Presidents’ Day 2022: On Presidents’ Day We Honor…Someone

From Fox News:

NEW YORK —  Question: Who is honored on Presidents Day?

Answer: Not Ronald Reagan. Or Franklin D. Roosevelt. Or Grover Cleveland or Martin Van Buren.

FoxNews.com conducted an informal and very unscientific poll in midtown Manhattan on Monday and found there are a lot of people who think Presidents Day honors a lot of presidents — with responses ranging from George Washington (No. 1) to Barack Obama (No. 44), with many others in between.

Given the increasing historical illiteracy of this nation, why am I not surprised? That is why we keep removing statues, for instance. So now I need to put on my old history teacher hat. Before you look at the article, do you know which presidents are honored on Presidents’ Day and why it is in February?

Read it all.

Our Ultimate Prize

Sermon delivered on the 3rd Sunday before Lent C, February 13, 2022 at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church, Westerville, OH.

If you prefer to listen to the audio podcast of today’s sermon, usually somewhat different from the text below, click here.

Lectionary texts: Jeremiah 17.5-10; Psalm 1; 1 Cor 15.12-20, 35-38, 42-58; St. Luke 6.17-26.

In the name of God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen. 

Last week we began a two-part preaching series on the Death and Resurrection of Christ based on 1 Cor 15, St. Paul’s massive treatise on the Resurrection of Christ. You recall that last week we focused on Christ’s sacrificial and saving Death. We saw that the problem of Sin, that outside and hostile power that has enslaved us thoroughly, requires more than just human repentance to be defeated; it requires the power of God to intervene on our behalf to offer an atoning sacrifice for our sins so that we could be reconciled to God the Father and thus healed of our sin-sickness so that its power is defeated once and for all. We saw that there is great mystery in all this and that the NT never explains fully how it all works, only that it does. If you don’t remember anything else from last week’s sermon—and being the brilliant teacher/preacher I am, I would be shocked, SHOCKED I tell you, if you didn’t remember every word I spoke—remember this. Christ died to reconcile you to the Father so that you can be fully healed of your sin-sickness. Christ, God become human, did this for you because he loves you and you are precious in his sight, even while you were still his enemy. There is nothing in all creation that can separate you from his love and there is no sin you have committed that has not been fully covered by the Blood of the Lamb shed for you on the cross. There is therefore no need or reason for any Christian to suffer debilitating, crushing guilt or despair. 

We also noted that without the Resurrection, Christ’s death would have been just another utterly humiliating and degrading criminal’s death, lost forever in the vast sea of history and without significance. But Christ was and is raised from the dead, forever alive, never to die again. The Resurrection vindicated Christ’s claim that he was indeed Israel’s Messiah and the eternal Son of God and therefore the cross accomplished what the early Church claimed it did. So this morning in part 2 of this series I want us to look at exactly what is the Christian hope of the Resurrection. I want us to do so primarily for two reasons: 1) as St. Paul proclaimed last week, the Resurrection is of first importance. Without it we are still dead in our slavery to Sin’s power and without hope. Death really does have the final say, a terrible reality made worse by the fact that all of us must endure suffering and hardship in this life to one extent or the other; and 2) we are baptizing two new members into Christ’s Body today, God be thanked and praised! As we will see, resurrection has definite implications for any who are baptized into Christ. Resurrection remains of first importance and needs Christ’s saving Death as much as Christ’s saving Death needs the Resurrection. Without both there would be no Christianity, no Good News, no turning point in human history.

One more preliminary note before we begin our discussion. This sermon presumes the historicity of Christ’s Resurrection, i.e., Christ’s Resurrection really did happen in history. It is emphatically not some made up hokum or wishful thinking. To give a basic defense of the Resurrection’s historicity would require a separate sermon in itself and ain’t nobody got time for that this morning. Coffee hour and Super Bowl are a-waiting and we need to get on with our order of business! Suffice it to say here that from the beginning the Church proclaimed Christ’s Death and Resurrection as historical fact and we have no good reason to doubt this Central Christian Proclamation 2000 years later!

I begin by asking you a question. How many of you find the vision of heaven where you live for all eternity without a body and float on a cloud playing your harp compelling?

