Monday, July 26, 2021
Sunday, July 25, 2021
A Wedding Sermon
The
Holy Marriage of Taylor Comfort and Anna DeTray
July
24, 2021
Chehalis,
Washington
Text: Matt. 19:4-6
Do
you have any idea how countercultural you are at this moment? Ironically doing the very thing people have
been doing since the dawn of time, the very thing God designed us to do from
the beginning, His institution, even before the fall into sin. You’re getting married. It’s like you’re hippies, or something, only
reverse hippies, rebelling by doing the thing the hippies (or in our day, the
postmoderns) rebel against doing. You’re
swimming against the tide. Man and
woman. Making vows. Pledging your faithfulness. Forsaking all others. To have and to hold from this day forward. For better or for worse. For richer or for poorer. In sickness and in health. To love and to cherish. Until death parts you. And you mean it. It’s really weird.
But
good for you. This is how God designed
us as human beings. He designed us for
marriage. He designed marriage for
us. This that is happening here today,
before God and these witnesses, this thing that is so countercultural, Holy
Marriage, is God’s gift to you. And you
are God’s gift to one another. “‘Therefore
a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the
two shall become one flesh.’ So they are
no longer two but one flesh. What
therefore God has joined together, let not man separate” (Matt. 19:5-6;
ESV).
It is
God who joins you together as husband and wife this day, and He does this thing
the way He always does His things, which is to say, by His Word. He pronounces it. He declares it. Why would He do such a thing? Why would He give such a gift? Well, as long as we’re being rebellious and
countercultural, we may as well get really funky and ask what the Scriptures
have to say about it. Marriage is by
God’s design. And according to the
Scriptures, God has designed the gift of marriage to fulfill at least three
purposes: 1. Companionship, 2. Procreation, and 3. Holy Sexuality.
In
the creation that was “very good” (Gen. 1:31), there was one deficiency,
even before the fall into sin, as God Himself points out in Genesis Chapter
2. “It is not good that the man
should be alone” (2:18). God created
man to live in relationship, in communion.
And here was Adam, utterly alone, the only soul on earth. But God knew just what He would do about
it. “I will make him a helper fit for
him,” literally, corresponding to him. And here we are making the revolutionary
assertion that men and women are, in fact, different, physically, mentally,
emotionally, in such a way that they complement one another. They complete each other. As a general rule, things work out best when
they are in relationship to one another.
But
things were so good in Eden, God had to make a special point of this to Adam,
that there was an absence that needed to be filled. Thus the parade of animals. You remember this. Adam names every living creature as God
marches them past. And it is not that Adam
is naming them “Spot,” “Rover,” “Mr. Snuggles.”
What is he doing? He is engaging
in scientific classification. He is
studying them. Remember, Adam is no
caveman. Pre-fall Adam is undoubtedly
the greatest intellect who ever lived, operating with the unmarred image of God,
the height of human reason and sophistication.
And as he carefully observes each living creature, he notices something
important. There is a Mr. Buffalo and a
Mrs. Buffalo, a Mr. Rhinoceros and a Mrs. Rhinoceros. You get the point. Each male has a counterpart corresponding to
him, and vice versa. And all at once,
Adam ruffles his brow and scratches his head and says, “Wait a minute… Where’s
mine? I need that. I am incomplete.” Perhaps he even prayed, as single Christians
should and do, “Gracious God, please grant to me a Christian spouse.”
And
God puts Adam into a deep sleep, and from his side, God fashions a woman, Eve,
and He brings her to the man. And this
is the first wedding, the first marriage.
God gets to define marriage, because He created it in the first place,
for our good, according to His eternal design.
Adam was beside himself. “This
at last,” he says, as so many men do when they’ve met the love of their
life, at last! “This at last
is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because
she was taken out of Man” (Gen. 2:23).
And then we get the Words of Institution for Marriage, quoted by Jesus
in our Holy Gospel: “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother
and hold fast,” cling, cleave, “to his wife, and they shall
become one flesh” (v. 24).
So
companionship. Not just good friends,
though certainly that. But intimate
relationship, communion. And from that
come the next two purposes, and they go together. Procreation.
Let’s have no talk about “reproduction.”
We’re not on an assembly line, pushing out product. Husbands and wives are given to be participants
in God’s creative act. “God blessed
them. And God said to them, ‘Be fruitful
and multiply and fill the earth” (Gen. 1:28). It is a blessing to have children, and every
child, no matter the circumstances of conception and birth, is a gift from
God. We don’t know yet whether, or how
prolifically, God will bless you with fruit and multiplication. But I’m warning you, I pray He blesses you
generously. We need some more kids
around here. As far as I’m concerned,
you can get started tonight. But then,
you know how that happens, right?
Holy
sexuality. And we should think of
it that way. We’ve made sex into something
dirty, unclean, unseemly, unfit for Christian sermons. But we’ve done that by misusing and abusing
what is one of God’s most precious gifts.
Because it is the bodily consummation of the companionship, the
communion, for which God created marriage.
And it is the means by which God makes a marriage fruitful, so that the
love between husband and wife flows out now creatively in the begetting and
raising of children. St. Paul sees this
as really important, and he warns husbands and wives not to deprive one another
of physical intimacy, except perhaps for a brief and agreed upon time to
concentrate on prayer, but then immediately to come back together, so that we
may avoid temptation and loss of self-control (1 Cor. 7:5). But also because within the context of
marriage, within the lifelong union of one man and one woman who have vowed
themselves before God to one another in love and fidelity, sex is holy and God
pleasing. It is His gift to you.
So
for these purposes God gave marriage to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, a
perpetual estate for every generation to follow. It was to be the ultimate expression of
communion between a man and a woman, the living picture of man’s communion with
God, and the reflection of the Communion of Persons within the God-head in the
Tri-unity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
But you know what happened.
Sin. Rejection of God. The breaking of Communion. The husband blaming his wife, and blaming God
for his wife. The wife blaming the
serpent. Humans blaming everyone but
themselves. And we, their children, the
fruit of their union, born into their guilt, and taking after their rebellion. That is why marriage is in the state it is in
in our society these days.
It is
not good for our communion with God to be broken. If God does not restore it, it leaves us
alone, separated from God, separated from one another. But through the rubble of Paradise lost, God
preserved marriage. He kept it for our
good. And by it He brought forth for
Himself a people, a people who lived by a Promise: The Seed of the woman who
would crush the serpent’s head (Gen. 3:15).
