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1 The Message for Feb 14, 2016 Luke 4:1-13 Jesus is Lord Rob Miller, Pastor Today we begin a 5-week series on our basic beliefs, our core values or as Kelly Fryer calls them, our Five Guiding Principles. This series is based on her book, Reclaiming the “L” Word - Renewing the Church from its Lutheran Core. She suggests there are Five Guiding Principles for us in the Lutheran Church. They are as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Jesus is Lord Everyone Is Welcome Love Changes People Everybody Has Something to Offer The World Needs What we Have We will take a look at each one of these over the next five weeks and on Wednesday evenings from 6:30 -7:30 we will consider what the Bible says about each one of these. I hope you can be there… We begin at the beginning with grace. Grace is at the heart of what it means to be a Lutheran Christian. In her book Kelly tells the story of being in a class during her first year at seminary. The visiting professor was not holding her attention. It was a beautiful day and she wanted to be outside. Instead, she was sitting in a classroom listening to a lecture about some long-dead theologian. She was bored and obviously not alone. The profession must have known that nobody in the class was really listening to him. He slapped his notebook closed and stopped talking. He wasn’t going to waste another breath on that class. He went to the board, picked up a piece of chalk, and drew an arrow pointing straight down. He stood back and said, “If you understand that, you understand everything you need to know about what it means to be a Christian… who also happens to be Lutheran.” And then the professor walked out of the room. 2 The class sat there is stunned silence, staring at this enormous arrow pointing straight down. Kelly said she thought - the only logical explanation why the professor would do that was because he obviously thought they were all going to hell… The next time the class gathered the professor drew the same arrow on the board and said, “Here’s what this means. God ALWAYS comes down. There is never anything we can do to turn that arrow around and make our way UP to God. God came down in Jesus. God still comes down to us in bread and wine, in water and fellowship of believers. God ALWAYS comes down.” We are a church grounded in and guided by grace. We start with grace. And that means we do things and say things that are uniquely us. Of course, there are many things associated with the being a Lutheran Church. We say things like: We are saved by grace Word and Sacrament Priesthood of all believers We know how to sing in worship Pot-luck dinners (my favorite) “We’ve never done it that way before.” Liturgical worship Coffee Hour(our third sacrament) Small Catechism Forgiven sinners We’re not Catholic Kelly says that most of the things that many people associate with being “Lutheran” are really adiaphora (a-dee-A-for-a). If you don’t know any other Latin words, you can use this one. “Adiaphora” means not essential -- in our case it means not essential for salvation. The church leaders during the Reformation - 500 years ago - used this word to sort out things that really mattered from the things that really didn’t matter. 3 In this new church they had to decide which things (like traditions and rituals and practices) they were going to keep from the Catholic Church and which ones they were not going to keep. The Reformers decided that anything that helps people meet God who always comes down to us is IN. Anything that absolutely gets in the way of meeting God is OUT. And everything else is adiaphora. It doesn’t really matter. Kelly writes: Today there seems to be some confusion over what is essential to our understanding of what it means to be Christians who are also Lutheran… and what is not essential. I don’t know how else to understand the fights we have over what color hymnal we should use or what kind of music we sing in worship. It is possible that sometimes we are guilty - without meaning to - of letting things like culture and tradition get in the way of seeing clearing what it means to be Lutheran Christians. Not that culture and tradition aren’t important. They are. But they aren’t the only things. And certainly not the most important things. (page 28) I believe with all my heart that we have something that no other church has. We are clear about God and who God is and that God loves us just as we are. That’s why we say, “Whoever you are and wherever you are in your journey of faith you are welcome here.” First-timers are so thankful to hear those words. And the reason we say those words is because love is shared in this place and love changes people. Guilt and shame do not change people. We start with God’s grace. And because we start with God’s grace we have a unique understanding of what it means to be saved. We don’t ask the question, are you saved? We don’t talk that way because we know we can’t do anything to get save. We were saved from the penalty of our sins the day Jesus died on the cross. That’s the day we were saved. We still sin, but the price has been paid for our sins. We strive not to sin. Every time we sin we put Jesus back on the cross. 