Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church

Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church
9 E Homestead Ave. Palisades Park, NJ 07650 201-944-2107 Sundays 11:00 a.m. We preach Christ crucified (1. Corinthians 1,23)

Monday, August 26, 2013

Matthew 6,1-4. 13th Sunday after Trinity


One Message: Christ crucified and risen for you

Matthew 6,1-4    4313
13. Sonntag nach Trinitatis  058    
Louis, King of France, † 1270  
25. August 2013

1. O almighty and Merciful God, of whose only gift it cometh that Thy faithful people do unto Thee true and laudable service: Grant, we beseech Thee, that through the merits of Jesus Christ our Lord we do finally attain Thy heavenly promises and may faithfully serve Thee in this life (The Book of Common Prayer, 13. Sunday after Trinity).  Amen. 
2. Jesus taught the crowds and His disciples: „Beware of practicing your righteousness before other people in order to be seen by them, for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven. Thus, when you give to the needy, sound no trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, so that they may be praised by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.“ 
3. There are those who boast in the law. They parade their piety before others. They sound forth how well they keep the commandments. In Jesus’ day such men were the scribes, the lawyers and the Pharisees. These three groups held up the commandments of God and strove to perfectly obey them. They would discuss and interpret the written law and the oral traditions of the elders and offer commentaries on the best course of action in a given situation. The discussion in our Gospel lection for today is an example of how the Pharisees discussed the law. These discussions were not merely devoted to how one was to act in a given situation, but more importantly, how did one merit everlasting life. The Pharisees argued that the law taught Jews to love God and love their neighbors. These two commandments were a summary of the Decalogue. If these two commandments were kept, then one was certain of eternal life. 
4. In His Beatitudes in Matthew 6, Jesus expounds upon these two commandments. Here Jesus discussed how to practice your righteousness in public and how you give your alms. The practicing of righteousness is another way of saying loving your neighbor, and almsgiving was money you gave to some poor beggar or handicapped person so they could buy food, medicine or clothing. The Pharisees made a big show of these things. They gave large sums of money to the poor and infirm. They made sure everyone saw them do this. They made their righteous deeds known to as many people as possible. Jesus said those who carried on this way are hypocrites. 
5. Jesus unveils their hypocrisy in His Parable of the Good Samaritan. What does the law say in the situation presented? Moses wrote that you help your neighbor, tend to his wounds, get him help and preserve his life. What did the Levite and the priest do? They did not obey the law, for they ignored the beaten man and left him in his misery, knowing that ignoring his plight might actually result in his death. The lawyer to whom Jesus told this parable was a hypocrite too. He boasted that keeping the law, that loving God and the neighbor, merited eternal life. He implied that he, as a lawyer and a Pharisee, had kept this law perfectly and thus had earned eternal life from God. This is nothing more than works-righteousness: the obtaining of righteousness by one’s own merit and keeping of God’s law. People like this deal with God in such a way as to get from God what they want (Nagel 204 § 5). They will not receive from God what He wants to freely give. No, they will earn it for themselves and obtain it for themselves. God will owe them their eternal life because they reached forth their hand and took it for themselves and earned it for themselves. Such Pharisees insisted that if they got anything from God it was not a gift but it had been earned. They would do their bit and claim their reward (Nagel 204 § 5). Such were the Pharisees in Jesus’ day and so also in our day. We ourselves are tempted to earn our salvation, do our part and merit our reward by obeying God’s commandments. 
6. „The Law demands the giving of love, which is the opposite of what we are bent on getting for ourselves. It is God’s judgment and condemnation of every motive in us that is contrary to God’s way of giving. Looking at what God requires, then looking at ourselves, we may see how we have become the opposite of what God wants us to be. As the Scriptures say, „By the Law is the knowledge of sin“ (Romans 3:20). No one can make a claim for oneself on the basis of the Law. „The scripture hath concluded all under sin“ (Galatians 3:22). God gave the Law to drive people from the folly of trusting in themselves. He would bring them to recognize the suicide of rejecting God’s way. He would bring them to despair of themselves so that emptied of proud self-getting they might be open once again to receive His gifts“ (Nagel 205 § 7). This was the point of today’s parable: you cannot earn eternal life by keeping the law, for no one is able to keep the law perfectly. No one loves God with all their might, and no one loves their neighbor like themselves. O we can love like this in pieces, but only loving once in a while or most of the time is not sufficient to claim obedience to the law. Obedience must be consistent and constant every minute of every day from the time we open our eyes at our birth until the time we close our eyes in death’s sleep. Such is the tremendous burden of the law, and it is a burden we can never, ever keep. Jesus wanted the lawyer to realize this, and He wants you to realize it too. 
