Showing posts with label Repentance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Repentance. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Ashes to Go


It’s the latest convenience. Ashes to go on Ash Wednesday.

Now Christians can get their ash on, show everyone their spirituality, and altogether avoid the Divine Service where our Lord speaks to us in His Word and feeds us in His Supper.

How sad!

Christians are free to receive or not receive ashes on Ash Wednesday. It is neither commanded nor forbidden in Holy Scripture. But for those who do receive them, don’t use them to draw attention to yourself. What’s more, ashes to go is no substitute for joining God’s people in God’s house on the first day of Lent, confessing one’s sin and hearing Jesus’ absolution, taking to heart His Word, and partaking of His body and blood.

So go and receive ashes if you desire. Just don’t forget to receive what is truly important. After all, Ash Wednesday is not about you and your forehead, but about Jesus, what He won for you on the cross, and the means through which He gives you His blood-bought gifts of forgiveness, life, and salvation. Come and hear His life-giving Word this Ash Wednesday!

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Either with Jesus or with You


“The mouth of the Lord has spoken it. How many mouths does the Lord put to His use? How many Elijahs? How many Sundays in Advent? How many calls to repent, to turn? As many as your sins that need repentance. The Lord is slow to give up on you. He calls you to repent again and again. But if you insist on holding onto your sins—perhaps just your favorite one or two—and try to run with both Him and your sins, He will finally put an end to that game. He tells you so. He issues a warning call to repent, to turn; Your sins are either with Jesus or with you. It is only the sins you hold and keep away from Him that can damn you. Jesus has already answered for your sins. You have to take them back from Him to be damned by them.”

Selected Sermons of Norman Nagel
CPH 2004, page 22
HT: Steven Anderson

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Return to the LORD

Ash Wednesday
Joel 2:12-13

Dearly beloved, no matter how careful your pastor was, or how still you stood, the ashes on your forehead are smudged, smeared, filthy. Some of it usually ends up in your bangs or on your nose. And it feels uncomfortable. Good! For smudged crosses, untidy ashes, and discomfort remind you that sin is a messy business.

Remember that “you are dust, and to dust you shall return” (Genesis 3:19).

Those words were originally spoken by God Himself on the very same day our first parents fell into sin. Sin has consequences. Sin means death. But even in the midst of sin and death, God did not leave our first parents without hope, but gave them a promise: The woman’s Offspring would someday crush the serpent’s head.

While ashes are an outward reminder of your sinfulness, ultimately this Lenten season is not about ashes, but about an inward change of the heart, and the Savior who works that change in you. Listen again to the prophet Joel:
“Yet even now,” declares the LORD, “return to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning; and rend your hearts and not your garments.” Return to the LORD, your God, for He is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love; and He relents over disaster.
When the LORD calls you to return to Him, it means that you have first left Him. The sin that separates you from God is part and parcel of your fallen nature and manifests itself in your thoughts, words, and deeds:
  • the idols to which you cling;
  • the foul language and gossip that come forth from your mouth;
  • your failure to hold God’s Word sacred and gladly hear and learn it;
  • the grudges you hold;
  • the lies you tell;
  • the greed and pride that fill your heart; and
  • the lust and covetousness in which you delight.
Do your sins disgust you? Or do you simply shake them off, ignore them, or downplay them? Do you sweep them under the rug and reason: “Well, my sins are not as bad as so-and-so’s sins”? Know this: “The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Your sins are so serious that God sent His only-begotten Son to suffer and die for them. No wonder our gracious Lord says to you: “Return to Me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning.”

Wrapped up in those three words “return to Me” is God’s call to repentance. At its root, to “repent” means to be of a different mindset, to turn around, to have a new orientation in life.

Once you thought this way, now repent and think the opposite way.

Once you were going this way, now repent and go the opposite way.

Once you were turned inward, self-oriented, self-centered, now repent and be oriented toward Christ and your neighbor.

