"Jesus: The Master Who Serves" Luke 17:1-10 October 21, Pentecost C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Similar documents
International Bible Lesson Commentary. Luke 17:1-10 New American Standard Bible International Bible Lessons Sunday, May 1, 2016 L.G. Parkhurst, Jr.

"Counting the Cost, Bearing the Cross" Luke 14:25-33 September 26, Pentecost C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"What It Takes to Be a Saint" Matthew 5:1-12 November 3, 2002 All Saints Day (Observed) Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Just Wait. You'll See" John 20:19-31 April 27, Easter B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Beatitudes" - Matthew 5:1-12 February 3, Epiphany A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Listen to Jesus Pray" John 17:1-11 May 12, Easter A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Well, if you were here last week, you heard Bishop Pittelko. suggest that if we are living sacrifices to God, then maybe we

"Who Are You To Judge Me?" John 20:19-31 April 11, Quasimodogeniti Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Signs and Works of God" John 6:24-35 August 24, 2003 Pentecost 11 B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Matthew The Rock and the Roll (TJP) page 1

"The Kingdoms of Power and Grace" Matthew 18:15-20 September 8, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Into the Vineyard" Matthew 21:28-32 September 25, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Narrow Door and the DoorMan" Luke 13:22-30 September 9, Pentecost C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

A Godly Heart Forgives #3 Text : Luke 17: 1-10

"But Wait: There's More" Luke 17:11-19 November 28, 2002 Thanksgiving Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Your Two-Kingdom Life" Matthew 22:15-21 October 20, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Where Jesus, There the Church" Luke 20:17-18 March 28, Lent C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Peter Gets It Right Matthew 16:13-20 August 25, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

385 Verse 3. So watch yourselves! "If another believer sins, rebuke that person; then if there is repentance, forgive. Verse 4. Even if that person wr

"Peace to This House" Luke 10:1-9, 16 July 22, Pentecost C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Your Sins Are Forgiven You" Mark 2:1-12 February 23, 2003 Epiphany 7 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Blessings and Woes" - Luke 6:17-26 February 15, Epiphany C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

God Forgave You. Do You Forgive Others? Revised

I. Life Isn't Fair. Behold the ranting of the Old Adam: It just isn't fair, so why bother?

His Name Shall Be Called... Wonderful Isaiah 9:6 December 5, Advent 1 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Lamb of God Goes Willingly" Luke 13:31-35 March 7, Lent C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Suffering Christian" 1 Peter 4:12-17, 5:6-11 May 8, Easter A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Love and Glory" John 13:31-34 May 9, Easter C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Matthew Trinity at Your Service (TJP) page 1

Luke 17A. o And more specifically, we saw how the Pharisees had completely missed the point of their Hebrew Bible

"The Hometown Prophet and the Useful Church" Luke 4:21-32 February 1, Epiphany C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

TEN LEPERS ARE CLEANSED LUKE 17:11-19

Freedom in Christ Knowing When and How to Confront Sin

"Rest [for the Soul]" Deuteronomy 5:12-15 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The [Too] Familiar Son of God" Mark 6:1-6 July 27, 2003 Pentecost 7 B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Prescription for Life Lesson 16 Luke 17:1-37

Lesson Four: The Perean Ministry Instruction to Disciples

The Second Commandment

Sunday, May 1, Golden Text: And the apostles said unto the Lord, Increase our faith (Luke 17:5).

I. Babel Babble Acts Babel Babble Pentecost Concord (TJP) page 1

"Pentecost's Presence and Proclamation" John 7:37-39 June 11, 2000 The Day of Pentecost Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Prevailing Charity" John 15:9-17 May 25, th Sunday of Easter (B) Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"The Resurrection of Our Lord" John 20:1-18 March 31, Easter Sunday Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

I. Ezekiel. 39 Series 4 Wed 1 Behold the Son John 19 v (TJP) page 1

Isaiah 29:11-19 Proper 16B Pentecost 12 August 27, 2009 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Luke Chapter 17. Luke 17:3 Take heed to yourselves: If thy brother trespass against thee, rebuke him; and if he repent, forgive him.

