

We proclaim that death, we reveal again the love that is revealed in His willing sacrifice of His life for us.

Something that changes everything.

Some of us will remember 9-11, like those before us remember the Shuttle exploding, or the Oklahoma City Bombing, like those, who remember Kennedy getting shot, or Pearl Harbor.  There are other events that we will never forget because they scar our souls, they ring us to the core, they cause us to be on guard.

this remembrance, where we take and eat the Body of Christ given up for us, where we drink the Blood of Christ given and shed so that sin is forgiven, this knowing the presence and depth of the love of God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ, doesn’t just scar our souls, it brings healing and life to our heart and soul, our mind and body that have been scarred by sin and the injustice of the world.  It sustains us through the rush of the world’s evil, and the traumas of life.

That is why we remember, that is why we proclaim His death until He comes….

For in knowing Him, we know peace.

(1)   Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 290-293). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

 

What we need to know… to survive the Monday’s of life….

Devotional Thought of the Day:A  Picture of our Journey... with Christ

25  I will sprinkle clean water on you and make you clean from all your idols and everything else that has defiled you. 26  I will give you a new heart and a new mind. I will take away your stubborn heart of stone and give you an obedient heart. 27  I will put my spirit in you and will see to it that you follow my laws and keep all the commands I have given you. 28  Then you will live in the land I gave your ancestors. You will be my people, and I will be your God. 29  I will save you from everything that defiles you.. Ezekiel 36:25-29a (TEV)

12  My commandment is this: love one another, just as I love you. 13  The greatest love you can have for your friends is to give your life for them. 14  And you are my friends if you do what I command you. 15  I do not call you servants any longer, because servants do not know what their master is doing. Instead, I call you friends, because I have told you everything I heard from my Father. 16  You did not choose me; I chose you and appointed you to go and bear much fruit, the kind of fruit that endures. And so the Father will give you whatever you ask of him in my name. 17  This, then, is what I command you: love one another. John 15:12-17 (TEV)

2      God is my Father! If you meditate on it, you will never let go of this consoling consideration. Jesus is my intimate Friend (another rediscovery) who loves me with all the divine madness of his Heart. The Holy Spirit is my Consoler, who guides my every step along the road. Consider this often: you are God’s… and God is yours.

This morning as I was working out, I hit a wall.  I thought I was done, at 12 minutes into my final treadmill session i knew I couldn’t go on any longer. I looked for an excuse to quit. I looked for a reason to end my suffering.  I didn’t want to endure.   A little more than 20 seconds later, the wall was there imposing, I needed to quit.

I heard in the back of my head my high school P.E. teacher’s rasping voice crying out LOVE IT LOVE IT LOVE IT.   Like back then, it made me want to quit even more.

Just like Mondays, and all the other days in life that seem like Mondays.

You know the feeling, like when you are in a meeting that is going on forever, as all the same issues keep frustrating things keep being rehashed.  as you do your bills, and wonder about the day when there will be money left over.  It’s when the long awaited rain shuts down roads you need to use to get to work.  It’s when all that was good and precious that you experienced in worship yesterday become a faded memory, choked out by the world….

It’s monday.

Or it might as well be.

There is only one hope on Monday, there is only one thing that will kill off the drama, the anxiety, the lows that we face.

It’s to realize that we, you and I, are the people God loves.  the people that He claimed.  That the Trinity in all of Their glory has called you to live life in their glory.  They didn’t insist that you come to Them, they’ve come to us!

Look at the promise in the reading from Ezekiel – the promise of Baptism!  Look at how God takes care of us, from eliminating the sin in our lives, to setting up shop in our lives, creating something quite incredible!

Look at the words of Jesus.  I know there is much criticism of those that treat Jesus as their brother, as if that meant all we did was “play” with Him.  But there is something far different in knowing Christ is our brother than that (check out yesterday’s sermon for one)

Look at the words of Josemaria, these blessed words which encourage us to really think through what it means for God to be our Father, Jesus our brother/friend, and the Holy Spirit to be our very needed comforter!

