Tuesday, July 30, 2019

190728 Sermon on Romans 6:1-11 (Trinity 6), July 28, 2019

190728 Sermon on Romans 6:1-11 (Trinity 6), July 28, 2019

When Adam and Eve were created in the Garden of Eden, they were created differently than all the other creatures. With light, the seas, the land, the heavenly bodies, the plants, the birds, fish, and animals, with all these things God spoke them into existence. He said, “Let there be…” and there was. But when he gave himself the task of creating Man, he did several things that he didn’t otherwise do. First, he took council within himself, Moses says. I don’t know that we can totally understand what that means, for who has known the mind of the Lord? But I think we can say that it means God thought about the nature and shape that man and woman were to have. Adam was formed from the ground, and God breathed life into his nostrils. Eve was subsequently formed from Adam’s rib. God added flesh, and made her a living being, a suitable companion for Adam. The Bible also says that Adam and Eve were created in God’s image. That means that something of God’s nature was stamped upon these creatures like an image can be stamped upon metal to create a coin. Adam and Eve were by no means gods, but something of God was impressed upon them that other creatures did not have.
Theoretically, we should be able to know the great difference that exists between us and animals just by sitting back and observing how we are different. Indeed, that might work splendidly if we still possessed the image of God in all its fullness. But that is no longer the case. Sin has pretty much destroyed the impression God made upon us at the start. When Adam fell all mankind fell. His sin infects us all. We do not voluntarily and joyfully enter into God’s will and do what he has commanded just because it is good and to his glory. The fall into sin introduced a new motivating factor in us human beings that determines our actions. When we are confronted with a set of choices we now do not think about God or his will or his glory. Instead, we ask, “What’s in it for me? Am I going to be benefited by this? Is it going to give me pleasure or happiness?” If we believe that it will, then we will do it. If we don’t believe that it will, then we won’t do it, or if we are forced to do it nonetheless, then we do it with great bitterness.
Another word for this is “selfishness.” We will gladly help ourselves, but not others. For example, nobody has to threaten and harass a kid to go to an amusement park. Or nobody has to bribe somebody to eat food that is delicious. We gladly take up these kinds of things because we want to do them. Our will is one with these pursuits that give us pleasure. But what about when a kid is required to do something that helps his or her parents instead of himself? Do you remember how bitter it sometimes was to do chores that your parents forced you to do? Sticks and carrots were required to make you do it. You did these unpleasant things because you knew that you had to do them sooner or later, because possibly worse experiences might be in store for you if you didn’t do them, or perhaps you had some reward in store for you if you carried through with it. If there were no sticks or carrots involved, you just didn’t do unpleasant things. Punishments and rewards are what motivate sinners, because sinners care about themselves.
This is the opposite of the way that we were created. It is the opposite of God. God is love. All the commandments of God may be summarized with the word “love.” We are not just to love those who do good to us, for this is nothing other than loving ourselves, in the hopes that the goodness will keep on coming to us. We are also to love our enemies. Enemies are people from whom we do not expect anything good for ourselves. What we expect from them is pain and trouble. If we were to only look out for ourselves when it comes to our enemies, then, at the very least we would carefully avoid them so that they can’t hurt us. If we remain involved with them, then we will suffer like Jesus suffered. Because we are selfish, we do not ever want to suffer. Or if we do have to suffer, then we want a big fat pay-off in the end to make it all worth it. This is because we love ourselves more than we love anybody or anything else.
It is necessary for us to speak at length about the way that we are unloving and selfish by nature so that we can understand the Bible. The Bible teaches us things about ourselves and what will happen to us that we are predisposed to disbelieve. For example, in our Gospel reading today Jesus says that unless our righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees we will by no means enter the Kingdom of heaven. The scribes and the Pharisees were tremendously disciplined and outwardly pious. They were extremely careful to keep God’s commandments and were exceptionally good citizens. They are precisely the kind of people that you sometimes hear people talking about when they say, “If anybody is in heaven, then surely that person is in heaven.” And yet with the words in our Gospel reading Jesus locks them out of heaven, and says that they are not good enough.
This is not because Jesus is being artificially nit-picky. He says this because of the truth of what is going on with these great achievers. The truth is that they are not motivated by anything else than the love of themselves. They do what they do so that they can be recognized and praised. Even their striving for heaven is just another one of their selfish endeavors. They do not so much believe in God as they believe in themselves and in their own goodness. There is really nothing that feels so good as feeling good about yourself, and with their strict codes of conduct the scribes and Pharisees indulge in this tasty treat. To sum up everything we might say about these scribes and Pharisees, we could say that they are corrupt in such a deep way that all of their striving cannot set them free or make them righteous. The power of sin is so great that there has never been a single soul who has even come close to setting themselves free from it. So when Jesus says that our righteousness must exceed that of the scribes and Pharisees he is really saying that no one is righteous, no, not even one.
