June 11, 2023

John Piper is a Christian pastor and author of a book called “God Is the Gospel,” and in it challenges Christians with this question: “If you could have heaven, with no sickness, and with all the friends you ever had on earth, and all the food you ever liked, and all the leisure activities you ever enjoyed, and all the natural beauties you ever saw, all the physical pleasures you ever tasted, and no human conflict or any natural disasters, could you be satisfied with heaven, if Christ was not there?”


Of course there is no version of heaven without Christ, and heaven is perfect in every way only because he is there. And on the day we arrive we’ll have Jesus and everything else he has promised us. But strictly speaking, this question doesn’t have anything to do with heaven. It’s a question about here and now-where our hearts are. It’s a question of what we really want.


In the gospel today, the rich young man asked a salvation question, but at the heart of it, it’s really about here and now. It’s a matter of life and death, and he clearly wanted life. He wanted salvation. He wanted to know God. He was a man I think any of us would call “good.” He was involved in his church - the gospel of Luke calls him a ruler, that is, the man in charge of the affairs of his local synagogue, meaning he had the respect and trust of his community. Look at how he presented himself to Jesus, running to him, throwing himself down on the ground in front of him, addressing him as “good teacher.” He was uncommonly humble and respectful. Ever since his childhood he had worked to keep the law, to please God, and it seems he had a conscience sensitive enough to recognize that none of that was enough. He asked, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”


The exact question we dream about hearing from our unbelieving friends. Have you considered how you would answer? Maybe your mind goes to the jailer at Philippi from Acts 16. Remember, a miraculous earthquake had flung open all the doors of the prison where Paul and Silas were being held. When the jailer saw, he assumed all the prisoners had fled. Terrified of the consequences, he was about to kill himself, but Paul cried out, “Don’t harm yourself! We are all here!” The jailer ran in, fell to the ground trembling and asked, “What must I do to be saved?” Paul and Silas gave this simple and beautiful answer: “Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved.” 


Why didn’t Jesus say that? When the actual Redeemer of mankind was asked nearly the same question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life,” he pointed to the law. Don’t commit adultery. Don’t murder. Don’t steal. Don’t lie. Don’t cheat. Honor your parents. The answer was different, because the person asking the question was different. This man Jesus was talking to wasn’t afraid of God; he was confident. He expected God to be pleased with him and his efforts. He said, “All these I have kept since I was a boy.” Then, so that we wouldn’t think that Jesus would inflict unnecessary pain, we get a glimpse of Jesus’ heart. Mark wrote: “Jesus looked at him and loved him.” 


Jesus’ love is what frames this whole account for us. Jesus’ overwhelming, unrelenting love for sinners is why he stopped to talk about the law with a man who had made the law his whole life. His love is why he isn’t content to be second place in our hearts, because love wants the best for the ones you love. And the best thing, the greatest good in the universe, is God. And his desire to bring us to God is behind every word, every action. His humble birth, his life of perfect obedience, (he really did keep all those laws from the time he was a boy). In love he put his disciples within earshot of this conversation with a rich young man, so they would learn this lesson too, that the law cannot save us. The only way for us to have the greatest good, to have God, is for Jesus to be good for us and for Jesus to die for us. And so he went on to Jerusalem, to a cross, and offered up his life to satisfy God’s wrath. 


Everything he does is love. That’s how we know that what comes next is not cruelty, but kindness. Even though he knew it would make the man walk away, Jesus added one more law. Not one of the Ten Commandments, and not one applied universally to all of his disciples. This one was specifically for this man. Jesus told him to give it all away—everything he had—and then to follow. And it’s like this man understood the law for the first time in his life. He was appalled at the thought of it, and he walked away from Jesus, because he liked being rich. What Jesus asked seemed like too much.


Jesus placed a burden on his heart that was so heavy that he could no longer deny that an idol lived there, and when he had to choose between money and God, he chose money. Up to this point his idolatry had been a secret sin, hidden from everyone, maybe even to himself. But hidden idols are seen clearly by our God. We read in Hebrews 4: “no creature is hidden from his sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.” 


God could see his idolatry, but the disciples couldn’t. They watched all this happen, and if they were surprised that someone would refuse such a gracious invitation from the Messiah himself, the text doesn’t record it. They were surprised, but it was at Jesus. After the man left, Jesus said, “How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God.” That’s what surprised them, that this “good” man wasn’t good enough. And if he’s not good enough, what hope is there for anyone? They shouldn’t have been surprised. Jesus had said it from the beginning, “No one is good—except God alone.”


Our consciences tell us the same thing when we try to answer this question: Could we be satisfied with heaven if Christ was not there? Now, heaven, that’s off in the distance. That’s the future. This is a question that we have to answer here and now. Let me put it a different way: Could we be satisfied with earth, with this life, if Christ was not here? When we put it like that as a simple choice between, on the one hand, the Creator of all things, the Redeemer of mankind, along with all his blessings and promises, and on the other hand...stuff—it’s not a hard decision to make. But this isn’t a rhetorical question. We have to make that choice every day, every minute, and how we choose to spend our time, our energy, our money—each decision comes from a heart that is either satisfied with Christ and his promises, or is seeking satisfaction somewhere else. 


And we come to the same terrifying realization that the jailer at Philippi did, and the same the disciples did: what God demands is impossible. He tells us to be good. And not in the way the rich man initially applied it to Jesus, but in the sense that Jesus applied it to God. He tells us to be perfect, to be as good as God. We ask with the disciples, “Who then can be saved?” Jesus’ answer: “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.”


It has been said that in God are oceans of love, and not a drop of it comes to us apart from the person of Jesus Christ. The young man thought he could go around Jesus, to go directly to God, and yet, here we see Jesus, with oceans of love flowing through him, directed toward this young man, toward his disciples, and even toward us. He looked at us, he loved us, and did what was impossible. He carried out God’s plan for salvation, every step something impossible for man. He took on our humanity so he could be good in our place by keeping every law, then he made satisfaction for God’s wrath by willingly offering up his life as the payment for our sin. He made us righteous. He made us good to God. Then, he rose from the dead, impossible for man, but possible for God. And now for us it’s not just possible, it’s certain. We will rise, and we will inherit the kingdom of God, and live there with him forever.


This is his invitation: to have all of the blessings that come from knowing him. This is his call. It’s not a call to poverty; it’s a call to discipleship. To know him, to follow him, to always want more and more of him, and never to be satisfied with anything less than all of him, even if it means giving up those things that compete for our devotion and our attention. And as Christ-followers, we can even do that joyfully, because he has given us true satisfaction, peace with God, forgiveness of sins, true righteousness, and the promise of eternal treasure in heaven. All this because, though we are law-breakers, we have a Savior who placed our salvation over his own good and sacrificed everything to forgive and save us. Jesus wasn’t satisfied with heaven without you and me there. In Jesus’ name. Amen.


June 4, 2023

CW-A Epistle Lesson  - Holy Trinity  - - K B Kuschel

II Cor 13:11-14

(11)  Finally, brothers, goodby. Aim for perfection, listen to my appeal, be of one mind, live in peace. And the God of love and peace will be with you. {12} Greet one another with a holy kiss. {13} All the saints send their greetings. {14} May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.


Draw a triangle. Draw the intersecting circles. Triune/ Trinity is not in the Bible. Shorthand for

Today we want to discuss. Our Triune God’s Gifts to Us.


IA1 {14}May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.  What is grace?  Grace is God’s love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.  It is His desire to forgive sinners who deserve to be punished. 

    2 Grace is a characteristic of God.  What God?  The Triune God.  The Father, Son, Holy Spirit God who is still only one God.  Remember the whole idea of triune doesn’t fit our heads.  According to mathematics how many is three?  Three.  How many is one?  One.  Three isn’t what?  One.  One is not what?  Three.  But the Bible teaches us that our One God has this Father, Son, Holy Spirit threeness about Him.

   B1 Even though grace is a characteristic of the Father, Son, Holy Spirit God, in the words before us today Paul writes: “May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.”   Did God the Son love sinners who don’t deserve to be loved?  Did God the Son desire to forgive sinners who deserve to be punished?  Look at His life.  He came into the world in order to take on Himself our humanity so He could be our Savior.  What was one of the earliest recorded things that some humans did because He had come into our world?  Tried to kill Him.  Did they deserve to have Jesus take on Himself humanity among them?  No.  Did they deserve to be punished?  Yes.  How do people respond today to the concept that Jesus of Nazareth was God and Man in One person? They reject it.  Do humans today deserve to have had God the Son take on himself our humanity in order to be our Savior?  No.    Why did God the Son take on Himself our humanity?  Because of his grace - His love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.    

   2 God the Son, who knew God’s truth perfectly, attempted to give God’s truth to people over the course of three years.  How did the majority of people respond?  They rejected him.  How did the religious leaders respond?  Accused Him of blasphemy.  What happened on several occasions when He taught in certain towns and regions?  People asked Him to leave.  How do people today respond to the truth which Jesus taught? They don’t want to bother with it. Did/do humans deserve to have God the Son teach them God’s truth?  No.  Why did/does God the Son continue to teach God’s truth?  Because of His grace - His love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.  

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 3 God the Son lived a perfectly holy life as the God-Man so that He could give to us His holiness so that we could be acceptable to God.  How did the people respond?  They wanted a powerful kinglike Messiah, not a humble servant who lived to benefit others.  How do people respond to Jesus’ lifestyle today?  They continue to live their selfish, sinful lifestyles instead of striving to mimic His lifestyle.  Do humans deserve to have God the Son continue to live a holy life among them?  No.   Why did He do so?  Because of His grace - His love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.

   4 God the Son took on Himself the punishment of physical death and separation from God which we deserve because of our sins to rescue us from that punishment.  How did the crowds respond?  They laughed at Him for claiming to be God.  They called on Him to come down from the cross. How do people today respond to the idea that somebody 2,000 years ago could do something to remove our guilt?  They laugh at it.  Did they deserve to have had Jesus die for them?  No.  Why did He do so?  Because of His grace - His love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.

   C1 How does Paul urge us to respond to the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ?  {11}“Aim for perfection.”  What does that mean?  Try to do everything God tells us to do.  Try to live the holiness Jesus has given you.  Why?   Not to earn eternal life by our perfection.  We already have perfection &  eternal life because of Jesus. 


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2 Why?  Why aim for perfection?  Because of the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.  Trying to do what God tells us to do is the only way we have to thank God the Son for loving us even though we don’t deserve to be loved.  Trying to do what God tells us to do is the only way we have to thank God the Son for forgiving us even though we deserve to be punished. 

 IIA1 {14}May the love of God be with you all.  What is love?  Sexual attraction?  You make me feel good when you are around?  The Bible defines love as the intent to live one’s life for the benefit of someone else.

    2 What was grace?  God’s love for sinners who don’t deserve to be loved.  So what is the difference between grace and love?  I suppose we would have to say His grace is a subcategory of His love.  God’s purpose is to benefit His human creatures.  That is God’s love.  

   B1 Love is a characteristic of God.  What God?  The Triune God.  The Father, Son, Holy Spirit God who is still only one God.  When you are reading your Bibles and you run across the term God, who is the Bible referring to?  All three persons - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  Unless it clearly states that the Father, the Son, or the Holy Spirit is the one under discussion.

     2 In the verse under discussion right now, the term God is probably not referring to all three persons.  Here it is probably referring to the Father.  Why can I say that?  Because the other two persons of the Triune God are clearly 

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mentioned.  Sandwiched right between a reference to the Lord Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit the term God here most likely is referring to the Father.

   3 So, let’s assume we are talking about the love of the Father.  In what areas of life does the Father benefit us other than those areas of life in which the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is primary?  The Bible says the Father brings us into physical existence, provides us with what we need, protects us, and takes care of us in numerous other ways. 

  C1 How does Paul urge us to respond to the love of God?  {11}“Live in peace.”  How can we live in peace?  “The God of love and peace will be with you.”  When the Lord has led us to understand and believe that He exists to benefit us, that His love surrounds us, then we can be content in every circumstance of life. We won’t have to be using and abusing other people in order to achieve contentment.   God’s love brings peace to our lives.

   2 When the Lord has led us to understand and believe that He exists to benefit us, that His love surrounds us, then we can be confident.  We are not facing tomorrow alone.  The all-powerful One who made us is using that same power to benefit us. We won’t have to be using and abusing other people in order to achieve security.   God’s love brings peace to our lives.

   3 When the Lord has led us to understand and believe that He exists to benefit us, that His love surrounds us, then we can be comfortable communicating with Him, asking Him to bless us and thanking Him for blessing us.  We won’t have to be overwhelmed with anxiety about knowing the right people and dealing correctly with the right people . God’s love brings peace to our lives.  

IIIA1 {14}May the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.  Fellowship.  What is fellowship?  Fellowship is being fellows, friends, good buddies.  When you hang out with somebody you are expressing fellowship.

     2 May the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you.  May the Holy Spirit hang out in your life.  May the Holy Spirit be present in your life.  May the Holy Spirit be a part of your life.  May the Holy Spirit become your good friend.  May you find it comfortable to hang around with the Holy Spirit.

   B1 What happens when the Holy Spirit hangs out in a person’s life?  Since the Holy Spirit’s purpose is to bring people to faith in Jesus, when the Holy Spirit hangs out in a person’s life, the person is brought to faith in Jesus.  When the Holy Spirit hangs out in a believer’s life through the Bible and the Lord’s Supper, He strengthens faith, so that the attacks of the devil, the unbelievers and our own human reason don’t drive a wedge between ourselves and Jesus.

    2 When the Holy Spirit hangs out in a person’s life through Word and Lord’s Supper, He works in the person the desire to live a godly life.  He gives us direction on how to live our lives in accord with God’s will.  He strengthens our resolve so we are not taken in by the temptations of the devil, the unbelievers, and our own selfishness.    

  C1 How are we to respond to what the Holy Spirit does in our lives when He hangs out in our lives?  Paul writes: {12} “Greet one another with a holy kiss.”  Acknowledge that you are united with each other.  Express your connection with each other.  Indicate to each other that you are buddies, that you like to hang around with each other, that you like to be good friends with each other, that you like to spend time with each other. 

    2 How are we to respond to what the Holy Spirit does in our lives when He hangs out in our lives?  Paul writes: {11}“Be of one mind.”  Have a united focus.  Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus together.  Study the Word together.  Receive the Lord’s Supper together.  Why?  To express the oneness in faith we have.  To say publicly to each other - we believe Jesus is our Savior.  We believe the Scripture is true.  And to strengthen the oneness that we have.  To help each other focus on the importance of the spiritual side of our lives.  

   3 How are we to respond to what the Holy Spirit does in our lives when He hangs out in our lives?  Paul writes: {11}“Live in peace.”  Spiritual oneness can be destroyed by constant battling.  Admit your sins to each other when you have wronged, slighted, or left each other out of your lives.  Forgive each other when you have been wronged, slighted or left out of each other’s lives.  Jesus has forgiven us.  We forgive.  That’s the only way to live at peace.  That’s the only way to maintain spiritual oneness.

   4 How are we to respond to what the Holy Spirit does in our lives when He hangs out in our lives?  Paul writes: {13}“All the saints send their greetings.”  If we are really good buddies, if we truly enjoy each other’s presence, then we will say so.

     Conc. We cannot understand the concept of the Trinity.  But His presence can be sensed by the gifts He gives.  Grace, love, and fellowship.


May 28, 2023

John 16:5–11   

 

5 “But now I am going away to him who sent me, and not one of you asks me, ‘Where are you going?’ 6 Yet because I have told you these things, sorrow has filled your heart. 7 Nevertheless, I am telling you the truth: It is good for you that I go away. For if I do not go away, the Counselor will not come to you. But if I go, I will send him to you. 8 When he comes, he will convict the world about sin, about righteousness, and about judgment: 9 about sin, because they do not believe in me; 10 about righteousness, because I am going to the Father and you will no longer see me; 11 about judgment, because the ruler of this world has been condemned.

 

Pentecost is a Gift that Keeps on Giving

 

Today is dedicated to the Holy Spirit.  He is the One who opens our eyes to see Jesus through the eyes of faith. If you think about it, it takes faith to believe in the Holy Spirit too.  We can’t see Him.  Throughout history he has appeared in the feathers of a dove and in fire and in water, but never apart from these physical elements.

 

The Bible doesn’t talk about Him as much, and He doesn’t want the attention in some senses.  Jesus compared the work of the Spirit to the blowing of the wind.   You can see what it does, but you can’t actually see the wind.  So it is with the Holy Spirit.  Perhaps we could think of Him as the unsung hero of the Trinity.  Without Him we couldn’t have faith and we wouldn’t be Christians. He is integral to our lives as Christians.  

 

Jesus promised the disciples that He would send the Holy Spirit, even though they had never seen Him, or much less heard from Him directly either at this point.  The disciples would go from a face to face experience with God in the flesh to a behind the scenes verbal experience with God.  If we had a choice, our sinful nature would probably say, “No thanks!”  We’d prefer the personal relationship with someone who walks with us and eats with us and speaks on our behalf.  We are physical creatures.  We are visual creatures.  

 

But some might argue that the Holy Spirit is even more visual than seeing Jesus face to face.  They think that the Holy Spirit is measured by the excitement in the air, the volume of the song, the emotion of the preacher, or the ability to speak in some strange language that no one can understand.

 

What about Pentecost?  The baptism was an amazing thing for those who were there, with a tongue of fire floating through the air and touching on their heads.  There was a sound of wind, but no source from where it came and no trees moving or hair blowing.  Those were visual and audible signs of the Holy Spirit.  But after that, it was all a matter of speaking for them and for those who came.  They spoke in INTELLIGIBLE human languages.  They weren’t rolling around in the streets and being healed with fainting spells.

 

In today’s text, Jesus doesn’t point us to anything like speaking in foreign languages or tongues of fire in His prophecy.  In John 14, just prior to this, Jesus said that the Holy Spirit would be the great REMINDER.  “All this I have spoken while still with you. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.”  This is how we received the entire Bible.  The Holy Spirit is the One who would verbally inspire the Word of God.  2 Peter 1:20–21 says, “Above all, you must understand that no prophecy of Scripture came about by the prophet’s own interpretation. For prophecy never had its origin in the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.”  So also in chapter 16, our text for today, Jesus only points us to the Holy Spirit as the COUNSELOR, who comes by our side, as One who SAYS what we need to hear and reveals things we could never know.   

 

The disciples were saddened by Jesus’ talk of departure, so saddened that they didn’t even want to talk about it.  They ignored it at all cost.  It was a tactic that my wife and I used in Mexico.  We had to sit through a presentation, so we decided beforehand, “Don’t ask ANY questions.”  That way the presentation would get over quicker and we could get back to the beach.  It worked!  But Jesus didn’t want this conversation to die.  He said, Nevertheless, I am telling you the truth: It is good for you that I go away. For if I do not go away, the Counselor will not come to you. But if I go, I will send him to you.  There’s a progression here, isn’t there.  Jesus has to go for Him to come.  It’s the only way He CAN come, if Jesus goes.


Why is that?  It wasn’t a matter of two people not being able to be at the same place at the same time.  But if Jesus didn’t go, then the Holy Spirit wouldn’t have had anything to talk about.   What good would the flames or the wind be but a sideshow magic act if they had no MESSAGE to go with it.  If Jesus hadn’t died, their sins wouldn’t have been paid for.  If Jesus hadn’t risen, there would be no resurrection from the dead.  What good would it be for us to know that Jesus walked on water or healed the sick or raised the dead if we have NO forgiveness and no HOPE for ourselves?  Jesus HAD TO go, for the Holy Spirit to come, right?  

 

When he comes, he will convict the world about sin, about righteousness, and about judgment.   First of all, we might note that the Holy Spirit doesn’t come with “opinions” or “thoughts” or “suggestions.”  He comes to CONVICT.  God’s Word is truth, and there’s no arguing your way out of it, especially on Judgment Day.  Either you’re on the side of truth or you’re not.  You can’t be wishy washy when it comes to these truths.  They aren’t generic types of platitudes that mean basically nothing.

 

The Holy Spirit was sent to convict about sin, because they do not believe in me.  This is an amazing thing if you think about it.  What’s the one main sin that the Holy Spirit is being sent to convict people of?   It’s not murder.  It’s not adultery.   All those since have been convicted from the time of Moses, and even before within the human heart.  But what’s the ONE sin that the Holy Spirit with condemn?  UNBELIEF - specifically those who don’t believe in Jesus.  So when Peter preached at Pentecost, he mentioned how they KILLED God in the flesh!  But that wasn’t even something that would damn them, in the sense that God WANTED Him to go to the cross.  The only thing that would damn them would be if they REJECTED Him after having risen from the dead and offered them a free and full forgiveness.  That’s it!

 

Think about what Jesus says in Mark 3:28–29 , “I tell you the truth, all the sins and blasphemies of men will be forgiven them. But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin.”  Did you catch the first verse there?  ALL SINS AND BLASPHEMIES WILL BE FORGIVEN them.  That’s an incredible statement.  When Jesus died, He died for EVERY sin.  You and I sin every day.  We are sinning machines.  Even our prayers and lack thereof are filled with sin in some sense.  But those are ALL forgiven.  Everything is forgiven that we do as Christians too!  We need that forgiveness, don’t we?  And even the blasphemies that people spoke against Him, calling Him a demon possessed man and a lunatic, those were paid for on the cross too.  What a beautiful promise verse 38 is!

