Sermon for Third Midweek Service. Stir Up the Power of Love

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1 Sermon for Third Midweek Service Text: I John 4:20-21 If anyone says, I love God, and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen. And this commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother. Stir Up the Power of Love Did you ever hear of cement overshoes? That s a term used to describe the Mafia s way of getting rid of someone. Since a corpse floats, the victim s feet are chained to cinder blocks or placed in buckets of cement. He s dumped in the ocean, never to be found again. Some suggest that s what happened to Jimmy Hoffa. In fact, there s no evidence that any Mafia victim was disposed of in this way. That leads one to think cement overshoes might be a creation of Hollywood and nothing more. But you ve got to admit, if you re wearing a pair of cement overshoes, it s pretty hard to move. Or more to the point, you re not going anywhere.

2 That s the effect of sin in our lives. It s like cement overshoes. Sin weighs us down, but God s grace and mercy free us to love. So that s what we pray for in the Collect for the Fourth Sunday in Advent, this coming Sunday, the third and final stir up prayer to collect our thoughts for this midweek Advent series: Stir up Your power, O Lord, and come and help us by Your might, that the sins which weigh us down may be quickly lifted by Your grace and mercy; for You live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen. First, God s grace and mercy free us from the weight of our sins so that we can love him. In the old 1950s black-and-white Martin Luther movie, Luther s father-confessor exhorts Luther to love God. Luther, a priest himself, replies that that s exactly what his sin is: he doesn t love God; he hates him. That may sound shocking, but that s how many people, even Christians, feel. Luther hated God because he knew God only as an angry judge who constantly threatened to punish him for his sins. Luther, unlike many of us, took God s Law very seriously. He actually tried to obey it perfectly, outwardly as well as inwardly. After years of brutally disciplining himself to do this, even beating himself with a whip, Luther believed himself a miserable failure. He agreed with St. Paul who said, I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing (Rom 7:19). God had placed an impossible demand on Luther that he be perfect in order to be saved. He placed that demand on St. Paul. He places it on all of us. God s Word actually says, Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect (Mt 5:48). When you and I take that demand seriously and actually try to be perfect in thought, word, and deed, twenty-four hours a

3 day, seven days a week, we will despair. Because we can t do it. And that s the idea. The purpose of the Law since the fall of Adam and Eve has never been to save anyone, but to show sinners that it s impossible for us to be perfect and thus save ourselves. When we come to that realization, we despair. And we cry out to God with St. Paul, Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? (Rom 7:24). That s when we discover the sweet comfort of the Gospel, that Jesus has died for our sins and through faith in him we are saved. Paul cries out with joy at this discovery, saying, Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!... There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus (Rom 7:24; 8:1). When we realize God no longer condemns us but loves us in Jesus, who died for us, our hatred of God goes away. That drowning weight of sin disappears, and we are free to love him, sing his praises, and live in thankful joy. Second, God s grace and mercy free us from the weight of our sins so that we can love those among us who are oppressed. This time of year, all the Christmas classics are on TV: Home Alone. Christmas in Connecticut. It s a Wonderful Life. A Christmas Story. You can add others. But the most famous one of all is Charles Dickens s A Christmas Carol. In it, Ebenezer Scrooge is such a miserly skinflint, he d let his own nephew freeze in his office for lack of coal. He d even let disabled Tiny Tim die of starvation.

4 Then one Christmas Eve, Scrooge has a bad dream. The spirits of Christmas past, present, and future visit Scrooge and scare him into a conversion experience. He sees himself dead, loathed, and forgotten. Like the Law of God, it shocks him into despairing of his miserly refusal to love. He wakes up Christmas morning a new man, freed from his old hateful ways, freed to be a generous and caring neighbor and uncle. That s what God s mercy and grace do for us. They free us from our sins so that we love God. But they also free us to love our neighbor. That s what we see over and over in the Old Testament. That s what we see in the Gospels and the Epistles in the New Testament. When God s grace and mercy free us from sin to love God, we change and begin caring about what God cares about. We don t wait for the Last Day, when Jesus comes again and every wrong is righted and Eden is restored. We start doing it now, enthusiastically and vigorously. Through God s Word and Sacrament, and with our time and talent and treasure, we become instruments of the Lord, who executes justice for the oppressed, who gives food to the hungry, and sets the prisoners free. We become instruments of the Lord, who opens the eyes of the blind and lifts up those who are bowed down, who watches over the sojourners and upholds the widow and the fatherless (Ps 146:7 9). When I say we do that through Word and Sacrament and with our time, talent, and treasure, I m recognizing there are two levels of meaning here. Sin imprisons, blinds, and weighs us all down; it breaks our backs and spirits. But the Gospel the Word and Sacrament frees us from sin; it restores our sight, enabling us to see God in Christ; and it uplifts our hearts. Thankful and rejoicing, we carry to others these same powerful Means of Grace that saved us. And

