Sunday, January 8, 2023

230108 Sermon on the nature of true faith (Baptism of our Lord) January 8, 2023

 Audio recording

Sermon manuscript:

It is fairly well known that in order to be saved from what we deserve for our sins we must have faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. There are many passages that could be cited as proof for this. I’ll give you just one. Christ our Lord says in the last chapter of Mark: “Whoever believes and is baptized shall be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned.” Faith and baptism make for salvation. Unbelief brings condemnation.

Since faith in Jesus is so important, it shouldn’t be surprising that the devil should want to mess around in this area. The devil’s specialty is theology. When Adam and Eve fell into sin, it was through the devil’s false theology. They weren’t brought into temptation by their lower passions. It was by means of their higher, spiritual abilities that the devil convinced them that the rule God had given them was rather arbitrary. Maybe God was holding out on them. Do not think that the devil only deals with filth and blood. He dresses up as an angel of light, puts on his preaching gown, and teaches religion.

So it is also, then, when it comes to what I’d like to talk about today—deceiving people about faith. But before we get into how we can be deceived, we should first know what it means to have true faith. The main thing that you should always remember about true faith is that it is absolutely mandatory that it be connected with the Word of God.

Adam and Eve’s first sin was despising the clear words that God had spoken to them and preferring something else that seemed better and wiser. Faith must stick with what God has said and refuse to be moved from what God has said. Adam and Eve should have told that snake to take a hike, but unfortunately they were charmed by it.

Faith must absolutely be tied up with the Word of God. But what, then, does that mean? Beware the devil here too. It’s easy for us to fall into a chain of logic that goes like this: Faith must only rely upon the Word of God. The Word of God is recorded for us in the Bible. The Bible is an awfully big book. I’m not a very good reader, and even when I try to read the Bible I often find it confusing. So I guess I won’t ever know the Word of God because I’m not going to master the entirety of the Scriptures.

Now the more honest and direct conclusion that should be drawn from this chain of logic is that I guess I don’t and I won’t have a true faith. But since people know that unbelief means hell for them, that’s not the conclusion that most people draw. Instead most people just kind of throw up their hands and say, “I guess I’ll just have to hope that I have faith. I’m sure not going to read the Bible. That’s way too much work and I’m not smart enough.” So what that means is that you won’t do anything seriously when it comes to God’s Word, and you’ll just have to hope that that’s good enough.

This is dreadful and unnecessary. It is dreadful because it is the very opposite of faith. Everything is left in doubt. If you can’t master all of the Scriptures, then you’ll have none of it—even though no human being has ever mastered the Scriptures. This is also unnecessary. Nowhere in the Scriptures does it say that we have to memorize or master everything that has been revealed.

The Scriptures do say about themselves that they are inspired by the Holy Spirit, and that therefore they are profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness. So you should never believe that it is not worthwhile to learn more and more from the Scriptures. But there are some things that God has said which are more essential and upon which our faith is necessarily dependent.

Getting to know these essential teachings has been the primary task of the Christian Church from the very beginning. Christ our Lord says in the last chapter of Matthew, “Therefore, go, and make disciples.” A disciple is a follower or a student. And so Christians from the very beginning have been teaching others the very things that they themselves have been taught. And what did the Apostles and Christians teach? They didn’t just sit down with the Bible and start at Genesis chapter 1 verse 1. They could have. That wouldn’t necessarily have been bad. But probably those ancient people weren’t too different from us today. And so they collected the most essential teachings and taught that to those who might become Christians.

We have a very handy and time-tested tool from that tradition in the Christian church with the little pamphlet called “Luther’s Small Catechism.” I’m not talking about the book called Luther’s Small Catechism with the explanation. The explanation greatly expands the content so that we end up dealing with a pretty big book again, and then we end up with all those same complaints and laziness that people have with the Bible. No, I’m only talking about the original Small Catechism, but a little pamphlet. It is simple and small enough to be read by a child; profound enough to never be mastered—even by Luther himself, who says as much.

And I can even make the material smaller yet. In the Catechism the first two chief parts, the Ten Commandments and the Creed, are what is quintessential—the essential of the essential. These two first parts of the Catechism answer two utterly and absolutely fundamental questions: Who am I? and Who is God?

The Ten Commandments answer the question of who I am. I am a sinner. Why? Just because I say so? No. I am a sinner because I have broken all ten of the commandments. So next time someone asks who you are, if you really wanted to get down to the fundamental and nitty-gritty about yourself, you could answer: “I’m a sinner.”

And who is God? God is the justifier of sinners. God created me. God sent his Son to be my Lord and to redeem me. God sanctifies me by the Holy Spirit giving me faith in Jesus Christ as my Lord. God justifies sinners. God has tied himself up in his very nature with justifying us sinners by the Christ’s holy, precious blood, and his innocent suffering and death.

So when it comes to having a true faith, which absolutely and mandatorily must be tied up with the Word the comes from God, these two fundamental questions tower above everything else: Who am I? I’m a sinner. Who is God? He is the justifier of sinners. If you don’t have these two fundamental things straight it is impossible to do anything true or beneficial with anything else that the Word of God might say.