The Nature of Faithful Service Luke 17:1-10 (NIV)

Steps (Week 10) Confronting and Forgiving

Lord Teach Us To Pray

Colossians 3: Christmas C December 31, 2006 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

"Lessons from the Soil and the Sower" Matthew 13:1-9 July 10, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

The Ten Commandments

"From the Beginning - Drawing Near" John 1:1-18 January 5, Christmas B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Finding Your Way Out Of The Christian Salvation DELUSION

"The Would-Be Slam-Dunk Disciple" Mark 10:17-30 November 5, 2000 Pentecost 21 B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Do We Need Organized Religion?

By Grace Alone A Bible Study

The Basic Teachings of a Strong Disciple By Doug Hamilton

"Days of the Week" -- Sermon Series for Lent & Easter

Introduction. Jesus Parable of The Pharisee and The Tax Collector. Introduction. Introduction. Jesus Parable of The Pharisee and The Tax Collector

LUTHER S SMALL CATECHISM

The Ten Commandments The Introduction. The First Commandment

"Are We Missing Something?" Acts 2:1-18 May 23, 1999 The Day of Pentecost Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Overcoming Addictions

Luke 17:1-10 A Lesson in Humility

The Old Paths Monthly

THE CHILDREN OF GOD (THE TRUE ISRAEL) SEARCH AND SHARE MINISTRY

Romans 9:1-5 (10-13) Proper 13A Pentecost 12 August 6, 2008 Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

of our God into lewdness and deny our Lord Jesus Christ. (Jude 4)

The people will be faithless, turning to idols of stone, wood and metal, of death, doom and destruction.

THE LETTER TO THE ROMANS PART II LAW AND GRACE, LIVING AS CHILDREN OF GOD

"The Final Lie: The Resurrection Never Happened'" 1 Corinthians 15:12-20

God s Boundary Stones Part 2 Glenn Smith, April 2013, Ahava B Shem Yeshua

MONTHLY PRAYER SHEET. How I will do it... How it went... Reach out... Other requests... Answered. How it was answered...

Lesson 4: How May People Have Peace with God?

"All About the Baby" Luke 1:39-56 December 11, 2002 Midweek - Advent 2 B Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Zion Lutheran School Learn by Heart Catechism and Bible Verse Year

How to use this Study Guide

John 18: The Fall and Restoration of Peter

Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it, prone to leave the God I love. This could be any of us.

"Forgive and Forget"

DO THIS IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME

To be forgiven by God means that He has released us from the debt that we owed.

First of all, the question implies the word loving to mean only giving pleasant things to those who are loved.

The Simple Way a Father Should Present it to His Household.

JUSTIFICATION BY WORKS VERSUS JUSTIFICATION BY GRACE

Religion Curriculum Curriculum Objectives. Grade 1

Christ the King Community Church Doctrinal Statement

Your Debt Has Been Canceled Matthew 18:21-35

A Study of Luke s Gospel Week Twenty-Four Luke 16:13-17:19

The Strategy of Satan The Accuser

Romans 6:1-4, 12-14, LESSON: RAISED TO NEW LIFE July 31, 2016

"The Way, the Truth, the Life" John 14:1-12 April 28, th Sunday of Easter (A) Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ." 1 Corinthians 1:3. SERMON TEXT: Romans 10:9, 13-15, 17 (Read first)

"Six Points from Two Houses" Matthew 7:21-29 June 2, Pentecost A Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls

Listen, learn, receive. That's how I want you to rest." Doesn't sound like our idea of R&R, does it?

B. (Slide #5) Outside A House Or Shelter During A Blizzard Compared To Being Inside The House. 1. ( ) Outside -- during a terrible blizzard.

Introduction. Forgiving Others. Forgiving Others. Introduction. God Will Not Forgive Us If We Do Not forgive Others. Forgiving Others Commanded

Matthew 9: And when the Pharisees saw it, they said to His disciples, "Why does your Teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?

Our text is a contrast of shadows and realities, of faint outlines and clear objects.