 

There’s only one sin that isn’t forgiven, and that’s the sin against the Holy Spirit.  BUT WHAT IS THAT SIN?  The Holy Spirit’s role is to enable us to cling to Jesus as our righteousness and our salvation. Jesus sent the Holy Spirit to convict the world  about righteousness, because I am going to the Father and you will no longer see me.  The Holy Spirit points us to Jesus in the heavens and says, “Cling to HIM as your Savior.  He has accomplished your salvation.  He has died for your sins.  He has risen from the dead.  He is coming to judge the living and the dead.  If you do not cling to Him, you will be damned!   But if you believe in Him and are baptized, you will be saved!”  How do you sin against the Holy Spirit?  You say, “I don’t want that!   I don’t believe that!  I don’t NEED that.  If there’s a heaven, I can get there just fine by myself.  I’m not going to believe in this Jesus any more than I would believe in a flying spaghetti monster.”  Out of ALL of the sins that are so offensive to our holy God, that the ONE sin that ultimately damns people.  Unbelief.

 

As we wait for Jesus to come, the world has been captivated by Satan, and along with him, they have also been captivated by Satan’s idea of JUSTICE and FAIRNESS.  How is it just for a policeman to kill a man on the road by putting his knee on his neck and mercilessly letting him choke to death as people are warning him to stop?  That’s Satanic justice.  How is it just for a crowd of people to go charging into a target store and steal things off the shelf in protest for a murder?  How does that solve anything at all?  That is Satan’s type of justice.

 

Satanic type of judgment also questions and challenges God’s judgments at every turn.   “Who is God to tell me who I can marry and what gender I should be?   I practice tolerance, not hate!”  Satan views life with a constant cynicism and anger.  Think of how Satan was ANGRY that Job was enjoying life and living with so many blessings.  He accused Job of being a fair weather fan of God.  He hated to see Job succeed and be blessed, so he got permission to attack Job’s family and Job’s honor.  When given the chance, he inflicted Job with boils in order to get him to crack.  This was his idea of justice, blind sided attacks and pain without any explanation or reason in simple hope to get Job to curse God and die.  Never once did he apologize after the fact for all of the judgments he brought down on Job and all of the death he incurred on his family.  This is how Satan is in this world.  He’s constantly judging everything and everyone.  And why?  Not because he wants justice.  He just wants vengeance on God.  It is just plain Satanic how he is filling people with murder and violence and vengeance.  Everyone wants to be his own judge and jury.  Everyone wants to sit behind his or her computer and judge everyone and everything else, thinking that he or she is so much better than all of them.  It’s a Satanic type of pride and anger that is filling our world.  We too need to repent of it.

 

The Holy Spirit’s role is to remind us of something important.  He has been sent to “convict the world . . . about judgment, because the ruler of this world has been condemned.”  Don’t forget who gets the final say.  Don’t forget what has already happened to Satan.  When Jesus died for the sins of the world and rose from the dead, this is the final say of God.  Sin has been paid for . Salvation has been procured.  God has declared that the way of salvation is only through faith in Him.  No matter what Satan has been saying and how he has been objecting to this truth, he will have nothing to say on Judgment Day.  Those who refuse to repent will have their Day in court.  When Jesus comes on Judgment Day, He will call us to the pleasures of heaven and give us brand new bodies to live in eternity with Him.  Nothing can stop Jesus from doing this, not even the prince of hell.  The Holy Spirit has to remind us of this: God’s Word is true.  We don’t have to play God.  We don’t have to be the judge and jury, because God’s judgments are right.  God is the judge.  Don’t be intimidated by Satan’s condemnation of the truth.  Listen to the Holy Spirit’s convictions, for these are God’s convictions.

 

So let’s take this back to Pentecost again, and think about this wonderful promise that Jesus gave to His disciples.   Think of the old Christmas Vacation movie, where Clark got the jelly of the month club for a Christmas bonus.  He was angry about it.  But Eddie said, “It’s the gift that keeps on giving!”  Clark wasn’t impressed.  So with the disciples, it may have seemed so much less to them to receive the Holy Spirit, but it was so much more.  It wasn’t either/or.  By giving them the Holy Spirit, Jesus was giving them Himself for ETERNITY!

 

Jesus basically says to us, “I’m giving you an invisible gift, the gift of a Person, the Holy Spirit.  You can’t see Him.  You can’t touch Him.  But He can touch you.  He will open your mind, to see Me through the eyes of faith.  When I give you HIM, I also give you ME!  He will enable you to run behind the cross and find full forgiveness and holiness.  He will assure you that I am in control and working all things for your good.  He will strengthen you and comfort you in the most trying times of your life.  You won’t even let the fear of death consume you!  He will continue to be with you, as long as you stay in the Word.  He can’t be kept out by jail cells.  He can’t be killed with chemotherapy.  He won’t go running out when you question Him or doubt Him.  He won’t beat you or abuse you.  He will never be quiet as long as you keep listening to the Word.”  What a precious gift this invisible Person is!  It is more precious than gold, this gift of the Holy Spirit, because of what He SAYS to us, how He connects us to Jesus and He KEEPS us connected to Jesus!

 

About 3,000 people were added to the church that day as they were baptized and believed in the WORDS that Peter and the disciples spoke to them about JESUS.  What a gift to them!  Through simple words and water the Holy Spirit united them together, people from all over the country, under the blood and righteousness of Jesus.  Pentecost still happens today through the same words and the same water, and the Holy Spirit unites us too!  What a gift to us too! Without the Holy Spirit, we couldn’t have Jesus, and if we didn’t have Jesus, then we wouldn’t be forgiven, and we wouldn’t be in heaven.  But with the Holy Spirit, we have Jesus, forgiveness, faith, peace, hope, and salvation.  Some day, when Jesus comes again, we will all be united in heaven.  What a wonderful gift, the gift of Pentecost, the gift of the Spirit, the gift that keeps on giving forgiveness, holiness, life and salvation, much more than the jelly of the month.  Amen.

May 21, 2023

CW-A Ep Lesson(Partial)-Easter 7(PostAscension)- Kieth Bernard Kuschel-


1 Peter 5:6-11


( 5)  Humble yourselves, therefore, under God's mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. {7} Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. {8} Be selfcontrolled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. {9} Resist him, standing firm in the faith, because you know that your brothers throughout the world are undergoing the same kind of sufferings. {10} And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast. {11} To him be the power for ever and ever. Amen.

NOW THAT JESUS ISN’T HERE.

IA1 Your best friend moved away.  Maybe her parents got new jobs in another city.  Maybe he went to college.  Maybe the family had to get a bigger house.  That person is not going to be close to you anymore.  What do you need?  A replacement.  At first you don’t want a replacement because nobody could possibly replace that person.  Then you realize that you need a replacement.  You start looking around for one. 

   2 Other people sense what is going on in our lives.  People recognize when we are sad, when we are happy, and when we need somebody.  All kinds of people suddenly start popping up in your life as potential candidates for replacing your friend.  Some of them you wouldn’t touch with a ten foot pole.  Some of them are worth checking out, but don’t measure up.  Some of them are potential candidates. 

  B1 Your best friend moved away.  His name is Jesus.  He was on this earth for 33 years.  He lived and never sinned so He could cover you with His righteousness.  He died on the cross so He could wash away all your sins and take away the threat of God’s punishment for your sins.  He rose from the dead so that He could give you eternal life.  He successfully completed His work as the Savior.  Then He moved away.  He ascended to reposition Himself as the Lord of Lord and King of Kings.

    2 We need a replacement.  Somebody who can give us comfort when needed.  Somebody who can give us direction when needed.  Some humans around us seem to be able to do some of those things.  Some humans around us make themselves available to be the replacement we need.  The devil offers himself as a candidate.  In fact the devil tries to convince people that He should have been their friend in the first place.

   C1 When St Peter wrote these words in the first century, he was writing to people who were being physically persecuted for being Christians. Look at the words he uses in the earlier verses of the Epistle lesson.  Painful trial.  Suffering.  Insulted.  These people were struggling with doubts.  Was being a Christian worth it?  The devil used the persecution.  His solution for it was - stop being Christians. “Leave Jesus out of your life.  Then you won’t be persecuted.  I can replace Jesus in your life as your supernatural contact.”   

     2 Peter’s advice is: {8} “Be selfcontrolled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”  How does the devil try to devour us today?  He doesn’t use physical persecution on us.  He uses apathy.  His advice still is - “Leave Jesus out of your life.”  But the reasons to do so are different from what he used on the Christians in the first century.  “You have so many other things to do. You don’t have time to cultivate a relationship with Jesus.   You have so many things to enjoy.  You don’t want to be inhibited by Jesus.  You are smart and capable.  You don’t need to be dependent on Jesus.” 

   D1 Peter’s advice is:  {9} “Resist him, standing firm in the faith,” We can resist Satan’s attempt to replace Jesus in our lives by standing firm in our connection with Jesus.  It is true.  Jesus is not physically here. But it is also true that He is here.  Keep on trusting in Him for forgiveness.  Keep on trusting in Him for direction.  Keep on trusting in Him for protection.   Then we won’t seek a replacement for Him even though He has ascended and physically left this earth.  

     2 How are we going to be able to resist the devil who is a supernatural power?  How are we going to stand firm in our connection with Jesus when the devil is trying to disconnect us?  We can’t on our own.  But we can with the Holy Spirit’s help.  He gives us that help as we use our Bibles at home, here in our worship activities, and in our Bible studies with our fellow Christians.  Now that Jesus is gone, resist the devil.  Use the Word. 

IIA1 Your best friend moved away.   You need a replacement.  Why?  There is nobody to talk to.  Well - there are people to talk to.  But you know.  There is nobody to talk to.  It takes a while to get a replacement with whom you have the right kind of rapport.   

    2 What do you do?  You talk on the phone with that person.  It seems as if he is right there.  You write letters and you get letters.  It seems as if she is right there talking to you.  You read your email.  Same thing.

   B1 Your best friend moved away.  His name is Jesus.  You can’t talk to him face to face as his disciples did for the three years of His public ministry.  He can’t physically put His arm around your shoulder as He listens to you. 

     2 What do you do?  You can talk to Him.  Just because He isn’t here on this earth physically doesn’t mean you can’t talk to Him or He can’t listen to you.  Remember we are dealing here with Almighty God.  The second person of the Holy Trinity who for thirty three years didn’t always make use of His power but who always had it.  He has ascended.  But He still is present everywhere, knows everything and is all powerful.  He can hear you when you talk to Him.  He can do something about the issues you talk about. 

   C1 Peter’s advice: Talk to him. {7} Cast all your anxiety on Jesus.   What worries do we have to throw at the Lord.  You name them.  We have them.  We worry that family members won’t recover from cancer.  We worry that the conflict between family members will destroy our family.  We worry that we won’t be successful in business, as students, or in whatever role in life we have.  

    2 The biggest worries are the ones which don’t seem to have a solution.   How are we going to handle life now that we are permanently handicapped?   No matter how hard we try there is apparently no way out of the financial hole which we have dug for ourselves.  The relationship has been destroyed already.  How can we interact with this person on a regular basis?  

   D1 Peter’s advice: Talk to the Lord.  “Cast all your anxiety on the Lord because He cares for you.”  How do we know that He cares for us?  He has proven it in the past.  He cared so much about us that He had Jesus live, die and rise to provide us with forgiveness, righteousness and eternal life.  He cared about us so much that He had the Holy Spirit come into our lives through Word & Baptism to convince us that the Gospel is true so that all those blessings Jesus won and the Lord wants us to have could be ours.  He has proven that He cares.

    2   Peter’s advice: {6}“Humble yourselves under God’s mighty hand.”  Acknowledge you have something that is worrying you.  Admit that neither you nor the other folks around you can solve this difficulty.  Then turn to the Lord and say, “I can’t solve this.  You have to.  I don’t see what I can do.  You have to show me.  I don’t see anybody to help me.  You have to lead me to them.  I am letting You handle this whole thing because I know You are almighty and You care for me.

   3 Did you notice the promise?  {6}“That he may lift you up in due time.”  God is going to give you a solution.  But He is going to do it in due time.  God’s sense of the proper time is not always our evaluation. Most of the time we think God takes too long to bring solutions.  His timing is based on His understanding of the needs of our souls, not necessarily based on our emotions.  He will do what needs to be done in the best interest of our souls at the proper time.   Now that Jesus is gone, talk to the Lord.  Cast your anxiety on Him

IIIA1 Your best friend moved away.  You got used to it.  You even got a replacement.  You have somebody to talk to.  You don’t even miss the person so much anymore.  You don’t think about that person much at all any more. Sometimes, it seems as if you have forgotten completely about the friend.  But you haven’t really.

   2 When your friend left, you promised to get together again.  It hasn’t happened yet.  You are confident that it will.  Even though you are not an integral part of each other’s lives any more, it would be nice to renew acquaintances.  That promise pops into your mind every once in a while.  

    B1 Your best friend moved away.  His name is Jesus.  You got used to it.  You can talk to him even though He isn’t here to see.  You do that.  You can listen to Him even though He isn’t here.  You do that by using the Bible.  You seem to be coping with life without Jesus’ physical presence pretty well.

     2 But you always remember His promise.  “I will come back and take you to myself.”  Peter reminds us of that promise when he writes: {10}“The God of grace has called you to eternal glory in Christ.”  In Christ our sins have been washed away.  In Christ we are covered with His holiness.  In Christ God gives us glory.  He says, “You are my holy people.”  Peter reminds us that is eternal glory.  That glory is going to last forever.  After we die.  When Jesus returns.  Forever.  

   C1 Even though that is such an important promise of God to us, there are other ones we shouldn’t forget. “The {10}God of all grace will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.”  The difficulties of our lives weaken us. Am I going to have the strength to stay close to Jesus until He comes and takes me to Himself?   The attacks on our faith and godliness make us question whether we should hang in there or not.  Am I going to have the stamina to stay close to Jesus if He doesn’t come and take me to Himself for a while?  We need strength and stamina.  Peter says, “God will restore us and make us strong, firm and steadfast.”

   2 God is promising to get you through your life and usher you into eternity as a member of His family. God is promising to get you through today as a member of His family.  Why can you get up in the morning knowing that you are going to be subjected to attacks on your faith and godliness?  Because God will restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.  Why can you get up in the morning knowing that you are going to fail in your faith and your godliness?  Because God will restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.

   D1 Do I have any evidence that Jesus is able to do what He has promised.    Peter says, {11}“To him be the power forever and ever.”    Peter isn’t saying Jesus ought to have the power.   He is acknowledging that Jesus has the power.   How do I know that Jesus has the power? 

    2 That is what Jesus’ ascension is all about.  No longer is He on this earth, limiting the exercise of His power to a few miracles here and there.  No longer is He on this earth, limiting the exercise of His glory by taking on Himself flesh and blood in a localized place.   He is the ascended Lord. He is ruling over all things for us.   He can exercise His power to restore us and make us strong, firm and steadfast for as long a time as needed.  Trust God’s promises because Jesus ascended.  We have good reason to trust God’s promises now that Jesus is gone.

LORD JESUS, help me resist the devil, cast my anxiety on You, and trust in Your promises.






May 14, 2023

CWA- Gospel Lesson - Easter 6  - Kieth Bernard Kuschel 


John 14: 15-21

15 “If you love me, you will obey what I command. 16 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever— 17 the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you. 18 I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. 19 Before long, the world will not see me anymore, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. 20 On that day you will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you. 21 Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him.”


Somebody tells us to do something. Why do it?


IA1 Who was Jesus?  A prophet.  A Rabbi.  A miracle worker.  From God.  Son of God.  Promised One.  The disciples were comfortable with those answers.  So, were most of the people at Jesus’ time. 

  2 But when Jesus said, (John 10:30) “I and the Father are one,” the crowds (31) “picked up stones to stone him........(33) for blasphemy, because you, a mere man, claim to be God.”  When He claimed to be God, (John 6:66) many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him.”  When He claimed to be God, His disciples asked dumb questions like, (John 14:5) “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?”

  B1 In the verses before us today Jesus was preparing His disciples for the time that He would no longer be there among them.  19 “Before long, the world will not see me any more.”  He physically left this earth.  With our physical, worldly eyes we cannot see Him.  

   2 But Jesus also says, “18 I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you........19, you will see me............20 you are in me, and I am in you.” Although Jesus isn’t here physically, He is among us and in us.  We know He is here because of His promise.  We see Him with the eyes of faith.  

   3 Why can Jesus make such a claim that He is with us even though we can’t see Him with our physical eyes   Only a supernatural, spiritual being can be with us and within us, but not physically.  That is what Jesus is claiming for Himself with these words, 20 I am in my Father.

  C1 Who is Jesus?  He is the Savior.  Sounds right, but sometimes people mean Jesus shows us how to live to save ourselves.   Then "Savior" is wrong.  He is the Son of God.  Sounds right, but sometimes people mean Jesus is a son of God just as we are sons and daughters of God.  Then "son of God" is wrong.   

   2 Who is Jesus?  “I believe that Jesus Christ, true God, begotten of the Father from eternity, is my LORD.”    Jesus has a Father-Son relationship with another member of the Triune God.  He always had it. Will always have it.  That’s who Jesus is.  

 D1 Next question.  Why do we obey Jesus’ commands?  Jesus took my sins off me and put them on Himself.  He suffered the death and hell I deserve to rescue me from those punishments.  He lived and never sinned so He could give me His holiness.  He rose from the dead so I might live forever.  I obey Jesus’ commands to say, “Thank You” to Him for all that only He, because He is God,  has done for me.    

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 2 Why do we obey Jesus’ commands?  There is another answer.  

Because Jesus has told us to.  Lots of people tell us what to do.  But Jesus is God.  That means His orders take on special significance.  Because He is God, He knows what is best for us. That is why He gives us orders.  Because He is God, He knows what is best  for our world.  That is why He gives us orders.  We trust that what He tells us to do is best for us because He is God. We do what He tells us to do because we realize who He is.    


IIA1 When you look around and see the kind of things people in our world do, are they generally doing what Jesus commands?  No. That shouldn’t surprise us.  Jesus says, 16 “The world cannot accept this Counselor(the Spirit of truth), because it neither sees him nor knows him.”  Since the Holy Spirit is the One who causes people to do what Jesus commands, it is impossible to do what Jesus commands if people don’t acknowledge or know the Holy Spirit. 

   2 Why?  Because all of us on our own are sinners.  When we think on our own, our thoughts are the opposite of God’s thoughts.   When we act out what comes into our minds, we break God’s laws.   If confronted with the differences between what we think and do and what God commands, we insist that we are right and God is wrong. 

  B1 Did you notice what Jesus called the Holy Spirit?  Counselor.  The word is used for anybody who stands with us.  Mediator, Helper, Adviser.  Defense lawyer.  

   2 The Holy Spirit can do that perfectly because He is the Spirit of truth.  The advice He gives us is always going to be the correct advice because it is the truth.  The advice He gives us is always going to be the correct advice because He is God and not affected by the confusion caused by the human view of things.  Because we never know if the advice coming to us from the world and from our sinful selves is any good,  isn’t it comforting to know that we can always rely on the advice coming from the Spirit of Truth.  

   3 Can the Holy Spirit be effective in our lives?  Jesus says He can.  Why?  17 “he lives with you and will be in you.”  We are not alone. He is with us and in us.  He doesn’t let our sinful self control our brain waves.  He doesn’t let the world control the air waves.  He is our Helper, Defender, Adviser.  And it is an inside job.  

  C1 Jesus says, 15 “you will do what I command.”  One of His commands is - use my Word.  Use it at worship.  Use it in Bible class.  Use it to study for Catechism class.  Use it for personal reading.  Use it for family devotions.  Use it by watching it on computer and bigger screens.  Use it by listening to it from electronic media.  Doesn’t matter how.  Just use it.  

   2 Why does Jesus command us to “not despise preaching and His Word but regard it as holy and gladly hear and learn it”?  Because He loves us.  He wants to forgive our sins.  He wants to cover us with His holiness.  He wants to keep us in His family.  Those gifts are given to us through the work of the Holy Spirit.  The Holy Spirit works through the Word.  So,  Jesus gives us a command that says, “Use My Word.”

  3 What happens when the Holy Spirit leads us to follow Jesus’ command to use His Word?  We get better and better at following Jesus’ commands.  We obey Jesus’ commands because we get help from the Holy Spirit.                      4

IIIA1 Jesus has some other commands.  One is “Don’t steal.”  My sinful self says: “Grab everything you can get.  Enjoy yourself.  Other people don’t matter.  I can use my stuff any way I want to.  Nobody has the right to tell me how to use my stuff.” 

2 There are some practical reasons for following Jesus’ command.  If we take other people’s stuff, how are they going to take care of themselves?   If we use all our stuff selfishly, who will take care of those dependent on us and how will the gospel get proclaimed? 