7. No one of us loves God and our neighbor as the law demands. No one of us gives alms without hypocrisy; we want to receive a reward in return. No one of us practices our righteousness humbly. We want to be recognized and commended for the good deeds we do under the law. Consequently, no one of us can claim to merit eternal life by keeping the law. 
8. The good news is you do not have to keep the law perfectly. God does not expect you to do what He knows is inherently impossible for you to do. Jesus brings us the gospel and tells us that He has kept the law for us. Cain after his murderous rage had abated could not bring his dead brother back to life, and Cain could not protect himself from his avenging kinfolk on the horrible murder he had committed. The lawyer was unwilling to help a destitute neighbor in need, and thereby revealed that he truly did not love God or his neighbor as he had boasted before Jesus. What Cain and the lawyer could not do, Jesus did. Jesus showed mercy upon Cain and promised to protect him from vigilantes. Jesus will on the last day reverse Cain’s sinful deed when He raises up Abel’s dead, murdered body along with all the rest who have been buried in death. Jesus stopped and healed a man beaten almost to the point of death and breathed new life into his body. Each one of us are that deathly-beaten man who had been waylaid by the devil who had robbed us of our original righteousness, took our joy of life and left us penniless with only death and hell as our future abode. 
9. Jesus will not abide for death and the devil to have the final word on this earth. Jesus came to this earth to turn the tables on the devil and usurp his machinations in our lives. Jesus did this by keeping the law perfectly. Jesus loves God and He loves you and all people. He proved this love by going to the cross, bearing the law’s punishment upon Himself in our place and reconciling us back to our Heavenly Father. 
10. „God has not given two ways of salvation—one of gift and promise and another for our getting achievements by the works of the Law. That is to make the Law contradict the gift-giving promises. God gives only the one way to His favor, which is the way of His giving and our receiving. His giving what we do not deserve is His grace. Our receiving what He gives is faith. God’s way is the way of gracious giving and the only response to that is our receiving, our faith. That is what alone makes God happy; that is what alone makes us happy“ (Nagel 206 § 12). 
11. The fruit of this gospel is faith, and faith ripens into good works that are found in the law. So we give alms and offerings, not as a means to merit eternal life, but as an expression of the eternal life we have already been given as a gift from Jesus Himself. We love God and our neighbors, not in order to add up points to earn everlasting life, but we love because God has first loved us and His love flows in us and from us to love others in return. We practice our righteousness, not to trumpet our piety before others for accolades and other rewards, but we act righteously because we have received that righteousness from Christ. He has given us His own righteousness, and we share that righteousness with others, especially when our neighbor is in need of help. If we work hard to increase our wages so only to get more possessions for ourselves, then we are only breeding further restlessness in ourselves to that we become consumed with wanting more and getting more (Nagel 208 § 19); this constant obtaining of things will be our reward, but it will only be a temporal reward that lasts as long as we have the money to satisfy our wants. If we work and earn so we may have more to give back to God, to friends, family and others, then our work is a joy, for it is performed in God’s way of doing things“ (Nagel 208 § 19), and Jesus’ way of doing things is always the way of a free gift and an imputed righteousness from His hands. When our good works are focused on God and helping our neighbor, God rewards us with a peaceful conscience. God rewards those who are humble in their service and their giving. His reward may not be in temporal things that catch the eye of the world, but His rewards are more often intangible, such as contentment, joy and the knowledge that God is happy with the work we have done for others. These rewards are mere down-payments on the greater reward that Jesus has already obtained for us which is eternal life in heaven on account of His righteous merit.  Amen. 
12. Let us pray. O Yahweh Christ, Your Name is worthy to be praised from this time forth and forevermore! Send us the Holy Spirit so that all that we say and do flows from Your love and thus flows to our neighbor as an expression of Your love and mercy for them.  Amen. 