4 We were saved not because of anything we could do, as a matter of fact; we don’t deserve to be saved. We approach this whole faith thing in a more humble way. We say that we are saved by God’s grace through Jesus’ faith. His faith saves us - not ours. We are saved from sin and death and the devil because that’s what Jesus came down to do. We come to a point in our spiritual journey when we realize deep in our souls that God comes down to us. God comes down to meet us when we are rich and when we are poor, when we are black and when we are white, when we are broken and when we are whole. God comes down because none of us could ever do anything worthy enough to make our way up to God. God comes down to set us free from everything that binds us and burdens us and hold us back from being the people God created us to be and who Jesus calls us to be. God comes down to set us free from sin and death and the devil. God comes down to set us free to love, and to laugh, and to learn, and to live life to the fullest with each other. St. Paul writes in his letter to the Romans, At the right time while we were still weak and lost in our sin Jesus dies for us so that we can be free to live again. (Romans 5:6-8) In this crazy, goofy way of the cross God proves and provides God’s love for us. Through the cross God made love, and grace, and mercy, and forgiveness available to everyone. That’s the truth the Reformers discovered 500 years ago. Nothing else matters. This is what it’s all about. This is the foundation, the framework, the starting point for everything we say and do in and through the church. 5 It’s all about Jesus and sharing the good news about what he has done for us, is doing for us, and will continue to do for us. Jesus is Lord. The cross is his throne and his crown is made of thorns. In our gospel reading for today Jesus is tempted by the devil… Jesus was filled with the Spirit at his baptism and then led by that Spirit into the wilderness. The devil tried to persuade Jesus from following his God-given mission. But Jesus does not give in to temptation… Gospel Reading -- Luke 4:1-13 Jesus overcame the temptations of the devil. The devil had no power over him. Jesus is Lord of everything -- and every time he was tempted to turn away from God, Jesus turned to the word of God. This should be a lesson for us. Every time we are tempted by the devil we should turn to the word of God. Or turn and say Jesus is Lord of my life not you Satan. That’s what the word of God tells us. Jesus is Lord of my life not you Satan. Say that with me… This week I invite you to read the word of God every day. Read 1 Corinthians 1 every day. And as you do consider these words being written to you personally to guide you, to empower you, to help you believe that Jesus is Lord. Jesus is Lord. That is so easy to say -- but living it is another matter. Most of the time, I want to be my own boss. Maybe you don’t but I do. Oh… who are we kidding, you do too. If we are honest with ourselves, we all want to be our own boss. It’s part of being human. It is that original sin that Adam and Eve brought into the world when they ate that forbidden fruit... Engraved on a wall in Niketown, Chicago are these words… ”In our hearts, we are always 12 years old and we are always the quarterback.” How true! 6 We don’t want to grow up and most of us don’t act our age. We also want to call the plays. We want to call the shots. We want all the glory when things go well and none of the responsibility when things go wrong. We want to be at the center of the huddle. Don’t we? Even and especially when we huddle together as the church… Sometimes I wonder who or what is “lord” of our lives. It’s easy to get confused. Kelly writes - I’ve noticed that sometimes people put traditions or culture or an idea or whatever -- at the center of our life together in the church. And yet, she continues… I can’t help but wonder how many of our problems and issues - in the church and in our personal lives - would be solved if we simply remembered that Jesus is Lord, no thing and no one else is. (page 35) Jesus is Lord, no thing and no one else is. When we say Jesus is Lord the first thing and the obvious thing is this -- I can’t be lord and neither can you. When we say Jesus is Lord the second thing and the less obvious thing is this -- We will never fully understand God so we need to be ready for anything and honest about everything. If Jesus is Lord then we will be surprised again and again and again when God meets us in the word and the sacraments, in a song or in fellowship with other believers, or in the words or actions of a stranger. God works in mysterious ways… the cross is proof of that -- so we need to be ready for anything. When we say Jesus is Lord the third thing and the most obvious thing is this. If Jesus is Lord then we don’t have to be. How cool… The devil is always tempting us to think that we can be lord of our lives. And when we think we can, we start acting like we are. Most of the time we don’t even know we’re acting that way. 7 The cross of Christ reminds us that we can’t be Lord. In the cross of Christ we see our failures and our faults. In the cross of Christ we know that Jesus came down to be our Savior because we need to be saved. We can’t save ourselves. We need to be set free from our stupidity, our selfishness, our selfcenteredness, and our insistence on making our own way through the wilderness of life. In Jesus we meet a God who loves us not because of who we are and certainly not because of what we’ve done but in spite of who we are and in spite of what we’ve done. We call that grace. God loves you. Turn to somebody right now and say to them, God loves you. We need to be reminded of that every day. So I have a challenge for you. Every morning this week before your day gets too involved go and look in the mirror and say to the person you see there, say to him or her… God loves you and Jesus is Lord of your life. It’s true! Do that every day this week and you will be surprised at how your day will take on a new meaning and a new purpose in the lives of those around you. Oh and by the way, when the opportunity presents itself this week and it will, invite someone to come with you to worship next week. Our topic will be, “Everyone Is Welcome.” Let us pray… Please, Lord Jesus, help us die every day to ourselves so that you and you alone can live within us. Set us free from everything that isn’t you. Help us to remember who we are and who you are. Jesus is Lord. And God’s people said, Amen.