Showing posts with label Martin Luther. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Luther. Show all posts

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Habakkuk 1:1-4, 2:1-4 and II Thessalonians 1:1-4


II Thessalonians 1:1-4, 11-12 (NRSV)

 Paul, Silvanus, and Timothy,

To the church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ:

2 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

3 We must always give thanks to God for you, brothers and sisters, as is right, because your faith is growing abundantly, and the love of everyone of you for one another is increasing. 4 Therefore we ourselves boast of you among the churches of God for your steadfastness and faith during all your persecutions and the afflictions that you are enduring.

11 To this end we always pray for you, asking that our God will make you worthy of his call and will fulfill by his power every good resolve and work of faith, 12 so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

Habakkuk 1:1-4 (NRSV)

 The oracle that the prophet Habakkuk saw.

2 O Lord, how long shall I cry for help,

and you will not listen?

Or cry to you “Violence!”

and you will not save?

3 Why do you make me see wrongdoing

and look at trouble?

Destruction and violence are before me;

strife and contention arise.

4 So the law becomes slack

and justice never prevails.

The wicked surround the righteous—

therefore judgment comes forth perverted.

Habakkuk 2:1-4 (NRSV)

2 I will stand at my watchpost,

and station myself on the rampart;

I will keep watch to see what he will say to me,

and what he will answer concerning my complaint.

2 Then the Lord answered me and said:

Write the vision;

make it plain on tablets,

so that a runner may read it.

3 For there is still a vision for the appointed time;

it speaks of the end, and does not lie.

If it seems to tarry, wait for it;

it will surely come, it will not delay.

4 Look at the proud!

Their spirit is not right in them,

but the righteous live by their faith.

 

 

Year C

October 30-November 5

October 30, 2016

Cross~Wind

Title: A Voice from the Past: Martin Luther

 

Introducing the Scripture


 

            I am going to share with you two scripture passages today. My primary interest is the theme that both have regarding an important teaching of the church. Both are significant because of their focus on faith.

            The prophet Habakkuk shared the internal struggle he has with God at a critical time in the history of Judah. God lets the prophet see clearly the wickedness and evil into which Judah has plunged. He wants God to do something about this. God is not answering his prayer in timely fashion. Yet, he still prays. The answer God gives, an answer we will not take time to read, is that God is going to send the Babylonians to punish the sin of Judah. The answer is that as bad as things are, they are going to get worse. This is not helpful, as the prophet hears an answer to his prayer, but an answer he does not like. If God is marching here, if God has a purpose, it seems to be a zig-zag approach to attaining the goal. With the vision that the prophet had in his humanness, all he could see for the immediate future was destruction. The answer God gives is that the prophet is to remain faithful. In fact, those who are just or righteous will live by their faith. God was telling Habakkuk that he would continue to live in a time when justice would be hard to find. Hebrews 10:38 refers to this passage. Paul uses it in Romans 1:17 and Galatians 3:11. In the immediate future, what the prophet could not see was that the exile in Babylon would mean the re-birth of the Jewish people. He could not see that the prophets, priests, and political leaders carted off into exile would remember the covenant Israel had with God. They would collect what we now know as the first books of the Bible, the Torah and the history of Israel. They would collect the Psalms. They would collect many of the writings of the prophets we have in our Bibles today. They would remember who and whose they were. Now, however, as they faced judgment for their sin, they must live by their faith.

            Paul will pick up the theme of faith as he opens II Thessalonians. He “must” thank God in prayer for the fact their faith is growing abundantly, as is their love for “everyone.” As he visits the churches, he proudly tells them of the steadiness and faith the Thessalonians had, even in the midst of persecution. His prayer is that God would deem them worthy because of their faith. The Christian finds glory in Jesus Christ. Christ finds glory in living in and through those who have faith.

Introduction


There are moments in life when you just have to speak up. There are moments when so much is at stake, something so egregiously wrong is taking place, that the option of keeping your mouth closed and your opinion to yourself is impossible to rationalize. In these specific moments, you think, “I know someone is going to be upset, but I just have to say something!” So you muster the courage and say, “Hey, you! Are you there? It is I. We need to talk.”[1]

I am more likely to be afraid of my anger. After all, what would happen if I were angry at the wrong things, over-reacting, or inappropriately expressing it? Fewer things make me angry as I age.[2] I see myself more as someone who hopes that something I say or do may help people receive an insight that helps them in their lives.

At the same time, I have had to take a stand.

It does not seem so courageous now, but as a teen, when Dad would get into one of his racist rants, I could not be silent.[3]

Application


If you can relate, then you know how a little-known pastor and college professor in the modest town of Wittenberg, Germany, felt after tacking his 95 Theses to the main doors of the local Catholic Church.

The man was Martin Luther. He was far from perfect. He liked his beer, probably too much. He said and did many things in his life that make one wonder about him. He was ahead of his time in using new media, the printing press. He probably would have liked social media, maybe too much. He could go to extremes when he talked about the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church. In any case, I invite you to consider that his recovery of the importance of grace and faith in Christian discipleship as one of the gifts he offers to the church of today.

The day was All Hallow’s Eve, October 31, 1517, the precursor to Halloween. Tomorrow is the 499th anniversary of the event. Luther knew that on this day the villagers, students and fellow college faculty would file through those church doors for a special mass and that, while entering, some would stop to read his pastoral thoughts on problems in the church at large.[4]

Luther was not the first to post things in this manner. Back then, people commonly used the church doors as a community bulletin board of sorts.

