Sunday, August 2, 2015

Tenth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: John 6:29
Theme: Divine Work

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

They wanted more of Jesus. The phenomenon of people flocking to Christ would seem to be the ideal situation. But their motives were complex and confused. We continue this week with the storyline of Jesus’ miraculous feeding of the crowds. The next day they track Him down on the other side of the lake. They were surprised He had gotten so far away. Without even as much as a “Hello!” Jesus addresses their motives. “I tell you the truth, you are looking for Me, not because you saw miraculous signs but because you ate the loaves and had your fill. Do not work for food that spoils, but for food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you.”1 And so begins a lengthy exchange that ends with many parting ways with the Breadwinner who seemed more concerned about spiritual food.

But first they make some very relevant enquiries of the Lord. “What must we do to do the works God requires?”2 They were searching for more detail on what it would mean to be a follower of Christ. What were the obligations? What would it cost them? We might expect Jesus to tell them, as He did elsewhere, to love God wholeheartedly and the neighbour sacrificially. Those are the requirements of the law. But what does He say here? “The work of God is this: to believe in the One He has sent.”3 The work of God is to believe.

Dear friends, the hardest part- of Christianity- is the believing; the doing follows as a matter of course. Now you might tend to disagree, claiming your faith is simple; you just believe what God says. But Satan is busy like a skilled attorney presenting “hard” evidence to undermine your faith. He’s always raising the question within us, “What’s in it for me?” What is the most damning expression of self-centredness? It’s not necessarily the crass way in which we fail in those outward acts of doing kind things for others. The most incriminating evidence of self-focus is the belief that we’ve done enough, or we’re good enough to please God; what’s more, that we’d like praise and recognition for it. In truth, we’re no longer trusting in God at all because we don’t need His grace; we don’t believe He’ll really provide.

There is a long and infamous history illustrating how quickly people lose faith. The Psalmist says this about the Israelites in the desert, “They continued to sin against Him, rebelling in the desert against the Most High. They willfully put God to the test by demanding the food they craved. They spoke against God, saying, ‘Can God spread a table in the desert?’”4 The Lord showed Amos a vision of a plumb line, a builder’s tool to measure the straightness of a wall. Amos said, “This is what He showed me: The Lord was standing by a wall that had been built true to plumb, with a plumb line in His hand.”5 But the house of Israel had become a crooked structure. They had departed from the standard of true wisdom. They had to be brought back true-to-plumb lest they come crashing to their end like a structure toppling off its foundation. And so John the Baptist came re-publishing the words of Isaiah to prepare for the coming of the Christ, “Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for Him…the crooked roads shall become straight, and the rough ways smooth.”6

The hardest thing is to believe but God doesn’t leave us hanging. Personal faith is a work of the Holy Spirit that enables an individual to trust that Jesus is the Christ, the Saviour of the world. Sometimes this is called saving faith. Faith is the vehicle, the conduit to Christ. Faith also has content. Faith must have an object, something, someone, we believe in. Faith itself doesn’t save us; Christ saves us. Our trust is not generic; it has a specific point of reference: The crucified, risen, and living Jesus and all that He teaches. It’s not quite so simple as to say that the full content of faith is the person of Christ Himself. All the necessary implications are included.

Why? Because faith desires to be obedient. It dares to take God at His word. Consider the relationship between a parent and child, one built on trust. We might say the child has faith in the parent. But if a child has a personal relationship with a parent that excludes the provision of daily needs, protection from danger, and participation in the inheritance, then that relationship is significantly compromised and no longer comprises a healthy relationship. Its content has been truncated. The relationship is incomplete or distorted if the child doesn’t honour and obey the parent and their instruction. The same holds for our faith in Christ. It’s a package deal.

So, your faith is not immune to scrutiny. What does the Scripture say? “Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith; test yourselves.”7 Last week Jesus questioned Philip about the multitudes only to test his faith.8 We are all likely to have beliefs that involve felicitous incongruity. That is, we happily believe things that are inconsistent with the teaching of God and reality. It’s not even uncommon to unwittingly believe things that are mutually exclusive. Part of Christian maturity is recognizing whether these are trivial matters or serious departures from biblical truth.

The dynamic of faith is well-defined biblically, and it is decisive. If the matter under consideration can be accomplished by human means then it doesn’t require faith. God doesn’t require faith in things that are humanly reasonable. It’s when we come up against impossibilities that faith is needed. We tend to play probabilities out to the limit, sometimes based on evidence, other times based on hearsay. It doesn’t take faith to believe you will eventually win the lottery; you’re simply playing probabilities, as remote as they may be.

The same is not true of our trust in Christ. Resurrection from the dead is beyond mathematical or biological probability. The forgiveness of sins is not a matter of human ingenuity. Rescue from the accusations of Satan cannot be reasonably achieved through human effort. These things require divine intervention. Miraculous, yes! But not simply as isolated interventions- a healing here, and a fortuitous rescue there- but as the entirety of God’s divine embrace in His love for the world. The God-in-the-flesh Messiah reconciles us to the heavenly Father so holistically we live in two over-lapping worlds at once. This is the reality of our faith.

