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7th Sunday after Pentecost – C (Proper 12) LSB #’s 761, 702, 685
Text – Colossians 2:11-12 In Him also you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised with Him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised Him from the dead. FAITH IN THE POWERFUL WORKING OF GOD Last Sunday, a scientist was exploring a cave system in Italy when a sudden rockfall caused a head injury & trapped him there. Though the injury prevented him from escaping on his own, he was eventually found over 130 feet below ground. In order to carry him to the surface, the cave had to be widened by explosives at three different junctures. I expect that none of you have ever been captive 130 below ground in a cave. Some of you may have felt captive in a bad marriage. Others may have felt captive in a bad job because you needed the money. Listening to ‘the news,’ may leave you feeling like a captive in a very broken world. There’s a lot of depressing news in our nation today with riots & protests & lawsuits, in addition to all the usual burglary & murder going on. Topping it off, it seems as if more corruption is being reported on in our government every day. Apart from all the mayhem caused by sinful actions, Satan is also trying to drag us down through all the depressing news. It’s not a stretch to wonder if God is doing anything at all in our nation & in our world? And Satan loves to feed any sort of despair that we feel. It’s not easy being a broken human being, & each one of us is broken. The older you get, the longer you’ve tried to fight it, the easier it gets to recognize that. The question, at any age, is, “What to do about it?” The answer is extremely simple yet confusingly complicated. Surrendering to the will of God is the answer, but our sinful nature fights it every step of the way. “Let go & let God” sounds less humiliating, but there’s no difference between that & surrendering to God’s will. In either approach, we still come face to face with the 1st commandment, “You shall have no other gods.” Whenever we don’t get our way, we are tempted to be held captive in rebellion against our Lord & Creator. My way, or the highway, is not our friend. All of us who are sinful should know what it is to be helplessly captive & unable to escape on our own. You & I suffer from far more than a head injury, & there is no way for any of us to rescue ourselves from sin. Sin is like quicksand, the harder we try to escape on our own, the farther we sink into its clutches. Because we are corrupted by sin, even the knowledge we cannot escape it, is something that comes to us only apart from ourselves. On our own, all of us are trapped by sin & held captive with no hope for escape. On our own, we can’t even pray our way out of sin because we have no idea to whom we should pray. The Holy Spirit must give us that knowledge. If you are in any way feeling captive to the current circumstances of your life, the Apostle Paul is writing about the solution in his letter to the church at Colossae: “In [Christ] also you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised with Him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised Him from the dead.” (2:11-12 ESV) Apparently, people in the church at Colossae were emphasizing that Gentiles who became Christians had to be circumcised. Paul is telling them that, by their own standards, circumcision would be inadequate for salvation because it did not remove all the human flesh that is corrupted by sin. In contrast, the spiritual circumcision of Christ does do away with the entirety of the sinful flesh. Paul then connects that spiritual circumcision to baptism where, having been buried with Christ, we are also raised with Him through faith. That faith is centered in the powerful working of God demonstrated as He raised Jesus from the dead. In that resurrection, the old flesh of Jesus, though never sinful, was raised in a new, glorified state. It is that flesh which now belongs to all Christians for all eternity; a flesh that can never again be corrupted in any way. It is a flesh that will never again be held captive in any manner. Clearly, we don’t yet possess that flesh here, but it is a sure & certain part of our inheritance to come. We long for heaven, not simply because it will be beautiful, but because we will be. Though it is hugely important, the Good News that our sins are forgiven is not the only message of the Gospel. In heaven, everything about our mind, body & soul will be perfect. Part of Jesus’ mission on earth was to reveal that bodily perfection once He’d risen from the dead. Heaven will not be only a spiritual place, but a real, physical existence in flesh & blood. It’s God’s design that our new life should begin as we are brought, early on, to the waters of Baptism. Our Creator wants us to receive His gifts as soon as possible, because we need them to counter the attacks of the Devil. There are so many distractions in our world, so many things Satan uses to draw our attention away from the fact that Jesus came to rescue us. To the naked eye, Baptism appears powerless. People still sin, horribly, even after baptism. Christians still wander from Christ & forget His blessings. Christians are still rude & insufferable. However, the faith the Holy Spirit creates in us sees & hears the powerful working of God even though our eyes & our ears do not. As insignificant & ordinary as baptism appears, it brings us to eternal & everlasting life. The fullness of God appeared in human flesh & when we’re baptized into that flesh we are being re-created into the flesh of Jesus Christ. After the resurrection, sin & death will never be able to impact us again. Those who are baptized have been raised