  3 There is another reason we obey the seventh commandment. Jesus says, (15) “If you love me, you will do what I command.” Jesus is the most important person in our lives.   Because He is so valuable to us, we don’t want to mess up our relationship with Him.  So with the Holy Spirit’s help we keep the seventh commandment.  

  B1 Another command is, “Don’t murder.”   The world says: “Life isn’t worth much.  It all came out of the primeval ooze anyway.  So, you can stop it before it comes out of the womb, when it gets old and nonfunctional, if someone gets in your way, or makes you upset.”

   2 There are some practical reasons for following Jesus’ command.  If you are in constant danger of losing your life, you can’t feel safe, lead a productive life or enjoy life.  

   3 There is another reason we obey the fifth commandment.  21Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me.  Jesus is the most important person in our lives.   

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Because He is so valuable to us, we don’t want to mess up our relationship with Him.  So with the Holy Spirit’s help we keep the fifth commandment.  

  C1 Another command is, “Among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality.”(Eph 5:3) The sinful self says: “Gratify yourself.  Use other people to achieve climax for yourself.  This is entertainment.  There are no long term consequences.”  

   2 There are some practical reasons for following Jesus’ command.  If there is no committed relationship, who will nurture any children produced?  How can a human being relate to others after being emotionally and psychologically damaged by one “short term-no strings attached” relationship after the next? 

  3 There is another reason we obey the sixth commandment.  21 He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him.”  Jesus is the most important person in our lives.   Because He is so valuable to us, we don’t want to mess up our relationship with Him.  So with the Holy Spirit’s help we keep the sixth commandment.  

 Conc: LORD JESUS, thank You for Your promise: “You will do what I command.”  Through Your Word please keep reminding us whoYou are, and sending the Holy Spirit so we keep loving You and doing what You command.


May 7, 2023

CWA- Epistle Lesson  - Easter 5   - - Kieth Bernard Kuschel 


I Peter 2:4-10

(4)  As you come to him, the living Stonerejected by men but chosen by God and precious to him {5} you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. {6} For in Scripture it says: "See, I lay a stone in Zion, a chosen and precious cornerstone, and the one who trusts in him will never be put to shame." {7} Now to you who believe, this stone is precious. But to those who do not believe, "The stone the builders rejected has become the capstone," {8} and, "A stone that causes men to stumble and a rock that makes them fall." They stumble because they disobey the messagewhich is also what they were destined for. {9} But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. {10} Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.


IA1 In the ancient middle East there weren’t a lot of wooded areas.  So, what were most houses made of?  Mud brick or baked clay.   What were the houses of the wealthy and the big buildings made of?   Cut and quarried stone.   

   2 How do you know Peter is not talking about a physical stone house in the text?  The first stone mentioned is called a {4}living stone.  How did the living Stone get to be in its present position?  God chose Him{4} to be the Living Stone.   Who is Peter talking about?  Jesus,  true God from eternity, who has Life in Himself, who became human so He might take His position as the most important stone in the spiritual house.  

  3 This living Stone is precious{4} to God. Why? Sons are always precious to Fathers.  But this Son was valuable enough to carry out God’s plan to be the payment for the sins of the world.  Valuable enough to provide forgiveness for the world.  Valuable enough to offer eternal life to the world.  

   4 What is the function of this living Stone?  He is the {6}cornerstone or capstone.  The cornerstone was the first stone placed on the foundation.  The rest of the building rested on the foundation through the cornerstone.  The vertical and horizontal lines of the building were run off the faces of the cornerstone.  Thus the cornerstone provided support and guidance for the rest of the building. 

  B1 Who are the rest of the stones in this spiritual building?  The people to whom he was writing.  We are the {5} living stones being built into a spiritual house.    Who makes us into the living stones in this spiritual house?  God does.  When do we become living stones built into a spiritual house? When He brings us to trust that Jesus lived and died and rose to give us forgiveness, holiness and eternal life.  

   2 Why can we be called living stones?  Because Jesus, who has life as an innate characteristic of Himself, has given us two kinds of life.   When He set up the ability of humans to reproduce, He gave us physical life.  Because He lived and died and rose for us, He gives us forgiveness of sins, His holiness and eternal life.  We are physically and eternally living stones.

   3 Peter further says, {6}“the one who trusts in him will never be put to shame.”  When the Holy Spirit leads us to lean our whole spiritual weight on Jesus in the same way that the building leaned on the foundation through the cornerstone, the building will not collapse.  Jesus won’t let us down.  When the floods of sin, and the 

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tornadoes of unbelief come smashing into us, our strength provided for us by our attachment to the cornerstone won’t fail, because the cornerstone is solid and unfailing.  We won’t ever be embarrassed spiritually for trusting in Jesus our Cornerstone.  

  C1 Does everybody have this lofty opinion of Jesus?  No.  {4}He is rejected by men.   If you would take a survey of the people in your life, what percentage of them would think Jesus is the God-man who lived and died and rose to provide all of us with forgiveness, holiness and eternal life?   Not a very big percentage.  Does that mean Jesus isn’t the Savior?  No.  He isn’t Savior because a majority voted Him into the job.  He is our Savior because God put Him into the job.  

    2 Do all the spiritual leaders in our world have this lofty opinion of Jesus?  No.  {7}The builders have rejected Him, wrote Peter.  The people who are in charge of building the spiritual house.   If the message is: Allah is God and Mohammed is his prophet and, oh by the way, so is Jesus, they are not building on the Rock.    If the message is: you can talk to John, Paul and Mary and they can get you to Jesus, they are not building on the Rock.  If the message is: you’ll keep getting more chances to get intimate with god even if you don’t succeed in your present life, they are not building on the Rock.  

   3 What happens when we don’t build on the Rock?  Then Jesus is {8}"A stone that causes men to stumble and a rock that makes them fall." They stumble because they disobey the message.”  All human beings on our own are self oriented and non-spiritual. All human beings on our own react to Jesus with comments like: “What do you mean I have to trust in Jesus to be right with God.  I am good enough on my own for God to be happy with me.”  So, on our own we disobey God’s message to trust in Jesus but instead stumble over Jesus and fall away from the Lord rather than being united with 

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Him.  Lord, thank You for loving me so much, even though I don’t deserve it, that I haven’t stumbled and fallen over You, but You have made me a stone in Your spiritual house, built on a Rock.  


IIA1 What does Peter call us living stones in verse 9?  Chosen people.  God picked us out to be living stones.  Why? Because He loves us.   Not because we are better at being spiritual than other human beings. We aren’t.  Not because we are better at being godly than other human beings. We aren’t.  Just because He loves us in spite of who we are and what we are like on our own. He chose us .  That’s a good thing.  

    2 He calls us people belonging to God.{9}  Why do we belong to Him?  Because He created humans and gave humans the ability to reproduce.  So He is responsible for our existence.  But we belong to Him for another reason.  He bought us.  Jesus’ blood bought us back from the guilt of our sins.  Jesus’ death bought us back from the punishment we deserve because of our sins.  Jesus’ suffering hell when He said, “My God, why have you forsaken me,” bought us back from hell.  Jesus’ holy life, lived as our Substitute bought us back from our lack of holiness.  Jesus’ resurrection bought us back from an eternal existence apart from God.  We belong to God.  That is a good thing. 

   3 Peter calls us a holy nation.{9}  Sinless in God’s sight.  Why?  Sins washed away in the blood of Christ.  Covered with the holiness Jesus lived in our place.   Acceptable to God.  Able to belong to Him.  Able to be in His family, His nation, His people. Able to be living stones in His house.  We are holy in His sight.  That is a good thing.

   4 He calls us a royal priesthood.{9}   We are kings.  We are not controlled by anything.  We are in control of everything because we 

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are connected to Jesus who is the King of kings and Lord of lords.  With His power active in our lives, our greed, our instant messaging, our sexuality, our anger, etc can’t control us.  We are kings.  That’s a good thing.    We are priests.  We have direct access to God.  We can stand in God’s presence.  That’s a good thing. 

   B1 In the Old Testament scheme of things, priests had two very specific functions.  They were the mediators.  In the worship activity they were the leaders.  They took the prayers of the people to God.   They declared God’s forgiving love in the Messiah to the people.  Thus they led the people to see the relationship they had with God because of the Messiah and led them to praise Him for it.   

     2 They were also the sacrificers.  They killed the animals for the daily sacrifices.  Those sacrifices indicated the ongoing relationship which existed between God and His people because of the coming Messiah.  They killed the animals which were part of the meals eaten as an expression of the family relationship which existed between God and His people.  They killed the animals and offered those substitutionary lives to the Lord as a picture of the life of the Lamb of God the Messiah whose life would pay for the sins of the world.  

  C1 Who was the perfect fulfillment of the function of the priests?  Jesus.  He can take all our requests directly to God because He is God the Son, second member of the Holy Trinity.  He brought through His preaching and brings through His Word the message that our Savior God gives us the gift of forgiveness, holiness and eternal life.  That leads us to praise the Lord. 

   2 Jesus sacrificed Himself for our sins.  He suffered our punishment.  He made it possible for God to forgive our sins.  Because Jesus perfectly completed all the work carried out by the Old Testament priests, God doesn’t assign those functions to a special class of people any more.                                  5

   D1 That is why Peter says to all of  us: You are a royal priesthood.   Why?  {9}That you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.   We are to share with people God’s forgiving love.  We are to share with people that Jesus gives forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life because He lived and died and rose for all of us.   We are to take people’s spiritual needs to God.  We are to give God’s solution for their spiritual needs to the people around us.  We are priests.  That’s a good thing. 

   2 We are to be sacrificers.  We give ourselves back to God to thank Him for what He has done for us.  We dedicate our mouths to speak to others about the sacrifice of  Jesus and to teach people in our family and in our congregation about Jesus.  We designate 10% of our income to sharing the sacrifice of Jesus with others.  We use our time to help people who are distressed physically or spiritually to thank Jesus for solving our distresses.   We are priests.  That’s a good thing.

   3 Our sacrifices are {5}acceptable to God.  Jesus’ blood washes away the selfishness attached.  Jesus’ holiness is attached.  That makes the sacrifice and the sacrificers, us, holy to God.  They are spiritual sacrifices because they are an outgrowth of our relationship with God.  We are living stones, being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.  That’s a good thing.  

    We are priests, placed in God’s house to offer spiritual sacrifices.  There is no special class of

 people to do that.  It’s up to us.  


                                     

    6







April 30, 2023

CWA - Epistle - Easter 4 - Good Shepherd  -  KBKuschel


1 Peter 2:19-25


19 For it is commendable if someone bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because they are conscious of God. 20 But how is it to your credit if you receive a beating for doing wrong and endure it? But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. 21 To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. 22 “He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth.” 23 When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly. 24 “He himself bore our sins” in his body on the cross, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; “by his wounds you have been healed.” 25 For “you were like sheep going astray,” but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.


What does a Shepherd do?

Why does Jesus call himself the Good Shepherd?


IA1 As Christians we focus on the sufferings and death of Jesus.  Peter reviews that all for us in one phrase – {21}Christ suffered for you.   

2 Peter is very careful to remind us why Jesus suffered.  24 “He himself bore our sins” in his body on the cross.  Jesus was a real human being.  He had a body just as we do.  By having a body He was able to take our place, be our Substitute.  He was perfect.  He never sinned.  But He took our sins in his body.  That made Him a Substitute sinner for us. So, he was punished for us.  That’s why He suffered.

   B1 Peter further reminds us that when Jesus died on the cross, He {23}“entrusted himself to him who judges justly.”  Jesus knew it was God’s plan to have Him die for our sins.  He knew God’s punishment against us was carried out on Him when He died.  So, He handed himself over to the LORD.  Anybody remember the words?  Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.”  He was confident that the outcome was going to be successful. And it was.  God raised Him from the dead.  God had accepted His payment for our sins.  Peter puts it this way: {24}“by his wounds you have been healed.”  We are healed from the guilt of our sins.  We are healed from the punishment we deserve because Jesus successfully took it on Himself.  How do we know it was successful?  Jesus rose.  

  2 Peter writes that Jesus did this {24}so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness.  Because of Jesus’ death and resurrection we are dead to sin.  It doesn’t make us guilty before God.  It doesn’t burden our consciences.  It doesn’t control us.  We are freed to live our lives God’s way. We can reflect the righteousness, holiness that God has covered us with because of Jesus.  

 C1 That is not the way it used to be in our lives.  The quote is: 25 For “you were like sheep going astray.” Sheep like to wander. If you let them, they just walk slowly without direction, stick their noses into everything, go from one thing to the next, and ultimately don’t know where they are.  They end up away from the flock & the shepherd, isolated, and in danger.  

2

We are like that on our own.  We walk through life without direction.  We stick our noses into everything, no matter if it spiritually good or bad for us.  We try this and try that to find direction & spiritual meaning.  We end up leaving God and His truth out of our lives, isolated from Him and in spiritual danger.

   2 But Peter reminds us {25}“but now you have returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.”  At some point in our lives God has turned us back to Himself.  Maybe it happened when you were a little one through God’s special washing.  Maybe it was as an older child or an adult through the Good News that Jesus lived and died and rose to give you forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life.  When God brought us to trust in Jesus our Savior, He brought us back into the flock of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, who oversees - watches over- our souls.

   D1 How many of you have actually watched a shepherd work?  How many of you have seen what a shepherd does on tv or a in movie or read about it in a book?  What does a shepherd do?  He lived with the sheep.  He slept with the sheep.  He guided them to food and water.  He protected them from danger.  He helped with the birth process when necessary.  He was the close friend of the sheep.  The sheep recognized his voice when they heard it.  They trusted him to do all of the above.  

   2 Why does Jesus call Himself our Good Shepherd?  He is with us always even when we are asleep.  He provides us with food and water for our bodies through His created universe.  He provides us with food and water for our souls, His forgiveness, holiness and eternal life  through His Word.  He brings us into His flock and keeps us in His flock by sending the Holy Spirit who guides us through His Word.  He protects us from the devil and from unbelieving people.   Jesus is the Good Shepherd for your salvation.  


IIA1 Why do children not fight with brothers and sisters?  Because you don’t want to get spanked.  Why do adults not break the law?  Because we don’t want to go to jail.  If children do fight with their brothers and sisters and get spanked, the suffering you have to endure isn’t anything to your credit.  It is something you deserve.  If you go to jail because you broke the law, it isn’t anything to your credit.  It is something we deserve.  Peter’s words are: 20 But how is it to your credit if you receive a beating for doing wrong and endure it?

   2 There is another reason for us to avoid sin besides not wanting to be punished.  “Christ (was) leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. 22 “He committed no sin, and no deceit was found in his mouth.”  It is true that Jesus lived as a human being on this earth to be under the demands of God’s law, so that He might keep those laws for us and give us the holiness that we need to be right with God.  But, Jesus is also the example of holiness after which we strive for our life style.  His perfection is what we are trying to reflect in our lives as our way of thanking the LORD for the salvation which He has given us in Jesus.   

   B1 Sometimes we don’t suffer as punishment for doing wrong. Sometimes we suffer for doing things God’s way.  Peter wrote: 19 For it is commendable if someone bears up under the pain of unjust suffering because they are conscious of God.  {20} But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. Someone shared with me a while back that he was not going to be given any major assignments by his company.  That would mean he would gradually fade out of his second level leadership position.  Eventually he would be out of a job.  Why?  He expressed concern that the marketing of a new product was not accurate and would most likely mislead consumers.  He was suffering because he was conscious of God.  

   2 Sometimes we suffer for doing things God’s way.  In the state of WI where alcohol use and alcohol abuse lead any other state, what happens when you don’t participate in the alcohol culture because you know your body is a gift from God and you don’t want to put yourself into a situation where you have lost your sense of right and wrong?  You know what is said.  “What’s the matter, are you a chicken?   You’ve go to learn to handle your booze if you want to live in WI.  You think you are better than us?  Real men drink.  If you are just going to sit there and be judgmental, we don’t want you around. What’s the matter with you, don’t you like to have fun?”    That is suffering because you are conscious of God.

  C1 Why do we try to follow Jesus’ example?  Because it is good for us.  God made us. He knows what is best for us.  He has told us what is best for us in His commandments.  When He leads us to realize that, we follow Jesus’ example.  Second reason.  Jesus gives us forgiveness, righteousness, and eternal life.  We thank God for those gifts by doing things that are pleasing to Him. We want Him to be happy with us, since He has made us happy by giving us His gifts.  

     2 23 When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats.”  Jesus didn’t deserve to be punished.  He didn’t retaliate.  He didn’t punish the Roman soldiers or religious authorities for what they did to Him.  21 To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. Jesus is our example.  Even though we would like to retaliate against people who hurt us, and even though we tell ourselves that it will make us feel better if we do, why don’t we?  Because people will be attracted to somebody who wants peace and is willing to suffer and refuses to retaliate in order to have peace.  If we live that way in imitation of Jesus, people will come to know Jesus from their contact with us.  

   3 Even though we would like to retaliate against people who hurt us, and even though we tell ourselves that it will make us feel better if we do, why don’t we?  Because people will be attracted to somebody who speaks beneficially rather than destructively, and is even willing to suffer and be ridiculed in order to have a verbally loving atmosphere in place.   If we live that way in imitation of Jesus, people will come to know Jesus from their contact with us. 

 Conc Why does God have us walk on our way following the Good Shepherd?  So that we are saved and so He might use us as we imitate Jesus to attract more sheep into His flock.  LORD JESUS, please keep me walking on the way of the Good Shepherd.


April 23, 2023

CWA- Gospel Lesson - Easter 3 - - Kieth Bernard Kuschel


Luke 24: 13-35

13 Now that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem. 14They were talking with each other about everything that had happened. 15As they talked and discussed these things with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; 16but they were kept from recognizing him. 17He asked them, "What are you discussing together as you walk along?" They stood still, their faces downcast. 18One of them, named Cleopas, asked him, "Are you only a visitor to Jerusalem and do not know the things that have happened there in these days?" 19"What things?" he asked. "About Jesus of Nazareth," they replied. "He was a prophet, powerful in word and deed before God and all the people. 20The chief priests and our rulers handed him over to be sentenced to death, and they crucified him; 21but we had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel. And what is more, it is the third day since all this took place. 22In addition, some of our women amazed us. They went to the tomb early this morning 23but didn't find his body. They came and told us that they had seen a vision of angels, who said he was alive. 24Then some of our companions went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said, but him they did not see." 25He said to them, "How foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken! 26Did not the Christ[b] have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?" 27And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself. 28As they approached the village to which they were going, Jesus acted as if he were going farther. 29But they urged him strongly, "Stay with us, for it is nearly evening; the day is almost over." So he went in to stay with them. 30When he was at the table with them, he took bread, gave thanks, broke it and began to give it to them. 31Then their eyes were opened and they recognized him, and he disappeared from their sight. 32They asked each other, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us?" 33They got up and returned at once to Jerusalem. There they found the Eleven and those with them, assembled together 34and saying, "It is true! The Lord has risen and has appeared to Simon." 35Then the two told what had happened on the way, and how Jesus was recognized by them when he broke the bread.

Jesus rose.  What does it mean for us? 

Jesus rose.  What does it mean He can do for us?

IA1 It was Easter evening.  Jesus’ followers had been through a lot.  Two of them decided to go home.  They needed rest from all the emotional expenditures of the day.  As they were walking home, they were discussing everything that had happened.   

  2    {19}"Jesus of Nazareth," "was a prophet, powerful in word and deed before God and all the people. 20The chief priests and our rulers handed him over to be sentenced to death, and they crucified him.”                                                                                                                                           

3   Their disappointment comes out in the words: {21}“But we had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel.”  They had trusted that Jesus was the Messiah who would free them from their sins and the punishment they deserved because of their sins.                                               4   Besides that, now they were on another emotional roller coaster.   22In addition, some of our women amazed us. They went to the tomb early this morning 23but didn't find his body. They came and told us that they had seen a vision of angels, who said he was alive. 24Then some of our companions went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said, but him they did not see."  Do you think these two believed the reports?  Doesn’t sound that way.

B1 Why were they so disappointed?  Because they thought God had accomplished salvation through Jesus of Nazareth.  If Jesus wasn’t the Messiah, then that wasn’t true.  That didn’t mean that the Lord wasn’t the Giver of forgiveness and salvation.  But it did mean that they would have to wait longer for the fulfillment of God’s promises.       They were also disappointed because Jesus’ death meant that He would no longer be with them.   His presence among them had been a constant reminder that the Lord is the Source of forgiveness and eternal life.  His presence among them gave them the strength to face life with all its difficulties.  He was always there to listen to their problems. He was always there to give them the right advice and direction.  The thought of life without Jesus was very distressing.            

Jesus appeared to them on the road to Emmaus.  After the discussion with them, they knew He had risen.  He was alive.  He was with them.  When He disappeared, it didn’t stop their joy.  They knew that because Jesus was alive, they could face life as they had faced it before. With Jesus.                                                                                As Christians we view life assuming that Jesus is with us. When our selfishness takes over,  Jesus is with us to apply to us His forgiveness which He won on the cross.  When we have failed to do what the Lord expects us to do, Jesus is with us to cover us with the holiness which He lived for us.                                                                                                                                      

When we face a terrifying circumstance in our lives, Jesus is with us to give us the strength that we need to say, “NO” to sin, to endure difficulties, and  to keep on living in a world dominated with difficulties.   