That’s why God calls out to you: “Return to Me.” He is calling you to turn away from yourself. To turn toward Him in faith and toward your neighbor in love.

And how is it that you turn toward God? “With all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning.” True repentance always stems from the heart, for it is “with the heart one believes and is justified” (Romans 10:10).

God wants you to return to Him “with all your heart” because, by nature, your heart is turned inward. By nature, your heart produces “evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander” (Matthew 15:19). By nature, your heart lays up for itself treasures on earth. Because such things are not compatible with faith in Christ, He calls you to deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow Him (Matthew 16:24).

Use this Lenten season to examine yourself in light of the Ten Commandments, and then “rend your heart.” Come clean. Confess what is true of you. That you are a sinner. That you have not kept God’s Law. That you deserve nothing but God’s wrath and punishment.

But then, in the same breath, confess what is true of the LORD your God. That “He is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love; and He relents over disaster.” That is what this Lenten season is all about. That “in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them” (2 Corinthians 5:19).

The beauty of the Gospel is this: God does not turn away from you, but comes to you, even in your weakness, in your sin, in your guilt and shame. He comes to you not with the pointy finger of “I told you so,” but with the precious blood of the Lamb without spot or blemish, with the baptismal flood of forgiveness that washes you clean and pure, with the true righteousness of Christ that covers up the filthy rags of your own self-righteousness.

Friends, God’s forgiveness is greater than your sin. His love is superior to your disobedience. His faithfulness is bigger and better than your unfaithfulness. Jesus Christ is proof of that. “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him” (John 3:16-17).

As is evident, your Lenten journey to the cross is not ultimately about ashes. Nor is it ultimately about charitable deeds, prayer, or fasting, as worthwhile as those practices can be. This Lenten season is about Jesus Christ—“the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). Even your sin. The ashes on your forehead in the shape of a cross point you to Christ. He alone is your salvation. He alone gives you the power to deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow Him. He alone turns your heart away from yourself to Himself. And He alone lays up for you treasures in heaven as you hear and believe His precious Gospel and faithfully eat and drink His life-giving Body and Blood.

From dust you came and to dust you shall return.

That is the curse you bear because of sin. But remember, Jesus Christ is stronger than your sin. And His Easter victory is a mere 46 days away. First the cross, then the glory. First confession, then absolution. First death, then life. All so that you can faithfully exclaim: “I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me” (Galatians 2:20).

God grant you a blessed Lent!

In the name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

The Entire Life


495 years ago today Martin Luther posted the Ninety-Five Theses on the doors of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany. This event began what came to be known as the Reformation.

As a confessional Lutheran pastor, I am indebted to the steadfast faith, the unwavering confession, and the brilliant insights of the Reformer. He called things as they are. Sin. Heresy. Antichrist. Repentance. Forgiveness. Justification. Christ. What’s more, he kept returning to the central article of the Christian faith: we are justified by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone.

Today, as we celebrate the Reformation, it is my fervent prayer that every Christian will ponder the depths of Luther’s very first thesis, which states:
When our Lord and Master Jesus Christ said, “Repent” (Matthew 4:17), He willed the entire life of believers to be one of repentance.
Christians today regularly jump from one “self help” book or philosophy to another. Always seeking to live a better Christian life. Always trying to gain insight into God’s heart toward them. Always pursuing some path that can be said to be living as Christ would have them live. Sadly, most of these are either legalistic drivel or feel-good fluff.

Read Luther’s first thesis again. There is so much to learn and take to heart and practice in that one thesis that it takes a sinner a lifetime of practice. Repentance is a daily calling. It involves living in the promises of Holy Baptism by crucifying the sinful flesh and rising to new life in Christ’s word of forgiveness.