So if you want to go to heaven, that is, if you want to have a true faith, I can give you no better advice than to diligently read your Catechism—again, the pamphlet, not the book. We give these catechisms out for free. If we run out I’ll print some more. And even within the Catechism itself, the Ten Commandments and the Creed are the essential of the essential. They are tremendous guides if you will take them seriously. Examine your life and your faith by them and you will be able to avoid countless errors and tricks of the devil.

Now let’s get into some of those tricks just a little bit. In a way there’s no end to the devil’s tricks. What I’d like to talk about today is one that commonly afflicts folks in our circles. It is very common for our people to pretty much follow the rules, and go with the flow, but we certainly don’t want to go overboard when it comes to how we are supposed to live. This is a kind of Christianity we can develop for ourselves where we are choosing for ourselves which commandments we might want to keep.

Maybe we don’t like to pray all that much, and so we break the second commandment. Or maybe we’re just really independent and forceful characters—leaders, you might say—so of course we don’t want to honor our parents or the other authorities God has placed over us. Or maybe we have a thriving business, but the successfulness of that business depends upon lying, cheating, and abusing our customers or our workers. Or maybe we have a hot head, and we can’t help it, and anger burns within us. Or maybe we twitter about what is going on with everybody else and can’t keep our mouths shut. Or maybe we don’t like hearing God’s Word, we don’t like the pastor of the church service, or we had a fight with someone at church.

Now realize that all the while, and in the midst of all these sins and more, it is not uncommon at all for us to believe that we just totally believe in Jesus. Boy oh boy do we ever believe in Jesus. We just believe in him so much! Start playing Amazing Grace, and don’t be surprised if you see a tear come into our eye.

Our society and especially our churches would be much better off if there were less bragging about a faith that just might be imaginary and hypocritical, and instead paying more attention to the Word of God. And not even to the whole Bible, which, of course, would be fine, but just the Ten Commandments and the Creed. If we payed attention to the Word of God, we’d then know that we are sinners, and we’re in the wrong. We might repent and change our ways. The Word of God says that the sacrifices of God are a broken and contrite spirit. A broken and contrite spirit God will not despise.

But not a lot of people are going to do that because it’s awfully convenient to ignore God’s commandments while relying on the belief that you are a believer. This is very convenient, because then you get to do all the things that you want to do. You can basically be the god of your own life. You have the knowledge and you determine what is good and what is evil. Pity the fool who might tell you otherwise. And then, after you’ve lived your life just the way that you want to live your life you get to go to heaven. Because the Scriptures say, do they not, that “Whoever believes and is baptized shall be saved. Whoever does not believe will be condemned.” And there’s one thing you know for sure about yourself, and that is that you are a believer in Jesus! Boy oh boy are you a believer in Jesus.

But what if your fake, made-up faith is just that? And, frankly, how could it be anything but fake? Any so-called faith that allows and basically encourages you to go deeper and deeper into lawlessness and sin can’t come from the Holy Spirit. It comes from an evil spirit.

So how should we handle all those breakings of the Ten Commandments, that even Christians with a true faith find themselves doing? Again, remember that true faith is utterly bound up with the Word of God. So may God bless you by having the Word of God come to you so that you may repent. May God’s Name be hallowed among us and may God’s kingdom come among us so that you may repent.

Having the Ten Commandments around, having a true interpretation of them, is a gift from God. Those who despise and ignore those commandments also usually end up having God take away his Word from them. Realize that you are not in control of your own faith. True faith is worked only by the Holy Spirit through the Word of God, so those who make themselves deaf to God’s commandments can end up having God make them totally and irrevocably deaf. He scatters the proud in the imagination of their hearts.

So do not despise and neglect the Ten Commandments which reveal your sin. When God reveals your sin to you, that’s never fun, and you shouldn’t expect it to be fun or easy, but you should understand that it is good and that it is a gift. Thank God that he reveals afresh, once again, who you are. Who are you? You are a sinner. So turn away from your self-justifying and believe what God reveals about himself. Who is God? He is the justifier of sinners.

This true faith, which lives on the Word of God, is kind of like a bird. Birds don’t sow, nor reap, nor gather into barns. They are dependent upon their heavenly Father feeding them their daily bread, day by day. So it is also with the true faith of a Christian. Our faith is in need of constantly being fed, day by day, bringing us to repentance and faith over and over again until we finally die with faith in Jesus.

Whenever anybody talks about faith in a different way from this humble and needy kind of process, I’m immediately skeptical. Maybe I might give some credence to someone saying that he or she has gobs and gobs of faith if they scrupulously keep the Ten Commandments, if they are gathering with and encouraging their fellow sinners, and are giving their all in a life that is lived in God. But that’s not what’s usually going on. Instead, they talk about how much faith they have for the very purpose of you leaving them alone. They don’t want to hear God’s commandments. They don’t want to repent or change. They’ve been tricked.

Instead of boasting about how strong your faith is, I think it is much closer to the truth to boast about how good God has been to you by faithfully bringing his Word to you. This is what is behind Paul’s advice that if we are going to boast, we should boast about our weaknesses. Christians are thankful when they realize how God has pulled them out of the pit of unrepentance and unbelief again and again. And we should believe that God will continue to be faithful to us, bringing his Word to us. We shouldn’t live in terror of God withdrawing himself from us. On the other hand, when God speaks to us we should listen. Don’t make yourself deaf to it or remove yourself from it, lest God should remove himself from you.


No comments:

Post a Comment