    When we need somebody to talk to,  Jesus is there to listen.  When we have a specific need, Jesus is there to receive our request.  When we need direction, Jesus is there to give it to us through His Word.   

    Why is it possible to take this view of life?  Because He can be with us.   It is true. Jesus rose.


Why didn’t they recognize Jesus?  I think Jesus didn’t allow them to recognize Him until it was the right time. 

How did Jesus get into the discussion?  He asked a question. 17"What are you discussing together as you walk along?"  Why did He do that?  Because He wanted to have them hear from their own mouths what was in their minds.  And they did.   

  Jesus reminded them of something very important, especially in view of the fact that they were so sad about Jesus’ death.  26"Did not the Christ have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?"  Have to.  The Christ, the Anointed One, the One commissioned by God, had to suffer.  The Messiah wasn’t here for glory.  He had to take the guilt of the world on Himself.  He had to suffer the death and hell we deserve because of our sins.  He had to rescue us from the punishment we deserve.  He had to suffer thirty three years in a sinful world to provide holiness for us.  The Messiah had to suffer if we were to have eternal life. 

    What did Jesus use to instruct His disciples? "How foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken! 26Did not the Christ have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?" 27And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures.”  Jesus instructed them from Isaiah 53 to remind them that the Messiah had to suffer and die.  He instructed them from Deut 18 to remind them that the Messiah was the bringer of truth.  Jesus didn’t bring new revelations directly from the Father and the Holy Spirit.  He instructed them from the Scriptures.  

    Did you notice I left out a very important two word phrase? “concerning himself.”   27 "And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself.”  He read the Scripture and then said, “This talks about me.  Remember what I did.  It matches what the Scripture said the Messiah would do. “ 

From what source do we learn that selfishness is sin?  From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that failure to benefit others is sin?  From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that taking advantage of others is sin? From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that Jesus took our guilt?  From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that Jesus suffered death and hell to rescue us from it?  From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that Jesus covers us with His holiness?  From the Scripture.  From where do we learn that we will live forever because of Jesus resurrection?  From the Scripture.

 Sometimes we complain that we can’t sit down and get instructed personally from Jesus as His first disciples were.  Sometimes we insist that we are at a disadvantage when compared to them for that reason.  But then we look at a section of Scripture like the one before us today.  What do we see?  We are instructed by the Lord through the Scriptures.  His first disciples were instructed by the Lord through the Scriptures.  The disciples walking to Emmaus were instructed by Jesus through the Scriptures.  

  Jesus has promised us that through the written words of His apostles He is actually working and instructing us.  Can He do that?  Sure.  How do you know? He is alive.  It is true.   Jesus rose.

Did you notice the change that took place in the two disciples on the way to Emmaus?   17 “They stood still, their faces downcast.”  Change to.    29"But they urged him strongly.”   Despondently purposeless to strongly purposeful.  What was their purpose? To spend more time with this person.  What was their plan that would accomplish that? "Stay with us, for it is nearly evening; the day is almost over."

   Why did they want that?  They had benefitted from His instruction in the Scripture.  They wanted more.  They wanted to become closer to this person who had instructed them.  That is exactly what Jesus allowed to happen.  “30When he was at the table with them, he took bread, gave thanks, broke it and began to give it to them. 31Then their eyes were opened and they recognized him.”  Now they knew why He had done such a good job of instructing them from the Scriptures.  Now they know why He was able to get right at their hearts with His teachings. 32They asked each other, "Were not our hearts burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us?"

  What did they do next? 33They got up and returned at once to Jerusalem. There they found the Eleven and those with them, assembled together 34and saying, "It is true! The Lord has risen and has appeared to Simon." 35Then the two told what had happened on the way, and how Jesus was recognized by them when he broke the bread.”  They had to tell somebody that their skepticism was wrong.  They should have believed the women.  


7

They went out into the dark to Jerusalem to the disciples whom they thought were probably still huddled in fear.  Their heart burned within them.  They had a purpose to carry out .  And they did.  

 We, just as the Emmaus disciples, want to spend as much time as we can with Jesus.  His presence fills our lives with His forgiveness, His holiness, His strength, His direction and everything we need in our lives.  So we worship Him regularly.  We have devotions at home regularly.  We participate in Bible class.  We talk to him.  We spend a lot of time with Him.  We try to increase the amount of time we spend with Him.   

 That increases our knowledge of the Scripture and our knowledge of Him. That has some personal benefit.  It strengthens our faith.  It gives us direction in life.  But it also gives us the equipment we need to become spiritual resources for other people.  How do we help people through their problems?  By pointing them to the Scriptures.  How do we help people recognize their sins?  By pointing them to the Scriptures.  How do we help people get over their guilt?  By pointing them to the Scriptures.  How do you give people direction for life?  By pointing them to the Scriptures.  How do we get equipped to do that?  By being instructed in the Scriptures.   

 

8

 Even if we are equipped with the Scriptures, are we going to share the Scriptures with others?  There a lots of opposition forces fighting against us.  The devil fills our lives with so many other things that we don’t have time to share the Scriptures with others.  The sinful self gets us so inhibited that we get scared to share the Scriptures with others. 

 Jesus presence in the lives of the Emmaus disciples and His instruction in the Scriptures made their hearts burn within them so they ran to share with others what they knew.  Jesus is present among us as the omnipresent Lord.  He is present among us in a special way whenever we use His holy supper. He instructs us personally whenever we use His Word.  Lord Jesus, please make our hearts burn within us so that we are eager to run to share with others what we know about You.  Can He do that?  Sure.  How do we know?  He rose.  It is true.     



















April 16, 2023

CW-A - Gospel Lesson Easter 2-    Kieth Bernard Kuschel


John 20:19-31

(19)  On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you!" {20} After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord. {21} Again Jesus said, "Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you." {22} And with that he breathed on them and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit. {23} If you forgive anyone his sins, they are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven." {24} Now Thomas (called Didymus), one of the Twelve, was not with the disciples when Jesus came. {25} So the other disciples told him, "We have seen the Lord!" But he said to them, "Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it." {26} A week later his disciples were in the house again, and Thomas was with them. Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you!" {27} Then he said to Thomas, "Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe." {28} Thomas said to him, "My Lord and my God!" {29} Then Jesus told him, "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed." {30} Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. {31} But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.


What kind of Easter did you have?  Happy. Jesus focused

Any Easter eggs for anybody?  That is Jesus focused

Any flowers for anybody?  That is Jesus focused

Any rabbits for anybody?  That is Jesus focused.

That was a good Easter.


Today we are asking, “Did you have a peaceful Easter?”


I.A.1 Did you have a peaceful Easter?  Well, let’s review what we did last Sunday?  We got up early to get everything ready for Easter breakfast.  Then we had to wake the family up early in order to get them to breakfast.  Usually Sunday is much more peaceful and relaxing.  We don’t have to be to church till much later. Everybody was pretty on edge.  The children were cramming their lines in the car on the way over.  It would have been more peaceful if they had learned them better earlier.  The seventh grader started complaining about singing with the little kids.  That caused some stress.  Breakfast was good, but not very relaxing.  Right after you got settled in, you had to start clearing the place and getting ready for church.  Church was good but not very relaxing.  It is always stressful singing in the choir and playing handbells and playing organ or trumpet.  Was my Easter peaceful?  Good question.

     2. Then we got in the car and rushed home to get the food ready we were going to take to the gathering.  We all had to change clothes.  We had to battle with the desire to just relax at home and work out in the beautiful sunshine.  The kids didn’t want to go visiting.  We weathered all those storms.  We made it to the gathering.  It is always stressful to try to keep everybody on good behavior after a day of no physical activity.  We finally got home about 5 p.m.  Was my Easter peaceful?  Good question.

  B.1. Did the first disciples of Jesus have a very peaceful Easter?  I doubt it.  {19}“On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jews.”  They were still afraid. They still thought they were going to be killed next.  Fear always robs people of peace.  

     2. Did the disciples have a peaceful Easter?  I doubt it.  They had another fear.  An even worse fear.  They were afraid that they had been wrong about Jesus.  They thought He was God.  Now He was dead.  That meant they were dead wrong.  They thought He was King.  Now it looked as if Pilate was in charge. They thought He was the source of spiritual truth.  Now it looked as if the Sanhedrin was right.  They thought He was giving them forgiveness and eternal life.  Now it looked as if they had to change their whole idea about eternity.  All of this made them afraid of even thinking about tomorrow.  

  C.1. What robs us of our peace?  Sin.  The hostility of sinfulness of the sinners in the world around us causes fear in us just as it caused fear in the disciples.  What is the criminal element in society going to do to me?   That thought robs me of peace.  What are the people who don’t like me, or maybe just don’t care about me going to do to me that will hurt me? That question robs me of peace.

     

2.  What robs us of our peace?  Sin.  My selfish thoughts, words, and actions disrupt my relationships with the people around me.   My laziness results in stress even about little things like singing in church.  My pride causes conflict even about little things like reciting lines with little kids.  My self-consciousness causes fear even when I am giving glory to God to the best of my ability. My sins rob me of peace.

     3. What robs us of our peace?  Sin.  My lack of perfect trust in the Lord causes fear.  Jesus didn’t seem to be God, or a King when he was crucified.  What if He really didn’t rise?  What if the disciples made all these stories up because they were good salesmen.  What if all this was really just a bunch of hallucinations cooked up in the minds of grieving people?  My doubts rob me of peace.

II.A.1. Did you have a peaceful Easter?  If sins robs us of our peace, then forgiveness of sins should give us peace.  Did you have a peaceful Easter?  Yes, because Easter is the guarantee of the forgiveness of sins.  Consider this scenario.  Jesus says He is in the world to give His life up as a payment for sins.  He says He is in the world in order to conquer the devil so He can’t control us.  He says He is in the world to experience death and conquer it so it can’t hold us.  He says He is in the world in order to experience hell so it can’t swallow us.  So, He dies and that is the end of the story.  That would be the end of the story about forgiveness for us through Jesus too.  But that isn’t the end of the story.   He rose. That means he conquered death and hell for us.  That means God accepted His payment for our sins.  That means we have forgiveness of sins.  That means we are at peace with God, and therefore also can be at peace with ourselves.  Yes, we had a peaceful Easter.

2. Did you notice that Jesus said, “Peace be with you,” to His disciples, and then said, {21}“As the Father has sent me, I am sending you,” and then He began immediately to talk about forgiveness.   The Father sent Jesus into the world to make it possible for there to be peace between us and God by His life, death and resurrection. But the Father had also sent Jesus into the world to inform the world about the peace that belongs to it because of Jesus.  With no information about that peace, people wouldn’t have it.  Jesus won peace on Easter.  He delivered peace to people throughout His ministry, including the ministry that began after Easter.  We heard the message at Easter.  Yes, we had a peaceful Easter. 

    B.1. “As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.”  {22}And with that Jesus breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.  If you forgive anyone his sins, they are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven.”  Jesus is giving us our job description here.  It is our job to inform people.  We are to tell them that Jesus died to take away their sins.  We are to tell them that Jesus died to take away death as punishment for sins.  We are to tell them that Jesus suffered hell so that hell can be escaped.  We are to tell them that Jesus lived and never sinned so that they can be holy in God’s sight.  We are to tell them that Jesus rose from the dead so that they might live forever with God.  We are to tell them that if they don’t repent of their sins, they are guilty before God.  When we tell people about Jesus, we have a peaceful Easter or any other day.

  5   

 2. Jesus is giving us our job description here.  What is our job description?  No. Not just to inform people.  “Peace be with you.  As the Father has sent  me, I am sending you.”  It is our job to bring peace into the lives of others as Jesus has brought it into our lives.  That is important for us to remember.  We are not just trying to get people to know the facts about Jesus Christ.  We want them to have peace.  We deliver peace to them when we deliver the message of Jesus and when the Holy Spirit whom the Lord breathes into people through us works.  When we deliver peace to people, we have a peaceful Easter or any other day.

  C.1. If my sins rob me of my peace, then forgiveness gives peace.  If my sins disrupt relationships with other people, then I need to have their forgiveness to be at peace.  If I am going to have their forgiveness, I need to repent to them.  And when they announce forgiveness to us, we are forgiven, according to Jesus’ words.  And then I can be at peace.

    2. If the sins of other people rob me of my peace, then forgiveness gives peace.  If their sins disrupt relationships with me, then I need to forgive them.  And when I announce forgiveness to them, they are forgiven, according to Jesus’ words.  And then I can be at peace.  Notice, I didn’t say, they can be at peace, although that is true also. But I can be at peace.  Because the book is closed.  Their sin against me doesn’t need to bother me any more.  It has been repented of and forgiven.  End of issue. No gnawing at me.  Peace. Forgiveness gives peace.

III.A.1 Did the disciples have a peaceful Easter?  Depends what part of Easter you are talking about.  After Jesus appeared to them, the answer to the question is: “Yes.”    They didn’t have to be afraid for their lives. Jesus was alive and among them.  He had already conquered death.   They didn’t need to be afraid that they had been wrong about Jesus.  He was alive and among them.  He was God, and the King, and the source of truth.  They had forgiveness and holiness and eternal life.  They didn’t have to be afraid about tomorrow.  Jesus was alive and among them. They could be at peace.

     2. Did Thomas have a peaceful Easter?  No.  He didn’t believe what he had been told.  He was amazed that the rest of the disciples would be saying such things.  But a week later, when he was allowed to touch Jesus, to see the nail marks, and touch the wounded side, then he believed that Jesus was alive and with him.  And then he too could be at peace.

    B.1. Did we have a peaceful Easter?  Did you notice somebody missing from our celebration here last Sunday?  Did you see Jesus at Easter breakfast?  I didn’t.  Did you see Jesus at our worship service?  There were lots of people here, but I didn’t see Jesus.  So I guess we didn’t have a peaceful Easter as the disciples did, since He didn’t show up here as He did on that first Easter evening.

       2. Did you have a peaceful Easter?  While you were at your gathering in the afternoon, did Jesus show up?  Were your doors locked?  That didn’t stop him on the first Easter evening.  Did he let you touch his hands and his side?  No?  Well I guess we didn’t have a peaceful Easter as Thomas had a peaceful week after Easter encounter with Jesus.

   C.1. Jesus has a comment if we are feeling left out.  {29}“Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”  And then notice John’s comment on this whole issue. {30}  Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. {31} But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name. God knew that many, many people would not have the privilege which the disciples had on Easter evening, and which Thomas had on the Sunday night following Easter.  They wouldn’t see the risen Lord Jesus.  But, He had all of these things written down, so that all of us would know that they happened and are true.  He uses the words of the Scripture to convince us of the truth of the message about Jesus.  Thus we believe although we have not seen, except with the eyes of faith.

   2. Did you have a peaceful Easter?  Is Jesus present among us?  His presence among His disciples gave them peace.  He is God.  He is present everywhere.  His presence gives us peace.  He is present in our hearts every time the Word is used by us.  His presence gives us peace.  He is present in a way that we can touch and taste in His holy Supper.  His presence gives us peace.

    Conc.   Did you have a peaceful Easter?  Even if you have to say, “No, it was a rush from 5:30 am to 6 pm.  It was not peaceful.”  Yet, because of Easter, because of Jesus’ resurrection, his forgiveness, and His presence, you can have a peaceful rest of your life.
























April 9, 2023 Easter Sunday


CWA part Gospel  - Resurrection of our LORD - KBKuschel

Matthew 28:8-10


8 So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. 9 Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. 10 Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”


Put yourselves into the sandals of the women.  You believe you are a sinner.  You believe God forgives sin.  You believe you are acceptable to God because He promised a Savior who would do everything necessary to provide you with salvation and righteousness. 

    You followed Jesus.  You listened to Him teach.  You listened to Him answer questions. You listened to Him apply the Law to people’s hearts to show them their sins.  You listened to Him apply the Gospel to people’s hearts to show them that they were forgiven because of God’s love.  You are convinced that He is the Prophet promised by God.  He is the Bringer of truth. 

    You watched Jesus work among the people.  You saw Him heal people who were sick,.  You saw Him make nature work under His directions.  You saw Him raise people who had died.  He had the power of God at His disposal.  When He claimed to be using His own power, you considered that He might be the Son of God.  

    You were convinced that this Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ of God.  The One promised by God to provide you with forgiveness of sins, holiness and eternal life.  You got to be pretty comfortable with that conclusion.   

  But then He died.  If He were the Son of God, how could He die?  The crowds at Calvary reinforced those doubts in your mind.  “If he was the Son of God, why didn’t He come down from the cross?”  Why didn’t He just escape?  How could He give eternal life if He is dead?  And dead He was.  You were there when they laid him in the tomb.  You were going to finish the burial process on Sunday morning. 

   But when you went there, He wasn’t there.  His body was gone.  The angels said, “He has risen.”  Could it be?  Doubt again.  Too good to be true.  What really happened?  More doubts.  Then Jesus met you and greeted you.  You grasped His feet to make sure that this wasn’t a ghost.  You knew it wasn’t, so you worshiped Him.  He was who He claimed to be.  His resurrection proved it.  You could on go on with the rest of the day and the rest of your lives without doubt.  Jesus is your LORD and God.  

   Doubts.  They are part of our lives as human beings, aren’t they?  Doubts that get bigger as we grow up.  When we as children learned about Jesus, there was no doubt who He was.  He is God.  No questions.  But as we grow up, our intellect rebels.  A person who was God and human? It doesn’t make sense.  A person who does miracles?  Miracles can’t happen.  Doubts.

    Doubts about the claim that Jesus is the only source of truth from God.  What about all the other spiritual resources in our world.  They all claim to have the truth.  What if Jesus was only another prophet?  What if Jesus was just another purveyor of a religious system?  Don’t other spiritual resource people in other religious systems also do miracles?  How do we deal with doubts like these?    

    Scripture always solves these doubts in the same way.  It always points us to the resurrection of Jesus.  Was Jesus the Christ?  Only if He was God.  Was He God?  Scripture says “Yes.”  Proof?  He rose from the dead.  Can you believe what He spoke and taught.  If He was God. Was He God?  “Yes.”  Proof?  He rose from the dead.  Whose power was He using when He did miracles?  Scripture says His own.  That’s only possible if He was God. Was He God? “Yes.” Proof.   He rose from the dead.  Because Jesus rose, we are free to live without any fears about who Jesus of Nazareth is.  He is our LORD and God.   

Hymn 152:1-3


Put yourselves back into the sandals of the followers of Jesus.  They had been with Him for three years.  They had personally grasped the forgiveness and eternal life which He offered them.  But He expected that they would share those gifts with others.  For three years they had been soaking up the message they were to share. 

    They had been given some trial runs.  Jesus had sent some of them out to take His message to other villages.  They reported back.  They had some success.  They had some failure.  They reported power over forces that opposed Jesus.  They had a taste of what they were supposed to be doing with their lives after Jesus would depart from their presence, something He had promised to do.   

   B1 Their message was very clear.  They had pointed to Jesus as the Christ.  They had told people that Jesus was the One who had come to take the guilt of people on Himself.  They told people that He would sacrifice His life to pay for their sins.

     They told people that Jesus was their righteousness. He was living for them.  Jesus was not sinning.  Jesus was going to cover them with His holiness.  That would make them able to be right with God.    

    Now Jesus was telling the women: “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”  Jesus’ followers were still under orders from Him to take His message to others.  Why should they have confidence that the message they were bringing to others from Jesus was true?  Why did the women eagerly and quickly go and tell the other disciples the message from Jesus?

    Because He had risen.  Jesus’ resurrection is the “Yes,” that God the Father gave to all the work Jesus had done.  Was Jesus successful in taking the guilt of humans.  YES.  Proof?  He rose from the dead.  Was He a success in taking the place of humans and suffering death and hell to rescue us from it?  YES.  Proof? He rose from the dead.    Was Jesus successful in supplying us with holiness so that we are acceptable to God.  YES. Proof? He rose from the dead.    Should the women be confident that the message from Jesus which they had for the other disciples was valid.  YES.  Proof?. He rose from the dead.  

   We are today’s followers of Jesus.  Jesus hasn’t brought us into His family just so that we might be a part of His family forever.   He has also given us a purpose. Our purpose is the same as that of the women in the verses before us today.  Our purpose is to transmit the words and message of Jesus to others.  We can do that through our congregation.  But the LORD is interested primarily in having us be transmitters of His truth to others as we rub shoulders with them in our day to day existence.  

    The message is simple.  I am a sinner.  Jesus took my sins.  Jesus suffered death instead of me.  Jesus suffered hell instead of me.  That frees me from my guilt and the threat of punishment.  Jesus lived a holy life for me.  That gives me His holiness.  That makes me right in the sight of God.  That’s the message.

   Is it really true?  Is there any portion of that message that should be doubted?  Does God really say people are not guilty and acceptable to Him because of Jesus.  The answer in the Bible is “YES.”  Proof? He rose from the dead.  Because Jesus rose, we are free to live without doubt about the Gospel.  