Today, Luther might have posted his theses on a blog and pointed his peers to them via Twitter. He was not doing anything that people had not done a hundred times before.[5] It was, in some ways, a means of tapping the authorities on the shoulder and saying, “Hey, there! It’s Martin. We need to talk.” Nevertheless, Luther could not have imagined his actions would spark a revolution that is still ringing loud and strong nearly 500 years later.

One pastor saw something wrong in the church and had the courage to speak up rather than remain silent.[6]

Church was different then. While you and I live in a world in which Christianity is like ice cream, different flavors for different tastes, Roman Catholicism intermingled with the political authorities in a dominant way in Europe. All of that was about to change. The Orthodox Church was the dominant force in the east.[7]

You can read a nice summary of the 95 Theses on Wikipedia. Clearly, Luther thought that even with the dominance of the church, the church had obscured or lost something important to its reason for being.  

Luther has much to teach about the role of the Bible in the church and in our personal lives. His teaching on the priesthood of all believers encouraged all disciples to have their personal relation with Jesus and a ministry.

He also taught us to think differently about the gospel.

Key Point: Are our efforts to be a decent dad, a patient mom, a good kid or a faithful Christian flowing toward our salvation, as if to secure it, or from our salvation, as a joyful response to it?

In Luther’s day, pastors did little preaching or teaching. Knowledge of scripture was for university professors, bishops, popes, and church councils. If you did not know Latin, you were largely out of luck.[8] It should not surprise us that the focus shifted from what God has done in Jesus for our salvation to what we can do through our works to attain salvation.[9] In order to raise money for cathedrals, the Church sold indulgences that released souls from the temporary cleansing needed in purgatory to heaven.[10]

Luther wanted to clarify that we walk in the freeing light of grace that would lead to what Paul says in our text as works that give the greatest glory to Jesus.[11]

From his lectures on Galatians, Luther writes:

 

“When I have this [passive] righteousness within me, I can descend from heaven like the rain that makes the earth fertile. That is, I come forth into another kingdom and I perform good works whenever the opportunity arises.”

 

Later, in his work on the book of Romans, Luther writes:

 

 “Faith is a living and unshakable confidence, a belief in the grace of God that a man would die a thousand deaths for its sake. This kind of confidence in God’s grace ... makes us joyful, high-spirited and eager in our relations with God and with all mankind .... Hence, the man of faith, without being driven, willingly and gladly seeks to do good to everyone, serve everyone, suffer all kinds of hardships for the sake of the love and glory of the God who has shown him such grace”[12]

 

After posting his list on the door of his local church, authorities would later force Luther to appear at hearings and give numerous accounts of all he believed. The pressure weighed on Luther who — at the Diet of Worms in 1521 — authorities told him to recant his teachings or face the prospect of death. This was his response:

 

“Unless I am convinced by proofs from Scriptures or by plain and clear reasons and arguments, I can and will not retract, for it is neither safe nor wise to do anything against conscience. Here I stand. I can do no other. God help me. Amen.”

 

Luther’s refusal resulted in his excommunication. This act forced him to live in hiding, under the condemnation of popes and emperors, as well as the constant threat of execution at the stake.[13]

Actions can have unintended consequences. I think Luther initially wanted to reform the church of his day. In the book The Wit of Martin Luther, Luther denounced in strong words the notion that any faction of the church should take upon itself the label “Lutheran.”

 

“ ... Let them call themselves Christians, not Lutherans. What is Luther? After all, the teaching is not mine [John 7:16]. Neither was I crucified for anyone. St. Paul, in I Corinthians 3[:22], would not allow the Christians to call themselves Pauline or Petrine, but Christian. How then should I — poor stinking maggot-fodder that I am — come to have men call the children of Christ by my wretched name? Not so, my dear friends.”

 

Instead, Luther urged, “Let us abolish all party names and call ourselves Christians, after him whose teaching we hold.”

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, in The Cost of Discipleship, writes:

 

“It was not the justification of sin, but the justification of the sinner that drove Luther from the cloister back into the world. The grace he had received was costly grace. It was grace, for it was like water on parched ground, comfort in tribulation, freedom from the bondage of a self-chosen way and forgiveness of all his sins. And it was costly, for, so far from dispensing him from good works, it meant that he must take the call to the discipleship more seriously than ever before. It was grace because it cost so much, and it cost so much because it was grace. That was the secret of the gospel of the Reformation — the justification of the sinner.”

 

Conclusion


            The point here is not a history lesson. We can learn from the courage of Luther. We can re-focus on the Bible as central of the formation of our beliefs and values. The point is to be sure that we fall into the error of 499 years ago. I ask you simply whether you have that personal faith in Jesus Christ. As we heard from II Thessalonians, is your faith is growing abundantly. Is your work of faith glorifying Jesus?

