Thursday, April 30, 2020

He is Arisen! Glorious Word

"He is Arisen! Glorious Word" (LSB 488) was written by Danish Lutheran Birgitte Katerine Boye (1742-1824).
Boye's chief legacy in the hymnody of the Scandinavian Lutheran churches is her three one-stanza festival hymns. Her three one-stanza hymns are "Rejoice, Rejoice this Happy Mourn," "He is Arisen! Glorious Word" and "O Light of God's Most Wondrous Love." These one-stanza hymns are often sung on festival days preceding the reading of the Gospel text for that day.
The classic Easter greeting "He is risen" opens this hymn. The text draws our attention to Genesis 3, contrasting the fall into sin and consequent curse of death with God's promise to send a Savior who must die for the life and restoration of the world. The original Danish text says that Jesus' victorious death "crushed the weapons of darkness" (Genesis 3:15), which is poetically rendered "destroyed hell's fiercest weapon" (line six).
Christ broke the curse of hell and Satan by His willing suffering and death as humanity's substitute. Satan only appears to have won the victory, while Jesus is the true conqueror over sin, death, and hell!
The hymn ends with the powerful statement: "He lives!" This is the angelic message to the women at the tomb on Easter morning: "Why do you seek the living among the dead? (Luke 24:5), "He is not here, for He has risen, as He said" (Matthew 28:6).
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 He is arisen! Glorious Word!
Now reconciled is God, my Lord;
The gates of heav’n are open.
My Jesus did triumphant die,
And Satan’s arrows broken lie,
Destroyed hell’s fiercest weapon.
O hear what cheer!
Christ victorious,
Rising glorious,
Life is giving.
He was dead but now is living!
Text: Public domain

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Christ the Lord is Risen Today; Alleluia

"Christ the Lord is Risen Today; Alleluia" (LSB 463) was written by Wipo of Burgundy (ca. 995-1048).
Interspersed throughout with the Easter cry "alleluia," this text serves as an invitation to the Paschal Feast.
The first stanza begins with the angelic proclamation of the resurrection, calling worshipers to join in that feast by offering praise to the Passover Lamb, who has risen and is present at the Eucharist.
Stanza two tells of a series of Biblical images: the Passover Lamb of God bleeds for the sheep, John the Baptist's cry that Jesus is the Lamb of God, the Sinless One who dies in the sinners stead, etc.
Stanza three joins the worshiper to offer praise to the Victim of the Passover, the Lamb who was slaughtered and whose blood covers sinners, reconciling them to God.
The final stanza calls the singer back to the first Easter and calls Christians to offer "grateful homage" in thanksgiving for the forgiveness of sin, which Christ's resurrection from the dead has won for all who believe in Him as Lord and Savior!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Christ the Lord is ris’n today; Alleluia!
Christians, hasten on your way; Alleluia!
Offer praise with love replete, Alleluia!
At the paschal victim’s feet. Alleluia!
2 For the sheep the Lamb has bled, Alleluia!
Sinless in the sinner’s stead. Alleluia!
Christ the Lord is ris’n on high; Alleluia!
Now He lives, no more to die. Alleluia!
3 Hail, the victim undefiled, Alleluia!
God and sinners reconciled, Alleluia!
When contending death and life, Alleluia!
Met in strange and awesome strife. Alleluia!
4 Christians, on this holy day, Alleluia!
All your grateful homage pay; Alleluia!
Christ the Lord is ris’n on high; Alleluia!
Now He lives, no more to die. Alleluia!
Text: Public domain

Behind the Hymn: A Look at Martin Luther

Episode One of "Behind the Hymn: Stories of the Hymns We Love to Sing: Martin Luther."

In today's video, I featured Martin Luther's Easter hymn "Christ Jesus Lay in Death's Strong Bands" (LSB 458). The lyrics and tune are available below.

The hymn begins by echoing the words of St. Luke: "God raised Him up, loosing the pangs of death, because it was not possible for Him to be held by it" (Acts 2:24). Christ's resurrection brings us life and salvation: "He will swallow up death forever" (Isaiah 25:8). In faith, the Christian joyfully praises the Lord for all He has done for us!

In stanza two, Luther writes of the Law's harshest condemnation of sin and its consequence: death.

In stanzas three and four, Luther tells of what Christ has done for us, sinners. He tells of Christ's struggle, victory, salvation and redemption for us!

In stanzas five and six, Luther tells of Christ's victory on the cross over sin, death, and hell. Also, in stanza five, Luther tells of Jesus as the Passover lamb (Exodus 12) and how His blood marks the Door to eternal life.