Hymn 152 : 4-6 


Put yourselves back into the sandals of the followers of Jesus.  You had become quite used to having Jesus with you all the time.  You traveled with Him.  You ate with Him.  You were like family.  You couldn’t think of what life without Jesus would be like.  You dreaded the time that He wouldn’t be with you, something He kept telling you about.  Now it had happened.  He wasn’t with you.  He had died.  Would you be able to handle the future on their own?  It was doubtful.  

   But now He was alive again.  Now he had shown Himself to you.  Now he had told you to tell the disciples they too would see Him.  This is very important.  His death hadn’t stopped His presence among you.  Nothing else would stop His presence among you either.  You could go on with your lives without doubt about the future because Jesus was still with you.  

   Jesus’ followers had another very important issue to face.  Death.  Humans die.  That’s just the way it is since Adam and Eve sinned.  But Jesus had told you that even though you would die, you wouldn’t really die.  He kept teaching you that He gives eternal life, a relationship with God that doesn’t end after one dies.  You believed that.  Now He died.  What did that do to His promise?  What did that do to your confidence?  More doubt. 

    But now Jesus was alive again.  He showed Himself to the women.  He wanted to show Himself to the disciples.  Jesus could conquer death.  He could conquer the deaths of His followers.  He could keep His promise.  You would rise from the dead as Jesus had promised.  Proof?   He rose from the dead 

   How do we handle each new day of our lives?  Life isn’t easy.  We are unemployed.  We are confronted daily with that unpleasant person at school.  We have physical handicaps.  People keep telling me to just do it, even though God says not to.  Can I handle life?  I doubt it. 

   We don’t have to.  Jesus is with us.  He gives us patience.  He gives us wisdom. He gives us strength.  He will lead us to do what we are supposed to do.  Is Jesus really with us?  “YES.”    Proof?  He rose from the dead.  That gives us freedom to live without doubt about tomorrow.  

   How do we handle death?  It’s scary, isn’t it?  We watch people die.  We don’t want to experience the pain.  We watch people get killed.  We don’t want to stop existing that suddenly.  It’s scary because we don’t know what is next.  But we do.  Jesus told us.  When we die, we go to be with the LORD.  Then on Judgment Day, we continue to exist in perfection, body and soul, with Jesus. 

    Is that really true? “YES.”  Proof? He rose from the dead.  He conquered death for us.  We will conquer it too.  How do we handle the concept of death?  With confidence, knowing where we are going, knowing what is going to happen next.  How do we handle the concept of eternity?  With confidence Why?  He rose from the dead.  Because Jesus rose, we are free to live without doubt about our eternal future.

  Conc: LORD JESUS, please help us to celebrate Easter every day by living free from doubt about Jesus, about the Gospel, and about the future.  

Hymn 152:7-8









April 2, 2023 Palm Sunday

CWA -Palm Sunday -   Gospel  Kieth Bernard Kuschel


                              John 12:1-11

Six days before the Passover, Jesus came to Bethany, where Lazarus lived, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. 2 Here a dinner was given in Jesus’ honor. Martha served, while Lazarus was among those reclining at the table with him. 3 Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume.4 But one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected, 5 “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.” 6 He did not say this because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it. 7 “Leave her alone,” Jesus replied. “It was intended that she should save this perfume for the day of my burial. 8 You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me.”9 Meanwhile a large crowd of Jews found out that Jesus was there and came, not only because of him but also to see Lazarus, whom he had raised from the dead. 10 So the chief priests made plans to kill Lazarus as well, 11 for on account of him many of the Jews were going over to Jesus and believing in him.

What do you remember most about the family of Mary, Martha and Lazarus? Maybe that Mary sat at the feet of Jesus and listened to Him.  Maybe that Martha was busy serving Jesus and upset with Mary.  Maybe that Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead.  In the verses before us this family held a dinner.  It was a special dinner.  It was held (2) “in Jesus’ honor.”  We are also reminded that Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead.  We are also told that Lazarus was present at the dinner.   So, I think we could safely guess what the purpose of the dinner was. What?  To honor Jesus for raising Lazarus from the dead.  

    Jesus had eaten at least one meal there before.  I think we can assume that He ate there regularly.  What does that say about His relationship with this family?  They were comfortable having Jesus there.  He was comfortable being there.  Jesus was like a member of the family.  

   On Palm Sunday when Jesus rode into Jerusalem, His focus was completely on what He was going to be doing during the next week.  Every year on Palm Sunday our focus is on what we are going to be doing this next week.  On Thursday we are going to have a special dinner.  Now I know that we are having the same dinner today.  But Thursday, when we come to dinner, it is special.  It is the day of the year when Jesus hosted this special supper for the first time.  I remember when I was a boy on Thursday of Holy Week almost everybody in the whole church went to the Lord’s Supper.  It took a really long time.  But it was awesome, I will never forget it.  

    What is this Supper about?  It’s all about Jesus.  He gives us His body and blood together with the bread and wine.  Because the Gospel is announced during the Supper, He delivers forgiveness of sins to us.   It reminds us who Jesus is and what He did.  We say to everybody who is watching us: Jesus is my Savior.  He lived and died and rose for me.  This Supper is to praise Jesus and proclaim His death.  It is  “in Jesus honor.”

    What is this Supper about?  It’s about family.  All of us who share in the meal believe the same thing about ourselves.  We are sinners.  All of us who share in the meal believe the same things about Jesus.  He is our Savior.  All of us who share in the meal believe the same thing about the Supper.  It is the body and blood of Jesus together with the bread and wine.  All of us who share in the meal believe the same thing about the blessing.  We receive forgiveness.  All of us who share in the meal believe the same thing about the Bible.  It is God’s truth.  When we eat together, we are saying, “We are family in Christ.”

Jesus was headed to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover.  He was also headed to Jerusalem on this particular Passover because He knew it was time for Him to sacrifice Himself as the Lamb of God to take away the sins of the world.  He had told His disciples very clearly on numerous occasions that he was going to go to Jerusalem and die.  

    While He was at this meal in his honor in Bethany headed for Jerusalem to die, 3 Then Mary took about a pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume.4 But one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected, 5 “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.” 6 He did not say this because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it. 7 “Leave her alone,” Jesus replied. “It was intended that she should save this perfume for the day of my burial.” In Jesus’ day bodies were prepared for burial by being washed, anointed with good smelling stuff, wrapped in cloths and then buried.  Jesus’ statement is very clear.   He considers what Mary is doing an early attempt to prepare his body for burial, which, of course, implies that He is ready to die.   

    When Jesus was headed to Jerusalem, and when He was at this meal in Bethany, he was completely focused on what was going to happen on Friday.  His death.   Every year on Palm Sunday our focus is on what we are going to be doing this next week.  On Friday we are going to think a lot about and talk a lot about Jesus’ death.  That is totally out of the ordinary.  People usually don’t want to think about death.  It is unpleasant.  People usually don’t want to talk about death.  Maybe they think it will go away if you don’t talk about it.  Even when somebody dies, people say, “She passed.  He is gone.”  They don’t even want to use the word, “death.”  

     Christians talk about death a lot.  We say, “Jesus died for my sins” all the time.  That is weird to a lot of people - to be so open about death.  If you really want to consider something strange, look at the name of Friday this week.  Good Friday.  A Friday that is the day on which somebody died is good?  A day on which an innocent victim was crucified is good?  Good Friday is a good name for this coming Friday.  It’s good for us.  Because Jesus died, our sins are gone.  Because Jesus died, death isn’t punishment for me anymore.  Because Jesus was separated from God while on the cross, I won’t ever have to be.  On Palm Sunday we get ready for Friday.  Because of the death that happened then.  That is what makes it good.    

Jesus’ presence in Bethany at this meal turned out to be a public event.  People heard that Jesus was present.  Throughout the three years of His ministry His presence attracted crowds.  Some came to hear Him.  Some came to see Him do miracles.  In this instance they came to see the person who had raised Lazarus from the dead.  But they came for another reason.  Lazarus had become a media star by this time.  9 Meanwhile a large crowd of Jews found out that Jesus was there and came, not only because of him but also to see Lazarus, whom he had raised from the dead.” They had heard about him, but they really wanted to see him.  So they were there to see this dead man who was raised.  

    During Jesus’ three years of ministry there was another group of people who came to observe Jesus.  This group was watching His every step.  They were gathering evidence to prove that He was not who He claimed to be.  They were gathering evidence on the basis of which they could get rid of Him.  This group was present here also.  10 So the chief priests made plans to kill Lazarus as well,  for on account of him many of the Jews were going over to Jesus and believing in him. When they saw the results of Jesus’ miracle of raising Lazarus, they were driven to carry out their plan to get rid of Jesus.  They hated it that Jesus had raised Lazarus from the death.   It was ruining everything.

  When Jesus was headed to Jerusalem, and when He was at this meal in Bethany, he was completely focused on what was going to happen on Sunday. He would rise as He had raised Lazarus.  Every year on Palm Sunday our focus is on what we are going to be doing this next week.  On Sunday we are going to see a risen dead Man.   Jesus’ resurrection from the dead is the basis of Christianity.   Because of that we know what He says is true.  Because of that we know that He is God.  Because of that we know our sins are forgiven.  Because of that we know He can cover us with His holiness.  Because of that we know we will rise from the dead one day.  Without Jesus’ resurrection Christianity is nothing.  

    People know that.  So people who oppose Christianity get angry about it. Just like the Jews did about Jesus and Lazarus.  So they ridicule it. “When was the last time you saw somebody rise from the dead?”  they say.  “The disciples must have been on medical marijuana or something to think that Jesus rose from the dead.” Or they divert attention from it.  Easter is about bunnies and eggs and flowers and springtime.    No. It’s not.  On Palm Sunday we are getting ready to see a risen dead man. 

Palm Sunday is about getting ready- for a meal, a death and a risen dead man.   On Palm Sunday we join Jesus in the parade to Jerusalem to get ready for Thursday and Friday and Sunday. For a meal, a death, and a risen dead man.  Thanks for coming.  I’m glad you like parades.


March 26, 2023

CWA - Psalm Lent 5 -  Kieth Bernard Kuschel


                             Psalm 116


I love the Lord, for he heard my voice; he heard my cry for mercy. 2 Because he turned his ear to me, I will call on him as long as I live. 3 The cords of death entangled me, the anguish of the grave came over me;  I was overcome by distress and sorrow. 4 Then I called on the name of the Lord: “Lord, save me!” 5 The Lord is gracious and righteous; our God is full of compassion. 6 The Lord protects the unwary; when I was brought low, he saved me.7 Return to your rest, my soul, for the Lord has been good to you.8 For you, Lord, have delivered me from death, my eyes from tears, my feet from stumbling, 9 that I may walk before the Lord in the land of the living.10 I trusted in the Lord when I said, “I am greatly afflicted”; 11 in my alarm I said, “Everyone is a liar.” 12 What shall I return to the Lord for all his goodness to me? 13 I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord.14 I will fulfill my vows to the Lord in the presence of all his people.15 Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his faithful servants.  .16 Truly I am your servant, Lord; I serve you just as my mother did; you have freed me from my chains.17 I will sacrifice a thank offering to you and call on the name of the Lord.18 I will fulfill my vows to the Lord in the presence of all his people, 19 in the courts of the house of the Lord—  in your midst, Jerusalem. Praise the Lord.


Something really important = a matter of life and death


IA1  I was overcome by distress and sorrow(3).  Most of us have felt that way at one time or another in our lives.  What caused you to feel that way most recently?  Diagnosed with a terminal disease.  Chronic health issue.  Loss of capacity.  Loss of job.  Loss of a loved one.  Not knowing what to do next.   Coronavirus.

   2 All of those cause distress and sorrow.   But there is one that is behind many of those mentioned.  It could be called the ultimate cause of distress and sorrow.  What is that?  Death.  The Psalm writer knew that.  He wrote this: 3 The cords of death entangled me, the anguish of the grave came over me.   Why does any disease cause distress and sorrow?  Because it could lead to death. Why do accidents cause distress and sorrow?  Because they could lead to death.  Why does loss of job or not knowing what to do next cause distress and sorrow?  Because your life might end without accomplishing even the basic things like providing the necessities of life for your dependents.

 B1 Is there any help for the distress and sorrow caused by death?   The Psalm writer thinks so: 8 For you, Lord, have delivered me from death.  How does He do that?  Jesus answers that question directly in the Gospel lesson: “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; 26 and whoever lives believing in me will never die.”  Jesus experienced death as punishment for our sins.  We are rescued from death as punishment for our sins because He did that.  Jesus rose from the dead.  He conquered it for us.  We will rise from the dead because Jesus did that for us.  That is how God delivers us from death.  

   2 8 For you, Lord, have delivered me from death. Does knowing that take away our fear of death?  NO.  Anything we haven’t experienced is scary.  Does knowing that make it at least possible for us to handle the thought of death a little bit better?  YES.  Because we know we have been delivered from it even before we have experienced it. 

  3 8 For you, Lord, have delivered me from death.  Does knowing that make it easy when a loved one dies?  NO.  It is always extremely difficult to think about facing life without someone who has been part of your life for a very long time, maybe your entire life.   Does knowing that make it at least possible for us to handle the death of a loved one a little bit better?  YES.  Because we know that loved one who, when alive,  trusted that Jesus lived and died and rose to give him or her forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life has been delivered from it.   The Psalm writer reflects that thought when he wrote: 8 For you, Lord, have delivered .............. my eyes from tears, my feet from stumbling.  I shed tears, but not forever and not out of despair.  I don’t stumble and fall into believing the thought, whenever it comes up, that God must not love me otherwise He would not have allowed my loved one to die.

  C1 God continues to love me even when I am dead.  Did you hear what the Psalm writer wrote?  (15)Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his faithful servants. Well, I guess that leaves me out.  I am a sinner.  I am not a faithful servant.  Not so fast.  You are covered with Jesus’ holiness.  You are a member of God’s family. God considers your life to be a thankoffering to him.  He considers you to be a faithful servant.  This verse is talking to you.  

   2 Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his faithful servants.   Precious.  We are valuable to the LORD.  What do you do with things that you consider to be precious?  You protect them.  You hold onto them tightly.  We are so valuable to the LORD that He had His Son live and die and rise to give us forgiveness, holiness and eternal life.  He is not going to let anything, including death release His strong grip on us.  Maybe St Paul had this Psalm in mind when he wrote: “Neither death.... nor anything else will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our LORD.” (Rom 8:38-39). Does knowing that helps us handle death a little bit better?  YES


 IIA1 How do we respond to God’s deliverance?   We 13  “will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord...19 in the courts of the house of the Lord—  in your midst, Jerusalem. Praise the Lord.”  When we can, we gather together in a public gathering place with others who believe what we believe about Jesus.  We lift up for all to see the concept that God has granted us salvation through Jesus.  Others hear that Jesus lived and died and rose to give them forgiveness, holiness and eternal life.  The Holy Spirit leads them to believe that Jesus is their Savior.  Our lives of calling on the name of the LORD help others have eternal life in Jesus Christ.

   2 How do we respond to God’s deliverance?   I utter “my cry for mercy.........I.will call on

him as long as I live. ......3 I was overcome by distress and sorrow. 4 Then I called on the name of the Lord: “Lord, save me!”  When my life is filled with distress and sorrow because of terminal disease, chronic health issues, loss of capacity, loss of job, loss of loved one, not knowing what to do next, I cry out to the LORD for mercy repeatedly over the entire course of my life on this earth.  Anyone who rubs shoulders with me hears those cries.  They are informed that my Lord, “hears my voice, turns His ear to me, is gracious, righteous, full of compassion, protects the unwary, and saves.”  The Holy Spirit leads them to believe the same.  Our lives of crying out to the LORD help others have lives willingly dependent on the LORD.     I    

   B1 How do we respond to God’s deliverance?  18 I will fulfill my vows to the Lord in the presence of all his people.”  Some of you have vowed to the LORD to love, be faithful to, cherish, support and help in sickness and in health another human being.  When asked why you fulfill your vow, you indicate that you want to thank the LORD for the special person whom He has given to you as a life long companion.  In doing so, your lives  have directed others to the LORD who wants to bless their lives similarly. 

   2 Some of you have vowed to the LORD to live as if fitting for a child of God, and in faith, word and deed remain true to the Triune God, even unto death.   When asked why you fulfill your vow, you indicate that you want to thank the LORD for giving you the ability to speak, the resources to live, the ability to reproduce, a wonderful body with almost limitless capacities, and the people through whom He blesses you.  In doing so, your lives  have directed others to the LORD who wants to fill humans’ lives with blessings.  

   3 Some of you have vowed to the LORD to shape your live with God’s Word, to hear the Word of God proclaimed every week, to use the LORD’s Supper whenever it is offered, to study the Word with your fellow Christians at every opportunity.   When you fulfill that vow, you are directing others to realize that God’s Word is the tool He has chosen to dispense His blessings of forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life because of Jesus into people’s lives.  In doing so, your lives have directed others to the LORD who is the source of those blessings for life.  

  C1 How do we respond to God’s deliverance?  We “sacrifice a thank offering to” the LORD. If we would be living when this Psalm was written, we would literally be involved in sacrificing.  We would bring animals and/or plants and have part of them burned by the priests on the altars at the worship location.  The remainder of the animals and/or plants was used for the physical support of the priests and the operation of the worship location.  What is the modern equivalent to the plants and animals which supported the worship of and proclamation of the true God?  Money.  

  2 We sacrifice a thank offering to the LORD when we dedicate a percentage of our income each year to bring the message to others that Jesus lived and died and rose to give them forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life.  You have the privilege of dedicating a percentage of your income to bring Jesus to others.  We suggest 10% in keeping with God’s Old Testament directive.  In doing so, your lives have helped others have life in Christ.    

LORD Jesus, You are right.  It’s matter death and life.  Your death helps us handle death.  Please use our lives to help others have life.   



March 19, 2023


CW - A  - Epistle Lesson  - Lent 4   Kieth Bernard Kuschel 


Romans 8:1-10

(Rom 8:1)  Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, {2} because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death. {3} For what the law was powerless to do in that it was weakened by the sinful nature, God did by sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering. And so he condemned sin in sinful man, {4} in order that the righteous requirements of the law might be fully met in us, who do not live according to the sinful nature but according to the Spirit. {5} Those who live according to the sinful nature have their minds set on what that nature desires; but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires. {6} The mind of sinful man is death, but the mind controlled by the Spirit is life and peace; {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God. {9} You, however, are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you. And if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Christ. {10} But if Christ is in you, your body is dead because of sin, yet your spirit is alive because of righteousness.


What is inside of you?

What does it do?

Why is it in there?

What is inside of you? Jesus.

Why is He in there?

What does He do?

Today with Paul’s help we want to ask three questions?

IF CHRIST IS IN YOU

I. Are You Condemned?

II. Are You Hostile?

III. Who is in Control?


IA1     A former state probation officer accused of demanding sexual favors from young men under his supervision pleaded no contest to 31 counts.  His plea came as jury selection was to begin..  Prosecutors had filed more than 220 criminal counts against him.  The 31 counts include charges of second degree sexual assault, hindering prosecution, tampering and unlawful restraint and are applied to all 15 victims in the complaint.  Several youths had told police that he threatened to return them to prison if they refused his sexual advances.  The alleged assaults took place in his office and at his former home, according to court documents.  

    2 Did you read that article?  How did you respond? Condemnation!!  What an outrage!  It is bad enough that people do that kind of thing in our society.  But when someone who is supposed to be a representative of what is the right does it, it seems worse.  When someone who is supposed to be helping people to get back on their feet do such a thing, it is awful.  Throw the book at him.  Throw away the key. 

   3 Why did you respond that way?  Because this man had violated what you considered to be a standard.  The law says you don’t do such things.  The conscience says you don’t do such things.  Our society which has abandoned many of the tenets of what is right and wrong at least still says you don’t do such things. 

 B1 A person who at one time in his life formally and publicly stated that he was a believer in Jesus Christ, stated that he would remain faithful to Jesus Christ, stated that he would use the Bible and participate in the Lord’s Supper regularly, and stated that he would live a godly life, doesn’t seem to be any different from anybody else in his neighborhood, never opens his Bible at home at all, and  opens his mouth about Jesus Christ so infrequently that hardly anybody knows he is a Christian.     

   2 How should God respond?  Condemnation.  Anger.  It is bad enough that the general populace is like that.  But when someone who is supposed to be connected with Jesus Christ acts that way, it seems worse.  When someone who is supposed to be leading others to Jesus acts like that, it is awful.  Throw the book at him.  Throw away the key.

   3 Why could/would/should God respond that way?  Because we have failed to do what God says we ought to be doing.   The Law of God says we are to keep Jesus first in our lives, we are to use the Word regularly, and we are to act in accordance with the standard God has set up.

  C1 Is that how God responds?  Listen to Paul:   “ Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, {2} because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death. {3} For what the law was powerless to do in that it was weakened by the sinful nature, God did by sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful man to be a sin offering. And so he condemned sin in sinful man, {4} in order that the righteous requirements of the law might be fully met in us, who do not live according to the sinful nature but according to the Spirit.”  Our sinful nature made it impossible for us to be right with God on the basis of trying to keep the Law.  I was controlled by sin and headed for eternal death.  God condemned me and my sin, but allowed the punishment to fall on Jesus.  In addition He puts the holiness of Jesus on me so that the requirements of the law are met in me.  So there is no condemnation waiting for me. 