This Christ was nailed to the cross for your sins. He suffered the harrowing horrors of hell to spare you from its devastation. He thwarted death in His resurrection so that you could be raised spiritually now and bodily on the Last Day. You are baptized into His death and you participate in the power of His resurrection. You share in His life through the sacred meal of Holy Communion. All of these are blessings and certainties that you possess through faith. This faith radically reorients your life. The apostle says it this way, “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.”9

In binding you to Christ faith also frees you to serve others without fear. The African impala can jump to a height of over 10 feet and cover a distance of greater than 7 meters. Yet these magnificent creatures can be kept in an enclosure in any zoo with a 3-foot wall. The animals will not jump if they cannot see where their feet will fall. Faith is the ability to trust what we cannot see, and with faith we are freed from the flimsy enclosures of life that fear traps us in. Dear friends, we are not ruled by fear because Christ has overcome. Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Tenth Sunday After Pentecost
2 August, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 John 6:26-27 2 John 6:28 3 John 6:29
4 Psalm 78:17-19 5 Amos 7:7 6 Luke 3:4-5
7 2 Corinthians 13:5 8 See John 6:6 9 Galatians 2:20

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Ninth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: John 6:15
Theme: Maintenance and Monarchy

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

Miracles aren’t always dazzling. God often tends to our needs discreetly. A moment of reflection will likely enable you to recall times when God quietly surprised you with His kindness. The subtlety and simplicity of some miracles of Christ do not negate their witness to His divinity. The multiplication of the loaves and the fishes was not flashy or eye-catching. Many would not have been near enough to Jesus to witness it visually. The exact logistics of it have not been revealed to us. Nevertheless- hapless, helpless, and hungry- the crowd was served with bread by Jesus, the Bread of Life. Advertising of the sort, “Come and hear Jesus, all meals included!” was not even necessary. They were drawn to the authority of His teaching and His command over the power of sin. Their needs were provided for.

When we pray for our daily bread we are asking for more than the means to fill our bellies. We are asking for God to make us grateful even as we remember those who go hungry. We are praying for trust to believe that God will provide according to His good and gracious will. The petition relates not just to food, but to all the material possessions we need in this temporal life. The Scriptures call on us to keep a balanced perspective on how we value the things of this life in comparison with the treasures of the life to come. It’s a perspective not shared by the unbelieving world.

A man named John Wendel and his sisters were some of the most miserly people ever known. Although they had received a huge inheritance from their parents, they spent very little of it and did all they could to simply hoard their wealth. John was able to influence five of his six sisters never to marry, and they lived in the same house in New York City for 50 years. When the last sister died in 1931, her estate was valued at more than $100 million. In 1931! Her only dress was one that she had made herself, and she had worn it for 25 years.

What a contrast to way Christ encourages us to love our neighbour selflessly! Jesus says, “If you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even ‘sinners’ [unbelievers] lend to ‘sinners,’ expecting to be repaid in full. But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back.”1 The Lord introduces something pretty radical here. It tests the integrity of our trust in Him. He isn’t encouraging believers to be irresponsible. He’s teaching us to be unrestricted in the manner and intent of our generosity.

Dear friends, when it comes to our manner and our intents we should quickly recognize our need for humility. This is where dealing with our sin becomes thorny. What makes you think your sin is any less offensive than the next person’s? Do you judge your own motives to be more pure? We cannot view our own sins objectively. Our assessment is skewed by our participation. A vision-impaired person cannot see a clear reflection in a mirror. A sinner cannot accurately gage the seriousness of his or her own sins. But God doesn’t call on us to quantify. He calls on us to repent. He calls on us to believe what the Spirit says, “There is no one righteous, not even one…for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”2 He convicts us of trying to make excuses and exposes all of our cover-ups. Perhaps we’ve hidden them from others- our selfish motives, our hatreds, our greed, our adulteries, our idolatries- but everything is transparent before the Almighty. His omniscience has not been compromised. He sees all.

The feeding of the multitudes caused undesirable consequences for Jesus. He wasn’t an earthly ruler trying to gather subjects. The Scripture says, “Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make Him king by force, withdrew again to a mountain by Himself.”3 Now this gives us more than enough evidence to establish the fact that many had misunderstood the purpose of Jesus’ miracles. He wasn’t trying to establish a Utopia on earth. Attempts at achieving Utopia are the perennial interest of many who believe this temporal life is an end in itself. The reaction of the people also gives us reason to question motives. They wanted to be maintained in their daily provisions and what easier way than making Christ their monarch?