Going deeper


[Habakkuk offered his prophecy between 609-605, and one part may come from 600. Klaus Koch (The Prophets) says he was a younger contemporary of Jeremiah. Habakkuk is different from the other biblical prophets in that he does not preach to the people. Instead, what we have is a sort of transcript of a conversation between the prophet and God. In some ways, Habakkuk is our contemporary because he asks God the same kind of questions many of us ask: Why do you allow evil and injustice to go unpunished? Why do you allow someone who is evil to inflict suffering on someone who is not as evil?  He will stress that Judah will not be able to withstand the assault of the Chaldeans. This happens because violence rules in Judah. Leaders have destroyed the just order of society. His social criticism is as sharp as Amos or Micah. The prophet attacks the one greedy for gain. Watts says the oracle refers to a Judean tyrant and a foreign oppressor. There is another title at 3:1. He may have been one of the Levites who conducted temple worship in Jerusalem, suggested due to the many worship references in the book. Achtemeier says Habakkuk has the primary concern for the purposes of God and the realization of the will of God for the world. She does not believe he was a cult prophet. The prophet receives mention in the apocryphal addition to Daniel that discusses the god Bel and a dragon who is also a god. This prophet sees the coming judgment upon Judah at the hands of Babylon.  However, he questions whether this is just.  Though he can see the sin of Judah, it appears to him that the sins of Babylon are much greater.  Thus, how can God justify using a wicked nation to punish a less wicked nation?  There are two complaints by the prophet, and there are two replies by the Lord.  The answers are not satisfying.  If he thinks the situation is bad now, it will get worse.  However, the person who is just will survive. He offers a woe upon oppressors, especially those who amass goods that do not belong to them, ill-gotten gains, murder, drink, and idolatry. He offers a plea to the Lord to deliver Judah from the approaching menace from the East.]

 

Habakkuk 1:1-4 (NRSV)

The oracle [Zechariah 9 & 12, Malachi] that the prophet Habakkuk saw [in the sense of having a vision.] [The title of the book.]

[Habakkuk 1:2-2:4 is a dialogue between a prophet and his God. Von Rad (Old Testament Theology) says that this section is a liturgical dialogue between the prophet and the Yahweh. Twice the prophet lays a complaint before Yahweh. He thinks it difficult to tell if the complaint is against enemies within or without. The answer is surprising in that more judgment is coming. Things are getting worse. How can Yahweh do this? The answer is that those who are faithful will live. Note that this prophet takes the initiative, whereas Amos, Micah, Isaiah, and others, God called first.]

[In 1:2-4 he offers his first complaint. Yet, the prophet is at prayer even while complaining of unanswered prayer. The concern, as Achtemeier sees it, is for justice, the order ordained by God for the covenant people.]

2 O Lord, how long shall I cry for help,

and you will not listen?

[Watts points out here that in spite of unanswered prayer, the prophet continues to pray. God is present, even when the evidence is not there.]

Or cry to you “Violence!”

and you will not save?

[He most likely refers to what he sees happening in Judah. His concern is the internal conflict he sees. His central complaint is that, as a prophet, the Lord makes him see the wrong and trouble, instead of receiving words and visions that speak of divine action.]

3 Why do you make me see wrongdoing

and look at trouble?

Destruction and violence are before me;

strife and contention arise.

4 So the law becomes slack

and justice never prevails.

The wicked surround the righteous—

therefore judgment comes forth perverted.

[Achtemeier points out that apparently the people have already forgotten the religious reform under Josiah. The result is chaos and oppression. Achtemeier will stress that the complaint is that there is no order in society. The Lord has an interest in justice at all levels. Therefore, he turns to God, but God does not hear. Yet, the complaint is that law and justice are losing their battles with evil. This violates the expected order when one believes one is living in a covenant relation with God. God does not seem to live up to the covenant relationship, even while the prophet has been faithful.]

1:5-11 contains the first answer from the Lord. The answer is that things are going to get worse. His point is that the Chaldeans are instruments of the justice of God. He is to look at the nations. God is doing a work that one will hardly believe, for the Lord is rousing the Chaldeans to seize dwellings not their own. Jeremiah 27:6a, given in 594, agrees, “Now I have given all these lands into the hand of King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, my servant …” Babylon is an instrument of God. They are fierce and impetuous. They embody dread and fear. Their justice and dignity proceed from themselves. Horses are swift as leopards and menacing as wolves. Those who ride the horses fly like an eagle swift to devour. They come for violence. They gather captives like sand. They scoff at kings and rulers. They laugh at every fortress. They sweep by like the wind, which may refer to 604, when the Babylonians passed by Judea to attack Egypt. Their god is their own strength. Achtemeier points out that the Lord is reassuring the prophet that what he sees is the work of God, even though it appears only people are at work on the world scene. Since the people of the covenant are doing injustice and violence, the answer of the Lord is to give them more of it!

1:12-17 offers a second complaint. The prophet begins with an affirmation from the creeds and hymns of the time. Is the Lord not from of old? The Lord shall not die. The Lord has marked them for judgment and punishment. The eyes of the Lord are too pure to behold evil. The Lord is not silent when wrongdoing and treachery are present. Achtemeier will suggest that if the Babylonians are instruments of punishment, the Lord will not destroy Judah forever, for the purpose of God is always correction. The Lord has made the people like the fish of the sea, or like crawling things that have no ruler. The enemy brings them up with a hook and drags them out with a net, bringing the enemy to rejoice. The enemy sacrifices and makes offerings to the net. Is he to keep on emptying his net and destroying the nations without mercy? Thus, Achtemeier points out, if the victory of Babylon is temporary, that does not solve his problem of waiting years for the fulfillment of the good purposes of God on earth. After all, the Babylonians will simply mean replacing a chaotic order with a godless one. He is perplexed about the fulfillment of the purposes of God. God has a purpose. God will replace the wickedness of Judah with the wickedness of Babylon. The march of God toward the goal seems to be a zig-zag approach.