Transcription:

"Jesus: The Master Who Serves" Luke 17:1-10 October 21, 2001 20 Pentecost C Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Boise, Idaho Pastor Tim Pauls "Thus also you, when you do all that is commanded of you, say, 'We are worthless slaves, who have done only what we ought to do.'" So concludes our Gospel lesson today, with the Lord calling us worthless slaves. We might note that there are better, truer translations out there; the Lord doesn't call us "worthless" as much as He labels us "unworthy." So, when we obey His commands, we are to call ourselves unworthy servants who have only done our duty. Somehow, this doesn't do a whole lot to inspire, as we hear it in the way of the Law: "Do your best, and you're still unworthy." Take heart, dear hearers in Christ; and remember the Master who speaks to you this day. In fact, as we explore this Gospel lesson, you will find that the news of your unworthy servanthood is some very Good News indeed. I. The Apostles' Consternation As Jesus speaks to the crowds that day, the apostles listen in. He says: It is impossible that scandal will not come, but woe to the one through whom it comes. It is better for him if a mill stone were placed around his neck and he was thrown into the sea rather than scandalize one of these little ones. Watch yourselves. If your brother sins, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him. And if he sins against you seven times and turns back to you seven times saying, 'I repent,' forgive him." (Luke 17:1-4) With these words, our Lord makes two important points of Law clear. The first is this: Scandal - false teaching that leads people astray - will come, and the one responsible is in big trouble. People will teach doctrine that will lead others away from Jesus and His saving grace; they may do so intentionally or unintentionally. Either way, the victim is led astray; and either way, the one who brings scandal faces the wrath of God. If one is tempted to believe that false teaching is a "little sin," then note the Lord's pronouncement: It is far preferable to be thrown into the sea, millstone and all, than to commit such a sin. The second point of Law is this: Be faithful in rebuking and forgiving sin. Christians are to confront those who sin and urge them to repent and be forgiven. To fail to rebuke a sinner is to fail to keep God's command. Furthermore, when a sinner repents, Christians are to forgive him: again and again and again, no matter how long the sinner suffers that temptation, no matter how grave the sin or irritating his person. Rebuke the unrepentant sinner, Jesus commands; and forgive the repentant sinner. Always. Every time. 42017001 Luke 17 1-10 Jesus the Master Who Serves (TJP) page 1

The disciples hear this Law as Jesus preaches it, and their immediate reaction is apparently clear: Inadequacy. They hear what Jesus commands for all Christians, and they realize that they have been called - and will be sent - as the Lord's apostles - His ambassadors. They will be public ministers, their labors more apparent than those of others. Their teaching will be examined under a microscope. Their interaction with sinners, repentant or not, will be an example to all who watch. These are not easy commands for anyone, and the apostles have no desire to scandalize and wear the millstone necklace. They see themselves in the fish bowl and know they cannot keep the Lord's commands. Therefore, they plead with the Lord, "Increase our faith." To the apostles, then, Jesus goes to say: "If you have faith as a mustard seed, say to this mulberry tree, 'Uproot and plant in the sea,' and it will obey you. Who of you, having a slave who comes in out of the field from plowing or shepherding, will say to him, 'Come! Sit down immediately!' But does he not say to him, 'Prepare what I will eat and, having dressed, serve me until I eat and drink, and after these you will eat and drink'? Does he have kindness for the slave that did what was commanded? No. Thus also you, when you do all that is commanded of you, say 'We are worthless slaves, who have done only what we ought to do.'" (Lk. 17:7-10) If we hear these words only according to the Law of God, they sting; for it sounds as if our Lord says to His anxious disciples, "Hey! Get some faith and get to work! And even if you work hard and do the things you already said you couldn't do, you've only accomplished what you were supposed to be doing anyway. You're supposed to teach the truth. You're supposed to confront sinners and forgive those who repent. You may find these tasks difficult or unpleasant, but it's your job. It's not like you're going to get extra credit or a merit badge or something. It's what Christians are supposed to do." Even if the apostles work the field and sow the seed of God's Word, shepherd the flock and feed His lambs and wait on the tables of the people of God, it doesn't earn them bonus points with the Lord. It's what He called them to do. Ouch. It's bad enough when the boss at work sums up the excellent job you've done with "Well, that's what we pay you for." To hear the same sentiment from the Master would be difficult indeed. Except that this is a different Master than all the rest. The Master who is speaking is the Son of God in human flesh. He is in human flesh because this Master has come to serve. He has not come to make new demands of mankind; God's Law is already sufficient, and man's obedience equally deficient. No, this Master does not come to add to our burden; He comes to relieve it. Therefore, consider these words that Jesus speaks to His apostles, knowing that He is the Master who goes to the cross for them. He says to them, "If you have faith as a mustard seed, say to this mulberry tree, 'Uproot and plant in the sea,' and it will obey you." This would sound like a criticism, save one important truth: This Master has come to give them faith and forgiveness. When the apostles implore, "Increase our faith," they are making a faithful confession: They are confessing their sin - that they cannot do what is expected of them, and they are trusting the Lord to forgive them and give them what they need. They are saying, "Our faith is inadequate - increase our faith." Jesus is there to do just that; He is present 42017001 Luke 17 1-10 Jesus the Master Who Serves (TJP) page 2