In the final stanza, Luther tells how Christ feeds our souls at the Sacrament of the Altar: "Christ alone our souls will feed; He is our meat and drink indeed; faith lives upon no other!"

Each stanza concludes with a bold Easter "alleluia," for Christ is victorious over sin, death, and the power of the devil!

Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!

To hear the hymn, click here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKx2J4Llcso

1 Christ Jesus lay in death’s strong bands
For our offenses given;
But now at God’s right hand He stands
And brings us life from heaven.
Therefore let us joyful be
And sing to God right thankfully
Loud songs of alleluia!
Alleluia!

2 No son of man could conquer death,
Such ruin sin had wrought us.
No innocence was found on earth,
And therefore death had brought us
Into bondage from of old
And ever grew more strong and bold
And held us as its captive.
Alleluia!

3 Christ Jesus, God’s own Son, came down,
His people to deliver;
Destroying sin, He took the crown
From death’s pale brow forever:
Stripped of pow’r, no more it reigns;
An empty form alone remains;
Its sting is lost forever.
Alleluia!

4 It was a strange and dreadful strife
When life and death contended;
The victory remained with life,
The reign of death was ended.
Holy Scripture plainly saith
That death is swallowed up by death,
Its sting is lost forever.
Alleluia!

5 Here our true Paschal Lamb we see,
Whom God so freely gave us;
He died on the accursèd tree—
So strong His love—to save us.
See, His blood now marks our door;
Faith points to it; death passes o’er,
And Satan cannot harm us.
Alleluia!

6 So let us keep the festival
To which the Lord invites us;
Christ is Himself the joy of all,
The sun that warms and lights us.
Now His grace to us imparts
Eternal sunshine to our hearts;
The night of sin is ended.
Alleluia!

7 Then let us feast this Easter Day
On Christ, the bread of heaven;
The Word of grace has purged away
The old and evil leaven.
Christ alone our souls will feed;
He is our meat and drink indeed;
Faith lives upon no other!
Alleluia!

Text: Public domain

The following hymns in the Lutheran Service Book were written by Martin Luther:
332 - Savior of the Nations, Come (Luther translated this hymn of Ambrose)
358 - From Heaven Above to Earth I Come
382 - We Praise You, Jesus, at Your Birth
406-407 - To Jordan Came the Christ, our Lord
458 - Christ Jesus Lay in Death's Strong Bands
497 - Come, Holy Ghost, God and Lord
505 - Triune God, Be Thou our Stay
556 - Dear Christians, One and All, Rejoice
581 - These are the Holy Ten Commands
607 - From Dephs of Woe I Cry to Thee
617 - O Lord, We Praise Thee, Bless Thee, and Adore Thee
627 - Jesus Christ, Our Blessed Savior
655 - Lord, Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word
656-657 - A Mighty Fortress is Our God
755 - In the Very Midst of Life
759 - This Body in the Grave We Lay
766 - Our Father, Who From Heaven Above
768 - To God the Holy Spirit Let Us Pray
777-778 - Grand Peace, We Pray, in Mercy, Lord (Luther translated this Latin hymn)
823-824 - May God Bestow On Us His Grace
938 - In Peace and Joy I Now Depart
948 - All Glory Be to God Alone
954 - We All Believe in One True God
960 - Isaiah, Mighty Seer in Days of Old

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Christ Jesus Lay in Death's Strong Bands

