Sermon Genesis 9:8-17; Mark 1:9-15 David R. Lyle Grace Lutheran Church 1 Lent Year B 18 February Caught in the Reign

Similar documents
The Stewardship of Lent

Worship Plan for Sunday, February 18, Lent First Sunday in Lent ELW Holy Communion Setting One Sunday, February 18, 2018

2/16/18. Liturgical Suggestions

BCP 350 Hear the commandments of God to his people: I am the Lord your God who brought you out of bondage. You shall have no other gods but me. Amen.

Celebrant continues: Let us confess our sins against God and our neighbor. All say together

Saturday Worship First Sunday 5:30 pm in Lent February 17, 2018

I come to you in the name of one God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. 17 dead, a dozen injured, that is how we enter Lent this year. 17 dead, literally

Teen Scene 1st Quarter 2019 Online Activities

Sunday, February 18, 2018 First Sunday in Lent PRELUDE A Mighty Fortress Is Our God Mueller

St. Andrew s Lutheran Church Sunday February 18, 2018 First Sunday in Lent 9:00 Worship

Sermon for Ash Wednesday Year C 2016 Remember That You Are Dust

With the Wild Beasts. A Sermon By Jeffrey P Carlson. St. Pauls Untied Church of Christ, Chicago. First Sunday in Lent.

was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him.

THE FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT. In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan.

First Sunday in Lent March 10, 2019 Rev. Carol Fryer Immanuel Lutheran Church, NYC Deuteronomy 26:1-11; Psalm 91; Romans 10:8b-13; Luke 4:1-13

Creative. Communications. Sample

The Series: Friending Jesus. Week 1 August 22-27: Friending Jesus. Week 2 August 29-September 3: Jesus before Time

St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church First Sunday in Lent February 22, 2015

What R U Up 2? February 18, 2018 Title: Come Up Scripture: Genesis 9:8-17 Mark 1:9-15

SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH

Welcome to the House of the Lord

The Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased

February 22, 2015 Genesis 9:8-17 Psalm 25: Peter 3:18-22

Gloria Dei (Old Swedes ) Church Christian Street and Columbus Boulevard Philadelphia, PA

March A Publication of Lord of Life Lutheran Church 2018 Issue SW 137 Avenue, Miami, Fl

Sermons from First Congregational Church of Southington

The Jesus I Want to Know: The Joyful Provider John 2:1-11. Dr. J. Howard Olds February 13, 2005

Once More Unto the Breach

Sermon Series 1 Peter. Part 7 A Reason For The Hope

And then Jesus emerges as a man with a mission, The time is now, the Kingdom of God is upon us, repent and believe!

GIVING UP FEAR: EMBRACING FAITH! John 11:17-37 Rev. Lindsey Hall

Desert Dangers. <Read Mark 1:9-15>

You ll notice at the top of your bulletin, underneath where it says 1 st Sunday in Lent, I

Christ, Christ crucified.

The Text, St. Matthew 4:1-11 (v. 1). 1 Then Jesus was led up into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.

Now for a lot of people, the relationship with food is no laughing matter I get that

Ash Wednesday Worship Service

Sermon for the Second Sunday of Easter. Behind locked doors

Be with the Hurting, Be with the Broken

Two common criminals carry their own crosses. They hang alongside Jesus

That s a question that caught my eye as I was browsing the internet conversation about today s Gospel text.

Opening Sentence Versicle and Response Invitatory Psalms Psalm 4

The First Sunday in Lent (Year B)

See his glory on the mountain!

1st Sunday in Lent 2/22/15 Mark 1:9-15

Meditation for Lent I Year B 2015 Marked for Discipleship The Cost of Discipleship

Lent 1 Feb 22, 2015 Genesis 9:8-17, Mark 1:9-15

Grace, Mercy & Peace from God our Father & our Lord, Jesus Christ. Amen. got this warm glowing feeling. As the pregnancy progressed, Sara

PA S S ION LENTEN DEVOTIONS

St. Mark s Lutheran Church Growing Together in Christ. Holy Communion Liturgy Sundays of Lent

Observing Lent. The Book of Common Prayer, p. 265

Week 1 (March 1-4) Weekly Scripture: Joel 2:12-13 Daily Prayers Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

A S H W E D N E S D A Y

Until Then Be Busy February 11, Thessalonians 3:6-18

Ash Wednesday Worship Service


The Word in the Wilderness - Matthew 4:5-11 Sermon Pastor Joe Davis Union Baptist Church February 11, 2018

Christ, the Risen Lord Acts 2: 22-24

LESSON What did Cain and his descendants live for? -They only lived for pleasure, money, and material possessions.

Bonus Questions: What do we celebrate on Easter? Why did Jesus have to die for us? 4th-5th What do you think heaven will be like?

And I would add, a life changing story for each of us!

course that s the way the devil is identified here. It says, when the tempter

The text for this sermon, the theme of which is, I AM... the Way, Truth. going. Thomas said to Him, Lord, we do not know where You are going.