Image of Gary Larson's The Far Side cartoon of man with wings and a halo floating on a cloud wishing he had brought a magazine.
Gary Larson’s The Far Side

I ask this question because this vision (or derivatives of it) seems to be the prevailing Christian understanding in the West of what happens to us when we die. Our souls are separated from our bodies and go to heaven to enjoy God’s company, forever as a disembodied spirit, freed from the woes and weaknesses of our mortal body. Is that compelling to you? It’s more than just a philosophical question because as Christians we are exhorted to keep our eyes on the prize—Jesus. Why is Jesus the prize? Because Christ is the only way to the Father because only his death atones for our sins and makes us fit to live forever in the Father’s Holy Presence so that we are not destroyed by God’s perfect Holiness and justice. That’s why the Resurrection needs the Cross (in case you were wondering). But is the vision I just described to you a compelling one? Is it the prize above all prizes for you that motivates your living? I’ll be honest. The vision I just described leaves me cold and I find little to no motivation to follow Christ because of it. I suspect I am probably not alone in my thinking. 

But thanks be to God that this vision is emphatically not the Christian vision contained in the NT, the vision of new creation that Christ’s Resurrection launched and proclaimed. It is a platonic and corrupted version of the Real Thing because resurrection never was about dying and going to heaven; it is instead about life in God’s new world, the new creation, God’s new heavens and earth. The former kind of teaching is the product of creeping gnosticism that believes in part that all things material are bad and all things spiritual are good. And I suspect if truth be told, it stems in part from inherent human disbelief and skepticism regarding the power of God and the utterly fantastic nature of the vision itself. Who among us has the power to imagine such a world so as to give it justice?

So what does the Church mean when it talks about the Resurrection and eternal life? Resurrection and eternal life are first and foremost—and I cannot be emphatic enough and exhort you strongly enough short of yelling and cussing at you, much as I would like that—about bodily reanimation on a permanent basis so that bodies are made fit to live in a radically new creation. When the first followers of Jesus proclaimed his Resurrection they were emphatically not saying that he had died and gone to heaven. They were proclaiming that God had raised his body from the dead and reanimated it by transforming it. This gets at what St. Paul is telling us in his very dense writing from our epistle lesson when he uses the analogy of seed and plant to compare our mortal body with our new spiritual body. St. Paul is telling that there will be radical change (a body that is impervious to death) within basic continuity (we are still talking about bodies, not spirits). We have a mortal body in this life and will have an immortal body patterned after the risen Christ’s body in God’s new creation.

And when we put this radical new teaching about a two-stage resurrection (Christ first and then later us when he returns to finish his saving work) within the overarching story of Scripture, this should make perfect sense to us. Think about it. The creation narratives in Genesis proclaim very clearly that God created creation good (very good after he created humans to run God’s world on his behalf; that’s why God created us in his image in the first place). And God continues to value his creation, creatures included. Only human sin and rebellion corrupted it and the rest of Scripture tells us about how God is going about rescuing his good creation gone bad and reclaiming it and us from the dark powers that usurped God’s rule in the first place, enigmatic and puzzling as that might be to us. God refused to totally destroy creation and start over because God loves and values us. That’s why he spared Noah et al. in the Great Flood. That’s why God called Abraham to be God’s blessing to his broken and hurting world and its creatures, a blessing ultimately achieved in Jesus Christ, the one true Israelite and descendant of Abraham. It makes no sense, therefore, that God would suddenly be uninterested in reclaiming the bodies of his image-bearing creatures, consigning us instead to an eternity of being disembodied spirits. How does that honor God’s faithfulness and love for his creation? Read in this manner, the Revelation to St. John, chapters 21-22, is seen as the successful climax of God’s redemptive project launched through Abraham and fulfilled in Jesus Christ’s saving Death and Resurrection. Heaven comes down to earth (we aren’t raptured so get that lousy theology out of your head). Heaven and earth, God’s space and humans’ space respectively, are fused together in a mighty act of new creation. Our mortal bodies are raised from the dead and transformed into immortal bodies, fit to live in God’s new world, the new heavens and earth, with new ways of working and living as God’s faithful, obedient, image-bearers. Death and illness and hurt and suffering and loneliness and alienation and all the rest that weigh us down and kill us are abolished forever, all by and through the power of God the Father who loves us and remains faithful to us as essential parts of his good creation. Seen in this light, resurrection makes perfect sense.