"Christ Jesus Lay in Death's Strong Bands" (LSB 458) is Martin Luther's Easter hymn.
The hymn begins by echoing the words of St. Luke: "God raised Him up, loosing the pangs of death, because it was not possible for Him to be held by it" (Acts 2:24). Christ's resurrection brings us life and salvation: "He will swallow up death forever" (Isaiah 25:8). In faith, the Christian joyfully praises the Lord for all He has done for us!
In stanza two, Luther writes of the Law's harshest condemnation of sin and its consequence: death.
In stanzas three and four, Luther tells of what Christ has done for us, sinners. He tells of Christ's struggle, victory, salvation and redemption for us!
In stanzas five and six, Luther tells of Christ's victory on the cross over sin, death, and hell. Also, in stanza five, Luther tells of Jesus as the Passover lamb (Exodus 12) and how His blood marks the Door to eternal life.
In the final stanza, Luther tells how Christ feeds our souls at the Sacrament of the Altar: "Christ alone our souls will feed; He is our meat and drink indeed; faith lives upon no other!"
Each stanza concludes with a bold Easter "alleluia," for Christ is victorious over sin, death, and the power of the devil!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Christ Jesus lay in death’s strong bands
For our offenses given;
But now at God’s right hand He stands
And brings us life from heaven.
Therefore let us joyful be
And sing to God right thankfully
Loud songs of alleluia!
Alleluia!
2 No son of man could conquer death,
Such ruin sin had wrought us.
No innocence was found on earth,
And therefore death had brought us
Into bondage from of old
And ever grew more strong and bold
And held us as its captive.
Alleluia!
3 Christ Jesus, God’s own Son, came down,
His people to deliver;
Destroying sin, He took the crown
From death’s pale brow forever:
Stripped of pow’r, no more it reigns;
An empty form alone remains;
Its sting is lost forever.
Alleluia!
4 It was a strange and dreadful strife
When life and death contended;
The victory remained with life,
The reign of death was ended.
Holy Scripture plainly saith
That death is swallowed up by death,
Its sting is lost forever.
Alleluia!
5 Here our true Paschal Lamb we see,
Whom God so freely gave us;
He died on the accursèd tree—
So strong His love—to save us.
See, His blood now marks our door;
Faith points to it; death passes o’er,
And Satan cannot harm us.
Alleluia!
6 So let us keep the festival
To which the Lord invites us;
Christ is Himself the joy of all,
The sun that warms and lights us.
Now His grace to us imparts
Eternal sunshine to our hearts;
The night of sin is ended.
Alleluia!
7 Then let us feast this Easter Day
On Christ, the bread of heaven;
The Word of grace has purged away
The old and evil leaven.
Christ alone our souls will feed;
He is our meat and drink indeed;
Faith lives upon no other!
Alleluia!
Text: Public domain

Monday, April 27, 2020

Jesus Lives! The Victory's Won

"Jesus Lives! The Victory's Won" (LSB 490) is rooted in John 14:19 and Christ's exhortation to a lively confidence in the face of death ("Because I live, you will also live"), the hymn begins with the counterintuitive claim that because Jesus lives, death no longer appalls the Christian. It affirms that Jesus' risen life means death's reign is done. The Apostle Paul reminds the Church that Christ's resurrection means that death is defeated (1 Corinthians 15:54-55).
Each stanza recalls the confidence the Christian has in all things because of Christ's resurrection: "This shall be my confidence."
The final stanza draws the text to a close on the same note with which it began: the resurrection of Christ provides confidence to the baptized in the face of death. The imagery is that of a deathbed, where the Christian no longer awaits death, but eternal life! This is when faith becomes sight! Jesus is my confidence!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Jesus lives! The vict’ry’s won!
Death no longer can appall me;
Jesus lives! Death’s reign is done!
From the grave will Christ recall me.
Brighter scenes will then commence;
This shall be my confidence.
2 Jesus lives! To Him the throne
High above all things is given.
I shall go where He is gone,
Live and reign with Him in heaven.
God is faithful; doubtings, hence!
This shall be my confidence.
3 Jesus lives! For me He died,
Hence will I, to Jesus living,
Pure in heart and act abide,
Praise to Him and glory giving.
All I need God will dispense;
This shall be my confidence.
4 Jesus lives! I know full well
Nothing me from Him shall sever.
Neither death nor pow’rs of hell
Part me now from Christ forever.
God will be my sure defense;
This shall be my confidence.
5 Jesus lives! And now is death
But the gate of life immortal;
This shall calm my trembling breath
When I pass its gloomy portal.
Faith shall cry, as fails each sense:
Jesus is my confidence!
Text: Public domain

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Come, You Faithful, Raise the Strain

