The Medicine – Sermon for Maundy Thursday

The Scripture readings for tonight’s service are Exodus 12:1-141 Corinthians 11:23-32; and John 13:1-1534-35.

In the name of Jesus. Amen.

When a doctor gives you a prescription for medicine, it doesn’t really matter if you understand how the medicine works. It doesn’t matter if you understand how that medicine is made. You don’t need to know exactly what that medicine does in your body. The only thing that matters is that the doctor who says, “Take this. It will heal you,” is right and that you actually take it.

Tonight, your Savior, Jesus Christ, the Great Physician, has a prescription for you, and it is the medicine of immortality.

So, we have to ask, “Is Jesus’ Word trustworthy?” Yes; absolutely yes! The power of Jesus’ Word is seen when He created everything (Jn. 1:3). In the beginning, God spoke, “Let there be light,” and there was light (Gen. 1:3). The power of Jesus’ Word is on full display throughout His life. When Jesus says something, it happens – always. When He speaks to paralytics, “Take up your bed and walk,” that powerful Word heals limbs that didn’t work (Mk. 2:11-12Jn. 5:8-9), and it happens. When Jesus says to the wind and waves, “Peace, be still,” (Mk. 4:39), it happens. When Jesus hands the disciples five loaves of bread and two fish to the disciples and says, “Use this to feed thousands of people,”(Lk. 9:16), it happens. When Lazarus has been dead in his tomb for four days and Jesus tells him, “Lazarus, come out,” (Jn. 11:43-44), he does. There’s no question that Jesus’ Word is powerful and does exactly what Jesus says.

So, when Jesus says to you tonight, “Take eat; take drink. This is for you for the forgiveness of sin,” does His Word have the power to forgive? Yes. When Jesus says, “This is My Body; this is My Blood,” does His Word have the power to make the bread and wine His Body and Blood? Yes. Do we have to understand how it works? No. Not at all. If Jesus wanted us to understand the how, He would’ve told us. But He didn’t, so we simply believe His Word.

Sure, it seems strange that eating and drinking the elements of Communion would do something spiritual like forgiving sin. Most of the things we eat are for physical benefits. We eat to fuel our body and give it the nutrients, vitamins, and minerals it needs. But eating food and having it do something spiritual sounds strange. But it shouldn’t. Remember how sin and death entered the world? Through eating the forbidden fruit. That eating was the sin that brought about both physical and spiritual sickness, death, and separation from God that has spread like a virus to all humanity (Ro. 5:12). God had warned Adam that would happen (Gen. 2:17), and God’s Word proved true (Gen. 3:6-7). So, when Jesus, the Son of God, promises that this meal will forgive sin (Mt. 26:28), His Word is also trustworthy and true.

A quick disclaimer before I go on here: I’m not a doctor, so what I’m about to say isn’t intended to be medical advice. Talk to your own healthcare professional.

When you get an ear infection, a doctor will prescribe an antibiotic to target and kill the bad bacteria. But those antibiotics will also kill the good bacteria in your gut that you need to properly digest food. When a doctor prescribes an antibiotic, he might also advise you to take a probiotic to keep all the biotics [sic.] in your body in balance. So, when you have a bacterial infection, you might end up taking two things – a prescription of antibiotics and a supplement of probiotics. Again, that’s not medical advice; talk to your healthcare provider.

Tonight, your Great Physician gives you one medicine, but it does two things. First, it fights off and rids you of the infection of sin through forgiveness. And second, it bestows, grants, and gives life. This one medicine of Jesus’ Body and Blood does both.

Listen to what Jesus says about this medicine in John 6. Jesus says that He is the living bread that comes down from heaven, so that you may eat of it and not die (Jn. 6:50). Christ says that when you eat this bread, you will live forever(Jn. 6:51). Jesus says that whoever eats His flesh and drinks His blood has eternal life (Jn. 6:54) because His flesh is true food, and His blood is true drink (Jn. 6:55). Christ says that by this eating and drinking, you abide in Him and He abides in you (Jn. 6:56).

In other words, this medicine kills your sin through forgiveness, and it nourishes and strengthens you so you love others in the same way as Jesus did. One of the prayers we use to thank God for what He gives in Communion highlights this. It goes, “We give thanks to You, Almighty God, that You have refreshed us through this gracious gift, and we ask that in Your mercy You would strengthen us through [this meal] in faith toward You and in fervent love toward one another.”