[In 2:1-4 we find the second answer of the Lord.]

Habakkuk 2:1-4 (NRSV)

2 I will stand at my watchpost,

and station myself on the rampart;

[A symbol of constant openness to the divine word, says Achtemeier. Watts will stress that the prophet respects the divine freedom here. Further, Jeremiah 42:7 shows the prophet waiting for ten days.]

I will keep watch to see what he will say to me,

and what he will answer concerning my complaint.

2 Then the Lord answered me and said:

Write the vision;

make it plain on tablets,

so that a runner may read it.

[A reference to the tablets of the Torah, which we also see in Isaiah 30:8 and Jeremiah 17:1.  In that sense, what the prophet writes is as ironclad as the original covenant.]

3 For there is still a vision for the appointed time;

it speaks of the end, and does not lie.

If it seems to tarry, wait for it;

it will surely come, it will not delay.

4 Look at the proud!

Their spirit is not right in them,

but the righteous live by their faith. [Hebrews 10:38 refers to this passage. Paul uses it in Romans 1:17 and Galatians 3:11.]

[The point here is that the silence of God does not mean that God is dead. Human beings always live between what God has already done and what faith expects God to do. Faith says that the answer will not fail. Barth says that faith has need of hope, which we can see from the innumerable temptations that assail and shake those who would cling to the Word of God. One example that he sees here is the delay of God in the fulfillment of the promises of God. Look at the proud. Habakkuk is most concerned with the conduct of the righteous in times of trial.[14]  Barth stresses that for the one who believes, the day of the Lord will not be a day of darkness. Rather, it will be a day in which the one who believes or has faith will remain alive in virtue of that faith. [15] In other words, God was telling Habakkuk that he would continue to live in a time when justice would be hard to find, but he should trust the vision of a fully just time yet to come. "If it seems to tarry, wait for it." Thus, for Habakkuk, living by faith meant carrying on in belief in that vision.]

[Was the Babylonian conquest of Judah a good or bad thing? If you were one of those killed in the invasion or marched off into captivity, you would be hard-pressed to label it good. Yet from the perspective of history, it may look different. For one thing, separated from the temple, which now lay in ruins in Jerusalem, the Jews could no longer offer sacrifices, but they continued to worship God. They discovered that their religion was not dependent on location and the temple. The captives came to understand that Judaism was a faith that could survive and be practiced in any geographical setting and culture. For a second thing, the Jewish leaders increased their literary production. Scholars will tell us that they produced much of our Old Testament in the exilic period. The history of Israel in the Promised Land was completed (Deuteronomy-2 Kings). They wrote down and preserved the sayings of the prophets to that date. Third, and most importantly, they proclaimed that only one God exists, and thus took idolatry seriously.]

[Although these words of the apostle Paul were not written until centuries later, the exiles were learning the truth that, as Paul said, "All things work together for good for those who love God" (Romans 8:28). And therein is the lesson for us. We often simply cannot see the positive side of many things at first ... or perhaps never in this life. But we have to trust that, since we have given ourselves to God, what befalls us is fortuitous -- in the hands of God -- and that's good enough to get us by from day to day.]

 

II Thessalonians 1:1-2, Address

[II Thessalonians 1:1-2 is the address of Paul to the church. One can compare it with I Thessalonians 1:1. For some scholars, the additions made bring the address into line with other Pauline openings. The letter opens, as ancient letters typically do, with a salutation from the sender or senders (sometimes described with various attributes) to the recipient(s) (again, sometimes described with various attributes), with a benevolent wish. In the present Christianized example, Paul, Silvanus, and Timothy are listed as the letter’s senders, as all three had been active in establishing the church at Thessalonica and were depicted as still traveling together as missionaries.]

         Paul, Silvanus, [Silvanus is the Latin form of the name more commonly found in the New Testament as Silas, which may be a Semitic form of the name or a Greek abbreviation. Silvanus/Silas is presented as a leader of the Jerusalem church and Paul’s companion during his second missionary journey (Acts 15:22-18:5; cf. also II Corinthians 1:19; I Thessalonians 1:1). Apart from his connection with Paul, little is known of him.] and Timothy, [About Timothy, the other sender of II Thessalonians, considerably more is known, especially from the epistles bearing his name, and he was a trusted and important coworker of Paul’s, as well as Paul’s emissary when the occasion demanded (1 Corinthians 4:17; 16:10-11; Philippians 2:19-22; 1 Thessalonians 3:1-6). Timothy is also listed as a co-sender of the epistles of Philippians, II Corinthians, I Thessalonians, Philemon and Colossians.]

To the church of the Thessalonians [(as they are addressed in I Thessalonians), which is a slightly different formula than Paul customarily uses to address churches (which is cast in geographical, rather than ethnic, form; i.e., “to the church [saints, beloved, etc.] in Such-and-Such-a-Place”). The writer’s use of the genitive here (“of the Thessalonians”) and in I Thessalonians is unique.] in God our Father [One subtle, yet substantial difference distinguishes this salutation from the first. Instead of "the Father," Paul addresses this letter to the church that is in "God our Father." This simple, inclusive note strikes a harmonious chord of kinship between Paul, his coworkers and the Thessalonian Christians. Paul assumes a genuinely close relationship.] and the Lord Jesus Christ:

2 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

1:3-12, Thanksgiving, Encouragement, and Prayer

1: 3-4, Thanksgiving

[II Thessalonians 1:3-4, with the theme of thanksgiving, is the opening portion of the introduction provided by Paul. Note the similarity with I Thessalonians 1:2-3.]