to forgive sins and strengthen their faith. The fact that they have made this confession shows that they trust in Him. Therefore, He confirms His mercy and forgiveness. And when He speaks, He does not call them faithless. Essentially, what He says is this: "If you have faith as a mustard seed, and you do, say to this mulberry tree, 'Uproot and plant in the sea,' and it will obey you." By the faith Jesus gives and maintains, they will be able to do what they could not do: Like believe, confess, enter heaven, speak the truth, rebuke the sinner and forgive the penitent. Because Jesus forgives them their sins and gives them faith, they are released from sin and can go about the will of God. They teach the truth because the Truth has set them free. They preach the Gospel because the Lord gives them the grace and the call to do so. And when they stumble and sin, by faith they trust in His forgiveness; after all, He is about to bear the millstone of their sin around His neck as He is thrown into the depth of God's wrath on the cross. Therefore, when Jesus speaks to the disciples of faith, it is a great comfort. He is there to give them faith. Consider as well the Lord's words about the apostles as unworthy servants. What He says is absolutely true: All of the faithful work that the apostles will do in His name will not earn them any extra merit before God. They should therefore not grow proud of what they do, and what they do will certainly not save them. They will not get to heaven because they do what they are supposed to do. Salvation is not about doing a good job and earning extra credit, merit badges or bonus points before the Lord. And by His words, Jesus tells His apostles that He knows this. He knows they are not saved because they do their duty; they are not redeemed by their works. No, they are saved by the work of their Master. Jesus asks: What sort of master, having a slave, commands the slave to sit down and then serves him? This Master does. He dons that human flesh to serve the apostles and all the world. Soon, at the Last Supper, it is He who has His disciples sit down; and it is He who takes off His robes, dresses as a servant and washes their feet. It is He who feeds them with His body and blood-in, with and under bread and wine at that Supper. And it is He who will then give His body and shed His blood on the cross for the sins of the world. This is the Master who speaks to the disciples. With any other master, the message would be, "Even if you do your best, you've only done your job. And if you mess up, you're a dead man." This Master tells His apostles, "While you are unworthy servants, you are forgiven and you are saved. You are saved because I go to the cross to die for your sins. You are not saved by your labors, for those are simply what God gives you to do because you are saved. Your work counts nothing toward paying for your salvation because your salvation is paid in full. You cannot add to it, because I've finished the job. Therefore, My servants, attend to your tasks. But do not go about them as men who are fearful that they must be perfect to earn their salvation; go about as joyful citizens, confident that salvation is already yours, thankful to proclaim that Gospel to others." What Good News our Lord declares to His apostles, for He speaks to them words of forgiveness, faith and life. He does so because He is the Master who serves His servants. He is the one who redeems us by His death. II. Good News for "Worthless" Slaves 42017001 Luke 17 1-10 Jesus the Master Who Serves (TJP) page 3