Twelve years after posting the Ninety-Five Theses, Luther would expand upon his first thesis when writing about Holy Baptism in the Small Catechism.
What does such baptizing with water indicate?
It indicates that the Old Adam in us should by daily contrition and repentance be drowned and die with all sins and evil desires, and that a new man should daily emerge and arise to live before God in righteousness and purity forever.
The Old Adam—the sinful nature inherited from the first Adam—must by daily contrition and repentance (First Thesis) be drowned and die with all sins and evil desires. Saint Paul writes: “Put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires” (Ephesians 4:22). Why must the Old Adam die? So that the New Man—Christ, the second Adam—might daily emerge and arise and live before God in righteousness and purity forever. Again, Saint Paul writes: “Put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness” (Ephesians 4:24).

That your entire life might be ordered around such repentance, Luther gives you four daily prayers—Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer, Asking a Blessing, and Returning Thanks—each of which is intertwined with the Lord’s Prayer and the petition “forgive us our trespasses...” These propers, coupled with regularly receiving our Lord’s Word and Sacrament on the Lord’s Day and other festival days, are how your Savior daily brings you to repentance and keeps you in the one true faith.

At home, at church, at work, and at play, Luther would have you look to Christ and Him crucified for your forgiveness. His cross. For you! His blood. For you! His perfect righteousness. For you!

So learn anew this day from the blessed Reformer. When our Lord and Master Jesus Christ says, “Repent,” He wills your entire life to be one of repentance. God grant you such repentance your entire life. For Jesus’ sake!

The Ninety-Five Theses

The Ninety-Five Theses
by Martin Luther

posted on the doors of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany
31 October 1517

Out of love for the truth and the desire to bring it to light, the following propositions will be discussed at Wittenberg, under the presidency of the Reverend Father Martin Luther, Master of Arts and of Sacred Theology, and Lecturer in Ordinary on the same at that place. Wherefore he requests that those who are unable to be present and debate orally with us, may do so by letter.

In the Name our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

1. When our Lord and Master Jesus Christ said, “Repent” (Matthew 4:17), he willed the entire life of believers to be one of repentance.

2. This word cannot be understood as referring to the sacrament of penance, that is, confession and satisfaction, as administered by the clergy.

3. Yet it does not mean solely inner repentance; such inner repentance is worthless unless it produces various outward mortification of the flesh.

4. The penalty of sin remains as long as the hatred of self (that is, true inner repentance), namely till our entrance into the kingdom of heaven.

5. The pope neither desires nor is able to remit any penalties except those imposed by his own authority or that of the canons.

6. The pope cannot remit any guilt, except by declaring and showing that it has been remitted by God; or, to be sure, by remitting guilt in cases reserved to his judgment. If his right to grant remission in these cases were disregarded, the guilt would certainly remain unforgiven.

7. God remits guilt to no one unless at the same time he humbles him in all things and makes him submissive to the vicar, the priest.

8. The penitential canons are imposed only on the living, and, according to the canons themselves, nothing should be imposed on the dying.

9. Therefore the Holy Spirit through the pope is kind to us insofar as the pope in his decrees always makes exception of the article of death and of necessity.

10. Those priests act ignorantly and wickedly who, in the case of the dying, reserve canonical penalties for purgatory.

11. Those tares of changing the canonical penalty to the penalty of purgatory were evidently sown while the bishops slept (Matthew 13:25).

12. In former times canonical penalties were imposed, not after, but before absolution, as tests of true contrition.

13. The dying are freed by death from all penalties, are already dead as far as the canon laws are concerned, and have a right to be released from them.

14. Imperfect piety or love on the part of the dying person necessarily brings with it great fear; and the smaller the love, the greater the fear.

15. This fear or horror is sufficient in itself, to say nothing of other things, to constitute the penalty of purgatory, since it is very near to the horror of despair.

16. Hell, purgatory, and heaven seem to differ the same as despair, fear, and assurance of salvation.

17. It seems as though for the souls in purgatory fear should necessarily decrease and love increase.

18. Furthermore, it does not seem proved, either by reason or by Scripture, that souls in purgatory are outside the state of merit, that is, unable to grow in love.

