Monday, September 28, 2015

Every sin in the world is present in the pews. . .

Much to the disappointment of many, the Church is filled with sinners.  They are not the kind of sinners who once dabbled in sin yesterday but have come to their senses and learned their lesson and sin no more.  No, the sinners in the pews do not differ much from the sinners in the world who would never venture into the church (except perhaps in the sin of unbelief).  Pastors hear all the time the frustration from our people that this should not be this way.  They are correct.  It should not be this way but it is.  The Fall does not cease in its effect upon us once we come to the knowledge of His Son.  In fact, if we believe St. Paul, we become more aware of our fallenness, more humbled by our sinfulness, and more in awe of God's righteousness once the Spirit intervenes to teach our fearful hearts to believe.

Every sin in the world is present in the pews (like every heresy).  Even in the pulpits of those churches.  We are sinners.  We do not toy around with sin but are sinful by nature and unclean in heart.  Within us lies a deep cesspool of dark, stinking, death causing sin that has been forgiven by the blood of Christ but which remains to afflict us, tempt us, and taunt us until we shed this mortal flesh and Christ's work in us is completed.

Every sin in the world is present in the pews.  Those are words that none of us wants to hear but we know the truth of those words even though we regret admitting them.  The Church is not made up of sinners who commit the safe, understandable, and acceptable sins we feel comfortable with -- no sirree!!  The Church is made up of people who are tempted to, taunted by, and troubled with every sin in the world.  And who do those sins -- sometimes without shame but mostly with guilt, remorse, embarrassment, and fear of what others will think of them.  And sometimes with despair worried that the sin they harbor in their heart is too big or too bad for Christ to forgive.

The challenge in preaching and the challenge to the sinful preacher is to preach the force of the law on this but without so wounding the hearer that they cannot hear the Gospel.  For as terrible as the sins are that live in the hearts and lives of God's people, Christ is also at work in them.  He who redeemed them once from sin and its death by the power of His suffering and death will not willingly relinquish them to Satan or to his voice either justifying and excusing those sins or making them more than the injured soul can bear.

As a pastor I have been called to jails, kitchen tables, hospital rooms, coffee shops, and offices to sit down with people whose secret sins have hit the papers or been revealed to family members in such way that they have no place to turn and no one else to which to turn. . . except Christ and His blood that cleanses us from all sin.  I know my own heart and that is hard enough for me to reconcile to the person Christ claims me to be in baptism.  I do not even need to hear all the details to know how sin destroys, tears down, and wounds us sinners.  Sin is dangerous.  Satan is dangerous.  But we are not alone.  Every sin in the world is present in the pews and the story would end right there were it not for Christ who is wounded with us, for us, and to redeem us.  All our shame, our regret, our fear, our darkness He has borne in love for us to redeems us that sin's prison may not keep us.  Part of the great fear for the sinner is having these sins dragged into the light but unless they are brought from their hiding places into the presence of Him who is the Light, they will choke off faith, condemn us beyond hope, and seal us into death forevermore.

Every sin in the world is present in the pews. . . but Christ is there.  He stands with us sinners in our sins to reclaim us by the power of His blood. . . to forgive us of those sins. . . to break sin's chains that hold us in the prison of death. . . and to restore us.  No, the earthly consequences of our sins do not magically disappear when we make the good confession but even there Christ is with us and works for us.

Every sin in the world is present in the pews. . . but we better work to make sure that preaching this truth does not lead these sinners to believe that there is no room for them under the cross, no blood strong enough to pay their cost, and no mercy powerful enough to rescue them.  For it is precisely God's rescue that we speak to sinners in the pews and to those not yet of the Kingdom.  If there is one man, woman, or child who hears the preaching of the Law and despairs that they do not belong, we have done something wrong.  For Christ came for sinners.  For safe sins the world does not notice and the terrible sins that make it so hard to love the sinner at all. 

At the same time, we bid them not to sin but to struggle against sin and to live as those who wear Christ's righteous by baptism.  For Christ's rescue is not license to live without shame or regret in our old sinful prison but to use His gift of freedom to love righteousness, to seek goodness, and to live holy. 

7 comments:

John Joseph Flanagan said...

Pp

John Joseph Flanagan said...

Yes indeed....all of us are sinners in need of God's daily grace, frequent repenance, regular encouragement from God's word. And when we feel close to Our Lord, and at peace ......watch out.....Satan and our own sinful nature beset us, often the temptations come with great force. Then, when we have sinned, Satan's pattern is to 'accuse' us, diminish our faith, encourage us to just give in to sin, and to realize even our best efforts to be holy and righteous, and guard our hearts....is futile. Satan and the world then call us 'hypocrits' and we experience guilt from within, mockery and self mockery. That cycle should humble us.,,,draw us so close to the cross of Jesus that we want to hold on with all of our strength and cry out...for mercy and deliverance comes down from Jesus.

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Rev. Peters, for a homily in which the Gospel truly takes predominance. “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.” These were the words that came to mind as I finished it.
Peace and Joy!
George A. Marquart

Dr.D said...

What a really great sermon! I wholeheartedly agree.

Fr. D+

Chris said...

Pr. Peters,

You wrote at the end:"For Christ's rescue is not license to live without shame or regret in our old sinful prison but to use His gift of freedom to love righteousness, to seek goodness, and to live holy." That sums it up pretty nicely. I may have to steal it.

Unknown said...

Written so well, even I get it. Perfectly! Thank you.

Unknown said...

Written so well, even I get it. Perfectly! Thank you.