To God alone be the Glory 

All Scriptural quotations are translations done by The Rev. Peter A. Bauernfeind using the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, 4. Edition © 1990 by the Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart, and the Novum Testamentum Graece, Nestle-Aland 27. Edition © 1993 by Deutsch Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart. 
ELKB. Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. www.bayern-evangelisch.de/www/index.php. Copyright © 2013 Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. 
Nagel, Norman. Selected Sermons of Norman Nagel: From Valparaiso to St. Louis. Frederick W. Baue, Ed. Copyright © 2004 Concordia Publishing House.  
VELKD. Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. www.velkd.de. Copyright © 2013 Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. 

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Mark 8,22-26. 12th Sunday after Trinity


✠ One Message: Christ crucified and risen for you ✠

Mark 8,22-26 4213
12. Sonntag nach Trinitatis  057     
Agapitus, Martyr 273         
18. August 2013

1. O Almighty and Everlasting God, who art always more ready to hear than we are to pray, and art wont to give more than either we desire or deserve: Pour down upon us the abundance of Thy mercy; forgiving us those things whereof our conscience is afraid and giving us those good things which we are not worthy to ask, but through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord (The Book of Common Prayer, 12. Sunday after Trinity). Amen.
2. And they came to Bethsaida. And some people brought to Jesus a blind man and begged Him to touch him. And He took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the village, and when He had spit on his eyes and laid His hands on him, He asked him: „Do you see anything?“ And he looked up and said: „I see people, but they look like trees, walking.“ Then Jesus laid His hands on his eyes again; and He opened his eyes, his sight was restored and he saw everything clearly. And He sent him to his home, saying: „Do not even enter the village.“ 
3. This healing of the blind man is, like all of Jesus’ miracles, unique. The uniqueness of this miracle is that Jesus heals the man in stages. There is no reason offered for this procedure, but it is another example that Jesus is in complete control of His creation and by whatever method He chooses to heal someone is effective in its results. Another feature of this miracle is that Jesus does it in private. He takes the blind man out of the village, heals him and then tells him to go home ... but not by way of the village. 
4. This miracle shows us that Jesus is not concerned with the glory, praise and honor that the crowds rightly showered upon Him after He performed His miracles. In this way Jesus shows us that the praise of men and women is not the most important thing in this world. This is a hard lesson for us to learn, for often we enjoy the praise of people and perform our deeds in public so others see what good people we are as we lavish in the accolades they give us. 
5. The last few weeks, our Gospel lections have contrasted Jesus from the Pharisees. In Jesus’ day, the Pharisees boasted of their good deeds and received their commendations with a self-righteous pride. Recall last week how the Pharisee boasted in the temple what a great person he was as he  measured himself against a vile tax-collector, one of the worst of sinners. Everyone there saw and heard the pious deeds of that Pharisee. Our selfish egotism is no different. We want the praise of people. We want people to know what we’ve done. And from the other side, we also enjoy lavishing praise on others. Such actions make us feel important, feel good and feel secure. We enjoy being a pharisee, and Jesus knows this. 
6. Jesus, it seems, in Mark 7, wanted to avoid the accolades of the crowd, who brought the blind man to Him in the first place. They begged Jesus to heal the man. Perhaps this is Mark’s polite way of saying the people of Bethsaida were pestering Jesus to heal the man. Jesus, however, does not heal the man because the crowd had asked Him to, nor to receive their praises, but Jesus healed the man because of His great love for him. Thus Jesus in this instance decides to perform His miracle in private and away from the town folk of Bethsaida. Once again He shows compassion and mercy to someone in need. 
7. The Triune God works through ordinary means, and  Jesus performs His miracles through ordinary means. Jesus used saliva and His hands to progressively heal the blind man. in Mark 7 and the deaf mute in Mark 8. Jesus works no differently today. He uses firefighters, police and even priests to help those in car accidents. These individuals use their skills and talents to help others in time of need. When people get sick, yes, Jesus can miraculously heal someone, but more often He uses doctors, nurses and pharmacists who diagnose, treat and administer with treatment options, surgeries or medicines that often heal or bring comfort to those who are sick or afflicted. 
8. In this miracle Jesus treats the man not as some poor, disabled man but as an afflicted man in need of God’s healing. He treats the man as a man, shows Him respect and upholds his dignity. This is how Jesus treats each one of us, whether it is in our sickness, our petitions we lift up to Him or when we come to Him for absolution for our sins. 
9. The Holy Spirit uses the spoken word, water, bread and wine to bring the gospel to people. These elements are ordinary means to which Jesus has attached His promise of forgiveness. This is how the Holy Spirit brings us the promises of Jesus into our midst today. We call these Word and Sacraments the means of grace. For the blind man in Mark 7, the means of grace were saliva and hands, for through these Jesus healed him. For the sinners of the world, the means of grace were a rough wooden cross and an empty tomb. 
10. We are tempted to think that proclaiming the gospel means only telling people about the crucified and risen Jesus. This certainly is the core and cornerstone of the gospel, but often when Jesus healed people He did not launch into a formal teaching on the gospel that He would be crucified and raised from the dead. For the blind man, the gospel was the restoration of His sight. He received this healing from Jesus Himself. Jesus did not tell him to follow Him. He did not exhort him to become His disciple, although it is probable that this man became a disciple. Jesus simply sent the man home. This is simply what Jesus does in your life. You hear the gospel each week and He sends you back home. In your circle of friends, in your vocation and among your neighbors you have opportunities to proclaim the gospel. Jesus has blessed you with this gospel and He blesses you with opportunities to share this gospel. May you speak this gospel to those in your life. Do not be afraid of what to say, for the Holy Spirit will guide your actions and words; He will work through you to bless those who are hurting. 
11. Through you examples Jesus continues to care for the destitute and heal the sick. You are His mouth and hands. Jesus works through you to serve others. The gospel creates faith, faith believes in Jesus unto salvation, and faith bears forth works of mercy. Diaconal service brings Jesus’ mercy to the neighbor. Every time you utilize your talents, abilities or alms in service of your neighbor, you are being merciful to your neighbor. Through these acts of mercy the Holy Spirit brings proof of the validity of the gospel and its power to save men and women, both in body and soul, unto life everlasting.  Amen. 
12. Let us pray. O Yahweh, Your Name is blessed, let Your  words continually be in our mouths so that those who see and hear us may be blessed with Your Spirit’s grace.  Amen. 