3 We must [Nowhere else in Paul’s letters does the writer express that he “must” always give thanks to God for the recipient of his letters (cf. Romans 1:8; 1 Corinthians 1:4; Philippians 1:3; Colossians 1:3; 1 Thessalonians 1:2; Philemon 4). The expression is stiff and not overflowing with grace. Paul's language here previously led some scholars to question the genuine nature of the apostle's continued delight in them. Paul appears to say that he is obligated to give thanks ("must always give thanks ... as is fitting") or "as is right." However, a more careful reading negates these doubts. Paul refers here not to some odious obligation but to what is simply an appropriate response in the face of laudatory behavior.] always give thanks to God for you, brothers and sisters, as is right, [The fact of the matter is that grammatical evidence indicates that Paul's addition of the "as is fitting" or "as is right" phrase is actually a liturgical expression for the necessity of properly offering thanks to God.  Instead of seeing Paul's "as is right" addition as a sign of doubt, it is far more likely that the apostle is reacting appropriately to the good news he has received about their faith.] because your faith is growing abundantly, and the love of everyone of you for one another is increasing. [Thus, many of the hopes and concerns voiced by Paul in his first letter have been answered positively. The news received now is even more encouraging than in I Thessalonians.] 4 Therefore we ourselves boast [Paul's "boasting" might be ad hoc, limited to those churches he was visiting while writing to the Thessalonians (quite probably the Corinthian churches). His "boasting" could also be more intentional, broadcast to as wide a number of Christian communities as he could reach through messenger or letter. In other letters attributed to Paul (e.g., in I Corinthians 15:31; II Corinthians 1:14; 7:4), Paul speaks of boasting of the members of a Christian church, as the writer does here for the steadfastness and faith displayed under persecution (v. 4).] of you among the churches of God [Paul turns his praise outward, telling others of what he has heard.] for your steadfastness and faith during all your persecutions and the afflictions that you are enduring. [The Thessalonians demonstrated that their qualities of "steadfastness" or "endurance" were not mere qualities of static "hanging on." Instead, they were actively adapting and thriving in all circumstances.  Paul had one more element in the Thessalonians' lives that made their faith and love so worthy of Paul's pride and pleasure. Their faith and love grew even while enduring "persecutions" and "afflictions." While he does not specify them, but it is quite possible that they involved opposition to the Christian message by the Jews among whose synagogues Paul, Timothy and Silvanus/Silas attempted to spread the gospel (cf. I Thessalonians 2:14). If the accounts in Acts are to be taken at face value (e.g., 17:17; 18:4, 19; 19:8; etc.), the missionary work of Paul and his fellow workers was concentrated firstly on the synagogues in Asia Minor, and only secondarily in public arenas and lecture halls (Acts 17:17; 19:9). It is clear that Paul’s primary ministry was directed toward the conversion of his fellow Jews to “the Way” (Acts 19:23), and only after the failure of that ministry did he refashion himself as the apostle to the Gentiles. The disruptions Paul and other Christian missionaries caused in Jewish houses of worship provoked verbal opposition, lashings, fines, expulsion and imprisonment, and it is likely these that the writer refers to collectively as “persecutions” and “afflictions.”]

            [II Thessalonians 1:11-12, with the theme of prayer, is the conclusion to the thanksgiving portion of the introduction by Paul.] 11 To this end we always pray for you, [They back up their boasting by keeping them ever before God in daily intercessory prayer. Note the ethical thrust of the prayer as it is associated with the eschatological prospect just mentioned.] asking that our God will make you worthy [Maybe better, as in other places, "to deem worthy." This implies that God will "deem" the Thessalonians worthy because God observes their faith.]  of his call and will fulfill by his power every good resolve and work of faith,[here is the content and purpose of his prayer. Of course, God may "deem" them worthy only because it is God alone whose power will bring about.] 12 so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, [Here is the greatest fulfillment of a Christian life, that of becoming an incarnated witness in daily work and life. It is a remarkable revelation Paul makes in verse 12: Just as a believer's true glory is found only in Christ, so, too, Christ enjoys his greatest glory when he is found in the lives of others. John has Jesus articulating the possibility of this kind of “reciprocal glory”. John reveals the "he in you/you in him" relationship as part of Jesus' special teachings to his disciples. In both John 17:10 and 17:22, Jesus specifically proclaims that glory is magnified as it is mirrored. The enjoyment of this kind of reciprocal glory is that for which Paul and his companions pray daily.] according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.

 

 



[1] Have you ever felt this way? Have you ever taken this kind of action? Then, just as you feared, once you open your big mouth, your words spark a much bigger deal than you had ever intended. Those moments are fun, are they not?
[2] I see my flaws, and hope people will be generous and gracious with them rather than angry with them. I accept that we live in communities, congregations, denominations, nations, and world that have deep flaws.
[3] He railed against Martin Luther King Jr one day, and I just could not keep my mouth shut. Yes, he got in my face and wondered how I dared to speak against his 40 years of experience. I have since learned that some people do not learn what they should learn from their experience. He would try to defend his racism by using the Bible. I learned early that people could use the Bible to support almost any opinion. In any case, I knew the Bible well enough to show him that his quoting of the Bible did not make his racism right.
[4] Tomorrow is the 499th anniversary of Luther posting his 95 Theses on the doors of Wittenberg’s Castle Church, an event that sparked what we know as the Protestant Reformation. Luther was not the only figure of the Reformation, of course, but because October 31 is when Luther pounded a tract on the church door, it is only fitting to look at this courageous and tsunami-inducing event.
 