with Christ from the death of our sins through faith in the powerful working of God. However, faith can grow faint if we’re not connected to the Vine which is Jesus Christ. In this life we constantly need to be connected to the Vine. We live in a toxic world & that is hell bent on poisoning us. As the reading from Colossians begins, Paul is encouraging us: “Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him, rooted & built up in Him & established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.” (2:6-7 ESV) The phrase “so walk in Him” basically means stay connected to the Vine, to Jesus, in everything you do. When we remain connected, when we walk in Christ, then we can experience abounding in thanksgiving. If we remain connected to Christ, it doesn’t matter what our circumstances are. Our thanksgiving does not come from our circumstances. It comes from the Holy Spirit whom we receive as we’re connected to Jesus. Will our lives be perfect? No. Faith is believing what we cannot see. Sin causes us to fail in everything we do, because we never do anything 100% perfectly. Our hope & our joy come from the fact that Jesus did do everything perfectly & He joyfully offers the credit to us. The Colossians were being pulled away from their trust in Jesus. The fullness of God dwelling in human flesh strengthens us & saves us, therefore there’s no reason to panic nor to despair. Paul wants to convince God’s children who’re still struggling here on earth that they have already risen from the dead, from spiritual death, & truly are alive in Jesus. The life lived in the joy of the Good News is the most powerful witness to the hope we have in Christ. That draws other people to Jesus for eternity in spite of what they see. Amen. May Thy rich grace impart strength to my fainting heart; my zeal inspire! As Thou hast died for me, oh, may my love to Thee pure, warm & changeless be, a living fire! While life’s dark maze I tread & griefs around me spread, be Thou my guide; bid darkness turn to day, wipe sorrow’s tears away, nor let me ever stray from Thee aside. Amen. LSB 702:2-3. 4th Sunday after Pentecost – C (Proper 9) LSB #’s 846, 673, 919
Text – Isaiah 66:14 You shall see, & your heart shall rejoice; your bones shall flourish like the grass; & the hand of the Lord shall be known to His servants, & He shall show His indignation against His enemies. YOUR BONES SHALL FLOURISH Growing up in Michigan, winter was a common experience, but it wasn’t until I was living in the state of Idaho, that I experienced temperatures as cold as 20 degrees below zero. What struck me one day, walking across a parking lot, is that I noticed I could feel the bones in my legs as my feet pounded across the pavement. ‘Chilled to the bone’ took on new meaning. Bone-tired is another idiom we are used to. I’ve been there many times while growing up & doing manual labor for farmers nearby. As an electrical contractor one job was completely rebuilding the electric service, & replacing all the electric panels, for a restaurant. My partner & I worked 29 hours straight through to get it done. I was bone-tired by the end. Proverbs 14:30 tells us, “A tranquil heart gives life to the flesh, but envy makes the bones rot.” (ESV) In one memorable vision, God painted a picture for the prophet Ezekiel of a valley filled with dry bones. Those bones represented the nation of Israel after they died to the true God by worshipping things that were no god at all. If you cut yourself off from the source of life, it is certain that death will follow. The exhilarating hope of entering the Promised Land was cut off from the source of life years later by the people themselves. They were exhausted – mentally, physically & spiritually. Weariness that feels like it has seeped into your very marrow had become their lot. The Israelites knew what it was to be bone-tired. In the context of Isaiah 66, they had suffered through the exile, cut off from their land & from their God. When some were allowed to return in anticipation of the great blessings they’d been promised, they found only further suffering. After Persia’s defeat of Babylon, the small groups of exiles who returned to Judah faced hardship, famine, political in-fighting & economic oppression. Their weariness, after generations of slavery & humiliation, made their lives a challenge. We know that weariness in our lives. Fortunately, for most of us, such bone-tiredness is an occasional experience. For others, though, it is a way of life. People living on the fringe are so exhausted on a daily basis that bone-tired is the only way they know how to live. Depression, anxiety, marital or family strife, financial instability, ill health – those & others can make us so crushingly weary that we can’t imagine feeling truly alive again. Throughout history, snake-oil salesmen have made their living off of people who are searching for a solution to their weariness. St. Paul warned about those salesmen: “I know that after my departure fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock; & from among your own selves will arise men speaking twisted things, to draw away the disciples after them.” (Acts 20:29-30 ESV) Jesus acknowledged our weariness & explained where it came from: “The thief comes only to steal & kill & destroy.” (John 10:10a ESV) And Satan does that, not only through outright violence, but through more subtle attacks like depression, anxiety, ill health, financial instability & marital or family strife. He tempts us through manifest sins, or attitudes like arrogance & pride. There are hundreds more ways in which Lucifer paints a very dark & troubling picture of our lives. Jesus was born into human flesh so He could endure & conquer that dark & troubling picture. He did not shy