  1. There is also no condemnation now.  My sins have been removed.  I have been punished already when Jesus was punished.  The accident I just had which broke my leg is not a punishment from God.  Looks that way.  Feels that way.  Smells that way.  But God says it’s not.  The loss of my job is not a punishment from God.  Looks that way.  Smells that way.  Feels that way.  But God says it’s not.  No condemnation.   

  2. Thank you Lord for giving me life.  I don’t mean physical life.  I mean real life.  An existence that isn’t threatened with condemnation.  Life that resulted when the Holy Spirit brought me to faith in Jesus.  Life that resulted when the Christ took up residence in me. If Christ is in you, are you condemned?  No way.  


IIA1 You are standing in the check out line at the grocery store and you decide to make conversation.  So, you say, “What do you think about God?” “Excuse me!!!”   Since you took the plunge and approached the subject, you don’t let it go.  “What do you think about God?”  What is the answer, if the person is willing to talk?  “I don’t think about him.  Doesn’t cross my mind during the course of the day.” Is that a hostile response? It is not an overtly angry response.  But it is a response that is hostile to the whole idea of God.  Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”   

   2 Got another possible answer?  “I think you should mind your own business.  I wasn’t bothering you.  What’s your problem?  Just let me alone.  The same thing goes for god.  He should just go ahead and do his god thing whatever that is.  I will do my thing.  I really don’t like intrusions into my life.  I know you are going to tell me god wants a relationship with me and I ought to be living connected with him.  I don’t care.  I want to live my life my way.”  Another hostile response to the whole concept of God. Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”   

   3 Got a third possible answer?  “I’ll tell you what I think about God.  I think He is a vindictive, unloving, sadistic so and so.  Look what he has allowed to happen in my life over the past few years.  If he were loving and caring, such things shouldn’t happen to anybody.  That’s what I think about God.  You can take your whole idea of God and stick it in your ear.”  That is a hostile response.  Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”    

    B1 You are standing in the check out line at the grocery store and you decide to make conversation.  So you say, “How are things going?” “They are going.”  Since you took the plunge, you keep swimming.  “Are the people in your neighborhood nice?”  What is the answer if the person is willing to talk?  “I don’t know.  I don’t have much contact with them.  I am pretty busy.  I don’t think about them.  They aren’t part of my life.”  Is that a hostile response? It is not an overtly angry response.  But it is hostile to the whole idea of loving relationships. Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”   

      2 Got another possible answer?  “I am a pretty private person.  I don’t seek out relationships with others.  So I don’t know if they are nice or not.  I kind of like being alone in our own little world.  It is OK if we don’t get any intrusions into our lives from other people.  Most of the time people have their own opinions which often are in conflict with mine.  I don’t like to have to deal with that.  I just like being by myself.”  Another hostile response to the whole idea of relationships.  Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”    

    3 Got a third possible answer?  “Things are not going well at all.  My neighbors are rotten.  They go out of their way to make life miserable.  I wish I were living on a desert island.  People are all the same.  They only look out for themselves.  That’s what I think about life right now.  You asked for it.”  That is a hostile response. Paul tells us that is to be expected: {7} the sinful mind is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. {8} Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God.”   

 

 C1 How would you respond to your own questions?  How about this for an answer?  “I think about God a lot.  I think He is important.  I know He loves me.  I know He cares about me.”  That answer tells me something.  It tells me you are at peace with the concept of God.  Paul says that is to be expected.  “ the mind controlled by the Spirit is life and peace;”   

     2 How about this for an answer?  “Things are going pretty well.  My neighbors are busy.  They have their own lives to live. So do I.   I know they are all sinners as I am.  I try to work at my selfishness.  I try to remember they are just like me.”  That answer tells me something.  It tells me you are at peace with the whole concept of loving relationships with sinful human beings. Paul says that is to be expected.  “ the mind controlled by the Spirit is life and peace;”

    3 Thank you Lord for giving me life.  I don’t mean physical life.  I mean real life.  An existence that isn’t driven by hostility.  Life that resulted when the Holy Spirit brought me to faith in Jesus.  Life that resulted when the Christ took up residence in me.  If Christ is in you, are you hostile?  No way.    


IIIA1 As you were walking around investigating all the parts of the cruise ship, you saw that they had everything you could think of for entertainment.  Even a casino.  You walked through and observed.  There was a nice little old lady sitting on a stool.  She wasn’t smiling.  Her hands were going rhythmically up and down, shoving in coins and pulling the handle.  Her pile of coins depleted.  She immediately got a new supply.  Went back to the same machine and continued.  Who is in control here?  Paul’s answer is: {5} “Those who live according to the sinful nature have their minds set on what that nature desires;”         

   2 As you were walking around in the blocks around your hotel in the big city you noticed a man walking slowly, looking at everything.  He picked up whatever he found.  Then you noticed him going through the refuse containers.  When people came by, he would run out to ask them for some money to buy food.  A car drove up quickly.  He ran over & pulled whatever money he had received out of his pocket.  He received a little bag back.  Who is in control here?  Paul’s answer is: {5} Those who live according to the sinful nature have their minds set on what that nature desires.  

    3 As you observe your office mate, you notice he comes in very early, and stays very late.  He seems overly concerned that he might lose his job if he doesn’t put in all this extra time.  He is always talking about getting security.  He never mentions that there is anybody else looking out for him.  Who is in control here?   Paul’s answer is: {5} Those who live according to the sinful nature have their minds set on what that nature desires;   

   B1 As you are walking through the different parts of the facility, you see a little old lady sitting on a stool.  She isn’t smiling.  She is intense.  Her hands go rhythmically up and down.  From the dish of pureed food to the mouth of the man.  You assume it is her husband.  It looks as if she has been doing this for years.  When one bowl is depleted, she gets some more. Looks the same just a different color. She intersperses words about Jesus Christ in with her fast moving hands. Who is in control here?  Paul’s answer is: “but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires.” {10} But if Christ is in you,  your spirit is alive because of righteousness.

   2 As you are counting the receipts for the fundraiser for the family who lost everything in a fire, you notice a check from a man who picks up cans off the street for the nickel deposit, who drives an old car, who lives in a modest home, and who is considered odd by most except those with whom he worships every Sunday.  The reason his check caught your attention was - you never knew he had that kind of money.  Who is in control here?    Paul’s answer is: “but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires.” {10} But if Christ is in you,  your spirit is alive because of righteousness.

    3 As you observe your office mate, you notice that he is always busy doing things right after work.  You hear him talk a lot about all the activity that he crams into his weekends.  Most of the things he does seem to have a common denominator.  He is interacting with a lot of people.  He seems intense about rubbing shoulders with a lot of people.  Rumor is that he thinks he might be able to steer them toward Jesus if he has ongoing contact with them.  Who is in control here?    Paul’s answer is: “but those who live in accordance with the Spirit have their minds set on what the Spirit desires.” {10} But if Christ is in you,  your spirit is alive because of righteousness. 

   C1 “ {9} You, however, are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you.”  God the Holy Spirit brought you to trust that Jesus died to wipe away your sins.  He brought you to trust that Jesus lived perfectly so that He might cover you with His holiness, He brought you to trust that Jesus rose from the dead so that He might give you eternal life.  But God the Holy Spirit also took up residence in your life at that time and is in charge of you.

    2 How does He exercise His position?  He works in you through the Word of the Lord.  He works in you through the Holy Supper.

    3 Thank you Lord for giving me life.  I don’t mean physical life.  I mean real life.  An existence that is controlled by the Holy Spirit.  “If Christ is in you, your spirit is alive.” 




March 12, 2023

CWA  - Psalm for the Day - Lent 3  - - Kieth Bernard Kuschel


                                               Psalm 143: 1, 2, 4,7, 8, 10 

                        (verses printed in hymnal Christian Worship pg 118)


1 O LORD, hear my prayer, listen to my cry for mercy; in Your faithfulness and righteousness come to my relief. 2 O LORD, do not bring your servant into judgment, for no one living is righteous before you. 4  My spirit grows faint within me; my heart within me is dismayed. 7 Answer me quickly, O LORD; do not hide Your face from me.  8 Let the morning bring me word of Your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in You.  10 Teach me to do Your will, for You are my God; may Your good Spirit lead me on level ground. 


IA1 One of the favorite topics of people when they get together and converse is: “How bad the world around us is.”   Give me an example.  Why do people talk about that all the time?  Could be a variety of reasons.  It could be because we would like to brainstorm solutions.  It could be because we are scared and want to release a little tension. 

  2 I want to suggest a sneaky spiritual reason.  Maybe we are rehearsing what all the really bad people out there are doing to convince ourselves that we are not as bad as those people out there.  Maybe it’s really a covert way of convincing ourselves that we are really very righteous people since we aren’t involved in those terrible things.  Sort of like the Pharisee talking about the tax collector.  

   3 Why do I say that is a spiritual reason?  Because it is easy to move from the courtroom of human opinion to God’s courtroom.   If I am convinced that in the courtroom of human opinion I don’t fit with those criminal types, I can easily think the same way in God’s courtroom.  “LORD, You know the world is really awful.   People are doing unbelievably ungodly things.  I sure am glad that I have never got sucked into any of that stuff.  You must be pretty happy too.  You must be pretty proud of me.”

  B1 That brings us to verse 2 of the Psalm for today: “O LORD, do not bring your servant into judgment, for no one living is righteous before you.”  Another translation of the same verse says,  “Don’t bring Your servant into court because no one living is righteous before You.”   No one living is righteous before You.  No one.  Not even we who haven’t killed anyone.  Not even we who always stand up for what is right.  Not even we who haven’t abused anyone. “

   2 Why?  Two different views of who is means to be righteous. God's view = no one (on his own).  View of the court room of human opinion:  "I am righteeous." Why are we so in the dark about being righteous?  Because God’s view of righteous is quite a bit different from the view of the human courtroom. God says righteous is the same as perfect.  Most humans admit: "I don’t perfectly live my life to benefit the people around me all the time.  That’s what God demands.   Just yesterday I insisted on doing something selfish instead of doing something to benefit my family.  Just this morning I (you fill in the blank)  

 3 This "being righteous" using God's definition sounds like an unsolvable problem.  It would be if the LORD hadn’t shined His light into our darkness.  But He has shined the Light of His Good News into our lives.  That is why with the Psalm writer we say {1}“O LORD, hear my prayer, listen to my cry for mercy; in Your faithfulness and righteousness come to my relief.”  Righteousness demanded by God through His Law doesn’t give relief.  It creates stress.  But righteousness, the gift of God because of the perfect substitutionary life of Jesus Christ. That gives relief.  LORD thanks for getting me out of the dark when it comes to being righteous..       


IIA1 Why do we get trained to cook, do laundry, clean bathrooms, read, do math, operate machinery, manage money or any other skill or task?   So we can handle life on our own and not be dependent on others.  Being independent is a noble goal.  But there could be a negative to that.  I could conclude that I don’t need anybody in my life at all. 

   2 Is that bad?  It could be,  if we have decided since we don’t need anybody, we don’t want to have any interaction with anybody.  Why is that a problem?  Well, what is our purpose in life?  We are to be witnesses for Jesus Christ.  It would be pretty difficult for us to talk about Jesus with others or influence them to live their lives God’s way,  if we had no interaction with others. 

  3 Another possible negative byproduct of self-sufficiency is to conclude, “I don’t need anybody.”  Anybody would mean anybody.  I can cook, clean, do laundry, read, do math, operate machinery, manage money etc.  I provide for myself, protect myself, figure things out for myself, so I don’t need anybody including God.  I can handle life on my own.  

  B1 However, that means we have forgotten some things. It is the LORD who has given us the minds and bodies and capacities that can be trained to do all those tasks in life which need to get done.  The LORD has given us people who have trained us to be able to do those things.  It is the LORD who gives us meaningful opportunities to apply those skills so we are able to take care of ourselves.  We need to be reminded regularly that the LORD made us and manages our lives, otherwise we would wrongly conclude that we can leave God out of our lives because we can take care of ourselves. We need to be reminded regularly that the LORD needs to continue to manage the universe, which includes our lives, otherwise things will not work very well for us. The LORD has turned on His light in our lives.  We understand all of this.  That is why we can join the Psalm writer in praying:{8} “Let the morning bring me word of Your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in You.”  

   2 There are some things we can’t take care of on our own.   We can’t get rid of a troubled conscience on our own.   We can’t get rid of our innate fear of a holy God and the punishment we deserve because of our sins on our own.  If we would try to handle those things on our own, we would have to join the Psalm writer in saying, {4}“My spirit grows faint within me; my heart within me is dismayed.  We need to be reminded regularly that the Lord loves us by washing away our sins in the blood of Christ, shed on the cross for us.  We need to be reminded regularly that the punishment we deserve because of our sins no longer threatens us because Jesus suffered it for us.  We need to be reminded regularly that the LORD’s love and forgiveness don’t run out or wear out, so that we can continue to trust in Him to provide us with all the blessings in this life and  those irreplaceable blessings for our spiritual lives. The LORD has turned on His light in our lives.  We understand all of this.  That is why we can join the Psalm writer in praying:: “Let the morning bring me word of Your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in You.”   


 LORD, thanks for getting me out of the dark when it comes to taking care of myself.         

   

IIIA1 Third question for this morning is, “What is good for us?”  Is it good to touch a hot stove, smart off to a bigger kid, have a reliable, safe, efficient car, have a secure, challenging, secure job, and enjoy pleasurable activity? 

   2 There are two things in common in all the areas I just mentioned.  One is feelings.  It doesn’t feel good to get burned or get hit by a bigger kid.  It does feel good to have reliable transportation, a secure professional life, and to be involved in pleasurable activities.  

   3 The other is emphasis on self.  The primary concern in experiencing something, doing something, having something is how does it make me feel.  There is no reference to anybody else. 

  B1 What is good for us?  Probably the best source for an answer to that question would be the Person who made us.  The Person who set up our psyche, our emotions.  He knows what will make those emotions and that psyche feel fulfilled.  Interestingly enough, what He tells us is good for us isn’t what we would determine on our own for ourselves.  

  2 God says the reference point should always be others.  Will my actions and words hurt others physically or emotionally?  Will my words and actions benefit, provide for, preserve something for, provide safety for, provide pleasure for, or give good feelings to somebody else? 

  C1 Why does God not leave us in the dark about what is good for us?   Because He wants our lives to be stable.  Jesus quote is: "I give you life in abundance."  The Psalm writer says that in picturesque language: "The LORD would like to lead us to walk our lives on level ground."  If our day to day experience is based on our feelings, we are going to be on a roller coaster, up one day and down the next.  If our life is based on what makes me feel good, I will be frantically searching for that all the time.  But, if our view of life is based on our Spirit led determination to do the Lord’s will, then we will have the fulfillment, satisfaction, and stability of knowing that we with the Spirit’s help have attempted to do what God wants us to do.  

  2 On our own we would say, “LORD, I don’t know what’s good for me." But the LORD has turned on His light in our lives.   So we also join the Psalm writer in saying: 7 Answer me quickly, O LORD; do not hide Your face from me.  10 Teach me to do Your will, for You are my God; may Your good Spirit lead me on level ground. 

LORD, thanks for getting me out of the dark when it comes to knowing what is good for me. 





















March 5, 2023

CWA Old Testament Lesson Lent 2  -  Kieth Bernard Kuschel


                                   Genesis 12:1-8


1  The LORD had said to Abram, “Go from your country, your people and your father’s household to the land I will show you.  2 “I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing. 3 I will bless those who bless you,  and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”  4 So Abram went, as the LORD had told him; and Lot went with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he set out from Harran. 5 He took his wife Sarai, his nephew Lot, all the possessions they had accumulated and the people they had acquired in Harran, and they set out for the land of Canaan, and they arrived there.  6 Abram traveled through the land as far as the site of the great tree of Moreh at Shechem. At that time the Canaanites were in the land. 7 The LORD appeared to Abram and said, “To your offspring I will give this land.” So he built an altar there to the LORD, who had appeared to him.  8 From there he went on toward the hills east of Bethel and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. There he built an altar to the LORD and called on the name of the LORD.


IA1 As recorded in Genesis 11 Abram, his father Terah, his nephew Lot and his wife Sarai had left their home in Ur and settled in Haran 600 miles to the northwest.  Ur would be in Iraq today.  Haran would be in Syria which we are hearing about all the time now.  Then Abram, his wife, and his nephew moved again.  This time 500 miles to the southwest into what is today Israel. 

   2 Why did he move?  God told him to.  1 The LORD had said to Abram, “Go from your country, your people and your father’s household to the land I will show you. Why?  Because according to Joshua 24 the forefathers of the Israelites worshiped other gods when they lived beyond the Euphrates River.   We also know that Terah worshiped the true God since Abram sent for a believing wife for his son Isaac later on.  So, we have to conclude that the problem was a willingness to mix in falsehood about God with the truth about God.  

   3 Why did God tell him to leave?  When a person is living in familiar surroundings with people you know, you tend to just go along with everything that everybody is doing.  In this case, it was in regard to the truth.  Cousin such and such believes this.  So it must be OK.  Our good friend such and such believes that.  So it must be OK.  I tolerate everything.  It affects me.  God told Abram: “Leave.  Get out of there.  If you hang around there much longer, pretty soon you won’t be able to tell what the truth is and what is not the truth.”  Abram left.  

 B1 God tells us to leave.  He tells us to leave when we are being subjected to teachings contrary to His Word.  But we like to play superman and superwoman. “O come on, Lord. I am not that weak.  I know Your truth.  Nobody is going to get me to back off from Your truth.  I know false teachings when I hear them.  I can put myself in any circumstance.  I can let myself be inundated by anything and still come out smelling like a rose.”

   2 You know how God responds?  “I told you to leave.” “Watch out for those who cause divisions and put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have learned.  Keep away from them.”(Rom 16:17)    Teachings influence people.  False teachings influence people.  The devil uses false teachings to divert people from Jesus.  God says, “LEAVE.  Your presence where false teachings is being tolerated also indicates that you condone it and or even promote it.  God doesn’t want anybody to promote or condone false teaching.  It leads other people away from Jesus.  “LEAVE.”  LORD Jesus, help us to live by faith.  Please lead us to leave as Abram did. 

  C1 God tells us to leave.  He tells us to leave when we are being subjected to temptation to sin. But we like to play superman and superwoman. “O come on, Lord. I am not that weak.  I know Your will.  Nobody is going to get me to fall into sin.  I know temptations when I hear them.  I can put myself in any circumstance.  I can let myself be inundated by all kinds of temptation and still come out smelling like a rose.”

   2 You know how God responds?  “I told you to leave.  “Bad company corrupts good character.” 1 Cor 15:33.  “Flee evil desires of youth.” 2 Tim 2:22  We are constantly bombarded by the devil, our sinful desires, and the sinful people around us with temptations to sin.  We are incapable on our own of withstanding those attacks.  We can’t ever get away from the sinful desires within us, but we can flee from circumstances that fuel our sinful desires.  We can’t get away from the devil, but we can get away from the people whom the devil uses to tempt us to sin.  God says: “LEAVE.”  LORD Jesus, help us to live by faith. Please lead us to leave as Abram did. 


IIA1 When God told Abram to leave, He gave Abram a whole string of promises.  “All peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”(3)  The repetition of the promise gives us more detail.  “Through your offspring all nations on earth will be blessed.” (Gen 22:18) Abram’s offspring would provide a blessing that would benefit everybody everywhere throughout the history of the world.   Jesus of Nazareth was the offspring of Abram.  Through His life, death, and resurrection, He provided all people everywhere throughout history forgiveness, righteousness and eternal life.  That’s what this part of the promise is about.  

   2 “I will make you into a great nation.”(2) Abram and Sarai were childless.  Hardly a good start at being a great nation.  Much later in Egypt their descendants became numerous.  Later under David and Solomon they became powerful and influential.   “I will bless you.” (2) Abram was one of the richest men in the area.  “I will make your name great.” (2)Abram became famous. He still is.  People descended from David make sure you know it.  It’s a matter of pride.  Anybody who studies the Bible or the Koran knows who Abram was.  “You will be a blessing.”(2) God used Abram to provide benefits for people throughout his life.  Abram left.  That indicates he believed the promises of God.  He lived by faith.  

 B1 God gives us a whole string of promises.  He promises to forgive our sins because of Jesus’ death.  He promises to take away our deserved punishment because Jesus suffered it for us.  He promises to cover us with the holiness which Jesus lived for us.  He promises that He will give us the eternal life which Jesus won by His resurrection.  We get up every day confident that we are acceptable to God because of Jesus.  Confident that we will remain acceptable to Him. Confident that we will spend eternity with the LORD because of Jesus.  Why?  Because the LORD had led us to believe His promises as Abram did.   

  2 God promises us that He is going to be with us all the time in this world.  He promises to give us the strength we need to handle all the difficulties in our lives.  He promises to give us the direction that we need to make right decisions in our lives.  He promises to turn even the worst of circumstances in our lives to something beneficial for our relationship with Him.  We get up every day confident that we are not alone.  Confident that our problems won’t overwhelm us.  Confident that we will make the right decisions.  Confident that we will stay close to Jesus.  Why?  Because the LORD had led us to believe His promises as Abram did.  