Through many generations of husbands and wives and children, God
preached and preserved that Promise, until an angel came to a poor virgin girl
in the town of Nazareth, Mary, who was betrothed to Joseph, now found to be
with Child, God’s own Son.
He
would grow up, that Son, to be the faithful Husband Adam was not. And to restore communion, He would give
Himself up into the death of the cross for His beloved Bride, the Church, to
present her to Himself in splendor, without spot, or wrinkle, or any such
thing; that is, sins forgiven, holy and blameless, righteous with the
righteousness of her faithful Bridegroom.
God put Jesus into a deep sleep, the sleep of death. And from His riven side, by water and blood,
God formed for our Lord a Bride washed and redeemed. And you belong to her. Which is to say, you belong to Him, the fruit
of this holy union, born anew in baptismal water, redeemed by His blood shed for
you.
Your
marriage will not always reach the ideal of Eden. In fact, it never will. But as a Christian marriage, ordered by God’s
Word and institution, it will always be a living picture, and icon of Christ
and His holy Bride, the Church. That is,
your marriage is a countercultural confession to the world, and to one another,
of the love of God in Christ that redeems sinners and makes us His own. And your marriage is, and will always be,
lived out in His grace, forgiveness for every failing, healing for all that is
broken, His steadfastness always preserving you and your union.
So
let’s do it, let’s be countercultural and revolutionary. Make your vows today, and mean them, and keep
them. Live as husband and wife according
to God’s order. Love one another. Be faithful to each other. Delight in one another. Speak well of each other in the hearing of
others. Exult in your marriage. Hold it in high esteem. Have lots of kids, if God so wills, and raise
them in the fear and admonition of the Lord.
Be the living picture of Christ and His Bride, the Church. To live such a life is to live by faith. And it is to live a rich and fulfilling life,
all redeemed and sanctified by the Lord who here declares a new beginning. In just a few moments, He will pronounce you
husband and wife, and so you will be, for the Lord has spoken. Thus you will leave father and mother, and
cleave to one another, no longer two, but one flesh. And what God here joins together, let no one
separate. God has designed you for this. In the Name of the Father, and of the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Wednesday, July 21, 2021
Eighth Sunday after Pentecost
Eighth Sunday
after Pentecost (Proper 11B)
July 18, 2021
Text: Mark 6:30-44
When
Jesus feeds the five thousand in our Holy Gospel, He is quite literally
fulfilling Psalm 23. Seeking just a
little bit of solitude and solace with His disciples, as He comes ashore in
this desolate place, He sees a great crowd.
They had run ahead of Him on foot.
And when He sees them, He has “compassion on them, because they are
like sheep without a shepherd” (Mark 6:34; ESV). And if there is one thing Jesus cannot stand
to see, it is sheep without a shepherd, sheep in disarray, scattered abroad,
lost, exposed to danger and predators, where there is no food, where there is
no drink, wounded and alone. So there by
the waters He gathers the flock together.
He congregates them. And He makes
them to recline on the green grass, to lie down in green pastures. And He restores their souls by speaking…
He teaches them many things. He leads
them in the paths of righteousness for His Name’s sake, and the Word He speaks
to them is the Word of life, the rod and staff that will guide and comfort the
sheep, and protect them from all evil, even though they walk through the valley
of the shadow of death. And speaking of
shadows… as they lengthen into evening, what does the Lord do but set a Table
before His sheep. Bread and fish. His goodness and mercy overflowing in
abundance. All eat and are satisfied,
and there are twelve baskets full left over.
So there can be no doubt. This
Jesus who miraculously multiplies the loaves and fishes is the Lord, who is our
Shepherd, and we shall not want. He
opens His hand and satisfies the desire of every living thing (Ps. 145:16).
From
this text we are to learn that Jesus cares about our every need, even our
bodily needs, right down to whether we get enough to eat. He cares, and He is able and willing to
provide for us. This is a great comfort
to us in an economy that is anything but certain, in times of political
instability and social unrest. None of
us knows the future, what will happen, but we do know the Good Shepherd who is
leading us through it. We know He can
feed us and comfort us in all the desolate places we find ourselves, that He
can do a lot with a little, that with Jesus, there is always enough, and even
more than we need.
Now,
He may bring us through some lean and scary times. The promise is not that we avoid the valley
of the shadow, but that He will bring us through. Remember, the crowds in our text only knew
their tummies were rumbling and it was getting dark. They had no idea what Jesus would do about
it. The disciples thought they could
avoid the trouble altogether by planning for the future, sending the
crowds off early enough that they could purchase something to eat for
themselves in the villages. In any
case, the disciples did not think there was any possible way the Lord
could provide for all these people here in the middle of nowhere. And we smile, and we laugh at their
littleness of faith, but then we stand on their shoulders, and we know what
happened, because it was written for our learning. The Lord provides. And He does it through the hands of these
very disciples.
And
isn’t that just like our Lord, to bring about something out of nothing, to fill
the hungry with good things, to pour out His gifts upon us, grace upon grace. And if we’re honest, isn’t it just like us to
doubt whether He can do it, or whether He will do it, and like
the disciples, to incredulously present our very reasonable objections, and
suggest to Him a better way to resolve the situation (“Shall we go
and buy two hundred denarii worth of bread and give it to them to eat?”
[Mark 6:37]… “Come on, Jesus! You’re
being ridiculous! Follow our plan for
once. We know what is needed. We know what to do.”) Yet, Jesus delivers anyway, though we doubt,
and though we do not deserve it. He
gives His instructions, and He fills the hands of His disciples, and everyone
walks away satisfied when the Lord hosts the meal. I don’t know about you, but when I think back
over my life and see how the Lord has provided for me, for my family, and for
my loved ones, there are times I couldn’t tell you how He did it. How did those five loaves and two fish feed
the multitude? There were some awful
lean times where by every human standard it shouldn’t have worked out and we
shouldn’t have had enough, but we did, and we survived, and we had plenty. And we had joy. The Lord brought us through. The Lord provides.