It is, of course, human nature to want to take shortcuts; to find the easy way out. Stress makes the temptation greater. Maybe few people know of the temptations you struggle with, the doubts you harbor, the anxieties that beset you? Perhaps no one at all knows, save, God alone? Maybe you even feel like a hypocrite sometimes- presenting an outward appearance of stability while inwardly you are full of turmoil? May you wonder if your problems, big or small, will ever be resolved? Maybe you wonder, like some in the crowd, where your next meal is coming from, or at least, how the bills will get paid? Each day is a gift. We learn from the past. We commit the future to God’s keeping. We live in the present. While we responsibly make plans for the future we also remember that God may call us out of this world at any time.

We remember Christ is always present with us. We remember there is a cross. That is the crux of the matter. It is final. To replace the meaning of the cross, the event of redemption with some other source of hope, is to irreparably damage the one truth which is the foundation of our salvation. The crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ are the very substance of the Good News. The gospel is not mere information. The gospel contains information, but the gospel is the power of God, the means by which He not only communicates, but by which He transforms hearts and minds with His truth. It is the source of hope and the cause of joy.

It changes our understanding of God’s presence and work among us and within us. We do not come to Holy Communion to elevate ourselves through spiritual meditation to Christ in heaven. The altar is not merely a focal point for our thoughts and piety. Here at the altar Christ descends to meet us in the sacrament. He makes Himself present through His body and blood for the forgiveness of sins. He meets us here as the crucified, risen, ascended, and coming Christ; transcending time and space.

The meal of Holy Communion belongs more to the future than it does to the past. It impacts us in the present precisely because the salvation secured at the cross frees us from the condemnation of our sins even now, as the Scripture says, “There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”4 But it is a foretaste of the feast to come; the heavenly banquet. It is the ongoing feast for the baptized.

Christ is the King who serves us. His compassion knows no bounds. The apostle makes this request which is fittingly ours, “I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ.”5 Dear friends, we will never exhaust the treasure of God’s riches in Christ; not in a thousand lifetimes, not in eternity. Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Ninth Sunday After Pentecost
26 July, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Luke 6:34-35
2 Romans 3:10, 23
3 John 6:15
4 Romans 8:1
5 Ephesians 3:17-18

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Eighth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: Mark 6:34
Theme: God Among Us

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

“He began teaching them many things.”1 That was the response of Jesus to the crowds needing compassion. Compassion is a particularly divine quality. God has a corner on the market. To the extent that humans also display compassion they are reflecting the image of God. Pure compassion with no compromises, no doubts, and no regrets exists in Christ alone. He makes the compassion of God tangible to sinners, though often in promissory form. All of His oaths are true regardless of the evidence we experience to the contrary. We may suffer, but He embraces our suffering, absorbs it into His, and frees us from its final power.

The short descriptions of today’s gospel narrative are characteristic of Jesus’ ministry.
“Wherever He went- into villages, towns or countryside- they placed the sick in the marketplaces. They begged Him to let them touch even the edge of His cloak, and all who touched Him were healed.”2 It sounds like hyperbole; exaggeration for the sake of communication. But it was the concrete experience of those who came into contact with Jesus. His power healed them. His compassion cured them. His presence freed them. He was greater than Solomon; more than a prophet even though most didn’t yet understand He was the Redeemer of the world. The cross was still looming. The resurrection was still to come.

There are many today who take leave of Jesus right there are the end of Mark Chapter 6. That is, they part ways with the One they believe only to be an itinerant healer of a by-gone age. For the people of Jesus day too, the magnetism of His personality and power would soon come into tension with the broader implications of being His disciple. Core convictions were at stake. Crosses were required to be carried; self-determination was required to be sacrificed. When push came to shove Jesus turned to the Twelve and asked, “‘You do not want to leave too, do you?...Simon Peter answered Him, ‘Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life.”3

Dear friends, the sick and the suffering were drawn to Jesus out of necessity. They recognized their need for help. Sinners, however, often don’t recognize their spiritual sickness. We go on pretending or believing we are healthy; able to manage on our own or by other means. Opposing God’s will becomes problematic for many only when they get tangled in the consequences. God certainly uses the circumstances to chastise us, but He desires a deeper basis for repentance. He desires that we properly fear transgressing His word. Do you hesitate to speak falsehood because of the trouble it could get you into or because you believe it would dishonor God? Do you refrain from stealing because of the embarrassment or punishment of getting caught or do you believe following God’s commands serves the well-being of all? Do you try to justify yourself or do you look for God’s justification?

Luther was concerned about being justified- in the truest spiritual sense. It was vitally important to know how one could be accounted righteous before God. Did it require good works? Were good intentions a necessity? If we gave our best effort would God accept that and supply what was lacking? Or was faith sufficient? Luther’s concern that every sinner know unequivocally that God is appeased only through the sacrifice of Christ; that His wrath is turned away only by the ransom-price paid on the cross; that the mercy of God is received only by faith, is still relevant. There is no other way for sin to be atoned for.