away from our struggles & suffering like someone superior to us who does not relate to the weariness we feel. In Jesus, God became our brother. His name Immanuel means “God with us.” Because Jesus has lived & conquered the weariness we experience, while He walked this earth, He proclaimed, “I came that they may have life & have it abundantly.” (John 10:10b ESV) That statement is in conflict with what you & I often see & with what we feel. Those words of Jesus confront us with a question: “Do we believe & trust those words of Jesus, or do we not?” Do you believe what you see & what you feel, or do you believe & trust in the Words & promises of God’s Son? Do you believe the hopeless, dark & troubling picture of Satan, or the “life abundantly” picture of Jesus? That is the crux of the Christian faith – the daily battle between our sinful nature & our saintly nature. Remember the picture that God painted for Ezekiel? “The hand of the Lord was upon me, & He brought me out in the Spirit of the Lord & set me down in the middle of the valley; it was full of bones. And He led me around among them, & behold, there were very many on the surface of the valley, & behold, they were very dry. And He said to me, ‘Son of man, can these bones live?’” (37:1-3a ESV) Would Ezekiel believe what he saw with his eyes, or would he believe in the power of God’s Word? The valley of dry bones represents the nation of Israel after they died to the true God by worshipping things that were no god at all. They cut themselves off from the source of life. Could their bones live? In the OT reading, Isaiah was telling them they would: “You shall see, & your heart shall rejoice; your bones shall flourish like the grass; & the hand of the Lord shall be known to His servants, & He shall show His indignation against His enemies.” (Isaiah 66:14 ESV) How do those words relate to your life? No matter how dark & troubling the problems of your life are, can your bones live? Remember, Jesus does not deny the dark & troubling aspects of our lives. He came to be with us precisely in those struggles & suffering. He gives us hope in His very body & blood, “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33 ESV) Christianity is not a Pollyanna faith. It does not deny the picture that Satan paints for us. Our struggles & our sins are all too real, but we take heart because Jesus has overcome this world. The dark & troubling picture that Lucifer paints is real, but for God’s children, it is not eternal. It’s temporary. The picture that God paints for you, “You shall see, & your heart shall rejoice; your bones shall flourish like the grass,” that one is eternal. In heaven, there’ll be no ‘chilled to the bone,’ & no one will ever be ‘bone-tired.’ In this life, Spring is a reminder of the new life to come. It was here not long ago. Did you see, & were you grateful for, the blossoms? They tell us a plant is flourishing. The Hebrew word translated into ‘flourish’ is actually ‘blossom.’ We could translate the text this way, “You shall see, & your heart shall rejoice; your bones shall blossom like the grass.” ‘Chilled to the bone’ & ‘bone-tired’ are true pictures of life here, but they are temporary. The far more beautiful picture of our bones blossoming like the grass is something that we do experience, in small ways in this life, but it is a true & permanent picture of the eternal life to come, for all who believe & trust in the Words & the promises of Jesus. In the context of Isaiah, there were those like Daniel who understood why Jerusalem was punished, mourned over it, & trusted in Yahweh’s promise to restore her. They maintained true faith in the midst of the exile. Though Yahweh’s promises to Judah are fulfilled in their return from exile, nevertheless their return from Babylon was not a full restoration of Israel: David’s kingdom was not restored. Israel remained under foreign rule. The Messiah had not yet come. Peace & the glory of the nations (66:12a) had not flowed into Jerusalem. The promise in the sermon text is that the hearers will see, rejoice, & thrive. Those who trust in Yahweh’s promise to restore His people to Jerusalem will be comforted & live. Those who scoff & reject His promise will be subject to His wrath & punishment. In our culture of abundant material blessings, people are still searching for solutions to their weariness. Deep within our bones we are weary & broken, yet deep within our bones God’s nurturing love reaches & restores. Jesus came to restore us from the crushing load of guilt; to restore us from broken health, from broken lives, & from broken spirits. Do you believe the dark & troubling picture of Satan, or the “life abundantly” picture of Jesus? Both are real, but Jesus came to rescue you from Satan’s picture, & to deliver you into His own picture, of abundant life. In a sense, everything in this life is merely a picture, because none of this is forever. Heaven will be far more than a picture, & it will never end. Thus, we find ourselves in a similar situation as Israel in exile: as they awaited the return from exile, we await the restoration of all things on the Last Day. In the meantime, we, as they once did, live by faith in the word & the promises of God. One day our very bones will blossom forever. Amen. Jerusalem, my happy home, when shall I come to thee? When shall my sorrows have an end? Thy joys when shall I see? Thy gardens & thy gallant walks continually are green; there grow such sweet & pleasant flowers as nowhere else are seen. O Christ, do Thou my soul prepare for that bright home of love that I may see Thee & adore with all Thy saints above. Amen. LSB 673:1, 3, 6. |
AuthorPastor Dean R. Poellet Archives
November 2025
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