Holy Communion strengthens your love for others because it joins you to Jesus and Him to you. And this joining of you and Jesus results in love for others. And the love that Jesus has for His disciples, which is beautifully demonstrated in our Gospel reading (Jn. 13:1-1534-35) is a humble, sacrificial, self-giving kind of love. Think of it. The One who had shaped Adam from the soil (Gen. 2:7) now stoops to wash the soil from the feet Adam’s sons (Jn. 13:5). The One who powerfully yet intricately placed all the galaxies, stars, and planets into orbit now kneels with a water basin and a rag. The medicine of the Lord’s Supper pours that kind of love into you and strengthens you to give that same love to others. And by you having that same kind of love, Jesus says that all people will know that you are His disciples (Jn. 13:35). 

So, whenever you feel your sin, come. Receive this medicine. Whenever your love grows cold, come. Receive this medicine. 

Medicine always has a cost, and so does this medicine. But Jesus, your Great Physician, foots the bill. He absorbs the entire cost. Christ fully pays for it so you can receive it gratis. Tomorrow, you’ll hear Jesus cry out on the cross, “My God, my God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Mk. 14:34). That was the cost, and it is completely covered by Jesus.

Dear saints, you have a Great Physician who heals, who forgives, who strengthens, who increases your love, and who gives you the medicine you need to lead you unto life everlasting. Amen.

The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

God Punishes Christ

The Scripture readings for tonight’s service
are portions of Psalm 22; Zechariah 13:1, 7-9; and Mark 14:32-41.

In the name of Jesus. Amen.

One of the common objections that pagans have against Christianity goes something like this: The Christian god is nothing more than a spoiled brat. He gets upset when humans decide to eat a piece of fruit, and you silly Christians believe the only way to make him happy is for him to torture and kill his own child. The pagans will then say that if god were truly loving that he wouldn’t threaten us with eternal punishment simply because we don’t follow his contrived rules. They think that god should just love and accept us for who we are and not who he expects us to be. He’s simply too demanding and stubborn. If he wants to forgive us, he should just get over his rules, ignore our deficiencies, and move on.[1]

That type of thinking is all the evidence you need to know that person has no clue what Christianity actually teaches. So, let’s try an analogy – just know this analogy isn’t a complete picture of Christianity either. The hymn we just sang, “Salvation Unto Us Has Come,” does a great job giving a fuller picture than this analogy does, but the analogy helps address that objection, so here it is:

Imagine a mom and dad who have a perfectly loving home with several children. In this home, there is no anger or selfishness. The children never fuss or complain. They all treat each other and with perfect, complete love and respect.

Then one day, a virus attacks the children, and it causes them to harm themselves and each other in horrible ways. They also fight against their parents. (Please know, the analogy already breaks down here because it doesn’t place any culpability on the kids for contracting this virus. We are entirely guilty for all of our sin. But, again, it’s not a full picture.)

In that instance, could those parents simply let that virus eat away at their children? Could they just decide to love their children the way they are while the virus progresses, and the conditions keep getting worse? Could those parents ignore how that virus mutates the genes of their kids and spreads to others too? Could they just let that virus fester and kill their kids along with all their descendants while the kids get more and more violent and dangerous? No!

The parents would hate the virus. They would be angry at the destruction and devastation it brought to their family. They would do anything they could to annihilate the virus. But those parents know two things. First, they know that the virus has run so deep that killing the virus would also mean the death of their children. Second, they know that only way to abolish the virus and stop the suffering it brings is for one of the parents to receive a treatment that sucks all the virus out of their children and puts it all into one of the parents. It means that one of the parents will have to die, but the children will live and be cured. So, of course, one of the parents, out of love for the family willingly volunteers to be the cure and die.

Now, this analogy doesn’t present all the aspects of what Scripture teaches, but it addresses the “God-is-a-child-abuser” objection against Christianity that I mentioned earlier.

Dear saints, the virus of sin is horrific. Sin isn’t just something floating around out there that periodically causes pain. No, sin is a completely devastating infection coursing through your veins. Your sin causes hurt and harm to others and to yourself. Sin kills you.

Yes, God loves you just the way you are. But it would not be loving for God to leave you just the way you are. Instead, He loves you in such a way that He will not allow sin to drag you into eternal suffering. In Christ, God came down to draw all the infection of sin from you. Jesus took all that sin and disease from you (Is. 53:4; Mt. 8:17). In 2 Cor. 5:19, 21, Scripture tells us, “In Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them… For our sake He made Him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.”