But today the questions are being asked differently. People are looking for acceptance from God. They are looking for certainty that they are connected with Him. But they tend to want that connection on their own terms. They want to participate in divine things, things that transcend the mundaneness which characterizes much of this life, but they don’t want to be constrained by powers greater than themselves. There is little appetite for truth. Passion for it is declining significantly within the church. Christ must be savvy to the thinking of the world to learn how to best address these realities.

Our wisdom and strength must continue to be sourced from the only reliable place. We gather here because we believe that here the eternal truth of God is spoken. We believe that He has ordered things for our well-being. We believe that Christ is the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End, the First and the Last. We believe He is the same yesterday and today and forever. He died and rose again for us and for our salvation. There is no other Christ than the Christ of the Scriptures. There is no other Saviour than the one disclosed to us in the pages of Holy Writ. The faith we have through the gift of the Holy Spirit is faith in the Christ of the Bible. Jesus does not walk off the pages of Holy Scripture into a relationship with us constructed on another foundation. He does not reimage or reinvent Himself for the appetites of a different age.

Time, distance, space- these are not barriers to Christ’s presence among us. Paul says today that the church is “Built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus Himself as the chief cornerstone.”4 “In Him [Christ] you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by His Spirit.”5 The baptized people of God are the body of Christ on this earth. In baptism we participate in the life of the triune God. The Bible says, “If anyone loves Me, he will obey My teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make Our home with him.”6 How mind-blowing is this promise! The Son of God and the Father Himself vow to dwell with the believer. The reality that God dwells with you! How does that strike you? It is daunting. It is exhilarating. You are His temple. The One who heaven and earth cannot contain; the King of kings, and Lord of lords, the Lord God of Sabaoth- near to you in your frailty!

We know the promises of His presence are common in the Bible. “Where two or three come together in My name, there am I with them.”7 “Surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”8 When Christ was seated at the right hand of God it means not only that He was honoured with the highest possible status; it means that now also in His humanity He rules and is present everywhere according to His good and gracious will. In this way He is available to us in Holy Communion. In it He offers us a healing of higher order than the healing He provided for the sick, the blind, and the lame. He is a God of compassion. His compassion frees us to serve others because it binds our sin for all eternity. Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Eighth Sunday After Pentecost
19 July, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Mark 6:34
2 1 Corinthians 9:24-25
3 John 6:67-68
4 Ephesians 2:20
5 Ephesians 2:22
6 John 14:23
7 Matthew 18:20
8 Matthew 28:20

Monday, July 13, 2015

Seventh Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: Mark 6:27
Theme: The Ultimate Price

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

Life is tenuous. God is reliable. We are never more than a single accident, incident, or impediment from realized mortality. That makes life precious. What comfort could you offer to John the Baptist and his followers? Beheaded for calling King Herod to integrity by condemning his adultery, he suffered martyrdom under the most capricious of circumstances. How could it be that the Lord’s prophet, the forerunner of the Messiah- lauded as one of whom no one greater had been born of women- would meet his demise at the whim of an intoxicated despot? He was given no opportunity for testimony in his final hour. Yet, the gruesome record of His death is recorded as a witness for the ages. It stands as a memory, a monument, and a motivation to faithfulness. Six months older than Jesus, he died before Jesus reached the cross. Christ Himself was naturally grieved. The Scripture says, “When Jesus heard what had happened, He withdrew by boat privately to a solitary place.”1

John’s faith endured the ultimate test. Faith that is not tested soon grows fat. It gets lazy. The bearing of our crosses is not a motionless, sedentary activity. What does the apostle say? “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever.2 Faith engages a dual struggle simultaneously. On the one hand we grapple with taking God at His word. The purity of His grace is more than the uncleanness of our souls can bear. On the other hand we wrestle against the temptations of sin; the tug of Satan, the pressure of the world, the pull of selfishness. This is a lot for faith to do.

But faith isn’t really doing the doing, God is doing the doing; faith is doing the trusting. It’s easy to bear the kindness and generosity of God, and indeed, we rightly praise Him for it. It’s another matter, however, to bear His darkness. Christ promises escape from eternal death. Nowhere does He preach a life of luxury, effortlessness, or painlessness. Christ calls on us to love others selflessly. That requires sacrifice. The Bible nowhere teachers that devotion to Christ makes life more carefree; but it absolutely makes it more meaningful. Note how Peter encourages the scattered believers. “…though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that your faith- of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire- may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honour when Jesus Christ is revealed.”3

Dear friends, the reign and rule of God will always be contested. It always has been; it always will be. The human ego prefers to answer to no one. Every generation makes some kind of effort to discount the profound impact of sin on the human race. Complete denial that sin exists is rarely asserted-yet- but the parameters and consequences are continually revised to suit the whims and agendas of those with the most invested. Manipulation of the moral code has always been a favourite pastime of people and we shouldn’t expect that to change. The mere declaration that God does not change- while true enough- will not suffice to redress hearts and minds steeped in the conviction that change is always commensurate with progress. Like the addict we must be given the words that express the hope of recovery. But only an outside power can initiate the process towards transformation. Christians know that only the Holy Spirit can initiate genuine repentance; a repentance that in some real way must recognize the relevant and powerful consequences of sin. Repentance is never generic. I am a sinner. You are sinners. We are equally at the mercy of God’s clemency.