St. Paul also talks about the fulfillment of God’s creative purposes in Romans 8. Hear him now.

Yet what we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will reveal to us later. For all creation is waiting eagerly for that future day when God will reveal who his children really are. Against its will, all creation was subjected to God’s curse. But with eager hope, the creation looks forward to the day when it will join God’s children in glorious freedom from death and decay. For we know that all creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. And we believers also groan, even though we have the Holy Spirit within us as a foretaste of future glory, for we long for our bodies to be released from sin and suffering. We, too, wait with eager hope for the day when God will give us our full rights as his adopted children, including the new bodies he has promised us (Romans 8.18-23).

Notice there’s nothing about dying and going to heaven here! No, St. Paul speaks of God’s curse on his current creation, a curse that was in response to human sin and rebellion, reminding us in no uncertain terms that God cannot and will not tolerate any form of evil in his promised new world. Notice too that St. Paul speaks unabashedly about the prize worth seeking above all prizes. This is about radical and total healing and transformation, the kind that can only be brought about by God the Father, and it speaks of a created future, not a spiritual or disembodied one. It is about being fully human, living in the created (or recreated) manner that God always intended for us.

But what about St. Paul’s comparison of the physical body and spiritual body? Doesn’t having a spiritual body mean we really don’t have a body? Not at all. The Greek for physical body, psychikon soma, and spiritual body, pneumatikon soma, both describe a body. In Greek and in the context of this pericope, when an adjective ends with -ikon, it refers not to the nature of the body (what the body is made of) but rather what powers or animates the body. So St. Paul is telling us that our new bodies will be powered not by flesh and blood or our soul, but by the Holy Spirit himself, thus making them indestructible. The reason flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God is not because God hates our bodies. That is ridiculous! God created our bodies and declared them good! No, flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God because the Kingdom is imperishable and immortal whereas our mortal bodies are not. Our bodies die and we are separated from them for a season. When Christ returns, however, our bodies will be raised from the dead and transformed and reanimated in a way that abolishes death forever. The NT has very little to say about what happens to our souls when we die other than a few oblique references (see, e.g., Phil 1.20-26). As we have seen, it has a lot to say about God’s new world, a world launched when God raised Christ from the dead and come in full upon Christ’s return. 

This is a vision that is compelling and worthy of all our striving. It proclaims a new world reclaimed by God, a world in which we get to live directly in God’s presence forever, a world therefore devoid of suffering, sorrow, sickness, and death, a world in which we are finally and perfectly healed forever, a world where we can finally be free to be God’s image-bearers who go about their business of tending to God’s new world with God’s blessing. It is a world where we will be reunited with our loved ones who have died in Christ, never to be separated again. And after our bodies are raised, death will be abolished forever as St. Paul tells us in today’s lesson. Death cannot be abolished until then, even for Christians, because death involves our bodies and souls, and until we receive our new bodies, death still reigns. While our loved ones who died in Christ are safely in his care as they await their new resurrection or spiritual bodies, they are still dead because they do not yet enjoy new bodily existence where their souls are reunited to their bodies. So we can remember them and miss them and find comfort that they are safe in Christ, but we can’t touch them or see them or hear them or feel them or smell them like we did when they were alive in their mortal bodies. The resurrection promises that this will all change one day when we and they are given new bodies. Whatever that looks like it is worthy of our highest calling and striving because it is a vision that exalts both God and humans, a vision beyond our wildest longings and desires and hopes. If what I have described does not stir you to want to give your ultimate allegiance to Christ, the One who makes it all possible because only Christ is the Resurrection and the Life, blame my inability to cast the vision for all it’s worth, not the vision itself with its incomprehensible richness and beauty that point to the power and fathomless love of God the Father for us as his human image-bearers. When it comes in full, whatever it looks like, God’s new creation will fully honor human beings and consummate our life-giving relationship with God the Father, our Creator.

So what do we take from this? Two things. For our about-to-be newly-baptized, it means they are about to become part of this promise because they are about to become united to Christ in his Death and Resurrection, sharing in both. In other words, they are about to tap into the power of God at work in them in and through the Spirit to make them part of God’s family forever. That’s why we can baptize infants and those who cannot speak for themselves. Baptism, like resurrection, is not about human responsibility but about the power of God at work to heal, redeem, and give life in full. It is a powerful and tangible sign of God’s extravagantly generous and gracious love for us. 