But
there is more going on here than simply the assurance that the Lord fills our
bellies. When the Good Shepherd gathers
His sheep into a congregation, what He gives them is the Divine Service. Did you notice the shape of the whole
encounter in our Holy Gospel? Jesus has compassion
on the crowds, who are like sheep without a shepherd, out here in this desolate
place (He literally suffers in His guts for them, that is the meaning of
the Greek word). So He gathers them
together beside the water, and He teaches them, and then He feeds them. Water, teaching, feeding. Do you get it? Baptism, Word, Supper. And so that you don’t miss it, what does He
do with the bread and fish? He takes
them, gives thanks, breaks them, and gives them. Does that sound at all familiar?
Now,
this is not to say, of course, that this is the Lord’s Supper. It is most certainly not. He has not yet instituted the Supper at this
point, and there is no wine, and we don’t have fish in the Sacrament. But what this is, is a foreshadowing
of the Supper, a dry run, if you will.
He is showing us the pattern, what He does for us, how He
cares for us, as the Lord who is our Shepherd, so that we shall not want. He provides.
He feeds us.
Jesus
provides all we need for this body and life.
Our Father gives us each day our daily bread for Jesus’ sake, and that
is not unimportant. But even more, the
Bread we need above all else is Jesus Himself, whom God feeds us here,
when He gathers us together as His Church.
In this desolate place, in this world where nothing is as it should be,
where all is fallen and broken, and we ourselves are broken and snared by the
mortal grip of sin and death, Jesus comes to rescue us. He has compassion, He suffers it in the
guts for us, because apart from Him, we are like sheep without a shepherd. We’re in disarray, scattered abroad, lost,
exposed to danger and predators, where there is no food, where there is no
drink, wounded and alone. Jesus knows
just what we need for that. We need to
hear His Word. That is what restores our
souls. So He teaches us. He calls us together, calls us by name, and
we recognize His voice. He gives us a
place at His Table. He gathers us in
groups, a hundred here, fifty there… in other words, He places us in a
Christian congregation. And He ordains
the disciples He has called and appointed for the purpose, to give out His
gifts, to take what is His and distribute it to the sheep, to you, to feed you,
to make sure you get what you need, and to gather together whatever is
left. Or as Paul says, to be “servants
of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor. 4:1).
And
this is to say, whenever you find yourself in a desolate place… wherever the
desolation touches you… when you are sick, when you are sorrowful, when you are
beaten and broken by your enemies, the devil, the world, and your own sinful
nature… when your marriage is troubled, when mom and dad just don’t understand
you, when your job is in jeopardy, or when just can’t seem to make ends meet…
when your mind is in a fog, when you are tired, exhausted… when those you love
are suffering or making bad decisions… when a loved one dies and you find
yourself in the midst of grief… when your sins burden you, when the devil
tempts you, when your body fails you, and when death approaches… wherever the
desolation touches you, what you need is what God gives you here in His Church. Jesus.
You need Jesus. His green
pastures, His still waters, the Bread of Life.
And He will provide it. Here is
Jesus, for you, always, in divine compassion, beside the water, teaching you,
feeding you, healing you, forgiving your sins, making you whole, and giving you
life. You should never say, when you
find yourself in desolation, when you are suffering or in want, “The Church is
not for me… That is not what I need
right now.” “I don’t feel like it,” or
“It’s not safe,” or “I’m not worthy enough or holy enough to go to Church.” Church is precisely where you should be when
you are suffering or worried or oppressed by temptations, or the devil, or the
guilt of your sins, when you know you are unworthy or unclean, when you find
yourself a sheep without a shepherd. For
it is here in the Church, gathered together with those who are just like you,
who have the same problem you do apart from Christ… It is here, in the water and the teaching and
the feeding, where your Good Shepherd Jesus applies the healing balm of His
death and resurrection for your forgiveness, life, and salvation. He teaches you the way you should go, and
strengthens you for the journey with the Bread of Life that is His very Body.
The
feeding of the five thousand was not just a one-off, spectacular miracle designed
to wow you with Jesus’ divine, glorious power.
It was a demonstration of just how your Good Shepherd, Jesus, at this
very moment, cares for you and provides for all your needs of body and soul. We love the 23rd Psalm because we
long for a Lord who cares for us the way the Good Shepherd cares for His
sheep. In Jesus, that is just what you
have. And, by the way, look there at the
altar. Do you see how He is still
multiplying the loaves? It will happen
again in just a moment. You will come,
and you will eat, and you will leave here satisfied, soul restored, forgiven,
healed, and whole. Psalm 23 is
fulfilled. Surely goodness and mercy
shall follow you all the days of your life, and you will dwell in the House of
the Lord forever. In the Name of the
Father, and of the Son X, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
Seventh Sunday after Pentecost
Seventh Sunday
after Pentecost (Proper 10B)
July 11, 2021
Text: Mark 6:14-29
St. John the Baptist was beheaded by
the government for preaching traditional marriage. Let’s not mince words
on this. Herodias was offended by John’s preaching, because he
declared it unlawful, ungodly, for Herod to have his brother Philip’s wife
while Philip was still alive. As we all know, hell hath no fury… and
Herodias was furious at the scorn and shame brought upon her by John’s
preaching. How dare he make her feel bad about her domestic
situation! How dare he question the sanctity of her love. How dare
he suggest, nay, proclaim, that her marriage to Herod is sinful before
God. And so John finds himself in the dungeon. Herodias wants him
executed, but Herod protects him, if you can call the dungeon protection,
because he fears John and knows that he is a righteous and holy man.
Herod even appreciates a good John the Baptist sermon now and then, although he
finds John’s message perplexing. You know how it is when a sermon hits a
little too close to home. The Law of God tears you apart at the seams.
And it hurts. It is the crucifixion of the old man, the old sinful
nature. That always hurts. But it must be done, so that your God
can raise you up to new life, a new creation in Christ Jesus. That
preaching hurts, but you love it, because you know it’s true, and you hear in
it the voice of the living God.
But the enemies of the Gospel are always watching for an opportune time to rob
you of such preaching, and Herodias and the demons identified the opportunity
to silence John on the occasion of Herod’s birthday. There was a big
bash, a serious feast, a wining and dining of the elite of the elite.
