Sunday, May 11, 2014

Easter 4 Sermon



Easter 4 – John 16 – May 11th, 2014

Christ is Risen (He is Risen Indeed, Alleluia) Amen
          Suppose you were to visit your doctor and your doctor were to tell you that you need to have something done, some procedure, and you asked him about it, and he were to smile at you and say to you, “Oh, don’t worry, it won’t hurt a bit.”  Call me cynical, but when I hear that, I assume that it is going to hurt like the dickens.  And this is just because it seems like so often, for whatever reason, we like to dance around the issue, wave our hands and say, “Oh, don’t worry, it’s nothing,” when it really is.  We even come up with neat names for this – it’s “sugar coating” the truth, it’s just trying to spare someone their feelings.  No it’s not.  Its  giving into fear.  Fear that a person won’t be able to handle a harsh truth.  If I tell you what is real, what is going to happen, I’m afraid that you are going to utterly freak out – so my fear will make me lie to you.

          Our Lord does not act out of fear – and when He needs to tell us something, He tells us, even if it is something uncomfortable, even something that we won’t enjoy.  Jesus is not one to whisper sweet nothings in our ears – rather, He will tell us how it will be.  And that is what we see our Lord doing in our text for this Sunday – indeed, for our Gospel texts for the next three Sundays.  Our Lord speaks these words to the Disciples on Maundy Thursday – and some of the things He says are great, and some, some speak to difficulty and challenge. After Easter, after our Lord’s Ascension, things would be different for the disciples, and for them to be able to handle those changes, they needed to know what was going on.  Jesus tells them the truth. Likewise, our Lord deals with us squarely, He tells us what to expect so that we can handle it.  Let us see what our Lord instructs us today.

          A little while, and you will see me no longer, and again, a little while and you will see Me.  This throws the disciples all into a fluster.  What does Jesus mean – we aren’t going to see Him?  That word “see” there has the implication of seeing someone who is around, who is there.  In a little while, I won’t be hanging around with you – I’ll be taken away.  And Christ here is speaking to His crucifixion.  When He speaks these words, His Crucifixion is less than 24 hours away – that little while isn’t long at all.  And He admits that it’s coming.  There will be a point where you won’t see Me, where I will not be here with you – I’ll be hanging on a tree, I’ll be placed in a tomb.  And that’s going to be rough.  In fact, Jesus tells the disciples, Truly, truly, I say to you, you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice.”  Truly, truly.  Blunt and honest.  The next few days are going to be hard on you.  You will weep.  You will lament.  And even as you sorrow, you will see the wicked of the world rejoice, you will see crowds jeering and cheering.  It will seem as though all the hosts of hell are laughing in your face.  In a little while.

          Note that Jesus doesn’t soft-sell what is going to happen.  Jesus doesn’t pretend that what is coming won’t be horrid, that it won’t impact them, that it isn’t a terribly hard thing.  He doesn’t play pretend.  Rather this – He instructs the disciples to remember, in their grief, that they will see Him again.  You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy.  You will sorrow over Christ’s death, but that sorrow will be banished and done away with when you behold the risen Lord.  The change will be dramatic – When a woman is giving birth, she has sorrow because her hour has come, but when she has delivered the baby, she no longer remembers the anguish, for joy that a human being has been born into the world.  So also you have sorrow now, but I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you.  This is a wonderful image.  No woman looks forward to the pain of labor or enjoys it – let’s just get it done with, let’s get through it – and then, when the labor is done, when the birth is complete – there is only the joy of the child, only the joy of the babe.  That birth becomes not a tale of woe and strife, but something to be celebrated yearly, not only on the kid’s birthday, but in May… with flowers and chocolate, right gentlemen?  Same thing – the sorrows of Good Friday yield to the joys of Easter.  Those sorrows are real, but they pass, and they are replaced by a wondrous joy.