"Come, You Faithful, Raise the Strain" (LSB 487) was written by John of Damascus (675-749) and has been sung in the Church since the middle of the 8th century.
John of Damascus and his family were among a minority of Christians who refused to convert to Islam. This made life very tough as he spent his entire life under Islamic rule.
Through persecution, John of Damascus was one of the last of the Eastern Church Fathers. He was a staunch defender of the orthodox Christian faith in response to the challenges posed by the new religion of Islam. John had a poetic gift as he wrote several hymns. Many of his hymns, including "Come, You Faithful, Raise the Strain," focused on the resurrection of Christ, which were written in particular against the false prophet who had died - Muhammad.
In the hymn, the truths of Jesus' resurrection crescendo until the Church of all time joins in praising the immortal King for her deliverance. The first stanza, based on the song of Moses in Exodus 15:1-18, connects Easter with Israel's deliverance from Pharaoh. Stanza two, recalls the true bondage of humanity to sin and death and how Christ has burst this prison. Stanza three tells of the joy brought by the "feast of feasts" that makes glad the hearts of the faithful, for nothing can ever dampen their strains of praise to God. The fourth stanza tells of that first Easter evening, when the resurrected Jesus appeared in the locked upper room. The final stanza tells how God has triumphed and the Church continues to sing alleluias to the King immortal!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Come, you faithful, raise the strain
Of triumphant gladness!
God has brought His Israel
Into joy from sadness,
Loosed from Pharaoh’s bitter yoke
Jacob’s sons and daughters,
Led them with unmoistened foot
Through the Red Sea waters.
2 ’Tis the spring of souls today:
Christ has burst His prison
And from three days’ sleep in death
As a sun has risen;
All the winter of our sins,
Long and dark, is flying
From His light, to whom is giv’n
Laud and praise undying.
3 Now the queen of seasons, bright
With the day of splendor,
With the royal feast of feasts
Comes its joy to render;
Comes to gladden faithful hearts
Which with true affection
Welcome in unwearied strain
Jesus’ resurrection!
4 For today among His own
Christ appeared, bestowing
His deep peace, which evermore
Passes human knowing.
Neither could the gates of death
Nor the tomb’s dark portal
Nor the watchers nor the seal
Hold Him as a mortal.
5 Alleluia! Now we cry
To our King immortal,
Who, triumphant, burst the bars
Of the tomb’s dark portal.
Come, you faithful, raise the strain
Of triumphant gladness!
God has brought His Israel
Into joy from sadness!
Text: Public domain

Saturday, April 25, 2020

With High Delight Let Us Unite

"With High Delight Let Us Unite" (LSB 483) tells of the exuberant joy of the resurrection! With the Jerusalem of Isaiah 52, Christians are invited to break forth into singing because Jesus Christ is our salvation! Everyone in Christ is set free from sin and death through faith in the Good News of salvation found only in Jesus Christ!
As true God, Christ is the firstborn of the dead, who "by His death has destroyed death, and by His rising to life again has restored to us everlasting life." The second stanza reflects the description of the resurrection of the dead in 1 Corinthians 15. God's Word gives the promise of victory over death and the grave that belongs to us by His grace through faith in the risen Lord Jesus Christ.
Christ's death and resurrection are ample reason to give Him thanks, praise and adoration!
1 With high delight
Let us unite
In songs of great jubilation.
Ye pure in heart,
All bear your part,
Sing Jesus Christ, our salvation.
To set us free
Forever, He
Is ris’n and sends
To all earth’s ends
Good news to save ev’ry nation.
2 True God, He first
From death has burst
Forth into life, all subduing.
His enemy
Doth vanquished lie;
His death has been death’s undoing.
“And yours shall be
Like victory
O’er death and grave,”
Saith He, who gave
His life for us, life renewing.
3 Let praises ring;
Give thanks, and bring
To Christ our Lord adoration.
His honor speed
By word and deed
To ev’ry land, ev’ry nation.
So shall His love
Give us above,
From misery
And death set free,
All joy and full consolation.
Text: © 1969 Concordia Publishing House. Used by permission: CPH Limited Promotional License no. 119000000

Friday, April 24, 2020

Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide

"Lord Jesus Christ, with Us Abide" (LSB 585) was written by two Lutherans of the Reformation era: Philipp Melanchthon and Nicolaus Selnecker. Melanchthon was Martin Luther's "right-hand man" as he penned the Unaltered Augsburg Confession (1530), the Apology of the Augsburg Confession (1531) and the Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope (1537). Selnecker was one of the principal authors of the Formula of Concord (1577). Selnecker was also a student of Melanchthon at the University of Wittenberg.
Selnecker, who wrote most of the hymn, was a staunch advocate for orthodox Lutheran theological expression.
The hymn begins with lines that evoke the prayer of the disciples on the road to Emmaus when it looked as though Jesus was going to leave them. The "eventide" and "night" of stanza one become "these last days of great distress" in stanza two. The hymn later speaks of the gravest temptation of all, apostasy or surrendering the faith, as "human pride" rejects God's truth and substitutes "man-made thoughts or things" for the words that the Holy Spirit uses to create and sustain faith.
Against such evils, the Church must pray to its Lord for His continued presence in order to "spurn Satan" and to remain "strong, bold, and unified" (stanza four). But how does Jesus "abide" with the Church? The hymn answers simply, explicitly, and in every stanza: God's Word. The emphasis of this hymn is the right proclamation of God's Word.
1 Lord Jesus Christ, with us abide,
For round us falls the eventide.
O let Your Word, that saving light,
Shine forth undimmed into the night.
2 In these last days of great distress
Grant us, dear Lord, true steadfastness
That we keep pure till life is spent
Your holy Word and Sacrament.
3 To hope grown dim, to hearts turned cold
Speak tongues of fire and make us bold
To shine Your Word of saving grace
Into each dark and loveless place.
4 May glorious truths that we have heard,
The bright sword of Your mighty Word,
Spurn Satan that Your Church be strong,
Bold, unified in act and song.
5 Restrain, O Lord, the human pride
That seeks to thrust Your truth aside
Or with some man-made thoughts or things
Would dim the words Your Spirit sings.
6 Stay with us, Lord, and keep us true;
Preserve our faith our whole life through—
Your Word alone our heart’s defense,
The Church’s glorious confidence.
Text: © 1982 Concordia Publishing House. Used by permission: CPH Limited Promotional License no. 119000000