These included Herod’s nobles and his generals and the leading citizens of
Galilee. Such feasts always serve a political purpose. They offer
an occasion for the ruler to show off his wealth and his power. He shows
the leading men a good time and shores up their loyalty. The free-flow of
alcohol looses up the tongues. Stories are told. Boasts are
made. And hearts are merry. And they’re all the merrier if Herod’s
pretty step-daughter gives us a dance. It’s not in the text, but we
assume the dance was lewd. Whether that’s true or not, it was certainly a
crowd pleaser, and it exceedingly pleased Herod. Caught up in the spirit
of the moment and the spirits in his cup, Herod makes a rash vow. “Ask
me whatever you wish, and I will give it to you… up to half of my kingdom”
(Mark 6:22-23; ESV). It has been suggested Herod was offering to trade in
the mother for a newer model, make Herodias’ daughter his wife. It’s hard
to say. But this had been a set-up by Herodias the whole time.
Daughter asks mother, “For what should I ask,” and mother advises
daughter, “The head of John the Baptist” (v. 24). She wouldn’t be
the last mother to demand a preacher’s head on a platter. But she meant
this quite literally. She had trapped the king in his words. Herod
didn’t want to execute John. But he also didn’t want to be embarrassed in
the presence of his prestigious guests. So rather than do what he knew to
be right, he sold his soul for a dance. Isn’t that the way of the
world? Herod promises to give up to half his kingdom, as if he were a
powerful god, but in the end, we see he is nothing but a weak and insecure
slave of his subjects.
Well, John is beheaded. So it goes. But there would have been an
easier way, you know. If he had just tolerated the illegitimate marriage,
this never would have happened. He could have done so much more good if
he’d just kept his trap shut this one time. But that wasn’t his office,
was it? He was sent to be “the voice of one crying in the wilderness:
‘Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight’” (Mark 1:3).
He was sent to proclaim “a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins”
(v. 4). To everyone. Even to sinful kings. He doesn’t stay
out of politics when the Word of the Lord is at stake. He is not ashamed
to proclaim the Lord’s testimony before kings (Psalm 119:46), even if it costs
him his life. Divine truth is worth dying for. We forget that,
living in a culture where the very existence of objective truth is
denied. But John knew it. So did the prophets and the apostles and
the martyrs of all ages who loved not their lives even unto death (Rev. 12:11).
What
about you? Are you afraid to bear witness to Christ? Do you fear to
speak His truth because your friends and family might rebuke you, or think mean
thoughts about you, or unfriend you on Facebook? Repent. It’s
getting harder, isn’t it? The Lord knows your weakness, and has taken
your failure into Himself and put it to death in His flesh. And He gives
you His Spirit, to make you bold, that you confess His Name and His Word, even
if it means your death. For you know that whoever lives and believes in Jesus,
though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in Jesus
shall never die (John 11:25-26). And you know that whoever confesses
Jesus before men, He will also confess before His Father in heaven; but whoever
denies Jesus before men, He will also deny before His Father in heaven (Matt.
10:32-33).
But with John there is even more at play. John is sent to prepare the way
of the Lord quite literally. John’s life, and his death, parallels
that of Jesus on every level, except that what happens to Jesus is greater,
what happens to John is lesser, just as he said it would be: “He must
increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30). So John’s birth is
foretold by the angel Gabriel, who promises he will be great before the Lord
(Luke 1:15), and Jesus’ birth is foretold by the angel Gabriel, who promises
the Child to be born is the Son of God (v. 35). John’s birth is
miraculous, born to elderly parents. Jesus’ birth is even more
miraculous, born of a virgin. John baptizes for repentance, but Jesus
offers a greater Baptism that not only washes away sin, but makes you God’s own
child. John has disciples, but he sends them to follow Jesus as “the
Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). And
John prepares the way in suffering and death. He is arrested and
beheaded. His disciples put his headless body into a tomb (Mark
6:29). Jesus is arrested, tried, and crucified. Joseph and
Nicodemus put His pierced Body into a tomb. And now it is Jesus’ turn to
blaze the trail. Jesus Christ is risen from the dead! Herod worries
that Jesus is John the Baptist raised from the dead, and his fear is not
completely unfounded. Because the risen Jesus will raise up John on the
Last Day. And He will raise you. You’ll see John and Jesus with
your very own eyes. And you’ll praise God for the blood John shed,
preparing the way for the Blood of the Savior, shed for you for the forgiveness
of all of your sins.
So you need not fear the enemies of the Gospel: Not Satan, nor the demons, nor
sin, nor death; not Islamic terrorists, nor abortionists, nor foreign
superpowers, nor the woke mob. You need not fear the unfaithful who claim
the Name of Christ, nor your own sinful flesh. Jesus Christ is the end of
fear. The enemies of the Gospel are always watching for an opportune time
to get you. But they can never get to you when you are in Christ Jesus,
in His Word, in Your Baptism, in His Supper. The Lord also gives a Feast,
and He outdoes Herod. He, too, gives Food and Drink. But He invites
the weak of the weak, dying and dead sinners. His Feast is the medicine
that brings the dead to life. His wine also looses tongues, not for
boasting, but for confessing and singing songs of praise. His wine makes
our hearts merry, so that we rejoice, and we’re caught up in the Spirit, His
Holy Spirit, who opens our lips to speak His Word with joy. He makes no
rash vow, but He does make a vow: “If you ask me anything in my name,
I will do it” (John 14:14). It is the promise that He hears our
prayers and answers them. And unlike Herod, He delivers. He is not
trapped in His Words. He holds Himself to them. He is a
powerful God, the only true God, with the Father and the Holy Spirit.
Though it is true that His Words result in a death: His own on the cross, for
the life of the world. For sinners. For you.
Jesus Christ is crucified by the government that He might form for Himself a
Bride, the holy Christian Church. He sleeps the deep sleep of death, that
from His side the Church be formed. Water and Blood, Font and Chalice,
filled with Jesus Christ crucified for you. You are His beloved.
You are His spotless Bride. As with any marriage, what is yours is His,
and what is His is yours. What is yours He has taken away: sin and death
and condemnation. What is His He has freely bestowed upon you:
righteousness and life and resurrection. In the Church, we preach
traditional marriage, not because we’re ignorant, or prudes, or haters. Let this be absolutely clear: You are to hate
no one. We preach traditional marriage because it is God’s gift for our
good: for companionship, and procreation, and holy sexuality. And we
preach it because it is an icon of Christ and His Bride, the Church, a living
picture of the Gospel. The husband gives himself for his bride. The
bride receives the sacrifice of the husband for her good. And in this
pattern of giving and receiving, husband and wife live together in love and
fidelity and so provide a safe haven for the nurture of children. We all
fall short of this in our marriages. But this is what marriage is
designed by God to be. Until the Day the Lord Jesus comes again
and bids us join Him at the wedding Feast of the Lamb that has no end.