[5] To be fair, he must have known that this would eventually get the attention of some people in power — perhaps even Leo (X), the pope.
[6] At the genesis of this history-shaping, Jesus-focused revolution was one man, one pastor, who simply saw something wrong in the church and offered several points for discussion and debate. He was a man who believed that occasionally, something is so bad that you simply cannot stay silent. Sometimes you have to speak up.
[7] Lastly, rather than a common understanding that God’s Word was to be upheld as the highest authority, in Luther’s day the pope and church councils had the last word.
[8] There was almost no Bible study among the people. In the 16th century, most pastors received little training. People generally considered knowledge of the Scriptures something for university professors, so people saw parish pastors as largely perfunctory, best used for walking the public through mass and hearing personal confession. Likewise, literacy was rather uncommon among everyday churchgoers, and even if one could read and write in German, the available Bibles were only in Latin.
[9] Such things hid from most people the work of God on behalf of the world through Jesus Christ. With the Scriptures largely unpreached and the people mostly unaware, the focus shifted off Jesus and onto us. That is, rather than a message of grace that glorified God’s Son, it became a message of works that put the burden of salvation on God’s people.
[10] The sermon was a mix of metaphysical mathematics and personal morality: Grace plus good works is what gets you in the door. Yes, Christ died on the cross, but in order to receive assurance of salvation, people also had to do their best.
[11] For Luther, such questions were essential for ensuring that the Church universal — and we, as the church local — are walking in the freeing light of grace, not under the evil burden of believing that God’s love is contingent on our works. Moreover, while some people argued that such a Jesus-centered, grace-alone view of salvation would lead to lazy and licentious followers of Christ, Luther rightly proclaimed the opposite. In fact, he would later teach that such an understanding was central to what Paul referred to in today’s text as works that give the greatest glory to Jesus!
[12] (Martin Luther’s Preface to the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans [Nashville: Discipleship Resources, 1977], 7).
[13] At one point in his flight from both civil and ecclesiastical authorities, Luther took refuge among the bats and owls of a cold, dark and dank Wartburg castle. Lonely and depressed, he wrote, "I had rather burn on live coals than rot here." Smoke was rising from the charcoal burners outside his room. However, as he watched, a wind came up and blew the smoke away. In that moment, his doubt dissipated and he felt his faith restored. (see Roland H. Bainton, Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther [Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1950], 194).
 
[14] Church Dogmatics IV.3 [73.1] 913.
[15] Church Dogmatics II.1 [30.2] 390.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Psalm 71


Psalm 71:1-6 (NRSV)
1 In you, O Lord, I take refuge;
let me never be put to shame.
2 In your righteousness deliver me and rescue me;
incline your ear to me and save me.
3 Be to me a rock of refuge,
a strong fortress, to save me,
for you are my rock and my fortress.
4 Rescue me, O my God, from the hand of the wicked,
from the grasp of the unjust and cruel.
5 For you, O Lord, are my hope,
my trust, O Lord, from my youth.
6 Upon you I have leaned from my birth;
it was you who took me from my mother’s womb.
My praise is continually of you. 

Year C
August 21-27
August 21, 2016
Title: Quest for Security
Cross~Wind

Introduction


We all have concerns for personal security.

Crime is a concern for many of us.

Around the year 2000, I was pastor of a United Methodist Church in Dearborn County, Indiana. One Sunday, after I preached, Suzanne and I entered our home to discover that someone had stolen my computer and everything else related to the computer. We called the police. They had some leads, but nothing materialized. In those days, we had no cloud back up. Fortunately, I had most of the important material backed up on disks. Still, as you can imagine the violation one feels is strong. The same type of feelings arose when we were present at a meeting at St. Luke’s UMC on 86th street in Indianapolis. When we came back to their parking lot, we found the window of the SUV smashed. They had stolen money and cards.  

Whenever a terrorist strike hits, many of us wonder how secure we really are. We ponder what we would do in the situation. Could we survive, where others did not?

            In the financial situation America faces, we ponder the security of our retirement or other investments. Our banks and pension systems want us to have “strong” passwords to enhance security. This shift has annoyed me at times, but I get it. The web page, “The Top 500 Worst Passwords of All Time” is helpful if you want to know what passwords to avoid.

For years, we have trusted government to provide us with political security, law enforcement to provide us with community security, our medical system to provide us with health security, and our financial system -- including online banking -- to provide us with economic security. Nevertheless, we are learning every day that there can be breakdowns in these systems.

This world is an insecure place. We have legitimate reason to have some anxiousness and even fear over the security of our little part of the world.  

Yet, beneath the insecure world in which we live, it would seem wise to find something or someone reliable. If we do, it will not come from this world. Such a reliable basis for your life wants you to “break in” and gain access to the security and deliverance it can provide.