When we have nothing left but the bare promises of God, the naked word…not material comforts, no ‘miraculous cures’, no evidence of God’s indulgent action, no one to empathize or dry our tears…is grace then really sufficient? Do we wait upon God’s promise? A resurrection is a fine-sounding idea, but do we not prefer to cling to the troubles we know? Can release from sin be so fantastic, immortality so stupendous, the vision of God so mesmerizing that we would chose to forego the pleasures which we have already tasted in this life? Would we choose to be immediately translated into the presence of God as were Enoch and Elijah?

A corpse hanging from a rough-hewn instrument of torture…that is our ransom. The death of a single man, but not any man, is the price of our freedom. This man is God-in-the-flesh; “God of God, Light of Light, true God of true God”, a Shepherd, a Redeemer, a King. His is Immanuel, God with us. He is the architect of life, the author of faith, and the master over death. Once crowned with thorns, He is the Servant King. He serves you with the sacrament of His presence and power at this altar. The Spirit makes you a participant of His death and resurrection in your baptism. As His baptized people you have high and holy callings in this world.

In Christ, your vocations are never trivial. They may seem tedious or laborious. Providing for your family, making ends meet, balancing relationships with family, friends, and work colleagues can tax us to the limit. We may question what the point and purpose is. But in the everyday routine of life, God gives us ample opportunity to accomplish His high and holy purposes. The considerate provision for a child; the patient compassion for a spouse; the honest effort done at work, all are godly expressions of vocation. We may often feel we don’t get due appreciation for our efforts. The squeaky wheel tends to get the grease. The quiet sufferer is often overlooked. But God notices and He takes all things into account.

The apostle reminds us today that God is not reactionary. He does not work haphazardly or on a whim. Time and eternity are in His purview. Our lives are in His hands.
“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. For He chose us in Him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in His sight…in Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.”4 Our faith will always be tested. But Christ has already passed the ultimate test. He has made the supreme sacrifice. Thanks be to God! Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Seventh Sunday After Pentecost
12 July, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Matthew 14:13
2 1 Corinthians 9:24-25
3 1 Peter 1:6-7
4 Ephesians 1:3-4, 7

Monday, July 6, 2015

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015- (Concordia wedding)

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: Mark 6:1-6
Theme: Authoritative Teacher, Rejected Prophet, Faithful Bridegroom

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

Creation and redemption are punctuated with nuptial overtones. The Holy Scriptures begin and end with distinct depictions of marriage. Both divine-human, and human-human relationships are described within this analogy. All believers collectively constitute the Bride- the church. Christ is the loyal Bridegroom. Note again, how the apostle concludes one of the most detailed descriptions of marriage in the Bible, “‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.’ This is a profound mystery- but I am talking about Christ and the church.”1 His love for us is unfathomably broad and deep. While our comprehension of it is like a drop in the ocean. But the Holy Spirit is always leading us into a fuller appreciation of God’s grace in Christ.

Today’s gospel account is a stark reminder that the full implications of Jesus’ identity and mission are not naturally accepted. Today Jesus got a cold reception from the hometown folks. The citizens of Jesus’ own hometown simply couldn’t come to terms with Him being the Messiah. Does that mean that no one from Nazareth was saved? Certainly not! We hear of the steadfastness of His family members later in the story. The same mindset is prevalent today: The expert usually thought to come from somewhere else. Familiarity breeds contempt. It is a contempt that is often born of jealously. Christ performed no miracles in Nazareth because of their lack of faith. They had place for the human Jesus, but not for the divine.

Dear friends, an age-old dogma is quickly regaining ascendancy in our society: The supremacy of self. We have little room for God. It’s not really new, but only the same old ego re-asserting and re-inventing itself. Natural law no longer underpins the full scope of shared values of our culture. Convictions held for generations about the limit of personal liberties and parameters of human relationships are quickly being eroded. Christians should expect this trend to continue. It’s human nature to push the boundaries of self-indulgence. Previous taboos and former restraints are quickly vanishing. The self-control St. Paul mentions as a fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5 is rarely held up as a virtue.

We should be clear in understanding that human nature never fundamentally changes. Sin motivates the heart and governs the will until God intervenes. Every human from the time of conception is turned away from the will of the Almighty. We are bent on going our own way. The townspeople took offence at Jesus. They couldn’t bear the upshot of His teaching. No one can until the Holy Spirit softens the heart. People will show no faithfulness to Christ as a Bridegroom until they believe that they need rescue from the power of sin and death and that He is the only one who can do it. The pureness and tenderness of His love means little to the person satiated with the affection of other things. The pretense of love is the deception of idolatry. It is the powerful draw of egocentricity. It is alluring, but hollow. It has serious consequences.