Then St. John will have His head again. And all will be made whole and
right and good. Indeed, come, Lord Jesus. Come quickly. In
the Name of the Father, and of the Son (+), and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Monday, July 5, 2021
Sixth Sunday after Pentecost
Sixth Sunday after
Pentecost (Proper 9B)
July 4, 2021
Text: Mark 6:1-13
Preachers are called to preach the Word
of the Lord. Jesus sends them with all His authority to speak His Word…
all of it, the whole counsel of God, no more, no less. The preacher
doesn’t get to pick and choose what he likes and what he doesn’t like, what is
safe to proclaim and what could land him in hot water with the people or with
the government. The Holy Christian Church is called to hear the Word of
God… all of it, the whole counsel of God, whether it appeals to her members or
not. She is to receive it gladly, confess it boldly, and support the
ministers of Christ who publicly proclaim it. But understand, there is no
promise of glorious success in this undertaking, at least not in human
terms. There will be those who hear the Word of God, repent of their
sins, and come to faith in Christ. But there will also be those who will
not hear, not for lack of preaching, but because they refuse to hear.
They do not want the Lord or His Word. And this should not surprise
us. We are a rebellious nation in the midst of rebellious nations, after
all. Fallen sinners, every one. We are born unbelievers. Our
ears are not, by nature, attuned to the things of the Spirit. That is why
we require a new birth by water and the Word, the washing of regeneration that
is Holy Baptism, that born of the Spirit we have ears to hear. It is
God’s gift, this new life, this faith that hangs on every Word of the
Lord Jesus. It is His doing, and not our own. And so it is
that we are called to preach and hear and confess the living Word of God.
But the results are up to the Spirit. We are not called to success.
We are called to faithfulness.
Jesus came to His hometown, Nazareth, to His home synagogue, to be the Guest
Preacher on this particular Sabbath. The text doesn’t say it, but I can
imagine how it went. Everyone was excited that the hometown Boy was
returning to preach. “That’s our Boy! He’s done well. Look at
the following He has. Why, I can remember when He was just a little guy
on Momma’s knee. I just can’t wait to hear His sermon. I bet He’s a
good Preacher.”
But then
He opens His mouth. And He preaches the Word of God unvarnished, with all
its rough edges and hard surfaces, the crushing weight of the Law, the scandal
of the Holy Gospel. And the people say, “Wait a minute! This is not
what we were expecting. Who does this kid think He is, anyway?!
Saying things only God has the authority to say! Telling us to
repent! Forgiving our sins! After all, He’s just a
carpenter. Nobody special! We know His mom and His brothers and
sisters.”
I’ve
preached at my home Church, and while everyone was very gracious, I’m not sure
how effective a preacher I can be to people who changed my diapers. When
a preacher returns home, at best, there is a condescending pride in the boy who
made good. Jesus gets the worst. The people are offended at
Him. They will not hear the Word from Him. “A prophet is not
without honor, except in his hometown and among his relatives and his own
household” (Mark 6:4; ESV). “And he could do no mighty work there,
except that he laid his hands on a few sick people and healed them. And
he marveled because of their unbelief” (vv. 5-6).
Disappointing. Sad. But so it goes. Jesus came to preach, and
that is what He does. Whether they hear or refuse to hear (Ez. 2:5).
Our Lord’s mistreatment serves as an object lesson for the Church. This
is not just about a preacher returning to his home congregation. This is
the treatment any faithful Christian can expect when you speak the Word of the
Lord. Jesus calls the Twelve and begins to send them out two by
two. He invests them with His own authority over unclean spirits.
He sends them out to preach that people should repent, to cast out demons and
heal the sick, to be His spokesmen, His representatives to the people. An
“Apostle” is one who is sent. The Apostles were sent by the Lord Jesus,
and they possessed all His authority in the matter for which they were sent, so
that when they spoke, when they acted, it was the same as though Jesus Himself
spoke or acted. And so also the reaction they were to encounter.
Jesus tells them they will not always be received well. “Whenever you
enter a house, stay there until you depart from there. And if any place
will not receive you and they will not listen to you, when you leave, shake off
the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them” (Mark
6:10-11). The negative reaction is not to the Apostles in and of
themselves. It is a rejection of Christ. It is a refusal to hear
His Word. As Jesus says elsewhere, “The one who hears you hears me,
and the one who rejects you rejects me, and the one who rejects me rejects him
who sent me” (Luke 10:16). “A disciple is not above his teacher,
nor a servant above his master… If they have called the master of the house
Beelzebul, how much more will they malign those of his household” (Matt.
10:24-25). No matter. “Blessed are you when others revile you
and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my
account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so
they persecuted the prophets who were before you” (Matt. 5:11-12).
That is what the world does to prophets and preachers of the Word. That
is certainly how they treated Ezekiel. God sends His man, the prophet
Ezekiel, to a rebellious nation of Israel. And He virtually promises the
prophet he will be rejected. “I send you to them, and you shall say to
them, ‘Thus says the LORD GOD.’ And whether they hear or refuse to hear
(for they are a rebellious house) they will know that a prophet has been among
them” (Ez. 2:4-5). The preacher is sent to preach the Word of the
Lord. He is not called to success. He is called to
faithfulness. Whether they hear or refuse to hear, they will know that
Christ has sent His man, that the Lord has spoken.
This is a comfort to pastors and to the Church in a world that doesn’t really
want to hear us right now. We’re free to believe what we want to believe,
as long as we do it quietly. But when we come speaking the Word of the
Lord, preaching that the people should repent, that they are sinners, and so
are we by the way, and we all need the salvation that only comes in Jesus
Christ, well… No, thank you! Keep preaching that and we’ll have to
silence you by force. Refuse to endorse same-sex “marriage” and we’ll
strip you of your tax-exempt status. Speak against homosexuality and
we’ll fine you for hate speech. Keep it up and we’ll arrest you. Unfortunately,
you know I’m not exaggerating. It is
coming. It’s already happening in Canada and Europe, and we know that
right here in the good old United States of America, Christians have lost their
businesses and their livelihoods for speaking God’s truth about gay marriage. Our service video may be pulled from Facebook
because of what I’m saying. Don’t think you are safe just because you
don’t own a flower shop or a bakery. God
still may call you to suffer at the hands of the world for His sake. But
that’s the Spirit’s problem, not yours. Jesus is Lord, and Caesar is
not. We must obey God rather than men (Acts 5:29). You just confess
the truth in love. I’ll just keep preaching. And whether they hear
or refuse to hear, they’ll know that the people of God have been among
them.