There is a scene in Tolkien's The Fellowship of the Ring when the party of adventurers known by that name is desperate to take refuge from their enemies in an ancient fortress. Dwarves built the fortress, known as the Mines of Moria, centuries earlier, with the assistance of elves. The way forward is through an intricately crafted door in the side of a mountain, known as The Door of Durin. A magic spell of the Elves keep the door sealed. An inscription on it reads, "Speak friend and enter." The wizard Gandalf deploys all his magical arts to try to discern the password and open the door, in order to save him and his friends. All his efforts are futile. Just when their cause seems lost, the hobbit, Merry Brandybuck, walks up to the door and speaks the Elvish word mellon, which means "friend." The door swings open, saving the Fellowship. Gandalf was overthinking it. Sometimes the true password is the simplest one. 

Application


At times, we all need a strong fortress. Oh, I know, we are strong and independent. Many of us do not want anyone to think that deep inside, we feel our weakness and vulnerability. We need a refuge. The loss of a loved, a divorce, changes in a job, or leaving the familiarity of a long-time home and moving to a new place, can make us feel our vulnerability to a sometimes-dangerous world.  

We need a rock of refuge, a mighty fortress, a bulwark that never fails. A basic issue in infancy is learning to trust. The issue never leaves us. We long to place our trust in something that is reliable. Yes, we need a refuge. Such a fortress needs to travel with us, enabling us to face the dangers of this life.

I invite you to reflect upon a favorite hymn of mine for a few moments. The hymn is an old one. It still speaks powerfully to me. I hope I can make it live for you as well.

Martin Luther felt the need for such a place of refuge when he took his stand against the Roman Catholic Church during the Protestant Reformation. In 1529, he wrote a hymn that began,  

"A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark never failing;
our helper he amid the flood of mortal ills prevailing." 

These English words are powerful, but the original German is even better.

First, let us consider the German words Feste Burg.

Historian Michael Streich points out that Luther compares God not only to a fortress, but also to a stronghold -- what he calls a "Feste Burg."

The word feste points to a strong and completely secure tower, and by using this word, Luther stresses the power of God over the invading forces. This is why the hymn's second verse ends with the triumphant prediction, "And [Christ] must win the battle." "A Mighty Fortress" moves us past the password to something much more secure -- to a completely unbreakable stronghold created by God.

The word burg refers to a fortified town. When invaders approached, the surrounding population fled to the safety of the walls that sometimes were layers of walls within walls.[1] In his hymn, Luther is saying that God is like the most powerful of all Burgs, one in which nothing can breach the walls.

When we need a place of refuge, God offers us a Mighty Fortress, a Feste Burg. No enemy can break into this stronghold. Within the refuge of God's fortress, we will "never be put to shame," because our value is based on our relationship with God, not on our earthly achievements and success (v. 1). Inside this fortified town, the Lord, who desires to have an eternal relationship with us, delivers, rescues, and saves us. (v. 2).

Second, let us consider the flood of mortal ills.

Let us be clear that life in the Feste Burg is not free of struggles. Martin Luther put it this way: 

our helper he amid the flood
of mortal ills prevailing. 

As long as we live, this world will bring us a "flood of mortal ills." We will still experience personal attacks, betrayals, failures, illnesses, and the difficulties that come with advancing age. Nevertheless, God acts as a helper amid the "flood of mortal ills," one who supports us and shields us from complete annihilation.

Inside the Mighty Fortress, we discover that 

"neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 8:38-39). 

That is real security.
Third, let us consider that "God rules the world"
Psalm 71 continues with the words, 

 "Rescue me, O my God, from the hand of the wicked, from the grasp of the unjust and cruel" (v. 4).  

The writer of the psalm is turning to God for help, and asking God to rescue him from the cold grip of wicked, unjust and cruel people. In short, "The psalmist trusts that God -- not the wicked -- rules the world."[2]

What a bold statement of faith: God rules the world. I have my struggles with this affirmation of faith. Sometimes, I have my doubts. Yet, the psalmist is saying that God the Creator is really in charge of the grand sweep of human history, despite the evil, unfair and heartless acts that people commit every day and television brings into our homes. God can be trusted to work divine purposes out, in spite of the selfish and sinful decisions that people make. As Luther put it: 

2. Did we in our own strength confide,
 our striving would be losing,
 were not the right man on our side,
 the man of God's own choosing.
 Dost ask who that may be?
 Christ Jesus, it is he;
 Lord Sabaoth, his name,
 from age to age the same,
 and he must win the battle.  

 3. And though this world, with devils filled,
 should threaten to undo us,
 we will not fear, for God hath willed
 his truth to triumph through us.
 The Prince of Darkness grim,
 we tremble not for him;
 his rage we can endure,
 for lo, his doom is sure;
 one little word shall fell him.  

 4. That word above all earthly powers,
 no thanks to them, abideth;
 the Spirit and the gifts are ours,
 thru him who with us sideth.
 Let goods and kindred go,
 this mortal life also;
 the body they may kill;
 God's truth abideth still;
 his kingdom is forever. 

To trust God in this way is to concentrate on living according to God's priorities. As the members of British indie folk band Mumford & Sons sing in the song "Awake My Soul": 

In these bodies we will live,
in these bodies we will die
And where you invest your love,
you invest your life.
(Mumford and Sons, Awake My Soul) 

Yes, strong password protection is important for our financial security. However, have we learned how to invest our love? Psalm 71 invites us to do this, saying, "For you, O Lord, are my hope, my trust, O LORD, from my youth" (v. 5). Further, he says: 

"Upon you I have leaned from my birth,
it was you who took me from my mother's womb.
My praise is continually of you" (v. 6).  