This is what the Christian religion is about.  It is how we get through life, even as we despise its shame, we look for the joy of walking with God, and one day, seeing Him face to face.  it’s how we get passed minute 12 in our journey, how the wall that we hit, exhausted and weary, is destroyed.  we find His strength, and He comes to us and helps us get to realize that though there are “Mondays” that even those Monday’s become our Sabbath, our day of rest.

For we are God’s people…..

and that trumps any Monday.

(1)  Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 237-242). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

It isn’t Faith or Works…. or Faith versus Works…

Devotional THought of the Day:The church, is always in the midst of a storm... but safe in Him

1  Your life in Christ makes you strong, and his love comforts you. You have fellowship with the Spirit, and you have kindness and compassion for one another. 2  I urge you, then, to make me completely happy by having the same thoughts, sharing the same love, and being one in soul and mind. 3  Don’t do anything from selfish ambition or from a cheap desire to boast, but be humble toward one another, always considering others better than yourselves. 4  And look out for one another’s interests, not just for your own. 5  The attitude you should have is the one that Christ Jesus had: Philippians 2:1-5 (TEV)

1  So then, my friends, because of God’s great mercy to us I appeal to you: Offer yourselves as a living sacrifice to God, dedicated to his service and pleasing to him. This is the true worship that you should offer. 2  Do not conform yourselves to the standards of this world, but let God transform you inwardly by a complete change of your mind. Then you will be able to know the will of God—what is good and is pleasing to him and is perfect. Romans 12:1-2 (TEV)

18  All of us, then, reflect the glory of the Lord with uncovered faces; and that same glory, coming from the Lord, who is the Spirit, transforms us into his likeness in an ever greater degree of glory. 2 Corinthians 3:18 (TEV)

 

 

Walther wrote: “Luther, you know, taught that good works do not save a person, but only faith, without good works. From this rejection of good work, papists draw the inference that Luther must have been a wicked man because he taught that to get to heaven, man should only believe and need not do any good works. However, that is by no means Luther’s doctrine. Luther taught the exact contrary. True, he did not say that, to be saved, a person must have faith and, in addition to that, good works, or love; but he did teach that those who would be saved must have a faith that produces love spontaneously and is fruitful in good works.  

The progressive identification of the soul with Jesus Christ, which is the essence of the Christian life, is carried out in a hidden way through the Sacraments.3 It also needs an effort from each one to correspond to grace: to know and love Our Lord, and to have the same dispositions as he had.4 The aim is to reproduce his life in our daily conduct, until we can exclaim with the Apostle: Vivo autem, iam non ego: vivit vero in me Christus,5 it is not I who live, it is Christ who lives in me.

I could have provided so many more quotations from scripture, so many more from Luther, Walther, Pieper or from Benedict XVI and Francis.

Recent Conversations on this topic exploded into my mind as I read the quote in blue this morning from the Introduction to the Forge, by Josemaria Escriva.  The day before I had found the quote in green from CFW Walther’s (first president of my denomination the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod).

Yet despite such things there are people that argue that works have no place in the Christian life, since we cannot save ourselves by them,  Theospeak – they do not merit our salvation.  There are others who say unless we break our backs in proving our holiness, that there we cannot be saved.  The first want to reject works because they smack of pietism (that we are Pharisees if we insist on good works) , the latter want to reject faith because they see it being antinomial. ( that being free of God’s law means we can do whatever the h&ll we want!)

In both cases, these arguments nullify the work of God in our lives.  The first denies the work of God through the means of grace in sanctifying us, in His setting us apart to be His special people.  That in setting us apart, He is transforming us, that the Holy Spirit is changing our hearts and minds to reflect the nature of Christ. Such a change should be reflected, not only in our actions, but more importantly in our attitudes towards our neighbor, toward “those people”, toward the ones who are our adversaries, or just antagonize the hell out of us.