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Our Paschal Lamb, That Sets Us Free

"Our Paschal Lamb, That Sets Us Free" (LSB 473) was written by Concordia Seminary, St. Louis professor Martin Franzmann (1907-1976) two years before his death.
The hymn originated at the invitation of Augsburg Publishing House of the American Lutheran Church, which was cooperating with the Lutheran Church in America and The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod in the Inter-Lutheran Commission on Worship (ILCW). As the ILCW worked toward the publication of the Lutheran Book of Worship hymnal, Augsburg instituted a hymn-of-the-month series for two church years, from 1973 to 1975, "Our Paschal Lamb" was one of those hymns.
The hymn's text does not focus so much on the empty tomb as it does on its effects in the life of each believer who has been baptized into Christ's resurrection. Franzmann based "Our Paschal Lamb" on 1 Corinthians 5:6-8, which St. Paul uses Old Testament imagery to express the implications of Christ's resurrection for Christians. All humanity is freed from eternal death by the sacrifice of Jesus. How amazing that God uses a death to restore life!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Our Paschal Lamb, that sets us free,
Is sacrificed. O keep
The feast of freedom gallantly;
Let alleluias leap: Refrain
ref
Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia! Again
Sing alleluia, cry aloud: Alleluia! Amen!
2 Let all our lives now celebrate
The feast; let malice die.
Let love grow strong anew, and great,
Let truth stamp out the lie. Refrain
3 Let all our deeds, unanimous,
Confess Him as our Lord
Who by the Spirit lives in us,
The Father’s living Word. Refrain
Text: © 1974 Augsburg Publishing House. Used by permission: CPH Limited Promotional License no. 119000000

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Good Christian Friends, Rejoice and Sing

"Good Christian Friends, Rejoice and Sing" (LSB 475) tells of the mercies of God to rejoice and sing in the bright light of our resurrected King, who has triumphed over all His enemies (Colossians 2:15).
As the faithful women quickly and joyfully left the empty tomb to tell the disciples about the resurrection, so Christians are called to celebrate joyfully and proclaim the resurrection to the entire world (Matthew 28).
The second stanza tells of the evidence of Christ's triumph. Christ, the Lord of life who was crucified, is risen, just as He said (Matthew 28:5-6).
We celebrate knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, will never die again. Death no longer has dominion over Him. As Christians, we share in Christ's victory!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 Good Christian friends, rejoice and sing!
Now is the triumph of our King!
To all the world glad news we bring:
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!
2 The Lord of life is ris’n this day;
Bring flow’rs of song to strew His way;
Let all the world rejoice and say:
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!
3 Praise we in songs of victory
That love, that life which cannot die,
And sing with hearts uplifted high:
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!
4 Your name we bless, O risen Lord,
And sing today with one accord
The life laid down, the life restored:
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!
Text: © 1958, renewed 1986 Hymns Ancient and Modern Ltd., admin. Hope Publishing Co. Used by permission: CPH Limited Promotional License no. 119000000

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Funeral Sermon: Resting Satisfied in Christ (Proverbs 1, 19; John 10:7-16; Ephesians 2:4-9)

 


Larry, Steven, Kathy, Judith and Bob, family and friends of Donna:

Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ! Amen!

[Intro]

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge” (Proverbs 1:7a). This is what Donna lived by.

Now, Donna was not trembling before her Lord. No, fear here means that she loved and trusted her Lord above all things. She was in awe of her Lord. She respected her Lord. She loved her Lord.

Today, Donna is living out the sure and certain hope that we each have by grace through faith in Jesus Christ. Instead of waiting to see her Lord, she is in the presence of her Lord.

On March 31, the door to heaven was opened to her. She has entered paradise.

Jesus teaches us: “Truly, truly, I say to you, I am the door of the sheep. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture” (John 10:7, 9).