If neighbors assessed our spiritual investment strategies, would they see signs that we have been leaning on God and offering praise? 

Conclusion

Where you invest your love, says the song, you invest your life.

So often, we make our investments elsewhere.

Psalm 71 challenges us to put our total trust in God, rather than in the people or institutions of this world. It invites us to depend on the Lord for security, recognizing that everything in this world has an element of insecurity. When we put our faith in God, we discover that God is a rock of refuge and a strong fortress. We find that God is strong and willing to help us, as God guides us through the grand sweep of our lives.

Invest your love in God and in the plans God has for the world. There you will find security, eternally.

Going deeper


            Psalm 71 comes from early in the history of Israel, during the time when Israel and Judah had separated. The writer offers a lament. This means he is in trouble and is asking the Lord for help. The psalm does not tell us why, but the writer is in trouble from some enemies. These enemies are ruthless who use their power against him. They plot against him. The accuse him and seek his harm. We do not like to think of life this way. Most of us think we are such nice people that no one would be our enemy. Yet, enemies are out there. The same is true with the church. We in the church need to consider that we have enemies. The persecuted church throughout the world does not need that reminder. The enemies the church faces in our land are usually subtler than that. At the same time, we also need to consider that we can be our greatest enemy. We learn later in this psalm that he is an old man. The older we become, the more vulnerable we become. He wants to sing the praises of God in his old age. These enemies are making that difficult. His prayer is simple. He wants the Lord to be his refuge and strong fortress. He recalls that the Lord was clearly the one whom he could trust while young. He wants to trust or rely and hope in the sense of eagerly expecting help. The focus of his trust and hope is the Lord, and he wants to have this in his old age as well. He prays that God will not abandon him.

Psalm 71:1-6 (NRSV) Psalm 71 is an individual lament.

[Verses 1-3, with slight variations, are also in Psalm 31: 1-3. An elderly person is not safe from malicious enemies.  Nevertheless, confidence is the theme, coming out of much experience.  He may also have been wealthy, and musically gifted.  In verses 1-4 we find a note of trust, finding refuge in God by going to the temple, he prays that God would protect him from his adversaries. These verses use a variety of somewhat synonymous words to express the rich complex of ways with which the psalm-writer prays to God to deliver him from his enemies.]

1 In you, O Lord, I take refuge;
let me never be put to shame.
2 In your righteousness deliver me [natzal, meaning "pull me out of"] and rescue me [palat meaning "bring me out so I can escape."];
incline your ear to me and save me. [yasha', a high-frequency word in the Hebrew Bible which means to save, to rescue, to deliver, to help; the names "Joshua" and "Jesus" are cognates of yasha'.]
3 Be to me a rock of refuge, [variously understood as "sheltering rock" (Tanakh and NJB) or "rock of safety" (NLT).]
a strong fortress, to save me,
for you are my rock and my fortress.
[The accumulated terms for rock-fortress and for rescue are intimately related in the psalm-writer's conceptual world, in that a rock-fortress is a good place for escape/hiding and/or for protection against attacks by one's foes. The psalm-writer metaphorically uses synonyms for rock-fortress to describe God as his formidable protective strength against those who would harm him.]
4 Rescue me, O my God, from the hand of the wicked,
from the grasp of the unjust and cruel.
 [Verses 5-6 show how he has trusted and hoped in God since his youth.  With the wisdom that comes to some in their later years, he realizes that God has been with him from the very beginning of his life.]
5 For you, O Lord, are my hope, [He has hope in the sense of “to wait expectantly for or to wait with eager anticipation.” The psalm-writer eagerly and confidently anticipates that God will act in his behalf against the threats of his enemies.]
my trust, [the noun mibtah is related to the verb batah, which means to feel secure/safe, to rely on someone to the extent that one is not unduly concerned with one's present circumstances.]
O Lord, from my youth.
6 Upon you I have leaned from my birth;
it was you who took me from my mother’s womb.
My praise is continually of you.

He has known from an early age that he can count on God. He has become a "sign" to others of the providential care of the Lord. He praises the Lord “all day long.”

Verses 9-13 show the poet giving his second petition. He does not want the Lord to forsake him. His enemies conspire against him. He does not want God to be far from him. His prayer is for God to make haste to help him. He wants accusers put to shame and disgraced. Verses 14-21 focus on praise to God. He hopes continually and praises God. He will tell of the righteous deeds of the God. Even in his old age, he prays that God will not forsake him, so that he can proclaim the deeds of God. Verses 22-24 offer a final testimony of praise to the Lord. He will offer praise on harp and lyre. He will should for joy. He will talk of the righteous help of God, “for those who tried to do me harm have been put to shame, and disgraced.” The psalm-writer's enemies are not specified. He describes them variously as the wicked (the unrighteous), unjust and cruel (ruthless) people who would use their power (hand) against him (v. 4). They conspire against him (v. 10). They accuse him and seek to hurt him (v. 13). In summary, they try to do him harm (v. 24). The danger is of such magnitude that he cannot merely avoid them or parry their attacks by himself. He has to rely upon his strong, protective God who has been with him all his long life.

 



[1] Historian Streich
[2] Biblical scholar J. Clinton McCann, Jr.