Christ crucified and risen for you 

   All Scriptural quotations are translations done by The Rev. Peter A. Bauernfeind using the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, 4. Edition © 1990 by the Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart, and the Novum Testamentum Graece, Nestle-Aland 27. Edition © 1993 by Deutsch Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart.  
   Book of Common Prayer, The. Copyright © 1990 Oxford University Press.
   ELKB. Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. www.bayern-evangelisch.de/www/index.php. Copyright © 2013 Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. 
   VELKD. Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. www.velkd.de. Copyright © 2013 Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. 

Monday, August 12, 2013

Luke 7,36-50. 11th Sunday after Trinity



One Message: Christ crucified and risen for you

Luke 7,36-50   4113
11. Sonntag nach Trinitatis  056    
Tiburtius, Martyr at Rome 286 
11. August 2013

1. O God, who declarest Thy almighty power most chiefly in shewing mercy and pity: Mercifully grant unto us such a measure of Thy grace, so that we, running the way of faith in Thy Name, may receive by faith Thy gracious promises, and be made partakers of Thy heavenly treasure (The Book of Common Prayer, 11. Sunday after Trinity).  Amen. 
2. One of the Pharisees asked Jesus to eat with him, and He went into the Pharisee’s house and reclined at the table. And behold, a woman of the city, who was a sinner, when she learned that He was reclining at table in the Pharisee’s house, brought an alabaster flask of ointment, and standing behind Him at His feet, weeping, she began to wet His feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head and kissed His feet and anointed them with the ointment. Now when the Pharisee who had invited Him saw this, he said to himself: „If this man were a prophet, he would have known who and what sort of woman this is who is touching him, for she is a sinner.“ And Jesus answering said to him: „Simon, I have something to say to you.“ And he answered: „Say it, Teacher.“ „A certain moneylender had two debtors. One owed five hundred denarii [1] 
, and the other fifty. [2] When they could not pay, he cancelled the debt of both. Now which of them will love him more?“ Simon answered: „The one, I suppose, for whom he cancelled the larger debt.“ And He said to him: „You have judged rightly.“ Then turning toward the woman He said to Simon: „Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has wet My feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. You gave Me no kiss, but from the time I came in she has not ceased to kiss My feet. You did not anoint My head with oil, but she has anointed My feet with ointment. Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, because she loved much. But the one to whom little is forgiven little loves little.“ And He said to her: „Your sins have been forgiven.“ Then those who were at table with Him began to say among themselves: „Who is this, who even forgives sins?“ And Jesus said to the woman: „Your faith has saved you; go in peace.“ 
3. There are a number of similarities between this morning’s Gospel lection and our sermon text. Both involve a Pharisee, a gross sinner and God’s mercy. The Pharisee in Luke 7 is a righteous man. This was a common trait among the Pharisees. Their righteousness was based on their keeping of the Mosaic covenant and the many oral traditions of the elders. They were good, moral conservative neighbors. 
4. The sinners, on the other hand, were liars, thieves, prostitutes and murderers. An observant Jew was expected to shun and avoid such people, which wasn’t difficult, because after all who wants to be around such untrustworthy undesirables? 
5. The conventional worldview in Jesus’ day was that the Pharisees were righteous and justified men who had God’s forgiveness. Sinners were unrighteous and unjustified people who were certain to bear God’s wrath and anger. 