  3 God promises that He is going to use us to accomplish His work.  He promises that His Word which we speak will bring others to trust in Him.  He promises that our godliness will direct others to Him.  He promises that our action will do for others what they need.  We get up every day confident that we can speak Law and Gospel to people when called upon to do so.  Confident that we will live our godliness as a witness to Jesus.  Confident that we will make use of opportunities to love others as the Lord places them before us. Why?   Because the LORD had led us to believe His promises as Abram did.  LORD Jesus, help us to live by faith.  Please lead us to continue to believe your promises.


IIIA1 Twice in the last two sentences we have similar comments.   6 Abram traveled through the land as far as the site of the great tree of Moreh at Shechem. So he built an altar there to the LORD, who had appeared to him. ........ 8 From there he went on toward the hills east of Bethel and pitched his tent, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. There he built an altar to the LORD and called on the name of the LORD.  Another phrase is significant.  At that time the Canaanites were in the land.  Abram and his people were not alone.  When he did things, people who were already there were watching.  

   2 What tendency would a newcomer have in a situation like that?  To go along with the customs and practices of the people who were already there.  Don’t want to be weird.  Don’t want people to look at me funny.  Do whatever the Canaanites did just to fit in.  Abram didn’t do that in spiritual matters.  He had a different God.  He approached God in a different way.  He had different directions from His God than they did from theirs.  So, he on his own built altars to the LORD and worshiped only Him.  

  B1 Christians are a minority in any society in our world today including here in the United States.  That means we are significantly different from the people around us.   Our being different automatically calls attention to ourselves.  That is a good thing.  People are watching us.    That is a good thing.  When we take time every week to worship Jesus, people notice because not many people do that.  It indicates to others how important Jesus is to us.  

   2 Christians are a minority in any society in our world today including here in the United States.  That means we are surrounded by all kinds of other views of spirituality as Abram was in Canaan.     We are tempted to go along with the beliefs and customs and practices of the people around us.  Don’t want to be weird.  Don’t want people to look at me funny.  Do whatever everybody else does just to fit in.  

   C1 But we don’t.  Why not?  We have a different God.  We worship the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit God.  We worship Jesus of Nazareth who is really God and also really human and lived and died and rose to give us forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life.   We believe He is the only God who exists.  We only worship Him. Nobody else.  Not to be snobbish.  Not to be condescending.  Out of love.  We want others to know who the true God is.  

    2 We don’t do what everybody else does just to fit in.  Why not?  We approach our God in a totally different way than they do.  We don’t approach God because we “have done our best to do our duty to God to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight.”  We are sinners.  That approach would never work.  We don’t have a relationship with God because we have made an intellectual decision to let Him into our lives.  We are by nature dead.  We don’t have the ability to make that kind of a decision on our own.   We don’t approach God on the basis of some mandated spiritual activity.  That doesn’t work.  All our outwardly righteous acts are tainted with sin.   We can only approach God and have a relationship with Him because of Jesus.  We can’t be dishonest and act as if we are approaching God in the same way that others do.  So, we will build our own altar and worship Jesus.   Not to be snobbish.  Not to be condescending.  Out of love.  We want others to know that Jesus is the only way to be right with God.   

   3 We don’t do what everybody else does just to fit in.  Why not?  Because our God has given us directions and perspectives about life that are totally different from what everybody else thinks and does.  So we insist on only doing things God’s way.  Not to be snobbish.  Not to be condescending.  Out of love.  We want others to know that only if we continue in Jesus’ teachings are we really His disciples.   LORD Jesus, help us to live by faith.  Please lead us to continue to only worship You.      

  




February 26, 2023

CWA- Lent 1 - Free Text - Epistle  - Kieth Bernard Kuschel


                        2 Corinthians 11:14 -15


Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. 15 It is not surprising, then, if his servants masquerade as servants of righteousness.  


IA1 If you were to ask the man on the street, “What is life about?”, what would he say?   “Life is about what I can see and touch and enjoy and experience right now.  Life is about the people I have relationships with.”  Notice anything missing?  Nothing about the supernatural.  Nothing about God.

   2 If you were to ask the man on the street, “What do you think about the devil?”, what would he say?  “You mean the little guy in the red suit with a pitchfork? I don’t think about him at all.  I don’t believe there is such a being.  I think he is a leftover from people who lived many years ago who were ignorant about a lot of things.”  What’s the point of this survey of the man on the street’s opinion?  We are influenced by what people around us believe. 

  B1 Jesus conquered every temptation which Satan threw at Him.  We had three examples of that in the Gospel lesson for today.  He did that as our Substitute.  He takes the holiness that He lived by conquering Satan’s temptations and covers us with it.  That is what makes us acceptable to God.  “Through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous.”(Rom 5:19)

  2 Jesus died as punishment for our sins.  But then He rose.  What does that mean?  It means that the devil can’t end our existence with death as a consequence of our sins as he wants to.  “Jesus shared in our humanity so that by His death He might destoy him who holds the power of death - that is, the devil (Hebr 2:14).  

  3 The risen Jesus lives in us.  He empowers us to live our lives His way.  We can say “No,” to Satan.  Because of that “God will crush Satan under our feet.”(Rom 16:20) Why review that Jesus “appeared to destroy the devil’s work”? (I John 3:8) Because that shapes how we think. 

 C1 The devil doesn’t exist.  The devil has been conquered.  Both of those conclusions could lead to something bad.  What?  An attitude which says, “The devil is not a problem.  I don’t need to worry about him.”  I get how the first one could be bad.  But you mean you are telling me Satan could use the truths of the Scripture about Jesus to produce something bad in my life?  Exactly.  Isn’t that what he tried to use with Jesus in the Gospel lesson? 

   2 If you ever catch yourself concluding that the devil is not a problem, please read 1 Pet 5:8.  Be self-controlled and alert.  Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.  Resist him, standing firm in the faith.”  God through Peter wouldn’t have given us that warning if the devil is not a problem.  Paul’s warning to us in the verse before us today is:  Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. 


IIA1 A few years ago the bishop of Green Bay, WI, formally invited the pope to visit Green Bay when he comes to the United States.  The Green Bay diocese must have wanted the message of Jesus the Savior to get a big boost in Wisconsin so they invited the pope to come. 

   2 Maybe.  The presenting reason for inviting him to the Green Bay diocese was to have his presence validate a miraculous appearance of the Virgin Mary which occurred in a small town in the diocese of Green Bay some years ago.   

  B1 Sometimes it is very difficult in our lives to know what we ought to do next.   I really miss the advice of my parents who have died.  And you know, when I think about them really hard, I get visions of them talking to me.  Like they miraculously appear to me from the dead and give me advice. 

   2 Sometimes the burdens of this life get pretty heavy.  Especially terminal disease.   Even with all our medical advances, technology, drugs and people, no cure seems to be possible.  My friend told me that they get a group together and touch the sick person and call on God to heal people.  And sometimes miracles happen. 

  3 Sometimes I get really down on myself about my relationship with God.  My trust in Him isn’t very strong.  My godliness isn’t very good. I doubt that I am a Christian.    I need something out of the ordinary to convince me that I am a Christian.  Maybe if I could speak in languages that I hadn’t ever learned as the apostles did on Pentecost that would be a miraculous sign from God that I am really a Christian. 

  C1 What is the common thread in all of these scenarios?  Something miraculous.  A miraculous appearance of Mary. A miraculous appearance of dead parents.  A miraculous healing of people’s physical bodies.  A miraculous activity to cure doubt.  There is another common thread in these scenarios.   No emphasis that Christianity is about Jesus.   No mention that Jesus promises to be with us always and take care of us in the future.  No mention that the physical healing of our bodies is not as important as the spiritual healing for our souls which Jesus accomplished.  No mention that Jesus successful work of living and dying and rising to give forgiveness, holiness and eternal life is the only objective basis of our confidence about our relationship with God. 

   2 What is the point of running through these four scenarios?  The point is just because miracles happen doesn’t mean that they come from Jesus.  In fact, if they point people away from Jesus, they can’t be coming from Jesus.  Listen to Jesus, “False prophets will appear and perform great signs and miracles to deceive even the elect - if that were possible.”(Matt 24:24).  Listen to Paul.  2 Thess 2:9 “the work of Satan displayed in all kinds of counterfeit miracles, signs and wonders, and in every sort of evil that deceives those who are perishing.”  Paul’s warning to us in the verse before us today is:  Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. 


IIIA1 In the Old Testament lesson for today we heard Satan talking.  4 “You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman.”  That was a direct contradiction of God who had said, “17 but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.”  Satan was lying about the consequences of sin.  

  2 What was this whole contradiction about?   It was about how to have a right relationship with God.  Human creatures had a dependent relationship on the God who created them and everything around them.  Satan who hadn’t been satisfied with his position of lesser authority indicated to the human creatures that they should strive for a peer relationship with God rather than a dependent one.  His words were. 5 “ when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”  Satan was lying about how to have a relationship with God.

  B1 What is our situation when it comes to having a relationship with God?  Our consciences tell us that we do things that make the Giver of the standard of right and wrong upset.  Our actions disrupt our relationship with God.  That conclusion is reinforced when we hear God’s Law as it is given to us in the Bible.  “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” Rom 3:23

   2 Our logical brains easily come up with a solution to this.  We have to fix this problem.  We have to refuse to sin.  We have to always do what is right.  We have to hang out with the right people who will influence to do what is right.  We have to avoid the situations which will lead us to do what is wrong.  We have to train our minds to think God’s thoughts. 

  C1 We are reinforced in that fix it yourself view by the secular moralists of our world who say that humans must make the world a better place in which to live by working hard at doing what is right.  We are also reinforced in the fix it yourself view by all the spiritual and nonChristian religious people in our world who say that humans have to cultivate the good that is in each of us.  Satan loves it.  He was the originator of the idea that humans had to do something to get to have an appropriate relationship with God.  The problem is:  He was and is a liar.       Listen to Paul: "The devil has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the Gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God."(2 Cor 4:4)

   2 Jesus is the only one who can make us right with God.  He does that by washing away our sins in His blood, by covering us with His righteousness and by making that relationship with God permanent by giving us eternal life because of His resurrection.  Paul’s warning to us today is: It is not surprising, then, if the devil’s servants masquerade as servants of righteousness.   

   Prayer: LORD Jesus, thanks for reminding me that Satan is a problem,/ that not all miracles come from You,/ and that Satan lies about how I get to be right with You






February 19, 2023

CWA- O T Lesson - Transfiguration Sunday -  KB Kuschel


Exodus 24: 12, 15-18


12  The LORD said to Moses, “Come up to me on the mountain and stay here, and I will give you the tablets of stone with the law and commandments I have written for their instruction.”  15 When Moses went up on the mountain, the cloud covered it, 16 and the glory of the LORD settled on Mount Sinai. For six days the cloud covered the mountain, and on the seventh day the LORD called to Moses from within the cloud. 17 To the Israelites the glory of the LORD looked like a consuming fire on top of the mountain. 18 Then Moses entered the cloud as he went on up the mountain. And he stayed on the mountain forty days and forty nights.


IA1 Three months before our text occurred, Israel had left Egypt after the firstborn of the Egyptians were all killed.  Then they had walked through the Red Sea. God had provided them with miracles to give them water, manna and quail. 

   2 Now they were at Mt Sinai.  There God told them that they were His special people.  He made His presence obvious to them with thunder, lightning, a thick cloud and a trumpet blast.  He gave them the ten commandments, laws about worship, about slaves and workers, about personal injury, protection of property, social responsibility, justice and mercy and the three major annual festivals.  Then He called Moses into His presence to receive the written form of His commands.  24:12  The LORD said to Moses, “Come up to me on the mountain and stay here, and I will give you the tablets of stone with the law and commandments I have written for their instruction.”   

  B1 Where do we get direction for our lives?   Sometimes the direction comes from inside us.  Based on the bad stuff that happened the last time we did whatever it was we are thinking about doing, we decide not to do it.  Based on the positive results that happened the last time we did whatever it was we are thinking about doing, we decide to do it.  Based on the negative feeling we have when we think about doing something, we don’t do it.  Based on the good feeling we have when we think about doing something, we do it.  Some of the direction in our lives comes from our consciences.  

    2 There is a potential problem here.  We can do the opposite of what our consciences tell us to do or to avoid.  And we can make our consciences not work so well anymore by doing the opposite of what our consciences tell us to do.  If that is the case, where are we to go to get correct direction for our lives?  The LORD says to us as He said to Moses, “ “Come up to me and stay here, and I will give you..... the law and commandments I have written for (your) instruction.”  What a blessing it is to be able to go into God’s presence and get direction from someone who loves us and who gives us directions through which we are blessed.  

  C1 Where do we get direction for our lives? Sometimes the direction comes from outside of us.   The laws of our land tell us which way to drive on our roads, among other things.  The rules of our household tell us where it is proper to place our clothes when we are not using them. The procedures of our place of work tell us what is appropriate or not appropriate for that environment.  Other people give us advice as to what is right or wrong in a given situation.  

   2 There is a potential problem here.  Sometimes the government says something like abortion is legal when God says it is sinful.  Sometimes the household rules allow us to not use God’s Word when God says that is sinful.   Sometimes the work environment expects us to be less than truthful when God says that is sinful.  Our friends, relatives, acquaintances and neighbors often tell us to do what is for our advantage regardless of how it affects others when God says that is sinful.  If that is the case, where are we to go to get correct direction for our lives?  The LORD says to us as He said to Moses, “ “Come up to me and stay here, and I will give you..... the law and commandments I have written for (your) instruction.”  What a blessing it is to be able to go into God’s presence and get direction from someone who loves us and who gives us directions through which we are blessed.  

  D1 Why can we have the confidence that what God tells us to do in His Law is intended to bless us?  God made humans.  They were perfect.  God made the world.  It was perfect.  God wanted His creatures to have a perfect existence filled with His blessings.  They had that perfect existence as long as they followed God’s directions for life.  

    2 God hasn’t changed.  He still wants our lives to be filled with His blessings.  He knows how we should live in order to access those blessings.  He tells us in His Law how to live to access His blessings.  The problem is, although the LORD hasn’t changed, we have.  We are sinners.  We don’t carry out the LORD’s directions for our lives.  Thus God’s blessings get cut off.  But we ask His help to implement His directions in our lives so that His blessings don’t get cut off.  What a blessing it is for us to hear the Lord say to us: “Come up to me and stay here, and I will give you..... the law and commandments I have written for (your) instruction.”


IIA1 When Moses went up on the mountain, the cloud covered it.{15}  For six days the cloud covered the mountain,{16}   This cloud was not something new.  Right after they had left Egypt a cloud guided them on their way.  When they were trapped by the Egyptian army against the water, the cloud moved between them and provided a barrier to help them escape.  Now on Mt Sinai they knew what this cloud meant.  Moses tells us what it meant.  {16}The glory of the LORD settled on Mount Sinai. 

   2 There was more to see.  {17}A consuming fire on top of the mountain.  This was not anything new either.  Right after they had left Egypt a pillar of fire guided them at night so they could travel on their way also at night.  When they were trapped by the Egyptian army against the water, the pillar of fire moved between them and provided light so that they could see their escape route through the waters of the Red Sea.  Now on Mt Sinai they knew what this consuming fire meant.  Moses tells us what it meant. 17 To the Israelites the glory of the LORD looked like a consuming fire on top of the mountain.  

  B1 What conclusions did God want them and us  to draw from this cloud?  A cloud hides.  God is a spiritual creature.  Humans are physical creatures.  The difference is so big that we can’t begin to understand Him.  He is hidden from us   He has to tell us about Himself, if we are to know anything about Him.  

   2 What conclusions did God want them and us  to draw from this consuming fire?  Fire burns up and destroys.  He had told them not to approach Mt Sinai or they would die.  He had displayed His destructive power through the plagues in Egypt.  He had done the same when He let the water drown the Egyptian army.  God has the power to destroy. 

  C1 This hidden God who has the power to destroy on the seventh day ........ called to Moses from within the cloud.  What did He says to Moses?  “Come here, Moses.”  How do I know that? Because of verse  18 Then Moses entered the cloud as he went on up the mountain. And he stayed on the mountain forty days and forty nights.  Who was this Moses who got this invitation?  This was the man who murdered an Egyptian.  The man who tried to talk God out of giving him his job.  This was the man God invited to come through the cloud that hid Him from people.

  2 This Moses was allowed to stay in God’s presence.  The fire didn’t consume him.  God’s anger over Moses’ murder and his refusal to shoulder his responsibility earlier in his life didn’t burn him up.  The power which He had used to destroy in Egypt and at the Red Sea wasn’t used against Moses.  The same hidden God who is a consuming fire invites humans into His presence and lets them stay there.   

  D1 Things haven’t changed.  The cloud hasn’t left.  On our own we humans don’t understand who God is or what He is like.  We just don’t get spiritual things.  The only thing we on our own know for sure about God is that we don’t know much for sure about God.  

   2 The consuming fire hasn’t left.  Our consciences tell us that we are guilty and deserve God’s punishment.  He still threatens to punish sin with physical death and separation from Him.  

   3 But He still invites us into His presence.  He says to us what He said to Moses: “Come here and be with me.”  And He allows us to come and stay.  Why can He do that?  He has taken our sins and put them on Jesus.  Jesus took them to the cross, shed His blood and washes them away.  Why can He do that?  He has taken the holiness, which Jesus lived as our Substitute and covers us with it.  We are acceptable to Him.  Can stand right next to Him on His mountain.  Jesus rose from the dead.  We can stay there forever. 

  E1 The glory of the LORD.   That means “the reason God deserves us to say, ‘God is great and God is good.’” He deserves to be praised because He is way beyond our comprehension as if hidden by a cloud.   He deserves our praise for defining and enforcing what is right and wrong - He is a consuming fire.  

   2 But the primary reason we say, “God is great and God is good,” is because He invites us into His presence and makes it possible through Jesus our Savior for us to stay there.  The biggest reason we praise God is He is our Savior who gives us forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life and allows us to belong to Him.  The glory of the Lord - it’s the Gospel - the good news about Jesus.  

 3 That’s what Transfiguration Sunday is about, isn’t it.  The hidden God of whom we are terrified because of our sins who showed  Himself to Moses, Elijah, His disciples and us in all His glory - in His power as God and with His resolve to go to Jerusalem to die and rise so we might have eternal life.  LORD Jesus, thank You for letting us come into Your presence to see Your glory.  




February 12, 2023

CWA Epiphany 6 Supplemental - Epistle Lesson(Partial)

 K B Kuschel


I Thessalonians 4: 11-12

11 Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business, and to work with your hands, just as we told you, 12 so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody.


      How do I win respect from other people?  Win a Super bowl.  Be a Super Bowl MVP.  Today

St Paul reminds us that there are other ways to win respect.  


IA1 The Thessalonian Christians seemingly had a fixation about Jesus’ second coming.  That’s all they thought about.  That’s all they talked about.  When other people saw them coming, they said, “Here come those fanatics.  Let’s try to avoid them.”

   2 Paul’s advice is: “Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life.”{11}  Literally the words say, “Get all excited about being quiet.”  In other words, “Stop being fanatics.  Don’t become obnoxious to others when speaking about what you believe.”  

   3 Paul’s advice is “Win respect by leading a quiet life. Live your life, acknowledging that Jesus could return today.  If others ask you about Jesus’ return, tell them He could come today.  Tell them that the message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ assumes a second coming of Jesus to judge the world.  But don’t be a fanatic or obnoxious about it.”

  B1 Why is that good advice for us Christians today?  Well, how do people react to somebody whom they consider to be a fanatic or obnoxious about an issue?   They avoid us.  If they can’t physically avoid us, they  tune us out as soon as we start talking.  Why is that bad?  Because our purpose in the world is to share words about Jesus with others.  If they tune us out, we can’t do what we are supposed to be doing.   

   2 “Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life.”  Quietly live a godly life on a daily basis.  If somebody asks you about eternity, tell them that yours is secure because of Jesus.  If somebody asks you about Jesus, tell them He lived and died and rose so all of us can have forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life.   Quietly be active in your congregation as it shares Jesus with others.  Quietly give 10% of your income to preach the Gospel in this community and throughout the world.   But don’t get the reputation of being a fanatic, or someone who is obnoxious about pushing what you believe on others.  

  3 This verse reminds me of an ad on TV many years ago.  When EF Hutton, the quiet company talks, everybody listens.    Be a quiet person.  Don’t be a motor mouth. Don’t have hoof-in mouth.  Only speak when you have something meaningful to say.  Don’t get fanatic about every little thing that comes along.  Then people will listen to you.  When we speak the gospel, we need listeners.  Don’t turn listeners away by being a fanatic or obnoxious. Win their respect by leading a quiet life.    


IA1 How would the Thessalonian Christians respond when others didn’t share their fanaticism?  They would probe and push and prod.  Paul’s advice is: “Mind your own business.” {11}

   2 Why that advice?  What do people do with others who don’t mind their own business?  They get very defensive.  They build walls around themselves so that the people who aren’t minding their own business can’t get in.  