Second, for those of us who are baptized, this truth reminds us to remember our own baptism and be thankful. The promise of resurrection and new creation also has the power to help us see life clearly now. Resurrection and new creation are our future and our hope, and both give us a real and appropriate vision of how life is to be lived. If you get this, reread Jesus’ woes and blessings in light of living in the resurrection reality. Both are remarkably appropriate because they encourage and warn us respectively what it is like to live as Christ’s true people. We will make judgments based on what is to come, not what currently is with all of its corruption and false values. We have a promised eternity to live in this manner and it is a sure and certain expectation, based not on wishful thinking but on the historical reality that Jesus Christ is raised from the dead. That is why I can preach it. If we find the vision of resurrection and new creation compelling, we’d better get busy and practice living like the resurrection peeps we are, no matter how imperfectly we live it. What better hope for us than to be perfectly healed of all that weighs us down and kills us, death included, never to be afraid again, always to enjoy perfect health and relationships? That, my beloved, is a prize worth all our strivings and it is only made possible by the amazing love and power of God made known to us in Jesus Christ our Lord. To him be honor, praise, and glory forever and ever.

In the name of God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

February 12, 2022: Happy Birthday, Mr. President

Abraham Lincoln picture

Today is Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. He would be 213 years old! The president is one of my heroes, primarily because of the role he played in saving this country. Mr. Lincoln had a wonderful spirit about him and his humility, compassion, and willingness to forgive his enemies arguably saved this country from a terrible aftermath following our Civil War. Reconstruction was hard enough as it was, but at least we did not have guerrilla warfare to contend with, something that would have probably done us in as a country forever.

We healed as well as any country could following a civil war. If you don’t believe me, check out other countries who have suffered through a civil war. Most of the time it didn’t turn out well. The reason our country’s reconstruction went relatively well is because of President Lincoln. He set the tone for U.S. Grant and the other Union commanders by insisting that they treat the vanquished with dignity and respect. Lincoln insisted that the rebels would not be treated harshly or punitively and as a result, everyone else followed suit, including the Confederate commanders.

Of course, this wasn’t all Lincoln’s doing, but as president he set the tone for others to follow as great leaders always do. It would have been just as easy to hang all the rebel commanders and make life miserable for the vanquished. But Lincoln knew better. He knew how that would turn out. It would have been interesting to see how much more quickly we would have healed as a nation had Lincoln lived to serve a full second term. Instead, the zealots and self-righteous decided to “fix” Lincoln’s initial proposals for reconstruction and nearly managed to destroy all that President Lincoln had sought to establish in the process.

I am convinced God put Abraham Lincoln in our history for a reason. His presidency is more evidence that God has blessed this country. Whether that blessing continues today is debatable.  But that’s a different story for a different day. Today, it is fitting that all Americans honor our 16th president and give thanks to God for placing the right man in the right situation at the right time. Happy birthday, Mr. President, and thank you for your service to our country.

Christ Died for Sin

Sermon delivered on the 4th Sunday before Lent C, February 6, 2022 at St. Augustine’s Anglican Church, Westerville, OH.

If you prefer to listen to the audio podcast of today’s sermon, usually somewhat different from the text below, click here.

Lectionary texts: Isaiah 6.1-13; Psalm 138; 1 Corinthians 15.1-11; St. Luke 5.1-11.

In the name of God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen. 

Since this is my first sermon in our new home I will try to make it at least as long as Fathers Sang and Wylie’s were the past two weeks; I know how much you enjoy long sermons from us. Once every three years, provided Easter falls late enough on the calendar, the RCL offers an opportunity to preach on St. Paul’s massive treatise on Christ’s resurrection contained in 1 Cor 15. This year we have that opportunity and so I begin a three part preaching series on Christ’s Death and Resurrection. But already I have a problem because in two weeks our bishop is coming here to consecrate our new home and insists on preaching from different texts for the occasion, bless his pointy little hat. Bishops. Can’t live with ‘em, can’t function without ‘em. Teasing aside, the three part preaching series on 1 Cor 15 I had planned to preach has to be reduced to two parts and next week we will combine the next two epistle lessons and read them as one. Confused? Good! So am I. On the up side this will actually serve us well (at least it will the preacher) because as we shall see, Christ’s Death and Resurrection have to be viewed as two sides of the same saving coin. It is a mistake for Christians to see them as separate events or functions and this morning I want us to focus on Christ’s Death. Why is it essential to our faith to have a robust theology of the cross?