In order for us to be accounted righteous before God, therefore, it is necessary for the most drastic, cosmic, astounding things to happen. It is even necessary for us to be born again, as Jesus told Nicodemus. Unless we are born again we cannot see the kingdom of God, Jesus says to him. Nicodemus naturally wondered how it might be possible to be born again. Jesus responded that we must be born by the water and the Spirit. That is to say, we must be baptized.
In our epistle reading today St. Paul speaks about what happens when we are baptized, and if you will only believe what he says you will see what drastic and amazing things happen. He says that we have been baptized into Jesus’s death. Death and hell is the correct punishment for sin. Jesus, though he knew no sin, became sin for us and endured the punishment for sin that we deserve. When we were baptized, St. Paul says, we were united with Jesus in his death—in that punishment for our sins that was carried out on him so that atonement was made.
Being united with him in his death we are also united with him in his resurrection. Since we are united with him, we are one with him. Since we are one with him, we share together in what belongs to each of us. The Son of God took upon himself our human nature as well as all the sins that we have committed. That is what he has received from us. What we have received from him is his own perfect, divine righteousness and perfect justification before God. We have received his sonship as the Son of God, and are therefore children of God. We have received from him, therefore also, God’s benediction and blessing. God is well pleased with us for the sake of Jesus. He gives us life and love and happiness. These divine blessings will only increase in us until they are given in full measure in heaven and with the resurrection from the dead.
And so we should think of ourselves as the children of two different Adams, as St. Paul speaks of it in his letter to the Romans. According to our flesh we are children of the Adam who fell into sin. This wrecked so many things that we cannot even begin to list them all, but the most precious and important thing it wrecked was our relationship with God. The entire nature and mentality of human beings is opposed to God from the moment of our conception in the womb of our mothers. We are not motivated by love of anyone or anything except ourselves. This results in coarse, disgusting outbreaks of sins, and we all well understand that. What we might not understand so well is that this false mentality also infects and corrupts even our seemingly good deeds. The scribes and Pharisees looked splendid on the outside, but inwardly they were full of uncleanness. This is what we have inherited from the first Adam.
The second Adam is the Lord Jesus Christ. We are born from him by the water and the Spirit, by Holy Baptism. What we inherit from this Adam is justification before God so that we are accounted righteous by the atonement that Jesus has worked for us on the cross. We are therefore reconciled and acceptable to God. Furthermore we are given the Holy Spirit, so that we begin to love and trust in God. We begin to take delight in the will and Law of God and enter into it with our own will. We begin to love as God has first loved us. From the first Adam we received sin, hatred of God, death, and hell. From the second Adam we have received forgiveness, righteousness, life, and salvation.
Notice how both of these states of being that we have received from the two Adams is above and beyond us all. Nobody has ever asked to be born. We are not in control of that. Likewise, nobody has ever been born without sin after Adam and Eve fell. We have inherited sin from them just as we inherit any number of different genetic traits. It doesn’t matter if someone wishes with all their might to be a foot taller than they actually are, it isn’t going to happen. It’s been inherited whether they like it or not. Likewise, our sin and damnation is such that it belongs to us whether we like it or not.
The same thing is true with the gift that is given to us in our baptism into Jesus Christ. This gift is not dependent upon us in any way. Jesus is who he is. He does what he does. He gives what he gives. If he baptizes and forgives and saves, then that is precisely what takes place. It isn’t up to us to dictate what Jesus can or should do. It’s his baptism. He does with it what he wants.
Now it can seem as though we have something to do with our salvation because baptism is a gift that can only be received by faith, and we are able to disbelieve. But this is no great ability, nor is it praiseworthy. In order for you to see this, consider this analogy. Let’s say that you are the heir of someone who is as rich as rich can be. As the heir to this rich person, all the money that belongs to that rich person belongs to you. But let’s suppose that you decide that you are going to pretend that you aren’t the heir, and so you are poor and destitute, miserable and pathetic. Is that some kind of great achievement? No, it is just sheer stupidity and ungratefulness. So it is also when we deny the inheritance that we have as baptized children of God. Why on earth would we deny the salvation that is given to us as children and heirs of God? And yet it happens, because sin makes us stupid.
But God has given us his Word to make us wise. What God’s word teaches us is our great need on the one hand, and God’s incredibly gracious promises on the other. For our salvation, for the renewal of our life, for us to beat back sin, we do not look to what is within us. All that we are going to find in our heart is the evil that we have inherited from the first Adam. Instead we look to the second Adam and the second birth, and what God has promised and achieved thereby. Because God is gracious, he has washed you with the Baptism of rebirth and renewal. This is not in any way your doing, but rather God’s doing. In embracing this gift of God you have salvation according to Jesus’s own Word: “Whoever believes and is baptized shall be saved. Whoever does not believe will be condemned.”
Baptism is more powerful than your sin, and so why do you remain in your sin? Why do you believe that it is still bound to you and that you cannot ever be free from it? You are in Jesus who is risen from the dead. Death no longer has dominion over him. Likewise, therefore, it also has no dominion over you. Therefore, consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.

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