But the transformation is the work of the Holy Spirit.  It is done, as the quote from the Forge says, in a hidden way. As God comes to us, through the word and sacraments He takes up residence in us, He delivers the blessings promised, (see Ez, 36:25ff)  He strengthens our trust in Him – the trust which causes us to correspond to this work.  We begin to desire His heart, we begin to confess our sins, and receive absolution, we begin to desire the Lord’s Supper-the Eucharist more and more.

it is subtle, yet it requires much of us.  Sometimes we want to rebel, to correspond less, or even not at all.  It is then those very same sacraments, especially Baptism, the Lord’s Supper, and Confession and Absolution come into play even more.  For as Jeremiah learns during his rants against God, God’s love it to wonderful, God’s mercy is to extravagant, God’s presence cannot be denied. We are transforming.

So stop all the arguments trying to divide faith and works.  It is a division God doesn’t intend.  One isn’t just the result of the other, for that still puts the emphasis on us.  Both are the result of God coming to us, saving us, granting us faith and repentance and replacing hardened hearts and minds with the presence of the Holy Spirit.   A presence that is undeniable and that we desire more and more in our lives.

To Him be glory for ever and ever.

Amen!

(1)  Thesis X, Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, CFW Walther

(2)  Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). The Forge (Kindle Locations 138-143). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.

Where’s the Rest of my Story? I Have to Know I Get the Miracle, Don’t I?

Devotional Thought of the Day:Concordia Lutheran Church - Cerritos, Ca , at dawn on Easter Sunday

8  It was then that some Babylonians took the opportunity to denounce the Jews. 9  They said to King Nebuchadnezzar, “May Your Majesty live forever! 10  Your Majesty has issued an order that as soon as the music starts, everyone is to bow down and worship the gold statue, 11  and that anyone who does not bow down and worship it is to be thrown into a blazing furnace. 12  There are some Jews whom you put in charge of the province of Babylon—Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego—who are disobeying Your Majesty’s orders. They do not worship your god or bow down to the statue you set up.” 13  At that, the king flew into a rage and ordered the three men to be brought before him. 14  He said to them, “Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, is it true that you refuse to worship my god and to bow down to the gold statue I have set up? 15  Now then, as soon as you hear the sound of the trumpets, oboes, lyres, zithers, harps, and all the other instruments, bow down and worship the statue. If you do not, you will immediately be thrown into a blazing furnace. Do you think there is any god who can save you?” 16  Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego answered, “Your Majesty, we will not try to defend ourselves. 17  If the God whom we serve is able to save us from the blazing furnace and from your power, then he will. 18  But even if he doesn’t, Your Majesty may be sure that we will not worship your god, and we will not bow down to the gold statue that you have set up.” Daniel 3:8-18 (TEV)

872         To help you keep your peace during those times of hard and unjust contradictions I used to say to you: “If they break our skulls, we shall not take it too seriously. We shall just have to put up with having them broken.”  (1)

In my devotional this morning, the Old Testament reading was exactly what you see above.

My first reaction was, why stop it here?

Why not give us the rest of the story.  (spoiler alert?)  Why not just let us read on, to the glory, to the miracle of the 4th man? To the repentance of the community in its sins, not just to God, but to me!

I want the rest of the story!  And I want it….. now!

I looked ahead – I don’t get the rest of the story tomorrow!  What is up with that?

What is up with that is the words of faith that the three men said.  They were sure of their trust in God enough to embrace the fact that the story might not end with a miracle, and somehow, they are okay with that.  Somehow, knowing that God is at work is enough, being sure He will keep His promises is enough.

Many martyrs die without receiving what we would want, their release back into the world.  Their freedom from those who would oppress, torture, and eventually kill them.

And they were able to endure, knowing something that their captors did not.

That God, by his very cHesed nature,the depth and height, the breadth and width of His love,  is worthy of the trust that the three men showed.  Even if He didn’t rescue them, even if they didn’t get the miracle they expected.  They knew His love.

May we, as we think through the work of God accomplished in our Baptism, as we meditate on the Body and Blood of Christ, as we hear with absolute delight that our sins are forgiven, that all is made right, know God enough to trust Him, even if we don’t get the miracle we want……

For we have the one we need. The Cross.  (see Romans 6:3-8)

He is our God.

AMEN.

(1)   Escriva, Josemaria (2011-01-31). Furrow (Kindle Locations 3565-3567). Scepter Publishers. Kindle Edition.