   B1 Mind your own business.  What is our business?  Jesus told us.  “Continue in my word," He said.

{John 8:31}  Our business is to know the Word of God.   Use it in worship, in Bible class, in Sunday School, in & for Catechism class, and  in your family unit.  Read it.   Then we are minding our business. 

  2 What is our business?  Jesus told us.  “Love your neighbor,”(Matt 22:39) He said.    We safeguard our neighbor’s reputation, his financial well-being, his sexual purity, and his physical well-being.  We support him financially, physically, and emotionally. That’s minding our business.  

  3 What is our business?  Jesus told us.  “Give thanks in all circumstances.”(1 Thess 5:18)  To the LORD for all He has done for us.  By attempting to follow His will.  To people who have benefited us.  By doing good to them.   That is minding our business.   

  4 What is our business?  Jesus told us.  “Be my witnesses.”(Acts :8)  Tell people Jesus is God and Man in One person.  Tell people that Jesus died to wash away their sins.  Tell them that Jesus lived a holy life so He could cover them with His holiness.  Tell them that Jesus rose from the dead so that they might live forever.  That is minding our business.  

  C1 When we don’t probe and prod and push, people might feel comfortable around us.  When people have not built a defensive wall around themselves against us, they might take us into their confidence in time of need or seek our advice in a time of uncertainty.  

   2 When people are led by their daily contacts with us to realize that we know the Bible, that we attempt to be helpful to people, that we are filled with thankfulness to our LORD, and that we have a relationship with Jesus, even if they don’t agree with what we believe, they will respect us.  In other words, we will have won their respect by minding our own business.


IIIA1 The Thessalonian Christians had such a fixation about Jesus’ second coming, that some of them quit their jobs to wait for Jesus.   As the days passed, they became dependent on the support of other Christians for food, clothing, shelter and other needs.  Soon  they expected the less fanatic Christians, who were still working, to take care of all their physical needs.

   2 Paul’s advice is: “Work with your hands, so that you will not be dependent on anybody.”   Working with one’s hands to provide for oneself is one of the God approved ways to attain the necessities of life.  Choosing to be dependent on others risks the resentment of others.  Choosing to be dependent on others tells outsiders that Christians consider themselves to be special and deserving of special treatment by ordinary people.   That condescension from Christians is a hindrance to the acceptance of the Gospel of Jesus Christ by outsiders.   

  B1 “Work with your hands, so that you will not be dependent on anybody.”     God has given us jobs by which we can earn money to provide for ourselves and our dependents the necessities of life.  When we work hard at those jobs and are thus able to provide for ourselves, we are doing something that pleases God. 

   2 “Work with your hands, so that you will not be dependent on anybody.”    When we do that, we will avoid the resentment of people who would be forced to take care of people who should be taking care of ourselves.  When we do that, we are not going to be viewed as religious parasites.  Christians ought to be viewed as people who have something to give to the world, the message of Jesus Christ, rather than people we are always looking for handouts from the world.  

  3 What kind of reputation does we have in our community?  Are we viewed as people with our hands out always trying to give somebody something?  Or are we looked at as people with our hands out always asking the community to give to us?  “Work with your hands, so that you will not be dependent on anybody.”    When we work hard at our jobs, and  give 10% of our income to the LORD, then we don’t have to have our hands out and be dependent on others to shoulder the financial aspect of preaching the Gospel.   That will win the respect of outsiders.  

  Conc.  You don’t have to be famous to win respect of people who don’t know you.  Just quietly and independently go about minding your own business.  

   

February 5, 2023

CWA - OT Lesson Supplemental  - Epiphany 5 -  KBKuschel


                                  Joshua 24:14- 24

14 “Now fear the LORD and serve him with all faithfulness. Throw away the gods your ancestors worshiped beyond the Euphrates River and in Egypt, and serve the LORD. 15 But if serving the LORD seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. But as for me and my household, we will serve the LORD.”   16 Then the people answered, “Far be it from us to forsake the LORD to serve other gods! 17 It was the LORD our God himself who brought us and our parents up out of Egypt, from that land of slavery, and performed those great signs before our eyes. He protected us on our entire journey and among all the nations through which we traveled. 18 And the LORD drove out before us all the nations, including the Amorites, who lived in the land. We too will serve the LORD, because he is our God.”  19 Joshua said to the people, “You are not able to serve the LORD. He is a holy God; he is a jealous God. He will not forgive your rebellion and your sins. 20 If you forsake the LORD and serve foreign gods, he will turn and bring disaster on you and make an end of you, after he has been good to you.”  21 But the people said to Joshua, “No! We will serve the LORD.”  22 Then Joshua said, “You are witnesses against yourselves that you have chosen to serve the LORD.”   “Yes, we are witnesses,” they replied.  23 “Now then,” said Joshua, “throw away the foreign gods that are among you and yield your hearts to the LORD, the God of Israel.”  24 And the people said to Joshua, “We will serve the LORD our God and obey him.”


Intro

Why has God given you family?

Blessing to you.

Opportunity to exercise responsibility.

Opportunity to practice love

How about: As a platform from which to show Jesus to others


IA1 15“As for me and my household we will serve the LORD.”  Joshua spoke those words.  He spoke them to the assembled leaders of Israel.  He spoke them as a farewell speech. He had been their leader for a long time. He had moved them into the land of Canaan.  He had helped them conquer everybody in sight.  He had led them as they overcame walled cities.  He had led them to settle into the land.  They were now farming their own land, living in their own cities and eating from their own vineyards and olive groves.

    2    14 “Throw away the gods your ancestors worshiped beyond the Euphrates River and in Egypt.” . 15 or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. These two references remind us that the Israelites had some other gods which they might have chosen to worship.  They had some real skeletons in their history closet.  Some of their ancestors had built the tower of Babel.    Some of them had worshiped the gods in Egypt.  Some of them had worshiped the god Wealth by refusing to dedicate war booty to the LORD.  Some of them had gotten involved with the local gods of the Amorites, the people of Palestine, gods called Baal and Astarte.  There were many other gods besides the LORD for people to serve.  

     B1 “As for me and my household we will serve the LORD.”   We have lots of choices today too, don’t we?   What god are we serving?  The god of the tower of Babel is still around.  Is the god named My Career Advancement?  Are all the decisions made in your family related to the career advancement of the adults?  Is the goal of the family to educate the children in the best way possible so they can have the best careers?   Are all the activities that we are involved in intended to make it possible for the members of the family to get or keep what we would consider to be the most desirable careers?  

   2   The god of Achan is still around.  Is the god your household serves called Standard of Living?  Is a primary topic of discussion amongst the family what you have or what

you want to get?  Is the level of compensation and fringe benefits the thing you focus on when discussing profession or career?  Is the size and location of your home very

important to you?  How about the style or make of automobile? 

   3 The  god of wanting to be back in Egypt is still around.  Is the god your family serves called Pleasure?  Do you work hard at your job so that you can have enough resources to do whatever you want to do?   Do you schedule your life around things that the members of your family enjoy?  Is it really important for the members of the family to get good at something that they enjoy so that they can get the most out of life?

   4 The gods Baal and Astarte are still around.   What really grabs our attention in advertising?  What snags you so that you watch the TV news?   What is on the front cover of the magazines at the grocery checkout place?   What always seems to be a major part of  TV or movie presentations?   If sexuality is such a focus of so much of our attention, what god are we serving? 

   C1 Jesus said to us: “You are lights of the world.”(Mt 5:14)   He could have said the same thing in these words:  “The world, in other words all the people in the world, are to see Me by watching you.”   Or He could have said, “You are epiphanies of Me.  You show Me to other people.”

     2 If people spent some time in our families, would they see who our God is?  Is our god Self,  Resources, Enjoyment, Sexuality, or is our God Jesus?   


IIA1 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  Well, God had taken the initiative.  He had picked out Abraham to be the father of a people from whom the Savior was to come.  Joshua was a descendant of Abraham.  Had Abraham deserved that choice from God?  Not if we assume that he was included in the ancestors who worshiped other gods beyond the Euphrates River.  Choice must have been based on who God is.  The God of grace.  

   2 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  Well, there was a lot of time in between Abraham and Joshua.  Maybe 600 years.   God had seen to it that His truth was preserved by people like Isaac and Jacob and Judah so that Joshua was aware of who the LORD was.   Did Isaac the one who played favorites and Jacob the deceiver and Judah who got in some really messy situations deserve to be carriers of the promise of the Savior?  Obviously not.  It happened because God loves people who don’t deserve it.  

  3 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  It sounds as if there was the danger of adopting the gods of Egypt when Israel was there for 400 years.   But God saw to it that a physical, social and thus spiritual separation existed between the descendants of Jacob and the Egyptians so that didn’t happen.  It happened because God loved them. 

  4 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  Because God had decided His people had spent enough time in Egypt, sent Moses in, and forced the Pharaoh’s hand through the miraculous activities which damaged Egypt considerably to allow his free labor to leave, so that they might once again exercise their relationship with Him.  Why?  He loved them.

  5 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  Because God hadn’t let all the people who were his ancestors die during their forty years traveling to the land of Canaan.  No normal source of food and water should have meant extinction and no Joshua.  But daily manna and quail from God’s hand solved that.    No trained army should have meant extinction at the hands of the nations through which they traveled.  That didn’t happen either.   

  6 Why was the LORD Joshua’s God?  Because He had kept His promise and allowed them to overcome those living in Canaan even though they were more powerful, had more military experience and lived in walled cities.  These are the words of the text.  17 It was the LORD our God himself who brought us and our parents up out of Egypt, from that land of slavery, and performed those great signs before our eyes. He protected us on our entire journey and among all the nations through which we traveled. 18 And the LORD drove out before us all the nations, including the Amorites, who lived in the land. That is why the LORD was Joshua’s God.  Because God did all that.  

  B1 Why is Jesus our God?  Because God took the initiative.  He picked us out to be His sons and daughters.  Was it because we had such a good track record of seeking Him?  Based on our previous look at all the gods we struggle to excise from our lives, it would not appear so.  His choice must have been just based on who He is.  The God of grace.  

  2   Why is Jesus our God?  Because God saw to it that we had ancestors who were believers in Him as their Savior.  Because God saw to it that we had parents who applied the Gospel to our lives through Word and Baptism.  

   3 Why is Jesus our God?  Because God washed away our sins in the blood of Jesus.  Because God covered us with the holiness of Jesus.  Because  God gives us a relationship that will never stop because of the resurrection of Jesus.  

  4 Why is Jesus our God?  Because Jesus did miracles to prove to us that He is God.  Because Jesus did the miracle of convincing us that He is God and Man at the same time and thus could be our Savior.  

  5 Why is Jesus our God?  Because Jesus continues to live in our hearts as He comes to us through word and Sacrament, thus keeping us trusting that He is our Savior from sin.  Because Jesus continues to live in our hearts as He comes to us through word and Sacrament, thus keeping us motivated to live our lives His way so that we don’t divorce ourselves from Him .  

  6 Why is Jesus our God?  Because Jesus conquered the devil so that he can’t control our lives and can’t commandeer our eternity.  Because Jesus conquers our spiritual enemies who ridicule us and try to badger us to give up Jesus.  That is why Jesus is our God.  Because God did and does all that. 

   C1 Jesus said to us: “You are lights of the world.”   He could have said the same thing in these words:  “The world, in other words all the people in the world, are to see Me by watching you.”   Or He could have said, “You are epiphanies of Me.  You show Me to other people.”

  1. If people spent some time in our families, would they hear about all that God has done for us?  Would they then understand why Jesus is our God?


 IIIA1  14 “Now fear the LORD and serve him,” Joshua told the people.  Fear is an attitude.  Fear says, “I know God’s place and I know my place.”  God is in charge.  He is way above me.  He can do anything.  I can’t.  He can punish.  I can be punished.  He can save.   I can be saved.  

   2    Serve is an action word. To serve means you will not merely acknowledge the existence of god.  You will not just be passive recipients of the Lord’s blessings.  You  and your household are going to be doing some action. 

  B2 What actions constitute service to the LORD?  We serve the LORD when we do what He tells us to do.  In order to determine how we as a household serve the LORD, we should first of all ask the question “What is God’s goal for  individuals and families?”  Answer is: “God wants all to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth.”  So anything that we do which helps anybody come to a knowledge of the truth and be saved is service to the LORD. 

    3 What would you as a household do to try to make sure that every member of the household has come to a knowledge of the truth?  Use the truth regularly.  Your household is going to be serving the LORD when you read age appropriate “Bible books” with your children.  Your household is going to be serving the LORD when you have some program of devotional practice or Scripture study going on as a group or as individual members of the family.   Your household is going to participate weekly with your congregational family as it uses God’s Truth.  Your household members would then be equipped with God’s truth so that they might share it with other people in our world and others might be brought to know the truth and to trust in Jesus the Savior.   

   4 We serve God when we do what He tells us to do.  He tells us to obey, respect, take care of, protect, honor, supply and speak well of others.  He tells us we are to use our assets, our words and our actions to benefit others.  That sounds as if we are serving others.  I thought we were talking about serving God.  Jesus said when we live our lives the way God wants us to, we will lead others to praise our Father in heaven.  When we lead our family members or people outside our families to praise our Father in heaven, they have been led either to have their knowledge of the truth about God reinforced or they have been led to acknowledge the truth about God.  That is serving God.  

   C1 Jesus said to us: “You are lights of the world.”   He could have said the same thing in these words:  “The world, in other words all the people in the world, are to see Me by watching you.”   Or He could have said, “You are epiphanies of Me.  You show Me to other people.”

     2 If people spent some time in our families, would our service to the LORD be obvious to them?

Conc:  LORD JESUS, thank You for giving me my family.  Please help us as a family to be an epiphany of You to anybody who visits us.   


 


   

January 29, 2023

CWA Gospel Lesson - Epiphany 4 –- Kieth Bernard Kuschel

Matthew 5:1-12

1 Now when Jesus saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down. His disciples came to him, 2 and he began to teach them. He said: 3 “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4 Blessed are those who mourn,  for they will be comforted. 5 Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. 6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. 7 Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy. 8 Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. 9 Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. 10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11 “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12 Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you. 

IA Jesus was talking to His disciples in this section.  He was not saying, “Be like this in order to become a Christian.”  He was saying, “Because you are a Christian, you are like this.”  Jesus was teaching, using paradoxes.  Seemingly contradictory statements which lead us to look beneath the surface of the statement to understand Jesus’ point.    

  B1 What are we like?  “Poor in spirit.” A poor person is one who is without the necessities of life.  A person who is poor in spirit is one who acknowledges that he or she is lacking what is necessary to make oneself right with God.  We Christians don’t constantly rehearse all the wonderful, moral, godly things we do.  Why not?  Because we know that they won’t make us acceptable to God.   Only perfection makes us acceptable to God.  We don’t and can’t produce perfection.  Therefore, we acknowledge that we are lacking in the spiritual area of life.  We are poor in spirit.  Since we are poor in spirit, we don’t focus other people’s attention on us. We  focus them on the solution to our spiritual poverty.  That solution is Jesus.  Poor in spirit people show Jesus to others.

   2 What are we like? “Mourners.”   We are sad because our sins make us unworthy of God. We are sad because we continue to do things that are displeasing to a God who has lived and died and risen to give us forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life.  We are sad because of the problems in our lives as a result of our sins.  We are sad because of all the problems in the world because of sin.  Sadness isn’t a very attractive characteristic.  So we don’t tell people to learn as much as they can about us.  We tell people to learn as much as they can about Jesus.  He takes away the cause of our sadness.  Mourners show Jesus to others.  

  3 What are we like?   “Meek.”   We work as hard as we can to get a 4.0 in school, but we feel embarrassed when it gets put in the school district’s communique to the community.  We are starting wide receivers and score a lot of receiving touchdowns but we don’t ever do a touchdown dance.  We are financially well-off but we live in a modest home and drive an ordinary automobile.  Why?  Because we realize that we are blessed by Jesus with intelligence, athletic ability and financial success.  We are not in this world to call attention to ourselves.  Meek people show Jesus to others. 

   4 What are we like?  We “hunger and thirst for righteousness.”  We have an intense desire to be right with God.  Since we are poor in spirit,  we can’t make ourselves right with God.  We have been led to believe that God gives us the righteousness which Jesus of Nazareth lived for us as our Substitute.   We realize that God clothes us with that righteousness through tools.  His Word and the Holy Supper.  So we have an intense desire to use God’s Word and to participate in the Supper.  That intensity points people to Jesus.  Our hunger and thirst for righteousness show Jesus to others.  

  5 What are we like? “Merciful.”  We are kind to others even if they can’t ever repay us.  We are kind to others because we know how it feels to be in need of kindness.  We are kind to others because we know by personal experience how difficult life becomes when it is filled with problems and concerns.  We work hard at not just looking out for ourselves.  We live that way because that is the way Jesus treats us.  When we are asked why we are like that, we mention that is how Jesus treats us.  Merciful people show Jesus to others.  

  6 What are we like?  “Pure in heart.”  We know that our actions and words are driven by our thoughts and emotions.  We actively avoid places, presentations and people who will make our thoughts and emotions impure.   We don’t want to selfishly and sinfully destroy our relationship with Jesus and other people.   The pure in heart show Jesus to others.

   7 What are we like?  “Peacemakers.” .  We attempt to bring people to repent of their sins.

We attempt to deliver to people the forgiveness of sins won by Jesus by His death on the cross.  That brings peace to individuals.  We attempt to solve differences between people by leading them to repent to each other and forgive each other.  That brings peace to people.  Peacemakers show Jesus to others.  

   8 What are we like? “Persecuted because of righteousness.”   Ridiculed and maybe even attacked for insisting that Jesus is the only source of righteousness.  Ridiculed and maybe even attacked for insisting that Jesus’ way of doing things is the right way of doing things.  People persecuted because of righteousness show Jesus to others.   

IIA What are we like?  We are “blessed.”   A blessing is something beneficial.  A blessing is something that gives us joy.  Some translations don’t translate, “Blessed is.....” in this section.  They translate “Happy is.....” What gives us joy?  With what beneficial things are our lives filled? 

    B With what are we blessed? Jesus says: “Theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”  God is active in our lives.  We are comfortable admitting that we are sinners because God is active in our lives through His Law.  We are confident  that  Jesus lived and died and rose to give us forgiveness, holiness, and eternal life because God is active in our lives through the Gospel.  We get up in the morning and are willing to face whatever comes because God is active in our lives through His Word reminding us of His presence.  We look to the future eagerly because God is active in our lives through His Word reminding us of His promises.  We in the kingdom of God show Jesus to others.

   C With what are we blessed? “They will be comforted.”  We are comforted that our sins have been washed away in the blood of Jesus.  We are comforted that we are covered with the holiness of Jesus and thus pleasing to God.  We are comforted that Jesus gives us the strength to go on in life in spite of the problems caused by our sins.  We are comforted that Jesus rules all things and can use the problems in the world caused by sins to accomplish His purposes.  Comforted people show Jesus to others. 

   D With what are we blessed?  “They will inherit the earth.”   We realize that God created the world we live in to nurture us.  We use what Jesus gives us on this earth to take care of our needs as God has directed.  We are content with the amount that the LORD chooses to give us.  We are filled with joy that the entire universe is being managed by Jesus for our benefit.  It all belongs to Him. We are His body.  So it all belongs to us.  Inheritors of the earth show Jesus to others.

   E With what are we blessed?  “They will be filled.”  We know that our lack of holiness has been filled up with the holy life Jesus lived as our Substitute.  We are not driven about wildly trying to achieve our status with God.  We have stability based on God’s gift of Jesus’ righteousness which gives us our right standing with God.  Our fullness shows Jesus to others. 

  F With what are we blessed? “They will be shown mercy.”  We are comfortable being receivers.  We gratefully receive God’s actions for our benefit.  We gratefully receive the forgiveness of sins from Jesus’ death.  We gratefully receive the holiness Jesus lived.   We gratefully receive the eternal life which Jesus won by His resurrection.  That willingness to be receivers is the opposite from humans’ tendency to insist on being accomplishers.  That willingness to be receivers is the result of the Holy Spirit’s work.  Recipients of mercy show Jesus to others.   

   G With what are we blessed?  “We will see God.”  We can’t now.  He isn’t physically present among us.  We will see Him in eternity.  I don’t know how we physical creatures are going to be able to see a nonphysical creature like God.  But God tells us that we will. Besides that Jesus is still the God-Man.  Our confidence that we will see Him tells people that Jesus always keeps His promises.  We who will see God  show Jesus to others. 

   H With what are we blessed?  “They will be called the children of God.”   We are members of

God’s family because of Jesus.  We call each other that.  Other people call us that.  That automatically shows Jesus to others.   

   I With what are we blessed?  “Great is your reward in heaven.  Eternity with the LORD.  A reward given to us not because we earned it but given to us because we are righteous in God’s sight through Jesus.   People in eternity with Jesus because of Jesus show Jesus to others.

   Conc: Jesus made you all epiphanies.  Your character produced in you by the Holy Spirit through God’s Word and your blessedness given to you by the Holy Spirit through God’s Word show Jesus to others.   Thank you Jesus.  Keep the Holy Spirit coming.  Amen.