When the virus of sin first infected humanity in the Garden of Eden, God promised to send the Savior (Gen. 3:15) and draw all the disease of sin out of you. In love for you, God kept that promise when, in the fullness of time, the long-promised and long-awaited Christ came to willingly suffer all the pain and torment that the virus of sin brings.

In Christ, God was at work keeping the promise He had made. But even though humanity first heard that promise in the Garden of Eden, Scripture teaches that even before He created all things, God knew that humanity would choose to contract that virus and He knew what it would take to cure you. So, Scripture comforts you by clearly stating that Jesus is the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world (Rev. 13:8 [KJV]; 1 Pet. 1:19-20).

When God poured out His just anger and righteous wrath against the virus of sin, He first placed it all upon Himself, on Jesus (Jn. 1:29; 2 Cor. 5:21; 1 Jn. 2:2) to spare and rescue you from that punishment. And when Christ suffered God’s punishment for your sin, He knew exactly what He was doing (Mk. 14:36, 39). No one took Jesus’ life from Him. He had the authority to lay it down and to take it up again (Jn. 10:18).

He knew that He was the Shepherd who would be struck for your sake (Zech. 13:8; Mk. 14:27). He willingly took the blow of God’s punishment and laid down His life for you (Jn. 10:11). Christ did this so that you would call upon His name and be His people (Zech. 13:9).

It was not out of hatred for His Son, but out of love for you that God the Father punished Jesus on the cross. The Good Shepherd willingly took all of God’s wrath against your sin in order that you would be His forever. He was punished so that you would be restored and forgiven, brought back to your proper place as a child of God. Because of what Jesus has done for you, you can confess, “The Lord is my God.”

Christ has opened the fountain that cleanses you from the virus of sin and uncleanness (Zech. 13:1). Because Jesus has taken your punishment God is not ashamed to say, “[You] are My people” (Zech. 13:9). Amen.

The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.


[1] I have intentionally used lower-case references to God here because this argument does not – in any way, shape, or form – represent who God truly is.

No Empty Houses – Sermon on Luke 11:14-28 for the Third Sunday of Lent

Listen here.

Luke 11:14-28

14 Now he was casting out a demon that was mute. When the demon had gone out, the mute man spoke, and the people marveled. 15 But some of them said, “He casts out demons by Beelzebul, the prince of demons,” 16 while others, to test him, kept seeking from him a sign from heaven. 17 But he, knowing their thoughts, said to them, “Every kingdom divided against itself is laid waste, and a divided household falls. 18And if Satan also is divided against himself, how will his kingdom stand? For you say that I cast out demons by Beelzebul. 19 And if I cast out demons by Beelzebul, by whom do your sons cast them out? Therefore they will be your judges. 20 But if it is by the finger of God that I cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you. 21 When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own palace, his goods are safe; 22 but when one stronger than he attacks him and overcomes him, he takes away his armor in which he trusted and divides his spoil. 23 Whoever is not with me is against me, and whoever does not gather with me scatters.

24 “When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it passes through waterless places seeking rest, and finding none it says, ‘I will return to my house from which I came.’ 25 And when it comes, it finds the house swept and put in order. 26 Then it goes and brings seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they enter and dwell there. And the last state of that person is worse than the first.”

27 As he said these things, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, “Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts at which you nursed!” 28 But he said, “Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!”

In the name of Jesus. Amen.

In 2014, it had been about two years of me waking up feeling more tired than when I had gone to bed. At my loving wife’s urging, I went to the doctor to request a referral for a sleep study. I remember the doctor saying, “Well, you’re not old, and you’re not overweight. I don’t think you have apnea, but I’ll refer you for the sleep study.” A couple weeks later, I went down to Altru Specialty Center to spend the night. When I checked in, the nurse who would be monitoring me met me and said, “You’re not old, and you’re not overweight. I doubt you have apnea.” But she dutifully brought me to a room and proceeded to put all the little sensors on my body, head, and beard. A couple hours later, I went to sleep. Less than an hour after that, she woke me up and said, “Put this on.” It was a cushion that covered my nose and blasted air into my nostrils. I hated it. It took me about an hour to figure out how to breathe with it and another hour to fall asleep once again. I only slept for four more hours, but it was the best sleep I had had in years.

The next morning, she unhooked the wires from my head and body. The nurse said I could expect to hear from the doctor in a few days. When I went to that appointment, this new doctor said to me, “Well, you’re not old and you’re not overweight, but you definitely have sleep apnea. We will write things up and get everything to your insurance so you can have a CPAP machine.”