By faith in Jesus as her Lord, Donna has passed from death to life!

During her earthly life, Donna wrote braille for 35 years. Most importantly, she was an active member of First Lutheran Church as she served as a member of the LWML, taught adult Bible classes and was a quilter.

In fact, she taught adult Bible class for 45 years. She certainly loved her Lord.

She also sewed baby clothes for hospital stillborn babies. Donna cherished the time spent with family and friends, especially loving the little children.

[Fear: The Beginning of Knowledge]

As I began our sermon, I mentioned how Donna feared the Lord. As I said, the fear mentioned here is not about trembling, but the fear mentioned here means awe and respect.

As Solomon puts in in Proverbs, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge” (Proverbs 1:7a).

Where does this fear come from? How do we come to fear the Lord?

Well, this knowledge comes from God through Christ. The knowledge to believe in Christ first begins at our Baptism. You see, knowledge is a gift from God, received by faith. As God’s name is pronounced over us in the waters of Holy Baptism, we receive the ability to believe in Jesus as our Lord and Savior. This occurred for Donna on November 25, 1928.

Then on April 18, 1943, the Holy Spirit called Donna to confess her faith in Jesus on her confirmation day.

Now, knowledge cannot be possessed apart from God’s gracious work in Christ. As Paul tells us in Ephesians 2: “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9).

We are saved only through the work and merit of Jesus. We receive eternal life through Christ’s sacrificial death upon the cross and through His resurrection from the dead on behalf of all sinners, you and me.

As Jesus tell us in John 10: “I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture. I am the good shepherd. I know my own and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep” (John 10:9, 14-15).

Through Christ laying down His life for us and rising from the dead, all who believe in Him have become heirs of the kingdom of heaven. By grace through faith in Christ, we are righteous and have received everlasting life!

[Fear: Leads to Everlasting Life]

Today, Donna is in the presence of the Good Shepherd. All of her sins have been wiped away. She has no more wants. She no longer hungers or thirsts, for she is in the presence of her Lord. She is truly a saint!

Her fear of the Lord has led to eternal life. As Proverbs 19:23 states: “The fear of the Lord leads to life, and whoever has it rests satisfied; he will not be visited by harm.”

Today, Donna is at peace. She is safe and resting satisfied in the presence of her Savior!

For us – who are on this side of heaven – we are still saints and sinners. We may weep for our separation from Donna, but know this: we may grieve, but we grieve in the sure and certain hope of life everlasting (1 Thessalonians 4:13-17). Through Christ, we know we will see our loved ones again!

Thanks be to God, who gives us eternal life through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ! Amen.

The peace of God which surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.

T SOLI DEO GLORIA T

Monday, April 20, 2020

This Joyful Eastertide

"This Joyful Eastertide" (LSB 482) tells of the necessity of Christ's resurrection from 1 Corinthians 15. 
In 1 Corinthians 15, the Apostle Paul refutes any claims that Christ did not rise bodily from the dead. 1 Corinthians 15:17 and 20 is echoed in each refrain: "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins... But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep."
Since Christ has been bodily resurrected and lives and reigns, Christians receive comfort, hope, and the assurance of our own bodily resurrection!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 This joyful Eastertide
Away with sin and sorrow!
My love, the Crucified,
Has sprung to life this morrow: Refrain
ref Had Christ, who once was slain,
Not burst His three-day prison,
Our faith had been in vain:
But now has Christ arisen,
arisen, arisen;
But now has Christ arisen!
2 Death’s flood has lost its chill
Since Jesus crossed the river;
Lover of souls, from ill
My passing soul deliver: Refrain
3 My flesh in hope shall rest
And for a season slumber
Till trump from east to west
Shall wake the dead in number: Refrain
Text: Public domain