We rightly lament how many marriages today fail. But the conundrum is more broad-based. The pressure is on all relationships; parent with child, child with parent, sibling with sibling, friend with friend, co-worker with co-worker. At the core is a crisis of identity; a complex contradiction about how any individual relates properly to another, and most importantly, to God. Only Christ can resolve this deeply pervasive chaos of the heart. Only the forgiveness that He bestows- a forgiveness forged in the fire of the cross- can bear up under any assault humans can muster.

Forgiveness that is only a formality, a fine-sounding, but hollow religious concept will have little or no effect on relationships in desperate need of healing and fortification. The forgiveness of Christ; the One who suffered willingly; the One who bled publically; the One who surrendered openly is no imaginary reality. It’s not an abstract concept intended a grist for the mill of human ideas. It’s a divine benevolence that has the power to transform.

You are absolved when He says the word. Your slate is wiped clean. You are freed by the same power with which you were baptized. You are forgiven when you take His body and blood upon your lips in faith. His pardon is a present reality. It’s not an IOU. It’s not a pledge that becomes activated at some future date. It’s not dependent on any conditions still to be met. Faith receives the pure and complete mercy of Christ. He died and rose for you and that gives you the greatest certainty.

Certainty is one of the great blessings that flow from adherence to Christ’s truth. The conscience can only truly be at ease when it rests on the clear promises of God. And so believers are free to engage in the discussions of secular society; in fact, they are encouraged to do so as salt, light, and leaven in the world. But we do so speaking the truth in love. We do so with the conviction and courage that the battle is not ours, but Christ’s.

Think how many battles throughout history were surrendered prematurely because courage was lost! Think how many sporting contests were yielded, not because the opponent had greater skill, but because courage failed! Countless are the examples where even well-intentioned people lost hope because the obstacles appeared too great. The spies sent to survey the land of Cana returned saying, “All the people we saw there were of great size…We seemed like grasshoppers in our own eyes, and we looked the same to them.”2

But the Lord of heaven and earth says, “I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”3 And He says even more emphatically, “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.”4 He says of His people, “I give then eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of My hand.”5

Dear friends, God has always faced rejection and Christ knew how to meet it; by marching headlong to the cross. When Adam and Eve fell afoul of God’s favour they tried to hide from Him. They attempted to cover their shame. But God provided proper clothing, more practical, yes; but imminently more significant. He clothed them with His armor, spiritual garments that foreshadowed the sacrifice of Jesus Himself. As we reflect on the wedding of Graham and Lori today, we pray that God would protect every husband and wife with His spiritual armor and that every member of the Bride of Christ, every believer, would be clothed with the same purity and power.

Christ is the faultless Bridegroom. He is beyond reproach. In His devotion to His Bride, the church, He utterly exhausted the full capacity of His love. It took from Him His last breath. Adam gave up a rib. Perhaps his was a restless sleep. But his union with Eve completed the divine ordering of creation. Christ, however, gave up an impeccable life. His rest in the tomb was a spiritual eclipse, deep and black. But His resurrection prepared the way for a reunion with His Bride; an event of such cosmic proportions that it is nothing short of the divine ordering of eternity. Christ is faithful, now and forever! Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost
5 July, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Ephesians 5:31-32
2 Number 13:32-33
3 John 16:33
4 Matthew 10:28
5 John 10:28

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015 -Bookpurnong, Myrla

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: Mark 6:1-6
Theme: Authoritative Teacher, Rejected Prophet

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

“There is nothing new under the sun.”1 So reflected Solomon in the wisdom of his maturity! “Whatever is has already been, and what will be has been before; and God will call the past to account.”2 That does change the fact that the human psyche craves the appearance and the experience of something new. It is the way of humans. Our era of intense media marketing has just taken it to a new level. How many false representations have been made claiming to offer something new under the sun! The creative mind of God is the only true source of anything new.

One thing that is not new is the rejection that Christ faced today. Jesus got a cold reception from the hometown folks. The citizens of Jesus’ own hometown simply couldn’t come to terms with Him being the Messiah. Does that mean that no one from Nazareth was saved? Certainly not! We hear of the steadfastness of His family members later in the story. The same mindset is prevalent today: The expert usually comes from somewhere else. Familiarity breeds contempt. It is a contempt that is also born of jealously. He performed no miracles in Nazareth because of their lack of faith. They had place for the human Jesus, but not for the divine.

Dear friends, an age-old dogma is quickly regaining ascendancy in our society: The supremacy of self. We have little room for God. It’s nothing really new, but only the same old ego re-asserting and re-inventing itself. Natural law no longer underpins the full scope of shared values of our culture. Convictions held for generations about the limit of personal liberties and parameters of human relationships are quickly being eroded. Christians should expect this trend to continue. It’s human nature to push the boundaries of self-indulgence. Previous taboos and former restraints are quickly vanishing. The self-control St. Paul mentions as a fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5 is hardly held up as a virtue.