19. Nor does it seem proved that souls in purgatory, at least not all of them, are certain and assured of their own salvation, even if we ourselves may be entirely certain of it.

20. Therefore the pope, when he uses the words “plenary remission of all penalties,” does not actually mean “all penalties,” but only those imposed by himself.

21. Thus those indulgence preachers are in error who say that a man is absolved from every penalty and saved by papal indulgences.

22. As a matter of fact, the pope remits to souls in purgatory no penalty which, according to canon law, they should have paid in this life.

23. If remission of all penalties whatsoever could be granted to anyone at all, certainly it would be granted only to the most perfect, that is, to very few.

24. For this reason most people are necessarily deceived by that indiscriminate and high-sounding promise of release from penalty.

25. That power which the pope has in general over purgatory corresponds to the power which any bishop or curate has in a particular way in his own diocese and parish.

26. The pope does very well when he grants remission to souls in purgatory, not by the power of the keys, which he does not have, but by way of intercession for them.

27. They preach only human doctrines who say that as soon as the money clinks into the money chest, the soul flies out of purgatory.

28. It is certain that when money clinks in the money chest, greed and avarice can be increased; but when the church intercedes, the result is in the hands of God alone.

29. Who knows whether all souls in purgatory wish to be redeemed, since we have exceptions in St. Severinus and St. Paschal, as related in a legend.

30. No one is sure of the integrity of his own contrition, much less of having received plenary remission.

31. The man who actually buys indulgences is as rare as he who is really penitent; indeed, he is exceedingly rare.

32. Those who believe that they can be certain of their salvation because they have indulgence letters will be eternally damned, together with their teachers.

33. Men must especially be on guard against those who say that the pope’s pardons are that inestimable gift of God by which man is reconciled to him.

34. For the graces of indulgences are concerned only with the penalties of sacramental satisfaction established by man.

35. They who teach that contrition is not necessary on the part of those who intend to buy souls out of purgatory or to buy confessional privileges preach unchristian doctrine.

36. Any truly repentant Christian has a right to full remission of penalty and guilt, even without indulgence letters.

37. Any true Christian, whether living or dead, participates in all the blessings of Christ and the church; and this is granted him by God, even without indulgence letters.

38. Nevertheless, papal remission and blessing are by no means to be disregarded, for they are, as I have said (Thesis 6), the proclamation of the divine remission.

39. It is very difficult, even for the most learned theologians, at one and the same time to commend to the people the bounty of indulgences and the need of true contrition.

40. A Christian who is truly contrite seeks and loves to pay penalties for his sins; the bounty of indulgences, however, relaxes penalties and causes men to hate them—at least it furnishes occasion for hating them.

41. Papal indulgences must be preached with caution, lest people erroneously think that they are preferable to other good works of love.

42. Christians are to be taught that the pope does not intend that the buying of indulgences should in any way be compared with works of mercy.

43. Christians are to be taught that he who gives to the poor or lends to the needy does a better deed than he who buys indulgences.

44. Because love grows by works of love, man thereby becomes better. Man does not, however, become better by means of indulgences but is merely freed from penalties.

45. Christians are to be taught that he who sees a needy man and passes him by, yet gives his money for indulgences, does not buy papal indulgences but God's wrath.

46. Christians are to be taught that, unless they have more than they need, they must reserve enough for their family needs and by no means squander it on indulgences.

47. Christians are to be taught that they buying of indulgences is a matter of free choice, not commanded.

48. Christians are to be taught that the pope, in granting indulgences, needs and thus desires their devout prayer more than their money.

49. Christians are to be taught that papal indulgences are useful only if they do not put their trust in them, but very harmful if they lose their fear of God because of them.

50. Christians are to be taught that if the pope knew the exactions of the indulgence preachers, he would rather that the basilica of St. Peter were burned to ashes than built up with the skin, flesh, and bones of his sheep.