And the miracle is that some will hear. The Spirit does His work
in the preaching of the Gospel. He breaks hearts of stone and bestows
beating hearts of flesh. He brings to new birth by water and the
Word. He leads the Old Adam to water and drowns him good and dead, that
He raise up the new man in Christ to live in Him by faith. He bestows
seeing eyes on the blind and hearing ears on the deaf. He opens dumb
mouths and looses bound tongues to speak His Word faithfully. He sends preachers
to preach and the Word of the Lord grows as sinners come to faith in
Christ. “(W)e preach Christ crucified,” says St. Paul, “a
stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called,
both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God” (1
Cor. 1:23-24). We preach Christ crucified for sinners, for the
forgiveness of sins. We preach Christ raised from the dead, who will
raise us also. It is a scandal, and it is really to say that Christ Jesus
saved us precisely in being rejected. It’s true. He saved us
by dying. Not very successful in human terms. But with God,
things are not as they appear. His death is His triumph and our
salvation. So with St. Paul, we are content to be weak and defeated in
the eyes of the world. For the sake of Christ, we are “content with
weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities” (2 Cor.
12:10). For Jesus says to us as He said to Paul: “My grace is
sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (v. 9).
So it is that the Lord sends His weak preachers to mount pulpits week after
week, day after day, proclaiming “Thus says the LORD GOD” to poor
miserable sinners. It is a pitiful sight to the movers and shakers of
this world. But with God, things are not as they appear. The weak
man is clothed in an Office that speaks for the risen Lord Jesus Christ.
The Word he speaks grants life to the dead. And the sinners in the pew
are forgiven, righteous, glorious saints, who reign with Christ and will judge
the world. We preach and we suffer, willingly, with rejoicing, because we
know how this ends. We know it is good. For Christ is risen.
He lives, and He reigns. The old is passing away. Jesus makes all
things new. “Thus says the LORD GOD.” In the Name of the
Father, and of the Son (+), and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Monday, June 28, 2021
Fifth Sunday after Pentecost
Fifth Sunday after
Pentecost (Proper 8B)
June 27, 2021
Text: Mark 5:21-43
Last
week we learned that, in the Hebrew mind, the sea is the place of chaos
and death, the very haunt of demons. But
the disciples in the boat are kept safe from all this, even as the storm rages,
because Jesus is in the boat with them.
The Church is the boat, the ark, and you are safe from all
the chaos and death and demons of the swirling sea, why? Because here is Jesus, the Creator of wind
and wave, the Savior of the world, in the boat, with us. Now, where do we find Jesus in our Holy
Gospel this morning? He is beside the
sea. I like how the King James puts
it: “nigh unto the sea” (Mark 5:21; KJV). That is, when the chaos threatens to engulf
you, when death touches you, wherever the demons afflict you, there is Jesus,
nigh unto you. He is not far off, leaving
you to whatever fate awaits you at the hands of evil. He is not unable or unwilling to help and
save. He is right there with you. That is why He came.
Jairus
had been touched by death. Not his
own. That would have been far better, as
any father will tell you. But this was
his precious little girl. Twelve years
old. She hadn’t died yet, but that is
where this is headed if Jesus doesn’t hurry up.
“Come and lay your hands on her, so that she may be made well and
live” (v. 23; ESV). Every sickness,
from the common cold to terminal cancer, is a symptom of death. That is why when someone you love is sick, no
matter how seriously, you pray. You ask
Jesus to come and make the person well and give them life. And this is especially true of moms and
dads. You know the great anxiety that
afflicts you as you care for a sick child.
“Lord Jesus, help him. Make her
well. Give my children life.” Well, here Jairus knows this sickness is not
just a rough night of holding the bowl by the bedside. His daughter’s illness is very serious. She is at the point of death (v. 23). Come, Lord Jesus, raise her out of that. And what does Jesus do? He immediately goes. Now, you know what will happen, the great
crisis and the great miracle about to unfold for the girl, but remember, at
this point, Jairus does not know, and here it is sufficient to point out that
when you pray, for yourself or for others, when you ask Jesus to come, that is
what He does. Immediately. You can be sure of that. “(C)all upon me in the day of trouble; I
will deliver you, and you shall glorify me” (Ps. 50:15). Our table prayer, “Come, Lord Jesus,” is
always more than simply asking Him to bless food. It is a prayer for His presence now and
always, and especially in times of sorrow and affliction.
So
they go to Jairus’ house, and a great crowd follows them. But along the way, there is a woman who is
suffering a discharge of blood. A
feminine issue, unrelenting, for twelve long years (incidentally, as many years
as Jairus’ little girl has been living).
And it makes her unclean.
Time does not permit a detailed explanation of the Levitical purity laws
at the moment, but suffice it to say, in the Old Testament, when bodily fluids
exit the body, they become unclean. And
in some sense, we still have this today.
For example, blood doesn’t gross you out when it’s inside you, flowing
through your veins. But when you see
blood, or someone bleeding, you may start to feel faint, and those treating the
bleeding person put on rubber gloves and use personal protective equipment so
the blood doesn’t get on them. And so it
is with every bodily fluid.
But
here it is more than that. The blood
makes this dear Jewish woman ritually unclean, and so separates her
from God and the community. She
can’t be around people. She can’t attend
Synagogue. She can’t be around her
family. She can’t approach God’s
presence in the Temple. She is an
outcast. And the doctors, who were not
the medical professionals we have today, took advantage of her. They took all her money and she wasn’t any
better for it.
Now
here comes Jesus. The chaos is swirling
all around Him. He is in the midst of
it, on His way to the place where death has touched Jairus and his home. The woman has heard about this Jesus. She knows if she could just get near Him,
even just touch His garments, she would be made well. What is going on with those garments? Well, we know from Matthew and Luke just what
part of His garments she touches. It is
the “fringe” of His garment (Matt. 9:20; Luke 8:44). This could well be one of the tassels Jewish
men wore on the four corners of their robes to remind them of God’s
Commandments, and that they belonged to God.