Finally, two weeks after that appointment, I was told I could go to Yorhom and get the machine. The technician who instructed me on its usage said, “You’re not old and you’re not overweight, but this should help you feel better.”

CPAP MaskThe CPAP means that a hose dictates how I can move when I turn at night. It means that, when I lie on my side, I have to adjust how the mask fits on my face and doesn’t get moved off my nose by my pillow. It means that I can’t fall asleep having a conversation with my wife. There are mornings that I wake up and have to unwrap the hose from around my neck. But in the six years since I started using that machine, there have only been just over a handful of nights that I have slept without that mask blasting air into my nostrils. I still don’t always like to use it. I wish there were some sort of medicine or a shot I could take, but such a thing doesn’t exist. Sometimes, I wish I could use the machine one night a month or one night a week and be fine, but it doesn’t work that way. I know that if I don’t use that mask and machine each night, I won’t rest or be able to function like I should.

Sorry for the long story, but there is a point and it is connected to the text. Here’s how:

Imagine how frustrated Jesus gets with us when we think that we can simply get a dose of His grace and mercy and then move on with our lives until we recognize or feel the need to take another dose. Imagine how frustrated Jesus gets with us when we think all we need is an occasional shot of the Holy Spirit when He desires that we have the daily and eternal presence of the Holy Spirit in our heart.

You see, your problem is not that you sin every now and then. Your problem is that the devil has essentially taken up residence in your heart. That’s what Jesus means when He says, “When an unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it seeks but finds no rest it says, ‘I will return to my house from which I came.’” The devil has led you into sin and possesses you. That problem can, obviously, be solved. Jesus, the one who is stronger than the strong man devil, expels Satan. And Jesus doesn’t leave you simply as an empty vessel because the house of your heart won’t stay empty. Instead, the Holy Spirit comes and resides within you, and this means that you need to continually receive the Holy Spirit because He can be pushed out. You can neglect God’s good gifts, and the Holy Spirit can be resisted so that He leaves.

Assailed by DemonsWhen this happens, your last state is worse than your first because as Jesus says, the demons come, it finds the house (you) swept and put in order. Then that evil spirit brings seven other spirits more evil than itself.

Throughout your lives, you find yourself in the position of thinking that it would be enough if God would just drive out the devil. And praise God that He does. However, that isn’t the end of the matter. Don’t forget that your house won’t stay empty. If you turn away from the Word that fills you with the Holy Spirit, the devil is going to come back worse then he was before. Don’t think that because you believe today that you will tomorrow.

Read. Study. Meditate on the Scriptures. Make the Bible more important to you today than it was yesterday. Don’t think that you can bring your kids to Sunday School and Confirmation and think they’ll be ok. Don’t be lulled into thinking that is enough Jesus for them.

The greatest threat to you and your children isn’t from terrorism, war, or a virus. The thousands of kids who grow up thinking that they were raised to be Christian because they were taken to church a few times a year. Those same people then go and read five out-of-context verses from some atheist blog thinking they know everything about what Christians believe. They are the very ones who are going to be the most likely to draw your children away from the faith.

But also be comforted because that is much less likely to happen if you train your children now to be in the Scriptures. To be in the very place that the Holy Spirit continues to work in their hearts and lives. That very Word of God is where God fills the house of your heart and theirs with the Holy Spirit and with treasures that cannot be spoiled.

You need to hear this today. There is a lot of uncertainty in our world and country right now. And while there are no plans to stop holding regular services here, it is possible that option might be taken from us. The devil is working very hard to bring enough uncertainty and fear to our society – and to Christians especially – that they would be tempted to think being at church and within the fellowship of the Body of Christ is not essential.

All Saints gathered around the throneRight now, we Christians need one another. Those who do not have faith in Christ need us as well. They need us to comfort them with the very same that we have in Christ. They need to know there is something more than this life. They need to know that Christ is coming back. They need to know that the One who is returning is the very one who shed His holy and precious blood for them. That very blood of Christ is the medicine they need to be freed from the devil’s tyranny over the house of their heart. They need to know that Jesus is the Lamb of God who takes away their sin.

Dear saints, today know that the house of your heart won’t stay empty. Know that the stronger man is on your side. And know that He desires all to be saved, and this may be the time He uses to call them to repentance and faith. Amen.

The peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.