51. Christians are to be taught that the pope would and should wish to give of his own money, even though he had to sell the basilica of St. Peter, to many of those from whom certain hawkers of indulgences cajole money.

52. It is vain to trust in salvation by indulgence letters, even though the indulgence commissary, or even the pope, were to offer his soul as security.

53. They are the enemies of Christ and the pope who forbid altogether the preaching of the Word of God in some churches in order that indulgences may be preached in others.

54. Injury is done to the Word of God when, in the same sermon, an equal or larger amount of time is devoted to indulgences than to the Word.

55. It is certainly the pope’s sentiment that if indulgences, which are a very insignificant thing, are celebrated with one bell, one procession, and one ceremony, then the gospel, which is the very greatest thing, should be preached with a hundred bells, a hundred processions, a hundred ceremonies.

56. The true treasures of the church, out of which the pope distributes indulgences, are not sufficiently discussed or known among the people of Christ.

57. That indulgences are not temporal treasures is certainly clear, for many indulgence sellers do not distribute them freely but only gather them.

58. Nor are they the merits of Christ and the saints, for, even without the pope, the latter always work grace for the inner man, and the cross, death, and hell for the outer man.

59. St. Lawrence said that the poor of the church were the treasures of the church, but he spoke according to the usage of the word in his own time.

60. Without want of consideration we say that the keys of the church, given by the merits of Christ, are that treasure.

61. For it is clear that the pope’s power is of itself sufficient for the remission of penalties and cases reserved by himself.

62. The true treasure of the church is the most holy gospel of the glory and grace of God.

63. But this treasure is naturally most odious, for it makes the first to be last (Matthew 20:16).

64. On the other hand, the treasure of indulgences is naturally most acceptable, for it makes the last to be first.

65. Therefore the treasures of the gospel are nets with which one formerly fished for men of wealth.

66. The treasures of indulgences are nets with which one now fishes for the wealth of men.

67. The indulgences which the demagogues acclaim as the greatest graces are actually understood to be such only insofar as they promote gain.

68. They are nevertheless in truth the most insignificant graces when compared with the grace of God and the piety of the cross.

69. Bishops and curates are bound to admit the commissaries of papal indulgences with all reverence.

70. But they are much more bound to strain their eyes and ears lest these men preach their own dreams instead of what the pope has commissioned.

71. Let him who speaks against the truth concerning papal indulgences be anathema and accursed.

72. But let him who guards against the lust and license of the indulgence preachers be blessed.

73. Just as the pope justly thunders against those who by any means whatever contrive harm to the sale of indulgences.

74. Much more does he intend to thunder against those who use indulgences as a pretext to contrive harm to holy love and truth.

75. To consider papal indulgences so great that they could absolve a man even if he had done the impossible and had violated the mother of God is madness.

76. We say on the contrary that papal indulgences cannot remove the very least of venial sins as far as guilt is concerned.

77. To say that even St. Peter if he were now pope, could not grant greater graces is blasphemy against St. Peter and the pope.

78. We say on the contrary that even the present pope, or any pope whatsoever, has greater graces at his disposal, that is, the gospel, spiritual powers, gifts of healing, etc., as it is written, 1 Corinthians 12:28.

79. To say that the cross emblazoned with the papal coat of arms, and set up by the indulgence preachers is equal in worth to the cross of Christ is blasphemy.

80. The bishops, curates, and theologians who permit such talk to be spread among the people will have to answer for this.

81. This unbridled preaching of indulgences makes it difficult even for learned men to rescue the reverence which is due the pope from slander or from the shrewd questions of the laity.

82. Such as: “Why does not the pope empty purgatory for the sake of holy love and the dire need of the souls that are there if he redeems an infinite number of souls for the sake of miserable money with which to build a church?” The former reason would be most just; the latter is most trivial.

83. Again, “Why are funeral and anniversary masses for the dead continued and why does he not return or permit the withdrawal of the endowments founded for them, since it is wrong to pray for the redeemed?”