In other words, in touching that tassel belonging to One who had
perfectly kept God’s Commandments, and who belonged to God as His very Son, she
would be cleansed of her uncleanness, restored, and made well. Touching the tassel was a confession of
faith.
Or,
perhaps, whether intuitively or explicitly, she understood that Jesus is her
true High Priest. In the Old Testament,
the priests were made holy by partaking of the holy sacrifices, by eating them. The people were made holy and thus given
access to God by touching the priests’ garments. Jesus is not only the Priest, He is the
Sacrifice. To touch His garment is to
receive His holiness. It takes away what
is unclean. It cleanses and
restores.
In
any case, even with all the people in the crowd touching Him and rubbing elbows
with Him, He knows when someone has touched Him in faith. And there He is where death and demonic chaos
have touched this woman. He feels the
power go out of Him, and He calls her on it.
He turns and evokes from her a confession of that faith. And when she falls down before Him in fear
and trembling, confessing the whole truth, what does He say to her? You wicked sinner! Those who are unclean cannot touch me or even
be in my presence! Go away until you can
figure out how to cleanse yourself. Then
I might receive you! No, that is not
what He says. “Daughter”… and
think already about the significance of that one word for a woman who had been
excluded from fellowship with God and all other people for the last twelve
years: You belong to God as His own Child… “Daughter, your faith has
made you well,” or, also a possible translation, has saved you… “go
in peace, and be healed of your disease” (Mark 5:34). Now, this is not to say that if you do your
part of having enough faith, Jesus will do His part of healing you. That would be a misunderstanding of what is
going on here. It is simply to say this:
Faith, which is given by God in the Word (the woman had “heard the reports
about Jesus” [v. 27]), knows that cleansing, health, and life are found in
Jesus Christ alone. Faith trusts this
Word of God. It believes Christ. Faith receives what Christ has to give. Because it lives in relation to God as a
child to the Father. “Daughter,”
Jesus calls her. And so she is freed
from her burden, and restored to God and to people.
Well,
this is all wonderful, isn’t it, what Jesus has done? But in the meantime, during the delay, the
poor child dies. And what can
Jesus possibly do now, in the face of death?
Remember
what Jesus said to the dear woman, prostrate before Him in fear? Your faith has made you well. Your faith has saved you. Now He bids Jairus, “Do not fear, only
believe” (v. 36). And He kicks out
the crowds and the professional mourners, and it is a beautiful scene there
with Mom and Dad, and Peter, James, and John.
Jesus takes the little girl by the hand, and remember, death is
unclean. Jesus grabs the unclean
corpse. And He says to her, “Talitha
cumi,” which is Aramaic for, “Little girl, I say to you, arise” (v.
41). And she does. She gets up, and walks around, very much
alive, and Jesus even tells them to give her something to eat, because, after
all, being dead is hard work, and, more to the point, Jesus will eat after He
rises from the dead, proving He is no ghost, but a living, breathing, food
digesting Man of flesh and blood.
Resurrection is nothing less than this real, tangible, bodily reality.
So
there is Jesus, nigh unto the sea, so to speak, and He is present
right where the chaos and death and demons afflict you. But there is something else important here
that you must not miss, and I’m going to warn you, it will touch you right
where it hurts. Yes, Jesus always comes
when you pray for His presence, and truth be told, He is always present with
you, even when you forget to pray. Yes,
Jesus always takes away your uncleanness by forgiving your sins, and He
restores you to community and Communion with God and with your fellow believers
here in the holy Church. Faith receives that
always from Jesus. Sometimes He even
heals your temporal afflictions. So
never be afraid to pray for healing, for yourself and for others, and always,
when you are healed, praise Jesus, your Great Physician of body and soul. When you are healed, He is the One who did it.
But,
notice, Jesus didn’t prevent the death of the girl. That is not the Promise here. The death of a child is the greatest pain in
all the world, and there are a number of you here present who know that pain,
and suffer deeply. In any case, every
one of you knows the pain of death stealing away a loved one… and if you don’t,
some of you young ones… you will. Death
touches us all. But what is the
Promise? Where there is death, Jesus is nigh
unto it. “Precious in the sight
of the LORD is the death of his saints” (Ps. 116:15). Where there is death, He wraps His hand
around it, and robs it of its teeth. And
then? Talitha cumi! Little girl, I say to you, arise! Lazarus, come out (John 11:43)! What is the Promise? Resurrection!
Jesus will restore your children and your loved ones to you, and you to
them, on that Day.
For
Jesus does not just take death by the hand.
He gives it a full-body embrace, arms outstretched on the cross. For you.
For them. For all. And on the Third Day, He rises. There is His authority to heal,
restore, and give life. Arise! Daughter, Son, your faith has saved you. Fear not.
Go in peace. Healed. Restored.
Whole. Alive.
For
now, the sea continues to rage. In this
fallen life, there is chaos, death, and demons.
It is what it is. But Jesus is nigh
unto it, and that is enough. Do not
fear. Only believe. And now come forward and touch the Sacrifice,
your High Priest, under the garment of bread and wine. Eat and drink. Being dead is hard work, but here you are,
alive again. Partake of the Sacrifice. And so be holy, and so be healed. In the Name of the Father, and of the Son X, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost
Fourth
Sunday after Pentecost (Proper 7B)
June
20, 2021
Text: Mark 4:35-41
“Who
then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?” (Mark 4:41; ESV).
This
is the One by whom all things were made, the wind, the sea, and all
creation. This is the Word God spoke,
and so it was. He was there when the
earth’s foundations were laid (Job 38:4).
He “shut in the sea with doors” (v. 8). He “made clouds its garment and thick
darkness its swaddling band” (v. 9).
He “prescribed limits for it and set bars and doors, and said, ‘Thus
far shall you come, and no farther, and here shall your proud waves be stayed’”
(vv. 10-11).
This
is the One who drowned the wicked world in the Great Flood, bringing Noah and
his family, eight souls in all, safely through the water (1 Peter 3:20; Gen.
6-9).
This
is the One who “rebuked the Red Sea, and it became dry land,” who led
the Children of Israel “through the deep as through a desert” (Ps.