5 often they respond as we have, with faith toward God and tangible acts of love. This isn t just metaphor; there s a literal level here. Freed from the burden of sin, we become caring people. We help prisoners, the blind, the bowed down, the sojourner or alien, the widow and the fatherless. We give to outreach and mercy organizations such as LWML or LCMS Disaster Response or other worthy charities. But it s not just with money that we help. If we have the health and strength, we can also show up; we can get in there and get dirty. We can jump in the trenches and work shoulder-to-shoulder with other Christians and neighbors in our community or somewhere else in the world. Or we can do it privately, one-on-one with people who need our care and the love of Christ. We don t have to look far to find them. We just have to lift up our heads and open our eyes. There are prisoners, people who are blind, the homeless, single mothers, and fatherless children right here in our own congregation. Nothing but our own sinful selfishness is stopping us from reaching out to them. And selfishness is only a problem if we let it be, because Jesus has freed us from the weight of sin by taking it to the cross. Freedom has a purpose, and that s so you and I can care about the same things God cares about. Lift up your eyes, roll up your sleeves, open your billfold, and live like you re free! Finally, God s grace and mercy free us from the weight of our sins so that we can love those among us who are unlovable. Every one of us knows somebody we don t particularly like. We tend to avoid those people. It could be a neighbor, a loud-mouth uncle, an irritating co-worker, a

6 fellow church member. But God s Word doesn t say we have to be best buds with everyone. It says we are to love them. These are John s words from the Epistle: And this commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother (1 Jn 4:21). I think we all accept that theoretically. It s putting it into practice that s the problem. Maybe you ve heard this old joke: I love my fellow man; it s people I can t stand. Here s one I heard in the store. Retail would be great if it wasn t for the customers. You get the idea. We accept loving our brother in principle. It s just that sometimes, especially when someone s obnoxious, we have a hard time doing it. What God calls us to, of course, is the kind of love expressed by that Greek word agape as compared to either the Greek philia, brotherly love, or eros, romantic love. We choose our friends because there s something we like about them. We have things in common. We enjoy our time with them. We choose the person we marry for a variety of reasons. But the Christian faith has its own unique concept of love, that agape. Agape love loves someone who is altogether unlovable. There is nothing about the objects of agape love that makes them worthy. They are altogether unworthy. Yet we love them, care for them, sacrifice for them, and forgive them. That is the kind of love Jesus has for sinners like us, who are by our nature unlovable. That s the kind of love God s grace and mercy free us to have for others. So that s what we do. It has nothing to do with feelings or attraction. Instead, it s defined by these words of St. Paul: God demonstrates his own love for us in this: while we were yet sinners, Christ did for us (Rom 5:8). That s the love of caregivers for sick and dying patients. That s the love of

7 counselors and therapists for the mentally ill. That s the love of those who work with the profoundly mentally and physically disabled. Do you remember when the Servants of the Paraclete were in the news? This Catholic order in New Mexico cares for and treats priests with serious issues, including alcohol and drug addictions and pedophilia. Can you imagine anything more repulsive than a priest who would molest children? Some of us think hanging is too good for them. Only a person filled with agape love could work with such a person. And believe it or not, there are some who have devoted their lives to caring for such offenders. The point is that if Jesus can love unlovable sinners like us, he can free us to love other unlovable sinners we don t like at all. And he does. He does as we pray with sincere and believing hearts the Collect for the Fourth Sunday in Advent. I ll pray it again as our closing prayer. Stir up Your power, O Lord, and come and help us by Your might, that the sins which weigh us down may be quickly lifted by Your grace and mercy; for You live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.