St. Paul tells us right out of the blocks. “…I handed on to you as of first importance what I in turn had received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures” (1 Cor 15.3). This is a central NT proclamation and this is where many of us start to get uncomfortable because we don’t like talking about Sin, especially our own. The Church in the West over the last 150 or so years has worked very hard to decouple the cross from human sin but the NT writers will have none of it and so we must look at the problem of Sin if we ever hope to have a theology of the cross that will sustain us even in our darkest hours. 

But first some operational definitions. Sin is not so much a collection of misdeeds as it is an active, malevolent force bent on utterly undoing God’s good creation and purposes—living to reflect God’s glory and goodness. Sin enslaves and kills us. It makes us sick and hostile and alienated toward each other and God. And when we are alienated from God and our relationship with him is totally disrupted as only Sin can do, we die because life is only found in God. Sin is emphatically not about making bad choices as many have falsely asserted. Misdeeds and bad choices are more symptoms of the real evil of Sin and any such talk serves only to confuse our thinking about the seriousness of human sin and our bondage to its power. Sin is a universal human affliction, enslaving us as the result of our first ancestors’ Fall. It has so completely enslaved us that we are powerless to break its grip on us, hard as we might try. If you doubt that, how are your new year’s resolutions going, five weeks into the new year? If we can break free from Sin’s power over us on our own, then why are there so many gluttons and drunks and addicts of all kinds and adulterers and dishonest and unhappy people? Yet over and over we return to the filth of our sin, demonstrating its death grip on us. But here’s the thing. Despite being a universal human affliction, Sin is a theological concept so that only those who have an awareness of God can be aware of their sinfulness. We see it all the time from the self-righteousness of the godless who help make up the social media lynch mobs. We see it in the lunacy of sexual or racial identity. We see it in the celebration of unbridled greed and all kinds of hardheartedness. Anyone who does not know or believe in God has no concept of sin because he/she has little to no knowledge of the Holy. This is not to say that these folks are sin-free. They most certainly are not. They simply aren’t aware of their predicament and deadly peril. 

We see this notion of sin as a theological concept at work in our OT and gospel lessons this morning. When the prophet and St. Peter become aware that they are standing in the presence of the Holy, they immediately become aware of their own sinfulness, a sinfulness that their enslavement to Sin’s power has produced. It is almost as if this awareness was built into their very being. They knew instinctively that they were standing in the presence of the Holy and their sin stain was made painfully obvious to them as it will be to us when we stand before Christ’s judgment seat, if not sooner. As we saw several weeks ago, this was the whole purpose of the Tabernacle/Temple system—to allow the profane to enter into the Holy’s Presence without it becoming fatal. 

Finally, sin always produces guilt in terms of breaking God’s law and/or violating the created order. It is not the same as “feeling guilty” nor does that guilt necessarily coincide with personal feelings of guilt which are determined mainly by our own awareness of God and his holiness; the more aware we are of who God is and God’s desire for us, the more our personal sense of guilt will likely be and vice versa. And because we are powerless to break free from our enslavement to Sin’s power, we must understand—and this is critical for our faith—that only God can supply the remedy to Sin to end our guilty status before him because only God is more powerful that Sin’s power. In other words, we must be liberated from Sin’s power by an even greater power, the power of God. And now we are ready to talk about why it is essential for us to have a robust theology of the cross, that it both atones for our sin so we can be healed and reconciled to God our Father and is seen as the sign of Christ’s victory of over the powers of Sin and Death.