106:9). This is the One who brought the
waters “back upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their
horsemen” (Ex. 14:26), thus saving Israel from their hand (v. 30), so that
“Israel saw the great power that the LORD used against the Egyptians, so the
people feared the LORD, and they believed in the LORD and in his servant Moses”
(v. 31), and “Moses and the people of Israel sang this song… ‘I will sing to
the LORD, for he has triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has
thrown into the sea’” (15:1).
This
is the One who repeated the miracle for Joshua and the next generation, leading
the nation through the Jordan on dry ground into the Promised Land (Josh. 3),
and so Elijah (2 Kings 2:8), and so Elisha (v. 14). As the Prophet Nahum preaches, “He rebukes
the sea and makes it dry; he dries up all the rivers” (Nahum 1:4).
And
this is the One who sent Jonah to preach.
“Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and call out against it, for
their evil has come up before me” (Jonah 1:2). But he would not preach. He fled in a ship from the presence of the
LORD, from this One who sent him. So,
this is the One who “hurled a great wind upon the sea, and there was a
mighty tempest on the sea, so that the ship threatened to break up” (v.
4). And the only salvation, the only
help, the only thing that would still the LORD’s wrath and bring peace and
calm, was to throw God’s man overboard to be swallowed up. The only answer was, as it were, Jonah’s
death. The belly of the fish. Three days, three nights (v. 17). And this is the One who carried Jonah
through, who heard his repentant prayer, who “spoke to the fish, and it
vomited Jonah out upon the dry land” (2:10), God’s man, raised from the
dead.
The
Sea of Galilee is 700 feet below sea level.
30 miles to the Northeast sits Mt. Hermon, 9,200 feet above sea
level. When the wind blows down from the
tops of the mountains and collides with the warm sea air, it creates sudden and
spectacular storms, like that encountered by the little boat in our text. But this is “the one who by his strength
established the mountains, being girded with might; who stills the roaring of
the seas, the roaring of their waves, the tumult of the peoples” (Ps.
65:6-7).
And
so He does in our Gospel. “Teacher,
do you not care that we are perishing?” (Mark 4:38). So He awakes, and He rebukes the wind and the
sea, this One. “Peace! Be still!” (v. 39), and there is a great
calm. Who then is this, that even the
wind and the sea obey? What clearer
answer could be given? Creation. Flood.
The parting of the waters.
Salvation for God’s people. Death
and resurrection. This man, Jesus of
Nazareth, is God. He is the Savior of
the world.
So
that is who He is. Who then are you,
to be so afraid? “Who is this that
darkens counsel by words without knowledge” (Job 38:2)? Have you still no faith?
The
disciples thought He didn’t care as the wind howled, and the waves broke over
the boat and began to fill it. In the
Hebrew mind, the sea is the place of chaos and death, the haunt of demons. The disciples were in a fight for their lives. And where was Jesus? There He was, sleeping on a pillow, ignoring
their mortal plight. And they actually
believed that He couldn’t care less.
That is you, isn’t it? When you
are suffering? When you are in
danger? When your life is out of control,
and your world comes crashing down, and all is hopeless, and you are
helpless? You cry out to God: Where are
You? Do You not care? Are You asleep? Can You not hear me? Do You even exist? Or are You out to get me? My God, my God, why? How long, O Lord, how long?
But
remember who He is. Creator. God.
Savior. And remember what He
said. The disciples forgot. He said, “Let us go across to the other
side” (Mark 4:35). He spoke. That is what would be. He did not say, “Let us be drowned, like
Pharaoh’s host, in the depths of the sea.”
Remember, you are Israel.
The LORD will bring you through.
Through the water. Through the
Red Sea. Through the Flood. “Baptism, which corresponds to this, now
saves you,” says Peter (1 Peter 3:21), who was with Him in the boat that
day. In Baptism, this Lord spoke to you:
“Let us go across to the other side.”
“Let your enemies, the devil, the world, your own sinful nature, be
thrown into the sea and die. I have
triumphed gloriously. And I will
bring you through. Through the
water. Through the valley of the
shadow. Through death, and into
life. Into the Promised Land. Heaven.
Resurrection. New Creation.” He does not say, “Let me now abandon you to
the evil forces that overwhelm you.” He
may be asleep on the cushion, undisturbed.
But don’t let appearances deceive you.
He has all things in His pierced hand.
And
He is with you in the boat! Do you
see? The Church is the boat. This is where God in the flesh rests with His
people, with you. We call the place
where you are sitting the nave, as in Navy, because this is the
ship, the ark, the boat where Jesus is with you, to save you. And no matter how turbulent the waters get,
no matter the storms to be weathered, even when the boat appears to be sinking,
you have Jesus. Always. And He will do what He says. He will bring you to the other side.
“Peace! Be still!” He says, and of course, we
know who He is to say that. Not only is
He God. He is God’s Man, who, to still
God’s wrath, was thrown overboard to be swallowed up by death. Three days in the belly of the earth. The Father carried Him through. He spoke, and the tomb vomited Jesus out on
Easter morn. Jesus is our greater Jonah,
accomplishing our eternal salvation. And
now He comes preaching, and He sends His men, the Apostles, the pastors, as
well as your fellow Christians, to call out against sinners and sin, to bring
you to repentance, to bring you into the boat, to show you your gracious Lord
who loves you, forgives you, and cares about your every trial and tribulation,
that you believe in Him, and go with Him, to the other side. He sends them to announce His peace. Be still.
The Lord is on your side. He is
risen. And He is in the boat.
“Some
went down to the sea in ships,” the Psalmist prays, “doing business on
the great waters; they saw the deeds of the LORD, his wondrous works in the
deep. For he commanded and raised the
stormy wind, which lifted up the waves of the sea. They mounted up to heaven; they went down to
the depths; their courage melted away in their evil plight; they reeled and
staggered like drunken men and were at their wits end. Then they cried to the LORD in their trouble,
and he delivered them from their distress.
He made the storm be still, and the waves of the sea were hushed. Then they were glad that the waters were
quiet, and he brought them to their desired haven. Let them thank the LORD for his steadfast
love, for his wondrous works to the children of man! Let them extol him in the congregation of the
people, and praise him in the assembly of the elders” (Ps. 107:23-32).
Today
this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.
In
the Name of the Father, and of the Son X,
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.