          This is the lesson that our Lord speaks to the disciples on Maundy Thursday, and it is an apt lesson, one that is quite appropriate for the disciples.  But now, how does this lesson apply to us?  What do we learn from it?  First, we learn that we will have hardships in this world.  Too often, we want to hide from the truth.  We want to think that everything in our life will go our way – that because we are good Christian people that everything will be wonderful.  Not so.  I’d say that the disciples were better Christians than we are, and if they have to face sorrows, then we certainly will.  And the reason for this is simple – we are still in the sinful world, we are still surrounded by those who will cheer on wickedness.  In this world, bad things will happen, and then will happen to you.  We can’t pretend otherwise, we can’t expect otherwise. 

          All too often we want to deny this, we want to listen to the people who will simply tell us that everything will come up roses.  We can want to delude ourselves – and in so doing we miss out.  Christ’s solution isn’t to tell you to close your eyes and hope it all goes away.  Rather this – you will have sorrow – but Christ will turn even your sorrow to joy.  When we consider our Risen Lord, when we consider that Christ has risen from death – we know what this means.  That Christ Jesus has overcome the world, the world in which we face these sorrows, the world in which loved ones die, in which we face pain and suffering, where there are concerns and fears and people seeking our harm – Christ has risen and He has overcome this world – and so we will endure through the sorrows of this life until we share fully in His joy.  In fact, knowing our Lord’s victory, knowing His resurrection, this is how God gives us peace, gives us contentment, gives us joy even in the midst of our sorrows – our eyes are drawn to something more wondrous than our present sorrow – they are drawn to Christ.

          And as such, our Lord instructs us something else.  He shows us how Satan is going to attack us.  When we have sorrows, the world will rejoice.  The world will be loud and brash, and try to rub it in.  The world will try to make it seem as though there is nothing else but sorrow for you, nothing else but problems, try to overwhelm you so that is all that you can see.  Doesn’t this happen?  I’m sure each of us could tell times of when we were overwrought, overwhelmed, when everything in life seemed against us, seemed to beat down upon us.  We’ve all been there – and it was bad, we can’t deny that.  But we don’t receive comfort by denying that things are bad, that they are rough – rather this.  We are focused upon Christ – we are shown our risen Lord, we are pointed again to the truth that Christ has conquered, that He remains, and thus, even in the midst of our temporal sorrows, we are pointed to the eternal joys that are ours in Christ.  Satan tries to make us forget this, but our Lord draws us unto Himself, and so we have gladness.

          In many ways, this service, this time together has as it’s purpose to show you, to bring you into the reality of Christ’s love and joy and forgiveness – to pull you out of all the junk out there in that world where things are going to be wild and wooly, and instead – here.  See Christ.  Hear His forgiveness.  Over and over.  Let Christ’s death and resurrection color your world, be the largest, the biggest truth there is.  Think about it – we entered this house and right off the bat – we confess our sins.  We confess all the stuff in the world that splashed on us, that we splashed in, that we dragged in here – and all of it, right up front.  And the response – you are forgiven.  Right like that – your sins are great, they are like scarlet Christ has made you white like snow.  We call out for mercy, and then we hear forgiveness.  God does not take away His Holy Spirit from us, but gladly gives us His Word.  Indeed, when we have the Supper here, Christ says “take and eat, take and drink” – here’s His Body, Here’s His Blood – you are forgiven.  And this is real.  Nothing in the world, nothing they do to you, nothing you’ve done and still kick yourself over – it cannot change the fact that Christ has died for you and He has risen for you – and when we see that, when we hear Him declare His peace to us again and again, we are centered in joy.  Joy – not “happiness”, not “excitement” – but Christian joy – that is confidence and assurance that even though everything around us fall apart – Christ is Risen, and so shall you.

          Dear friends, let no one deceive you, let no one pull the wool over your eyes or try to pin your hopes in this life.  Life in this world is hard – has been since the fall, and it will be until Christ returns.  In this life you will have sorrow – but only for a little while, for our Risen Lord who has ascended will return, and then we will see His joys face to face, and they will be complete.  God keep you firm in Christ Jesus, so that His joy might sustain you now, and be with you for all eternity.  Christ is risen, (He is risen indeed, Alleluia) Amen.

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