Up to this point we have only been talking about bad news and if you are feeling depressed by what we have said that is understandable. The human condition is a depressing situation without the help and mercy of God. We need to look no further than the madness and lunacy that swirls around us and within us in our increasingly unhinged and godless society. But it is to the glory of God that the bad news will not have the final say. The dark powers that have enslaved us to the power of Sin—an impenetrable mystery itself—have already been defeated on Calvary. That is why we call it Good Friday, not Bad Friday! We will never be ready to hear the Good News of Jesus Christ if we do not understand and accept the bad news of the human condition left unaided, hard as that is to hear. It is a terrible thing to live in a cursed world and the gospel is our only real hope and solution for our predicament. The gospel is not a good idea or a good theory. It’s Good News because something happened that changed the world in which we live and if you do not believe that, you have no gospel at all and are much to be pitied. When St. Paul talks about Christ dying for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, he probably has more in mind than just Isaiah 53 and a handful of other OT proof-texts. He is talking about the strange power of God (to us ) at work to free his originally good creation from the corrupting and death-dealing powers of Evil and Sin. Of course consistent with his creative purposes, God chose to do this primarily through human agency, first in his call to Israel and then through Christ, the one faithful Israelite. God did and does this for us because God loves us. That is the essence of the meaning of Christ dying for sin. God could have chosen to utterly destroy us because of our sins. Instead, God chose to become human and die for us to to bear his own wrath on our sins to spare us and reconcile us to himself so that we could be reconnected to our life support system again. St. Paul describes this in various ways throughout his letters. He tells the Romans that despite our universal rebellion against God, God in his grace (undeserved mercy) freely makes us right in his sight through Christ’s Death, freeing us from God’s penalty for our sins. St. Paul also tells us that God did this for us while we were still God’s enemies or sinners (Rom 3.24-25, 5.8-10). He tells the Galatians that Christ gave his life for our sins just as God our Father had planned to rescue us from this evil world in which we live (Gal 1.4). And St. Paul told the Thessalonians that God chose to save us through Christ’s death, choosing not to pour out his anger on us. Christ died for us, so that whether we are dead or alive when he returns, we can live with him forever (1 Thess 5.9-10). Clearly St. Paul and the rest of the NT writers saw Christ’s death as truly sacrificial, atoning for our sins and thus sparing us from God’s terrible but deserved wrath. And this of course is for our own good. How can a loving God ignore the evil and sin and the suffering it produces in his world? How can we ever hope to enjoy life eternal in a world blighted by sin? But by dying for sin to spare us, Christ demonstrated God’s amazing love for us. We see this hope reflected in the following prayer on Christ’s passion by St. Brigit: 

O JESUS, unfathomed depth of mercy, call to mind your grievous wounds that penetrated to the marrow of your bones and the depths of your soul. In memory of your piercings, O my Savior, turn the face of your anger from me and hide me in your wounds as wrath and judgment pass over me. Amen.

Christ’s Death helps us see clearly the terrible cost of our sin, but it also helps us see equally clearly the love, mercy, and power of God for us his image-bearers. 

Not only did Christ’s sacrificial death spare us from suffering permanent death, it also broke sin’s power over us as St. Paul affirms in Colossians:

You were dead because of your sins and because your sinful nature was not yet cut away. Then God made you alive with Christ, for he forgave all our sins. He canceled the record of the charges against us and took it away by nailing it to the cross. In this way, he disarmed the spiritual rulers and authorities. He shamed them publicly by his victory over them on the cross (Col 2.13-15).

Here we are confronted with an enigmatic truth we are called to believe by faith. Christ’s sacrificial death (dying for sin) is the vehicle God used to free us from our sins. St. Paul and the rest of the NT writers never explain how this works, only that it does. And we all know it isn’t quite as simple as that as Romans 7 with its profound introspection and lament over sin indicates (and our own life experience confirms). Many believe this is an autobiographical testimony from St. Paul himself. Whether that’s true, the fact remains Romans 7 is a reality for many, if not most, Christians if we are honest with ourselves. Even though freed from Sin’s power by Christ’s death we all continue to struggle with sin to one extent or another. St. Paul acknowledges this further in Romans 6.7, telling us that no one is finished entirely with sin until we die. It is a testimony to the awful power of sin in our lives, even with Christ’s even more powerful help. Perhaps John Wesley sums it up best when he proclaimed that while sin remains in Christians, it no longer reigns as it did before we believed in Christ. Regardless of our difficulties and struggles with the residual of Sin’s power, we still must take heart and hope because it is the undivided testimony of the NT that Christ’s death on the cross both saved us from utter destruction and freed us forever from Sin’s power, although not completely in this mortal life. What wondrous love is this, my beloved? Is it a wondrous love you possess?