84. Again, “What is this new piety of God and the pope that for a consideration of money they permit a man who is impious and their enemy to buy out of purgatory the pious soul of a friend of God and do not rather, because of the need of that pious and beloved soul, free it for pure love’s sake?”

85. Again, “Why are the penitential canons, long since abrogated and dead in actual fact and through disuse, now satisfied by the granting of indulgences as though they were still alive and in force?”

86. Again, “Why does not the pope, whose wealth is today greater than the wealth of the richest Crassus, build this one basilica of St. Peter with his own money rather than with the money of poor believers?”

87. Again, “What does the pope remit or grant to those who by perfect contrition already have a right to full remission and blessings?”

88. Again, “What greater blessing could come to the church than if the pope were to bestow these remissions and blessings on every believer a hundred times a day, as he now does but once?”

89. “Since the pope seeks the salvation of souls rather than money by his indulgences, why does he suspend the indulgences and pardons previously granted when they have equal efficacy?”

90. To repress these very sharp arguments of the laity by force alone, and not to resolve them by giving reasons, is to expose the church and the pope to the ridicule of their enemies and to make Christians unhappy.

91. If, therefore, indulgences were preached according to the spirit and intention of the pope, all these doubts would be readily resolved. Indeed, they would not exist.

92. Away, then, with all those prophets who say to the people of Christ, “Peace, peace,” and there is no peace! (Jeremiah 6:14)

93. Blessed be all those prophets who say to the people of Christ, “Cross, cross,” and there is no cross!

94. Christians should be exhorted to be diligent in following Christ, their Head, through penalties, death and hell.

95. And thus be confident of entering into heaven through many tribulations rather than through the false security of peace (Acts 14:22).

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The LORD Has Heard

Ash Wednesday
Psalm 6

Dearly beloved, today we begin a forty day journey to the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is a journey unlike any other. For its destination is unique. As the next five Wednesdays and Holy Week unfold, you will hear anew …
  • how our Lord enters an upper room and institutes a new and better Passover,
  • how He retreats to a hillside garden and prays to His heavenly Father,
  • how He is betrayed by one of His own,
  • how He is arrested and stands trial before the high priest,
  • how He is slapped and scorned by the religious guards,
  • how He is led to the local governor,
  • how He is questioned and sentenced to death,
  • how He is beaten and mocked by the soldiers,
  • how He is led out to the place of the skull,
  • how He is raised up from the earth to draw all men to Himself,
  • how He speaks seven faithful words, and
  • how He finally wins the victory.
As you begin this journey to the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, I invite you to slow down and take a closer look at some of the scenery you will be passing. This year’s journey to the cross takes you directly through the seven penitential psalms—psalms that express sorrow for sin and God’s answer to that sin. But I must warn you. In many ways, this will be a painful journey. For “those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. [Jesus] has not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance” (Luke 5:31-32).

You are here this evening because you are sick, because you are a sinner, because you are in need of God’s gift of forgiveness. So let us begin this journey and find healing and forgiveness in the precious blood of Jesus Christ.

The first penitential psalm is Psalm 6, which we prayed earlier. Like a skilled physician, King David diagnoses the ugliness of sin and its consequences in this psalm. Listen again to the wages of sin:
  • A languishing spirit;
  • A troubled body;
  • A troubled soul;
  • Death and the grave;
  • Moaning and tears;
  • Grief and weakness.
This picture of the effect of sin in our lives is profound, uncomfortable, even painful. We tend to think of sin as being little more than a bad habit or a character flaw. We eat too much chocolate. We drink too much pop. Our schedules are too busy. But let’s call a spade a spade. Sin is disobeying God. And God hates it!

He hates it when you covet what is not yours, when you gossip, when you cheat, when you lust, when you harbor anger or resentment, and when you disobey those whom He has placed over you.

He hates it when you are apathetic toward His house, bored with His Word, and do not hunger for Christ’s body and blood.