The Law and Gospel of our text holds true for you today, dear Christians. It is still so terribly true that It is impossible that scandal will not come, but woe to the one through whom it comes. It is better for him if a mill stone were placed around his neck and he was thrown into the sea rather than scandalize one of these little ones. Therefore, God commands us in His Law that we are to hold fast to His Word. We are faithfully to hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it. We are to speak the truth without compromise, lest for any reason we would lead people away from the Savior and to a god who cannot save. It is still true that we are commanded to rebuke the sinner, to show him his sin and call him to repentance. And it is still true that the Lord commands us to forgives all who repent, again and again and again if need be. There is no room for bearing grudges. There is no room to put political spin on sin to make it seem acceptable in a situation. There is no allowance for the whitewashing of transgression to make it appear a good thing. Hold fast to the truth. Cause no one to stumble by compromising God's Word. Rebuke those who sin and call them to repentance. Forgive those who repent. This is the Law of the Lord, and it is still very much in force. It applies to every Christian. It goes without saying, then, that it applies also to every pastor, every missionary, every district president, every synodical president. This is the work of the Church-the proclamation and application of God's Law and His Gospel. And the Law that Jesus lays down here is enough to damn us all. Far from perfect, we do not have a perfect grasp on the Word of God; nor are we particularly dedicated to gladly hearing and learning it. Furthermore, sinful lives often contradict the truth that we proclaim; therefore, intentionally or unintentionally - and even with the best of intentions, we will cause others to stumble. In addition, it is not an easy thing to confront one who is guilty of sin, and to call them to repentance: Such an act of love is usually met with anger and harsh words. Therefore, it is far more agreeable to live and let live, to ignore the fact that others are condemning themselves by their refusal to repent. And forgive the repeat offender? Grudges come much more easily to us than forgiving a sinner again and again. No, we hardly keep the Law that God commands in our text for today. I think it's safe to say that we are unworthy servants, who haven't done a whole lot in the way of doing what we ought to do. Truly, therefore, we throw ourselves before the Lord this day, praying that He would forgive our sins and increase our faith. Take heart, brothers and sisters in Christ. The Master gives you faith. It may be much like a mustard seed in that it is often overlooked, but the Lord gives you faith that is full of promise. You see, by faith you know that error and sin are fearful things. By faith you know that the Savior has borne the millstone of your sin around His neck as He was thrown into the depths of God's wrath at the cross. By faith, you confess your sin, trusting-by faith-that God forgives you. By faith, you know that you are set free by the Truth to tell the Truth, to proclaim the news of Christ and cross to all who will hear. By faith, you are confident of something far bigger than a transplanted mulberry tree; for the sake of Jesus, you have been uprooted from this sinful world, grafted into Christ the vine, and transplanted into the Kingdom of Heaven for eternal life. You have faith, because the Master has come and died to forgive your sins and give you faith. 42017001 Luke 17 1-10 Jesus the Master Who Serves (TJP) page 4

Because you are freed from sin, and because you have faith, you know that Christ has done all the work for your salvation. Therefore, you have the comfort of knowing that you aren't saved by your servanthood. It is still taught so prevalently that you are saved by the good works that you do. Jesus defeats this doctrine with the news that the one who does good works is only doing what he's supposed to, and hardly earns extra credit toward heaven. His message, however, does not end there: He announces that, despite your unworthy sinfulness, your salvation is already won. Your redemption is sure because of the work of the Master. He has taken on human flesh, and He has suffered and died on the cross for you. He is risen again, and the Master serves you even now. You come here today from your labors of the week, into the presence of the risen Lord Jesus Christ. Your Master does not call you here so that you must now work and serve Him for this hour. The Master calls you here so that He might serve you! "Come!" He calls. "Sit down immediately," He instructs, and then He ministers to you. He speaks to you words of healing as He forgives your sins in His absolution. As He washed the disciples' feet and pronounced them clean, He washes you and pronounces you clean in your Baptism. He seats you at His table and feeds you with His body and blood. There is, then, no room for pride which would try to earn points toward heaven; nor need you sink in despair because of your sin. No, you rejoice this day that the Lord has accomplished that victory for you already. There is no fear of being unworthy, for the Master makes you worthy. You are not a worthless slave, because the Master declares you to be His beloved child. He comes to serve, to cleanse and sanctify you, declaring that you are forgiven for all of your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. 42017001 Luke 17 1-10 Jesus the Master Who Serves (TJP) page 5