6. Luke and the other Evangelists record that Jesus hobnobbed with both the Pharisees and the sinners. Luke himself lists four occasions where Jesus ate a meal as the honored guest of the Pharisees. Simon, however, is shocked that Jesus, a respected teacher and interpreter of the law, would tolerate a sinful woman fawning over Him the way she does. Simon concludes that Jesus is not the prophet he was looking for. Simon trusted in his righteousness and treated both Jesus and the sinful woman with contempt. 
7. Jesus Himself said: »I must preach the gospel of the reign of God ..., for I was sent for this purpose. Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I have not arrived to call the righteous but sinners to repentance« (Luke 4,43; 5,31-32). Jesus arrived to call you to repentance and to preach His gospel to you. Some of us are self-righteous Pharisees who are content with the righteousness we attempt to earn by obeying God’s law. Others of us are distraught sinners obsessed with our guilt. Jesus redeemed both types of people. 
8. The reign of God is about justification; how is a person justified and righteous before God? There is the self-righteous path that leads away from God and ultimately becomes obsessed with the self and its obedience of God’s law and testament. There is also the imputed righteous path that flows from God and leads back to God that simply trusts in Christ and His obedience to His law and testament. 
  9. The Preacher writes in Ecclesiastes: »In my vain life I have seen everything. There is a righteous man who perishes in his righteousness, and there is a wicked man who prolongs his life in his evildoing. Be not overly righteous, and do not make yourself too wise. Why should you destroy yourself?« (Ecclesiastes 7,15-16). A self-righteous person will perish in his righteousness, for he or she, like the Pharisee, will leave the house of God unjustified and unforgiven, but a sinner who falls on the mercy of Jesus, like the sinful woman or the tax collector, will leave the house of God justified and forgiven. Everyone who trusts in Jesus alone and His righteousness will by faith receive that promised gift of imputed righteousness as his or her own. 
10. The gospel changes people. Those who have received the mercy and forgiveness of Christ reciprocate in kind with love. Jesus says that one who has been forgiven a great debt will have much love for Jesus as opposed to someone who has been forgiven a small debt will have less love. In Simon’s case, he has no love for Jesus as he has not received any forgiveness. It is not as if Jesus refused to forgive him, but rather Simon refused the gift because, smug in his own righteousness, he did not perceive the need of Jesus’ forgiveness. Simon’s complete absence of love toward Jesus is exemplified by his complete lack of respect that he had shown Jesus the moment He entered his house. In stark contrast, a sinful woman showered Jesus with love as evidence of the forgiveness Jesus had graciously lavished upon her. Likewise the tax collector in Luke 18 who threw Himself upon God’s mercy and received that very mercy from God who absolved him of his many heinous sins and declared him justified and righteous in His Divine sight. 
11. Jesus humbles those who exalt themselves and exalts those who humble themselves. Jesus is the example par excellence who humbled Himself by being incarnated with human flesh, suffered on the cross, died and three days later exalted Himself by raising Himself from the tomb. Jesus has exalted you, given you His very own righteousness and seals it with your Holy Baptism in the Triune Divine Name. His great mercy now bears much good fruit in your lives. As ones who have been forgiven a great debt by Jesus, respond with great love to Him and your neighbors. In Jesus, your righteousness supersedes that of the Pharisees, and from that imputed righteousness a greater love flows from you that puts all Pharisees to shame. Such is the reality of faith in Jesus and the love that springs forth from that faith.  Amen. 
12. Let us pray. O Merciful Father, who declares all men and women righteous by the merits of Christ Jesus, make us bear food fruit so that we proclaim His gracious deeds among neighbors!  Amen. 