Sunday, April 19, 2020

He's Risen, He's Risen

On Easter Sunday, April 8, 1860, C.F.W. Walther (the first president of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) composed "He's Risen, He's Risen" (LSB 480).
This hymn emphasizes the conflict between the hellish host and the incarnate Word. The text speaks especially of Christ's descent into hell and the comfort this brings to believers: "He's opened death's prison"; "deal, hell, and Satan He vanquished"; "the conquering Lord lifts His banner on high." In these words, Walther is proclaiming the banner-bearing Lord of Victory!
Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen, indeed! Alleluia!
1 He’s risen, He’s risen, Christ Jesus, the Lord;
He opened death’s prison, the_incarnate, true Word.
Break forth, hosts of heaven, in jubilant song
And earth, sea, and mountain their praises prolong.
2 The foe was triumphant when on Calvary
The Lord of creation was nailed to the tree.
In Satan’s domain did the hosts shout and jeer,
For Jesus was slain, whom the evil ones fear.
3 But short was their triumph; the Savior arose,
And death, hell, and Satan He vanquished, His foes.
The conquering Lord lifts His banner on high;
He lives, yes, He lives, and will nevermore die.
4 O, where is your sting, death? We fear you no more;
Christ rose, and now open is fair Eden’s door.
For all our transgressions His blood does atone;
Redeemed and forgiven, we now are His own.
5 Then sing your hosannas and raise your glad voice;
Proclaim the blest tidings that all may rejoice.
Laud, honor, and praise to the Lamb that was slain:
With Father and Spirit He ever shall reign.
Text: © 1941 Concordia Publishing House. Used by permission: CPH Limited Promotional License no. 119000000

Sermon for the Second Sunday of Easter: "The Voice of Peace"


Grace, mercy and peace be to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ! Amen!

Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ:

[Intro]
“Hey, Siri, call mom.”
“Okay, Google, what’s the weather forecast this weekend?”
“Alexa, set my alarm for 6:30 a.m.”

The human voice has new power! Now we don’t have to type with our thumbs anymore. We can talk to our devices and they will do what we ask. Or at least that is how it is supposed to work.

It’s the sort of thing that was science fiction just years ago. At a time when most of the information that went into a computer was on punch cards, Star Trek’s Captain Kirk and others on the USS Enterprise talked to a computer.

And now, we all can talk to the computer. We can dictate to our word-processing programs, we can surf the internet without touching a keyboard, we can call up a recipe in the kitchen without dirtying the tablet screen.

You see, God created voice to have power.

Easter is, among other things, about the power of voice. On this Second Sunday of Easter, the risen Lord Jesus comes to you and to me to speak His peace into our hearts so that we may speak that peace to the world.

[Speaking Peace in the Upper Room]

This is what we read in today’s Gospel lesson. After Mary Magdalene and the other women told Christ’s disciples they had seen the Lord, the disciples did not really believe.

By the evening of that very day, we find the disciples behind locked doors. That is, except for Thomas. Now, this wasn’t just a simple padlock — the doors were barred. No one was getting in and no one was getting out.

Now, the disciples had good reason for their fear of the Jewish authorities. Long before Christ died upon the cross, the Sanhedrin had decreed that anyone who confessed Jesus to be the Messiah was to be expelled from the synagogues (John 9:22). Since that time, the Sanhedrin’s hatred for Jesus also spilled over to the disciples. Now that the Sanhedrin succeeded in getting rid of Jesus, the disciples thought they were next.

So, here they are, hunkered down, huddled together, letting fear rather than faith control their every thought and action.

Then suddenly, Jesus comes and stands before them. Now, Jesus never knocked on the door asking to be let in. Jesus never snuck through a window. Jesus was simply – there. John tells us the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord. But in their joy, not one of them apologizes for his behavior over the last few days.

No one says he’s sorry or that they should have done better. Perhaps part of the reason is that they did not get a chance to say anything.

Instead, it’s Jesus who speaks the first word, much like the Father who had the first word in the “Parable of the Prodigal Son,” who hugged and kissed his lost son, before he could say a word.

And just as was the case at the sound of God’s voice in creation, the sound of Jesus’ voice creates something wonderful and new: “Peace be with you,” (John 20:19). 

This is not a wish or a hope. It is His gift to them.

“Peace be with you,” He says, and there is peace and joy.

This, the disciples could only begin to realize, was the whole point of what Jesus had just been through. Jesus’ death on the cross was to reestablish the peace between God and man that had been shattered when we first sinned. Sin will always stand as separation, conflict, between two parties. 

  • §  In sin, we live for ourselves, not for each other.
  • §  In sin, we cannot be in harmony, instead we are at odds.
  • §  In sin, we could never be with God, because His holiness cannot be in relationship with unholiness.

But, by taking our sin to the cross, Christ removed the separation and reconciled us to God, bringing us back into peace with Him.

This whole scene repeats a week later when Thomas, at last, is with the disciples. The doors still being locked, Jesus simply appears. He speaks the same word: “Peace be with You.” 

Then, Jesus encourages Thomas to touch and see the wounds. He says: “Do not disbelieve, but believe” (John 20:27).

[Speaking Peace to Today’s Disciples]

Even though two thousand years have passed since that first Easter evening, the Church still struggles to get out from behind locked doors and into the world. 