We should be clear in understanding that human nature never fundamentally changes. Sin motivates the heart and governs the will until God intervenes. Every human from the time of conception is turned away from the will of the Almighty. We are bent on going our own way. The townspeople took offence at Jesus. They couldn’t bear the upshot of His teaching. No one can until the Holy Spirit softens the heart. People will show no faithfulness to Christ until they believe that they need rescue from the power of sin and death and He is the only one who can do it. The pureness and tenderness of His love means little to the person satiated with the affection of other things. The pretense of love is the deception of idolatry. It is the powerful draw of egocentricity. It is alluring, but hollow. It has serious consequences.

We rightly lament how many marriages today fail, the prevalence of domestic violence, situations of fear, intimidation, and hopelessness which characterize the lives of too many. The pressure is on all relationships; parent with child, child with parent, sibling with sibling, friend with friend, co-worker with co-worker. The Lord calls on us to love our enemies, yet we can sometimes barely love those who should be most dear to us. At the core is a crisis of identity; a complex contradiction about how any individual relates properly to another, and to God. Only Christ can resolve this deeply pervasive chaos of the heart. Only the forgiveness that He bestows- a forgiveness forged in the fire of the cross- can bear up under any assault humans can muster.

Forgiveness that is only a formality, a fine-sounding, but hollow religious concept will have little or no effect on relationships in desperate need of healing and fortification. The forgiveness of Christ, the One who suffered willingly, the One who bled publically, the One who surrendered openly is no imaginary reality. It’s not an abstract concept intended a grist for the mill of human ideas. It’s a divine benevolence that has the power to transform.

You are absolved when He says the word. Your slate is wiped clean. You are freed by the same power with which you were baptized. You are forgiven when you take His body and blood upon your lips in faith. His pardon is a present reality. It’s not an IOU. It’s not a pledge that becomes activated at some future date. It’s not dependent on any conditions still to be met. Faith receives the pure and complete mercy of Christ. He died and rose for you and that gives you the greatest certainty.

Certainty is one of the great blessings that flow from adherence to Christ’s truth. The conscience can only truly be at ease when it rests on the clear promises of God. Believers are free to engage in the discussions of secular society; in fact, they are encouraged to do so as salt, light, and leaven in the world. But we do so speaking the truth in love. We do so with the conviction and courage that the battle is not ours, but Christ’s

Think how many battles throughout history were surrendered prematurely because courage was lost! Think how many sporting contests were yielded, not because the opponent had greater skill, but because courage failed! Countless are the examples where even well-intentioned people lost hope because the obstacles appeared too great. The spies sent to survey the land of Cana returned saying, “All the people we saw there were of great size…We seemed like grasshoppers in our own eyes, and we looked the same to them.”3

But the Lord of heaven and earth says, “I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”4And He says even more emphatically, “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.”5 He says of His people, “I give then eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of My hand.”6

Christ is the Good Shepherd. He is the faultless Bridegroom. He is beyond reproach. In His devotion to His Bride, the church, He utterly exhausted the full capacity of His love. It took from Him His last breath. Adam gave up a rib. Perhaps his was a restless sleep. His union with Eve completed the divine ordering of creation. Christ gave up an impeccable life. His rest in the tomb was a spiritual eclipse, deep and black. But His resurrection prepared the way for a reunion with His Bride, an event of such cosmic proportions that it is nothing short of the divine ordering of eternity.

Dear friends, God has always faced rejection and Christ knew exactly how to meet it; by marching headlong to the cross. God is unalterable and unchanging, and yet His love to us is continually new. “Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning.”7 He continually renews us in His love. Amen.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost
5 July, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Ecclesiastes 1:9
2 Ecclesiastes 3:15
3 Number 13:32-33
4 John 16:33
5 Matthew 10:28
6 John 10:28
7 Lamentations 3:22-23

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Fifth Sunday After Pentecost (B) 2015

+ In nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti + Amen.

Text: Mark 5:21-43
Theme: Powerful, but not Showy

Dear friends in Christ Jesus,

Jesus was never showy. He was not gaudy. It’s a reality we shouldn’t lose sight of. He never summoned a crowd or emotionally manipulated one. He had many opportunities to do it. More than once He arranged for privacy before performing a miracle. Part of the reason may be practical. Without crowd control things can quickly get out of hand. Primarily though, He was motivated by humility which is the truest expression of His nature. You cannot be both authentically humble and ostentatious at the same time. “The son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”1

In today’s gospel Jesus had two opportunities to make a spectacle. Instead He showed grace and propriety. Two desperate people sought Him. One was a distressed member of society’s elite whose daughter was dying, the other a woman whom the physicians had no power to cure. Jesus was a magnet for the misplaced, displaced, the downtrodden and the desperate. Many sought Him in curiosity. But those who hungered for healing and thirsted for relief sought Him in faith. Jesus was gentle with the frail, corrective of the wayward, firm with the arrogant, patient with hapless; but He was dismissive of no one. He desired no one to remain in the darkness of unbelief.