To God alone be the Glory 

All Scriptural quotations are translations done by The Rev. Peter A. Bauernfeind using the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, 4. Edition © 1990 by the Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart, and the Novum Testamentum Graece, Nestle-Aland 27. Edition © 1993 by Deutsch Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart. 
ELKB. Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. www.bayern-evangelisch.de/www/index.php. Copyright © 2013 Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. 
Just, Arthur A., Jr. Luke 1:1––9:50. Copyright © 1996 Concordia Publishing House. 
VELKD. Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. www.velkd.de. Copyright © 2013 Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. 

1. $29,000 at $7.25 x 8 hours. A denarius was a day’s wage. 
2. $2900.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Jeremiah 7,1-11; Luke 19,41-48. The 10th Sunday after Trinity


One Message: Christ crucified and risen for you

Jeremiah 7,1-11[12-15]. Luke 19,41-48; Matthew 21,12-17; Mark 11,15-19 4013
10. Sonntag nach Trinitatis  053     
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. Daniel 1,7        
4. August 2013

1.  Let Thy merciful ears, O Lord, be open to the prayers of Thy humble servants; and that they may obtain their petitions make them to ask such things as shall please Thee.   (The Book of Common Prayer, The 10. Sunday after Trinity).  Amen. 
2. 41And when Jesus drew near and saw Jerusalem, He wept over it, 42saying: „Would that you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. 43For the days will come upon you, when your enemies will set up a barricade around you and surround you and hem you in on every side 44and tear you down to the ground, you and your children within you. And they will not leave one stone upon another in you, because you did not know the time of your visitation.“ 45And He entered the temple and began to drive out those who sold, 46saying to them: „It is written: »My house shall be a house of prayer,« [Isaiah 56,7] but you have made it a den of insurrectionists.“ [Jeremiah 7,11] 47And He was teaching daily in the temple. The chief priests and the scribes and the principal men of the people were seeking to destroy Him, 48but they did not find anything they could do, for all the people were hanging on His words.
3. Jesus uttered these words and prophecy when He was approaching Jerusalem. As He approached the holy city, Jesus paused and gazed upon her splendor. He lifted up His eyes and beheld Jerusalem seated upon the hills in all her glory and the magnificent temple glittering in golden beauty. Jesus wept with sorrow over the impending judgment upon the city and the nation. By the end of the week He suffered, died and rose again for His people. Forty years later, His prophetic judgment came to pass on 10. August 70. This is a date that lives in infamy, for that is the day the Roman General Titus completed his campaign against rebellious Israel when he destroyed the temple in Jerusalem. 
4. Two thousand years later, what does Jesus teach us in regards to this pericope? Looking to Christ Himself, we want to: 
I.     weep with Christ
II.   let us be warned through Christ
III. be comforted by Christ [1] (Martens § 3). 

