Household & Heritage
Conference
August 9, 2025
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran
Church, Rathdrum, Idaho
Text:
Joshua 4
Twelve men, a man from each
Tribe. Twelve stones from the midst of
the Jordan. To be a memorial
forever. A visible, tangible sign. Of what?
Of God’s saving acts for His people.
In a wonderful rerun of the Red Sea miracle, there is the LORD, present,
this time not in a pillar of cloud, but enthroned between the cherubim, seated
upon the Mercy Seat, the covering of the Ark of the Covenant. And the moment the beautiful feet of the
priests bearing the holy Ark touch the water, the waters of the Jordan are cut
off. The LORD is holding back all that
would hinder the children of Israel from entering the Promised Land. God’s people pass over on dry ground. Collect the stones! Actually, first build a similar monument
right there in the midst of the Jordan.
And then collect the stones.
Twelve of them. And lay them down
in the place you lodge tonight
What is the purpose of a
monument, memorial? What’s it for? Well, first, it’s so you go look at it and remember…
remember the thing it is given to call to mind (it’s right there in the word,
“Memorial”… remember). And in the
remembering of the thing, reflect on it.
Meditate upon it. Let gratitude
for the thing thus memorialized be engendered within you. And then, think what that thing means for you
now, and in the future.
Let it give you confidence for the present, and wisdom and
courage as you face the future. That is the first purpose of a memorial: Your
own edification.
Second, that it may do the same for
future generations. When your child
looks at the memorial, and asks, “What does this mean?”… ah… now you have the
perfect opportunity to teach them about it. That they may have the same gratitude
for the past, and the same confidence, and wisdom, and courage for the
present and the future. You can think
about this in terms of holy memorials, like the stones. But you also know this from, say, the
Washington Monument, or the World War II Memorial. These memorials ground us, who came later, in
the struggles and remedies of generations past, and make their
struggles, and their remedies, our own.
And it even works for those who
don’t share our history. Others
can come to know about the thing memorialized, by means of the memorial. Maybe even ask you about it. So you’ll tell them. And then, they, too, will come to know
and participate in it in some way.
They will come to receive the benefit of it.
The twelve stones work that
way. They were given for that
purpose. Whenever an Israelite would
come to Gilgal, he’d look at the stones, and remember and give thanks
for God’s great salvation. And he’d
be steeled for the present and the future in the face of the mighty
enemies who stand between him and his inheritance.
That is what signs do in the
Scriptures. In the Gospel of John,
Jesus’ miracles were called signs.
In Acts, the Apostles performed great signs and wonders (it was
actually Jesus working through them).
The memorial of twelve stones was to serve as a sign. Such signs are not only momentous in
and of themselves (I mean, crossing over the flooded waters of the Jordan on
dry ground is pretty momentous!).
They also testify to the certainty of God’s Promises for the
present and the future. Specifically, in
this case, the Promise of the Land. But
also, and to every generation, THE Promise: The Seed of the woman, the Seed of
Abraham, the Son of David, Messiah, who would come to crush the
serpent’s head, deliver His Israel from bondage, be the Blessing of the
nations, save His people from their sins.
And in this way, this sign,
the twelve stones… this is for you, beloved. Twelve stones, a stone for each Tribe. I can’t help but think about the twelve
foundation stones of the New Israel, the Twelve Apostles. Upon their teaching and writing the holy
Christian Church is built. St. Paul
agrees: “built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus
himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined
together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord” (Eph. 2:19-20).
Twelve stones. You can’t see them with your own eyes (we
have no idea where they are, now). But
here they are, memorialized by the Spirit in the Holy Scriptures, so
that they may do your work on you. Thanksgiving
for God’s mighty acts of salvation, as you now receive the benefit of them. Confidence, wisdom, and courage
for the present and the future, by virtue of the certainty of God’s
Promises (that is to say, faith!).
God has brought you to this moment by His sheer grace and mercy. He will bring you through this moment,
on into eternity, by that same grace and mercy.
All the Holy Scriptures are,
in this way, a memorial, a sign.
What else? Holy Baptism
(and the LORD, present in the midst of the Jordan, that His people may pass
over into the Promise, certainly ought to call to mind Christ’s Baptism in that
same Jordan, and our Baptism into Christ!).
Some of you may vividly remember your Baptism, if you were old
enough. But those of us baptized as
infants have to remember it by other signs. So, “Here stands the font before our eyes,
Telling how God has received us” (LSB 645:4).
Maybe you were given a baptismal certificate you can hang on your wall,
or a candle, or a baptismal shell. Memorials. That’s what those things are.
What else? The Supper. Bread and wine that you can taste, touch,
smell. And, of course, ears that hear
our Lord’s Word, that this is no mere bread and wine, but the very
body of Christ that suffered and was given into death on the cross for our
sins, and is now risen from the dead (resurrection body of God invading
us when we eat of it), lives, and reigns.
The very blood of Christ, shed on the cross to make atonement for us,
now coursing through our Lord’s resurrection veins, and our veins
as we drink of it.
What else? Brothers and sisters in Christ, united
in confession, and suffering, and prayer, gathered around the Lord’s
gifts. What else? There is virtually no end. The very architecture of the Church is
a sign. Ask yourself, what is
prominent here? What does it mean? Think about it. Meditate on it. Big cross, front and center. Below it, an altar, where the once-for-all
Sacrifice is delivered to us as Sacrament.
Ah, but you can only get to that through the font. Pulpit and lectern, like an open Bible on
either side. Attention directed up, and
toward God, but you, planted deep in the company of others like you, believers
in Christ, to form one body of Christ.
Now, your children may ask you about
this, that, and the other thing, “What does this mean?” Actually, you should lead them to ask you. And if they won’t ask, ask for
them. And then answer them. Your pastor can help you, but remember, as
Dr. Luther repeatedly reminds us in the Small Catechism, the head of the
family should teach the faith in a simple way to his household. And this is one of the things a memorial is for. That you may teach your children, and so
catch them up into the story of our Lord’s salvation, so that it becomes their
own. So, do it. Read and meditate on the Scriptures with your
family at home. Keep the Bible before
their eyes and in their ears. And the
Catechism. And the hymnal. Put up some crosses and crucifixes and
Christian art on your walls. In every
room of your home. Keep it always in
your line of sight. How about a crucifix
in close proximity to your computer screen?
You get why that may be helpful?
Why not listen to hymns, and sing hymns together with your family? Inundate the senses with the signs.
And then, others will come to
know, too. They may even ask you about
it. And you’ll tell them. You’ll show them the signs, and memorialize
our Lord’s great salvation for them.
You’ll tell them about Jesus and His love for them. His life for them, His death for them, and
His resurrection from the dead for them.
How He restores them to the Father and bestows His Holy Spirit in His
Means of Grace. The signs.
Just like the stones. They are for you, and for your children. And they are for all who are far off,
everyone whom the Lord our God calls to Himself (Acts 2:39). Why? “(S)o
that all the peoples of the earth may know that the hand of the LORD is mighty,
that you may fear the LORD your God forever” (Josh. 4:24). In the Name of the Father, and of the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.