Of course, none of this would be possible if Christ were not raised from the dead. We will speak more about the resurrection next week in part two of this sermon series, but here we note simply that if Christ had not been raised from the dead, he would have died a criminal’s death in utter shame, dishonor, and horror, never to be heard of again, let alone remembered past those who knew him in his mortal life. St. Paul will tell us as much in our epistle lesson next week. The resurrection validated Christ for who he claimed to be: God’s Messiah and Son, who atoned for our sins and freed us from our slavery to Sin’s power. And because he is raised from the dead and rules from God’s throne room (heaven), we can have utter confidence that his cross is what the Church has always proclaimed it to be: an instrument of God’s saving love, grace, mercy, justice, and power.

So what should we do with this information? First, we should use it to put to death all the guilt that we carry with us. If we have confessed our sins and asked God’s forgiveness on them, we can have full confidence that God has forgiven us and we have the cross as tangible evidence if we need reminded of this astonishing love, grace, and mercy. There is no sin from which Christ’s blood cannot cleanse and heal us, God be thanked and praised. Second, Christ’s cross reminds us that sin is universal and all are enslaved to its power save for the blood of Christ shed for us. This exposes lies like CRT that posit only a segment of the population is guilty of sin, whether or not sin language is used. Before we are quick to condemn others, let us first look in the mirror and then kneel at the foot of the cross, seeking the Father’s humility and wisdom before we unleash our own “wisdom” and wrath on others. Last, the cross proclaims the astonishing love of God to us in no uncertain terms. God loves us and cherishes us. We dishonor him when we refuse to do the same, both to ourselves and to others, or when we refuse to accept God’s grace offered unconditionally to us through Christ’s Death. God’s love should always produce glad and grateful hearts in us, full of wonderment as to how God can love us at all given the human condition. The cross is God’s eternal witness to us that nothing in all creation can separate us from his great love made known to us in Jesus Christ our Lord. Let us embrace this love and remain firm in our faith and hope in it, rejoicing always, even in the most difficult of times. To him be honor, praise, and glory forever and ever.

In the name of God: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

2022: Happy Birthday, Dad

Today would have been my dad’s 99th birthday, something I can barely wrap my mind around—where has all the time gone???? He’s been dead for almost 18 years and I still miss him. Oh, don’t misunderstand. I know where he is and I am not unhappy for him because he is enjoying his well-deserved rest with the Lord as he awaits his new resurrection body. So no regrets there.

No, I just miss him. I miss being around him and enjoying his company. I miss his gentle humor and his great wisdom. I miss his huge heart and him being the patriarch of our family. God blessed me richly in giving me a father who loved me and served as a great role model for me and the community in which he lived. For that I am thankful and I try to conduct myself in ways that would make him proud. That’s easier said than done for me, however. Happy birthday, dad. I love you. Thank you for giving me the greatest gift a son could ever want—you.

Candlemas 2022: And Before There Ever Was Groundhog Day, There Was…

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…Candlemas, a Christian holiday that remembers when Mary presented the Christ child at the Temple in Jerusalem and performed her purification (see below). Candlemas is also called the Festival Day of Candles, in which the parish priest would bless candles for use in the local church for the coming year and would occasionally send some of them home with his parishioners for them to use. It is one of the earliest known feasts to be celebrated by the Church.

Candlemas falls 40 days from the birth of Jesus because that is the day Mary would have completed her purification process as prescribed by the Law, which means that Candlemas always falls on February 2. It is the midpoint between the winter solstice and spring equinox and before there ever was a Groundhog Day (also observed on February 2), tradition held that when Candlemas fell on a sunny day, there was more winter to come. But when it fell on a cloudy, wet, or stormy day, it meant that the worst of winter was over. Check out the two Candlemas poems below and see if you recognize anything familiar in them:

If Candlemas be fair and bright,
Come, Winter, have another flight;
If Candlemas brings clouds and rain,
Go Winter, and come not again.
(Anonymous English poem)

If Candlemas day be dry and fair,
The half o’ winter to come and mair,
If Candlemas day be wet and foul,
The half of winter’s gone at Yule.
(Anonymous Scottish poem)

For you Christmas junkies out there, tradition also holds that any Christmas decorations not taken down by Twelfth Night (January 5) should be left up until Candlemas and then taken down. Candlemas also officially marks the end of the Christmas and Epiphany seasons, seasons in which the Church celebrates Christ as being the light to the world.

Now you know.