He hates it when you excuse your pet sins—those sins that consume your thoughts and desires, but you still delight in them anyway.

He hates it when you take His name in vain and forget to call upon Him in every trouble, pray, praise, and give thanks.

He hates it when you place yourself, your schedule, and your priorities above Him and idolatrously take comfort in earthly things rather that Christ’s good gifts.

Last but not least, He hates it when you make excuses and attempt to justify yourself before Him.

So let’s cut to the chase. Like me, you are a poor, miserable sinner. Sin separates you from God. It harms you and damages your relationship with others. It will do you no good to point to those whom you think are worse sinners. We’ve all sinned and fallen short of God’s glory. So come clean. Repent of the sinner you are and the sins you think, say, and do. And then look to Christ alone for forgiveness.

The penitential psalms do a beautiful job not only of holding your feet to the fire of God’s Law, but also of driving you to that one place where God delights to see you. On your knees. In need. Crying out to Him for mercy. Repenting of your sin and seeking His forgiveness in Jesus Christ.

Jesus, you see, is the Good Samaritan who bandages your wounds, pours on oil and wine, and nurses you back to health. Jesus is the Good Shepherd who picks you up, places you on His shoulders, and carries you back to the sheepfold of His Word. Jesus is the Good Physician who gives you the medicine of immortality—His own life-giving body and blood for the forgiveness of sins.

Stated simply, Lent isn’t about you. It’s about Jesus. Jesus taking your sin and making it His own. Jesus suffering the penalty you deserve. Jesus shedding His blood to make atonement for you. Jesus dying to sin that you might not die eternally, but rise to newness of life in Him.

So what about fasting, prayer, and charitable deeds? Go for it. Discipline your body. Make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires. Dive into the Scriptures and make your requests known to God. Help provide for the needs of your brothers and sisters in Christ. Just remember not to do these things to win over God or show others how religious you are. Instead, do them as helpful reminders that your sinful flesh no longer rules the roost. Christ does! His cross, His blood, His means of grace have washed you clean, declared you righteous, and now define who you are as a child of God.

But even more than that, the best Lenten discipline is simply to have more Jesus. More preaching of Jesus, that He died and rose for you. More remembering your Baptism, by which you’ve been made a child of God. More Absolution, which releases the devil’s claim on you by forgiving your sin. More body and blood of Jesus, so that you are filled with the one who lives in and through you and will raise you up on the Last Day.

Concerning tonight’s psalm, Martin Luther wrote:
“The life and behavior of every Christian should be so constituted that he does not know or have anything but God, and in no other way than in faith.” [Luther’s Works XIV 146]
The penitential psalms hold this truth before your eyes. They point you to Christ and lead you through repentance to God’s gift of forgiveness. All so that you can live your baptism. So that the Old Adam in you can by daily contrition and repentance be drowned and die with all sins and evil desires, and that a new man should daily emerge and arise to live before God in righteousness and purity forever. So that you can do charitable deeds, pray, and fast in the freedom of Gospel, for the benefit of your neighbor.

So slow down this Lenten season and enjoy the scenery pictured in the penitential psalms as you journey to the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. You will learn therein that the Christian life has a distinct and beautiful rhythm—Law and Gospel, sin and grace, confession and absolution, dying and rising to newness of life. In Christ, dear friends, you find God’s gift of forgiveness. That’s why King David ends this first penitential psalm so confidently: “The LORD has heard the sound of my weeping. The LORD has heard my plea; the LORD accepts my prayer.” In Christ, you see, God hears, answers, forgives, and renews.

What a blessing it is to enter this holy season. Lent means more Jesus. And you can never have enough of Jesus, because you’re always trying to have too much of you. Thanks be to God, therefore, that Jesus came and bled and died and rose again for you. That is what we begin celebrating tonight!

This Lenten midweek sermon series is based on God’s Gift of Forgiveness, CPH © 2011.
A few thoughts were borrowed from an article by the Rev. Mark Buetow at Higher Things.