Ash Wednesday/Midweek 1 Matthew 26:20-25 Sermon #949 March 5, 2019 Erich Jonathan Hoeft

Ash Wednesday Worship Service

Mark 1:21-28 (Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany Series B) The Authority of the Holy One Lutheran Church of Our Redeemer, Enfield, CT January 28, 2018

Younger Kids Bible Study Leader Guide LifeWay

Helpful Elements: Purple tablecloth (Lenten color) Burlap and/or gray table runner (Ash Wednesday only)

First Sunday in Lent February 18, Dr. Susan F. DeWyngaert. 1 Peter 2:9-10 Mark 1:9-13. The Real Temptation

But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.

Crushing Temptation (James 1:13-15)

Jesus said to the disciples, It is to your advantage that I go away. It is for your own good that I am leaving you.

Mark 1: st Sunday in Lent Feb 26, 2012

CHIMING OF THE TRINITY Cecelia McGinnis. PRELUDE Lead On, O King Eternal setting by Charles Callahan

The Christian Arsenal

Reconciliation 2 Corinthians 5:18 Part One

LESSON OVERVIEW/SCHEDULE

Rev. Daniel Mackey The Resurrection of Our Lord April 20, 2014 Mark 16:1-8 Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church in Muncie, Ind.

@Discipleship Ministries 1

The LaMMP. 18 th February 2018 The First Sunday of Lent. The weekly newsletter for the Benefice of Laleston and Merthyr Mawr with Pen-y-Fai

The Lord s Prayer: Seasons of Needing Forgiveness ASH WEDNESDAY

Kids in the Divine Service. Divine Service. What is Ash Wednesday all about? What is Ash Wednesday all about? Why do we do this?

.. Daily Devotions February 18-24, 2018 By Pastor Lisa Ubbelohde Christ Lutheran Parish, Ironwood. A week to reflect on the small catechism

Risen Indeed! Easter Sunday Message New Life Assembly April 24, 2011 AM Luke 24:1-12

Younger Kids Bible Study Leader Guide LifeWay

THE FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT

Confirmation Questioning Night

thesource Worship Service

NOAH - God Will Not Forget You Sunday, August 20, :30 AM

Triune Chapel: January 13, Growing Pains: Baptism of the Lord Sunday

Hall of Faith. Six Bible Study Lessons for Group Discipleship

The Church of the Transfiguration The Little Church Around the Corner One East 29th Street, New York, NY littlechurch.

Joy to the World December 16, 2018

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Battle Plan. Where do you turn when you need a foolproof plan? #BSFLdarkside QUESTION 1 BIBLE STUDIES FOR LIFE LifeWay

Emmaus Evangelical Lutheran Church 929 East Milton Street, South Bend (574) emmaus24.org

Bonus Questions: What do we celebrate on Easter? Why did Jesus have to die for us? 4th-5th What do you think heaven will be like?

Never Give Up! Luke 11:5-13. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O Neill

IN NOMINE JESU. Grace be unto you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ

Psalm 32. (2015) The Bible not only reveals God s eternal plans purposes and promises. But also shows how you can know God for yourself.

Transcription:

1 Sermon Genesis 9:8-17; Mark 1:9-15 David R. Lyle Grace Lutheran Church 1 Lent Year B 18 February 2018 Caught in the Reign Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace be unto you and peace this day in the name of God the Father and our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen. 1. This past Monday morning, I arrived early to the office. I had a scheduled call with our mission partners in Martin, Slovakia. When the call was over, I was dumbfounded to discover that our building had gone dark, quiet. The various office staff members were nowhere to be found. Odd for a Monday morning; odd for any time during the workday. I went up the stairs to say good morning to my favorite German teacher, only to find her door locked and the lights out. Coming back to my office, it dawned on me that we were in the middle of a lockdown drill, practicing how to respond to an active shooter in our building. I had two immediate thoughts. First, we should probably invest in a security detail for the senior pastor. After all, I m kind of a big deal, and I shouldn t be trusted to keep myself safe. And second, that I m incredibly grateful that we practice for this scenario. Knowing the drill, I pictured where each of my children was at that moment as they prepared for the unthinkable. Our four-year old and our six-year old were each with their teachers and peers, hidden from sight. So, too, our eight-year-old daughter. She told me later that part of the training for her classroom involved which students would need to step up in their hiding space so that their feet wouldn t be visible to a shooter seeking to do them harm. I thought about how infinitely sad it is that my three children, not to mention the other 200- plus students and their teachers at Grace, have to practice for such an event. But so it goes in this world in which we live.