Both Jairus and the woman with bleeding disregarded cultural expectations and made themselves vulnerable to Christ’s mercy. Neither was disappointed. At twelve years of age the daughter of Jairus was on the cusp of marriageable age for her culture. Christ’s resuscitation of her restored her not only to her family, but to society. The unnamed woman who was subject continual bleeding for 12 years was only made poor and worse by the doctors. Christ restored to the worshipping community and to society. She was no longer unclean. She was no longer a burden to society.

Dear friends, as we meditate on the on the compassion Christ displayed today the last thing we should do is think, “Thank goodness I’m not in need like those people were!” If you fancy yourself to be a pretty naturally pious person you’d better pause for a reality check. Every sickness, every anxiety, every doubt is a complication of sin. And none of us are immune. God’s holy law doesn’t permit a single transgression. One wayward thought, one false motive, one misstep and we are liable under the whole law. The corrupted nature we have from the moment of conception makes it impossible. The salty well doesn’t produce fresh water. The salt must be removed. We’re gathered here as sinners. If that were not the case the main purpose of being here would already be obsolete.

Desperation often drives decisive action. When caution is thrown foolishly to the wind the results can be disastrous. It’s wise to check for your parachute before jumping out of an airplane at 30,000 feet! Satan tried to convince Christ to throw Himself off the pinnacle of the temple relying on the angels to break His fall. Jesus responded, “Do not put the Lord your God to the test.”2 But the reckless testing of God is not the same as a leap of faith. The leap of faith, properly understood, involves relinquishing the tight control we like to have over our own affairs and leaving ourselves to the providence of God. God will not abandon us. He will not ignore us. He is not too impotent to help us.

We’re gathered here as sinners, but we are forgiven sinners; redeemed. The Bible has another word for it and the word is saints. A saint is a ‘holy one’. We are made holy through the Lamb’s blood. So we are also gathered here as saints. Paul addresses the Christians in Philippi as saints.”3He is not speaking to the deceased, nor is he talking to some class of superior-Christians. He is addressing the baptized (and through them, those who would be baptized). Yes, saints are full of fears, faults, and foibles. They often feel helpless, hapless, and hopeless. Saints are not morally blameless or superior; they rely solely on grace. They cherish the cross and rejoice in the empty tomb. Do we pity the woman who desperately sought Jesus, or do we identify with her? Does the anxious Jairus resonate with us?

In the body of Christ it’s not a matter of us and them. We all need and participate in the same blessings of God. Every time we walk by that font we should remember that God has redeemed us through that font (or one similar) and brought us into His family. In baptism God drowns our natural piety (which is nothing more than selfishness in disguise) along with the flagrant sins which open us to guilt and God’s condemnation, and He breathes new life into us through the Spirit. He seizes us from the darkness of Satan’s grasp. Every time we kneel at the communion rail we proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes4. We confess by our reception of His body and blood that forgiveness and life are found in His sacrifice.

Through these gifts God makes us-spiritually poor souls- rich in His grace. It’s a generosity we have the privilege to mirror, as St. Paul speaks of today. It would be difficult to make a convincing argument that in the West the standard of living in regards to material things was higher 25 years ago, 50 years ago, or 100 years ago than it is today. People have more stuff than ever before and always seem to be looking for more. It doesn’t mean life is safer, more stable, or more meaningful; often less so. But it’s a measure of the things we value. Support for the proclamation of the gospel locally or for missionary activity overseas continues to decline in parallel with the decline of faith. Yet, in other parts of the world Christianity is flourishing and people are crying out for resources to teach them the faith. The generosity of God’s people cannot be driven by guilt or brow-beating. Such measures are not only short-lived, but counter-productive in the long run. “We love because He first loved us.”5


The raising of Jairus’ daughter points to Jesus’ own resurrection from the dead. Lazarus too, is yet to be raised. Christ is not a limited worker of signs and wonders pointing to someone or something greater. He is the Lord of life and death. In the person of Christ someone greater than Solomon had arrived. In the person of Christ something greater than the temple was present. The same Jesus lives and intercedes for you and me. The same Redeemer will come again in glory. Meanwhile, His presence is mostly made known through very ordinary-seeming acts of love. Of course, there’s nothing ordinary about the cross.

+ In nomine Jesu +

Fifth Sunday After Pentecost
28 June, 2015
Reverend Darrin L. Kohrt

1 Mark 10:45
2 Matthew 4:7
3 See Philippians 1:1
4 See 1 Corinthians 11:26
5 1 John 4:19