I.
5. Christ, the Son of God, wept over Jerusalem. He still weeps over Jerusalem, a city that teems with Jews, Christians and Muslims. Holy sites to all three religions dot the urban map. Israeli atrocities against Christian and Muslim Palestinians abound. Palestinians are removed from their homes and land so Israelis can move in. A wall is built to separate the Palestinians from their land. When they cross the border to worship God, only a few of the many are granted access. The Palestinians are by no means innocent doves. In their struggle for identity, land and a nation, they at times violently resist the Israeli government and military with bombs or rockets that often kill civilians. The Palestinians and the Israelis pay back blood for blood in kind. A violent cycle of fighting, mistrust and anger exists on both sides. Peace is tenuous, and not even mighty nations like the United States have been able to broker a lasting peace in the region for very long. 
6. Jesus wept over Jerusalem because the temple had become a den of insurrectionists. The religious and political leaders had rejected Jesus as the Son of God and the Messiah, and in doing so they rebelled against Yahweh. Jesus had come to redeem them, but the Jewish religious and political leaders labeled Him a demon-possessed, law-breaking, rebel-rousing trouble-maker. Such gadflies often face the wrath of the powers in charge. Socrates was sentenced to death in ancient Greece, and Dietrich Bonhöffer was executed by Nazi Germany for being the conscience of their societies. Jesus shared a similar sentence. 
7. Jesus wept because rebellious actions have consequences. He Himself quoted the Prophet Jeremiah: »And now, because you have been idolatrous and treated your neighbor wickedly, when I persistently spoke to you but you did not listen, and when I called you, you did not answer, therefore I, Yahweh, will do to temple that is called by My Name, and in which you trust, and to the place that I gave to you and to your fathers, as I did to Shiloh when I withdrew my protection and allowed the ark of the covenant to be captured. I will cast you out of My sight« (Jeremiah 7,13-15). 

II.
8. „Yes, Israel is a model with his guilt – a model for us as Christians and as a church. For the words of Jesus to His beloved city – they apply not only to His own people, they should also serve as a warning to us: Is it clear to us that the time that God still grants us is the period of grace and the time He gives us to turn back to Him? Is it clear to us that it is a gracious gift of God when Christ still invites us to encounter Him here in the Divine Service, the Sermon and the Lord’s Supper? Is that clear to us that this time is limited, or do we think we can deal with this subject at some later time when it suits us better if we can find the necessary time for it in our busy lives? Is it clear to us that we receive Christ as the only means for our life and salvation, who alone gives us the peace of fellowship with Him? Or do we think we come into our lives without this fellowship with Christ, and could very well do without His fellowship?“ [2] (Martens § 10). 
9. Because we take such questions lightly, Jesus weeps over us. We are no better than the Jewish rebels of His day. If we lift up idols alongside of Jesus, then we are ungrateful idolaters. If we wish, or do, evil to our neighbor, either by causing them harm and distress or by failing to help them in their time of need, then we are wicked, selfish people. The law does not excuse any one of us from such sins. The law calls us to repent, to worship only the Triune God and to befriend our neighbors. This church, like every church, is established by the Holy Spirit to be a house of prayer, a sanctuary of worship and a holy place where forgiveness of sins is given out to those who are distressed or burdened by their sinfulness. Woe to us if we ever forget that as a church or a Lutheran synod! The law’s condemning sentence looms over all who are wicked and unrepentant, yes, even us. 