2 2. My first draft of this sermon was filled with what you ve come to expect from me: funny jokes and witty repartee, followed by my trademark theological brilliance. Ahem. I mean, it was going to be great. And then the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School happened on Wednesday Valentine s Day, Ash Wednesday and, well, the sermon I was going to preach now rings hollow. Seventeen people, seventeen children of God, were gunned down by a young man, another child of God, with a legally purchased AR-15. And maybe, maybe you re shifting uncomfortably in your pew right now. Maybe you re thinking that the last thing you want is a political sermon. Rest assured, you re not going to get one today. I have zero interest in advancing or negating one or another political argument. That said, the gospel of our God is intensely political not in the sense of being partisan, but because God cares about the affairs of the polis, the state. And if God doesn t have anything to say about the deaths of seventeen people, from fourteen-year old innocents to heroic teachers and coaches, then I don t know what we re doing here. If God has nothing to say about this, if God desires that nothing be done about this, we d be better off staying home on this and every other Sunday, reading the New York Times over brunch. 3. Today marks the First Sunday in Lent, our yearly remembrance of Jesus confrontation with Satan in the wilderness. This is a word we need. We live in the wilderness, the Wild West, where evil and violence stalk their pray, aided and abetted by our sinful indifference, our inability to do anything about it. One might expect God to do what Genesis tells us God once did when God looked upon the creation and saw, unmistakably, that every inclination of the thought of their hearts was only evil. And so God, the God of justice, broke open the heavens and let the waters rush in for forty days. But God s act is not, finally, one of destruction; it is a re-creation, a new beginning: new life brought forth from the flood. It is, finally an act of mercy, as God sets a bow in the skies as a promise that such a divine act will never again occur.

3 God, in the flood, sets aside justice and chooses instead grace and mercy as the means by which God will deal with humanity. 4. Of course, Noah and his descendants don t fare much better than those who came before. But God s course is set, a course of grace and mercy, a course of standing with humans against the evil that assails us from without and wells up from within. So it is that God, rather than looking upon our sinfulness and enacting justice, enters instead into the human story, incarnate in the Son, Jesus Christ. Instead of sending a flood, Jesus goes under the floodwaters of the Jordan. Instead of the heavens torn open with a new flood, the heavens are torn open with a word of promise: You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased. Instead of watching from a distance, offering up thoughts and prayers for the people, God in Christ comes to stand with and for the people, for you and for me, to beat back the forces of sin and death. Instead of sending a destructive rain, God initiates a liberating reign. And in Jesus, sin, death, and the devil are defeated. Once and for all. Full stop. 5. On Wednesday, the same day Nikolas Cruz gunned down his peers and his teachers, you and I were marked with crosses of ash. We were reminded of our sin and our mortality, but we were also reminded that our mortality is now cross-shaped and our sins are forgiven. For just as Jesus came out of the Jordan dripping with God s love, so too have we come out of the baptismal flood wet with the life-giving reign that is the Kingdom of God. The Word and the water of baptism are salvation for us, grounded in nothing less than the resurrection of Jesus Christ that has vanquished death forever. And so it is that we can commend these seventeen victims, and all victims of gun violence, including Chicago s own Commander Bauer, into the life of eternity and abundance that is now theirs. Their dying is not their ending, for Christ is alive and his Kingdom will not be thwarted.

4 6. In the midst of this good news is our call. It is never enough to say only that God triumphs over sin and death for the sake of the next world, for the Kingdom of God is for this world, too. Why else would Jesus say repent? Why else would Jesus have us turn from our sin and seek to enact God s life-giving reign in this world, too? This is what Lent is for. We do not simply rehearse the story of God s victory over death; we live it out. For if we have been made alive in Christ, we have nothing to live for except life itself life in fullness, dignity, and safety for all of God s people. Today. This Lent, God calls you to the discipline of repentance. Perhaps, just perhaps, God is calling us to give up our smug certainty about the right course of action. In the past few days, we have heard and read of why this or that response wouldn t work, couldn t curb the violence we endure. Gun control won t really solve the problem, we hear, because mental health services are the real issue. Or is it an absence of good parenting? Maybe the problem is access to violent video games and the media s glorification of violence. Others pine for some golden age in which people were kinder, and if we could all just be more empathetic, our societal ills would go away. Every camp, every politician, has a reason for why their vested interest isn t really to blame, and so we end up doing nothing at all. 7. But what does Jesus say? Repent, and believe the good news. The Kingdom of God has come near. Repent, and give up your need to be right, your need for your political view to come out on top. I believe that better gun control laws are the place to start, but perhaps they wouldn t solve every problem. Maybe quality care for those struggling with mental health issues isn t enough. Maybe being more compassionate isn t the answer. But maybe and I m no policy expert maybe instead of finding paralysis as we debate which answer is best, just maybe we could try all of them at the same time gun control and access to mental health services and better parenting and more compassion; let s try all the things! Jesus calls us to repent, and that means starting with ourselves and the sin that lurks within us, manifest in our need to be right before we try. Because when I look at my children, and at your

5 children, I don t see young people in need of our debates. I see children of God in need of Jesus followers who are bold enough to admit that we don t know which answer will be the right one. I see children of God for whom it is worth trying absolutely everything. Thanks be to God that the victory over sin and death is already won by the Christ who walked into the wilderness and stared Satan down. The victory is won. So why stand on the sidelines debating? Repent, and believe the good news. Believing, try everything. Believing, do something. Jesus has claimed these little ones as his own by giving up his life. As we await the joy of Easter morning, perhaps our repentance means doing any and everything we can to prevent more little ones from giving up their lives, too. God in Christ has chosen grace and mercy. God has chosen life. Awaiting Easter, may we choose life, too. Amen. And now may the peace that passes all human understanding keep you hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus, this day and forever. Amen.