ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY
23 August Anno + Domini 2009
"The
Luke 18:9-14 (Gen. 4:1-15; Eph. 2:1-10)
NOTE: This sermon was written by Rev. William
Weedon (
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Our God does not leave us to grope after Him and try to find Him on our own. The God we worship is the God who makes Himself known AND who locates Himself in grace so that His people can find Him and receive the life He wants to give them. That's what the temple was all about; what it was there for.
When King
Solomon prayed the prayer of dedication for that holy place, over and over
again he asked: "and when someone comes
and prays in this place, hear in heaven, your dwelling place, and forgive.†The
Cain had it backwards. Even though there was no temple in those days, already Abel understood that the worship that pleases the Lord is when we let Him give us forgiveness, and that forgiveness always seems to involve blood. So Abel brings the Lamb and sacrifices it for the forgiveness of his sins, so that God can through that offering reach Him pardon and life. The sacrifice confessed that Abel's life was forfeit because of his sin, and that he needed a substitute, a life interposed in place of his own. And Abel recognized in the Lamb that God had provided exactly that. Even when Abel's blood is spilled, and cries aloud to God from the ground, it is the blood of one who has been redeemed, and it does not cry in vain. God will raise Abel, the first martyr for the Lamb.
But in the Gospel the sad Pharisee, standing apart by himself, doesn't seem to know why he's there. The temple was the forgiveness place, where God dished out the "abundance of His mercy, forgiving us those things of which our conscience is afraid and giving us those good things we are not worthy to ask.†God was standing ready to give, as He always was at the temple, but the proud Pharisee didn't think he needed what God was serving up.
"Forgiveness? Why that's for the likes of sinners. Like the rest. Like that miserable tax collector over there.†The Pharisee had come to tell God what a lucky bloke God was to have such a servant - one who took the faith seriously enough to effect both pocketbook and stomach. He was all about what HE had done for the Lord. You slip into that whenever you are ready to pat yourself on the back for you service, and look disparagingly on those you don't think have put in quite the same effort.
In contrast stood the poor tax-collector. He had come to the right place. The forgiveness place. And he came asking for what God was dying to give there. Beating his breast he cried out: "O God, be merciful to me, a sinner.†Our English there doesn't serve as well as it might. More literally, what the man prayed was: O God, be propitious to me, THE sinner! O God, grant the sinner, me, a sacrifice that will take away my sin and give me forgiveness! That's the sort of mercy that he ached for; a bloody mercy from the hand of God.
Jesus tells us
who went home justified. Not the proud
man who forgot what the
How richly God
answers that prayer for which the
He goes to His Cross, condemned that we might be declared innocent; forsaken that we might never be abandoned; given into death that we might share His endless life. Behold, the Lamb! Abel's lamb was already pointing to Him, but it was only a type, a sign, a prefigurement. Here is the reality, here is the One who on His cross answers the plea for mercy, blood mercy, giving forgiveness, giving life.
As the Risen
Lord, who gambled everything upon His Father's promise and found it to hold, He
has gotten rid of the
Paul reminds us in the epistle that it's all for free. No matter how hard you would try, you could never pay for this free gift. God doesn't need what you can do for Him! You need what He alone can do for you and does for free. Be done today with silly Pharisee praying and thinking. God's not in your debt, but you are in His. And when you stand before Him, beating your breast and praying with the tax man, Jesus delights to dump down on you "those good things you are not worthy to ask, but are yours through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ,†to whom with the Father and the Holy Spirit be all honor and glory, now and ever, and unto the ages of ages! Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding keep our hearts and
minds in Christ Jesus, unto life everlasting.
Amen.