III. 
10. Be now comforted by Christ. I proclaim to you the gospel: Jesus came to rescue you from the law’s condemnation and your sins. In Luke 19 Jesus was traveling up to Jerusalem to do just that, and He accomplished your salvation and absolution on Good Friday and Easter Sunday. Jesus has paid for our idolatry and wickedness. Jesus has ransomed us from the error of not rejoicing in this place as His sanctuary of grace. Jesus has paid the price in full and declares us not guilty. You are saved and redeemed by Jesus, the very one who was rejected by His own Jewish leaders. 
11. Though we may forsake Christ, He does not forsake us; He does not forsake you. Jesus stays true to His word and stands by what He has promised you in your baptism. Jesus stands by His Father as they wait for their prodigal children to return home. Jesus is rich in grace and mercy, for He joyfully welcomes home sinners who have returned once again to their baptismal faith that trusts only in Him. 
12. When God destroys, He always leaves a remnant from which He rebuilds. Noah and His family repopulated the earth after the Flood. Babylonian Jews began to return from exile in 538 BC to rebuild after the first temple had been destroyed by God’s judgment.[3] Today the Palestinian Christians live in Jerusalem and the surrounding lands. They are descendants from the first Christians who trace their lineage all the way back to Jesus and His apostles. O these Palestinian Christians are a minority in the land, but they are Jesus’ remnant in the holy city and they are a gadflies to the Israelis and the Muslim Arabs in the land. They are a constant reminder that no matter how fiercely the world persecutes Jesus’ Christians, they are His people and they still remain. They are stones in the Lord’s new testament temple who offer prayers and worship to the One True God who is Father, Son and Holy Spirit (1. Peter 2,4-5). Jesus is the True Temple, for Jesus does what the temple as a building on Mt. Zion did. Jesus is the source of the forgiveness of sins, and the object of our Divine Service and prayers. All Christians are stones in Christ the Temple. 
13. „Together, we live by God’s grace, by His forgiveness, even by the intercession of our Lord Jesus Christ, who never ceases to advocate for His people, so that we all recognize each other, which make for peace“ [4] (Martens § 14). We pray for our Christian brothers and sisters who are persecuted for the Name of Jesus in Palestine, Egypt and the Muslim lands. We pray for an outpouring of the gospel among the Jews and Muslims so that the few Christians in those cultures will be joined by many more converts to the Christian faith. We pray for our church and our Lutheran synod so that the Holy Spirit would abundantly bless us temporally and spiritually.  Amen. 
14. Let us pray. O Yahweh,You are our God and we are the people of Your pasture and the sheep of Your hand; be with us and bless us so that we may preach and administer the gospel to those in our midst and to the borough which surrounds us.  Amen. 

Christ crucified and risen for you 

1 Auf Christus selber wollen wir schauen, wollen

- mit Christus weinen
- durch Christus uns warnen lassen
- von Christus getröstet werden 

2 „Ja, vorbildlich geht Israel mit seiner Schuld um – vorbildlich auch für uns als Christen und als Kirche. Denn die Worte Jesu an seine geliebte Stadt – sie gelten eben nicht nur seinem eigenen Volk, sie sollen auch uns als Warnung dienen: Ist uns das klar, dass die Zeit, die Gott uns jetzt noch schenkt, Gnadenzeit ist, Zeit, die er uns gewährt, um zu ihm umzukehren? Ist uns das klar, was für ein Geschenk und was für eine Gnade Gottes das ist, wenn Christus uns immer noch einlädt, ihm zu begegnen hier im Gottesdienst, in der Predigt, im Heiligen Mahl? Ist uns das klar, dass diese Zeit begrenzt ist, oder meinen wir, wir könnten uns mit diesem Thema irgendwann später mal befassen, wenn es uns besser passt, wenn wir in unserer Zeitplanung dafür den nötigen Raum finden? Ist uns das klar, dass wir allein in der Gemeinschaft mit ihm, Christus, den Frieden geschenkt bekommen, der allein für uns Leben und Rettung bedeutet? Oder meinen wir, wir kämen in unserem Leben auch ohne diese Gemeinschaft mit Christus aus, könnten darauf immer wieder ganz gut verzichten?“ (Martens § 10).  

3 The second temple was consecrated in in the spring of 516 BC and stood until AD 70. 

4 Gemeinsam leben wir aus Gottes Gnade, aus seiner Vergebung, ja von der Fürbitte unseres Herrn, der nicht aufhört, für sein Volk einzutreten, dass wir alle miteinander erkennen, was zum Frieden dient (Martens § 14)





All Scriptural quotations are translations done by The Rev. Peter A. Bauernfeind using the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, 4. Edition © 1990 by the Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart, and the Novum Testamentum Graece, Nestle-Aland 27. Edition © 1993 by Deutsch Bibelgesellschaft, Stuttgart.  
ELKB. Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. www.bayern-evangelisch.de/www/index.php. Copyright © 2013 Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern. 
Martens, Gottfried. A sermon preached on 16. August 2009 (10. Trinitatis) in Berlin-Zehlendorf, Germany on Luke 19,41-48. Copyright © 2009 St. Mary Church in Berlin-Zehlendorf (SELK). All rights reserved. The Rev. Peter A. Bauernfeind, Tr. © 2011. 
VELKD. Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands. www.velkd.de. Copyright © 2013 Vereinigte Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Deutschlands.