While we might not fear suffering the same cruelty as Jesus suffered on the cross — the fear that kept the first apostles locked up — there is as much to be wary of in the 21st century as there was in the first century.

How appropriate is our text that we find ourselves locked up in quarantine during this COVID-19 Pandemic? Instead of fearing the Jewish authorities, we fear the unknown of this novel virus.

Or, before COVID-19 was known, many of us were in fear of the culture around us as the Christian truth was being marginalized by the culture in order to achieve “social justice.”

The temptation is to focus all our attention on our fear and let that fear paralyze us. Our text from John 20 is not about how the world locks its doors to the Gospel, but how the Church locks itself away from the world.

The irony of the disciples’ locked doors is that they weren’t really keeping out soldiers looking to crucify them and they weren’t keeping out friends and relatives who may have wanted to ridicule them for following Jesus. The One they were looking for was Jesus. 

They locked out the word Christ had so clearly spoken to them about dying and rising again, and in locking out that word, they locked out Jesus. 

When fear becomes our focus, we fall into the same trap. We lock out the Lord, who time and time again tells His Church: “Do not be afraid!”

Jesus will have none of it! The securely locked doors are no problem for Him. If the grave could not keep Him in the ground, their barred door would not keep Him outside the room where they were gathered. And so, He comes and stands among them and among us and speaks His word — a word that brings the very thing it says: “Peace be with you!”

This is Jesus’ word to you this Second Sunday of Easter.
§  “Peace be with you.”
§  “Peace, your sin is forgiven!”
§  “Do not fear the world. I have overcome the world. Peace be with you!”

This word comes to you and me today, with exactly the same power as it came to those first disciples on the first Easter and to Thomas a week later.

“These [words] are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name” (John 20:31).

In His Word, Jesus comes among us today, as we experience the power of His voice. He doesn’t just tell us about peace, but He actually speaks peace to you and me. As Martin Luther puts it, “As soon as He said it, it was done” (AE 12:32).

Just like on that first Easter evening, Jesus does not knock on our church doors asking to come in and Jesus does not sneak in through a window. He simply appears through His Means of Grace – in remembering our Baptism, in hearing His Word rightly proclaimed, and in eating and drinking of His very Body and very Blood – and we hear His peace saying “Peace be with you!”

Jesus first spoke His peace to you and to me in the water of our Baptism, where we were joined to His death and resurrection and we died to sin and rose to new life. 

That peace is spoken to you every time you return in repentance to your Baptism, and Christ says to us through Pastor Welch and myself: “As a called and ordained servant of Christ, and by His authority, I therefore forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”

This same peace is spoken to you each time you come to His table, where – in, with, and under the bread and wine – He comes through space and time to feed you His very body and His very blood for the forgiveness of our sins and to lift us from our fears. There His voice speaks peace: “Take, eat. Take, drink. This is for you, for the forgiveness of your sins.” 

Then, we hear Christ speaking to us, as if to remove any doubts, “The body and blood of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ strengthen and preserve you in body and soul to life everlasting. Depart in peace and joy.”

During this time of social distancing, we are not all able to receive Christ’s true Body and true Blood. But, we can all take heart that by grace through faith in Jesus, we have received forgiveness of sins. But, when this pandemic is passed, let us all join together again at Christ’s table of grace!

We will all then rise together from the table of grace at peace.

[Peace that Passes all Understanding]

Jesus tells us: “As the Father has sent me, even so I am sending you” (John 20:21). The Lord cannot be bound. His Word cannot be bound. His followers do not live behind locked doors — even during a quarantine. He sends us out into the world six-to-eight feet apart, or with a simple phone call, text message, video chat, not empty handed.

He breathes His Holy Spirit upon His disciples, and to us — His Church. So, like the first disciples, we are sent to the world to be the voice of peace. Our voices become voices of power, not because of our doing, but because through our voice, Jesus Himself speaks.

For Christians, we see peace differently than the unbelieving world around us. We know that enemies, sickness, poverty, sin, the devil, and death are still there. Yet, we have peace within, and strength and comfort in our hearts. We know that since Christ has conquered sin, death and Satan, by grace through faith in Jesus, we too have conquered our evil foes!

This is why the peace we have in Jesus passes all human understanding. Our peace passes and exceeds reason and all the senses.

We have peace, because although He died, He rose again to speak to us saying: “Peace be with you!”

Long before there was a Siri, Alexa, or Google, there was the Risen Lord Jesus, speaking to us and through people like you and me, so that all who are locked behind doors of fear, sin, sickness, and even death itself might hear His word: “Peace be with you.”

Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia! Amen.

 T SOLI DEO GLORIA T