In lieu of our time together due to the
stay-at-home orders issued by our government, because of the
coronavirus troubles – which have put our worshiping, studying
and serving in our building in abeyance – I offer these abbreviated online
liturgies. They in no way are equivalents to our normal fare,
when we gather in our beautiful church to sing praise to
Almighty God around Word and Sacrament.
But they still have value. In them I’m taking
advantage of our time apart to accentuate Psalm 46:10 about
being silent before God. These liturgies have no audio tracks
(except for a hymn link here and there) or
video streams – which in Mendocino County, California,
have been banned (Doug Mainwaring, “California County Bans Singing in
Online Worship Services,” LifeSites, online, April 17,
2020). So what we have here are just words. If I were to provide instead a
full mock worship service online, that would be inconsistent with our
mission statement and the honor it pays to historical liturgies
(which require a congregation present). So the liturgies I provide are
short, meditative in tone, and solitary. Use them
to stand silently before God and his Word – and its elaborations
in prayers, hymn texts, art works, and sermons. Luther thought
God has his way with us in this silence (Luther’s
Works 6:35). Kierkegaard agreed, seeing in this silence
God’s Word gaining power over us (For
Self-Examination, ed. Hongs, p. 47). He even thought,
somewhat humorously, that by blunting our “loquacity” through
this silence, God’s ways were protected from any “undietetic
uncircumspection” coming from us (The
Book on Adler, ed. Hongs, p. 166). Be that as it may, we
must never forget, as Kierkegaard elsewhere warned, that
Christianity is not primarily for quiet times, but for fighting
the good fight of faith “right in
the middle of actual life and weekdays” (Journals, ed. Hongs, §2:2132).
Online Sunday Liturgy
December 27, 2020
Bulletin Cover
Behold the Lamb of God
who takes away the sins of the world.
(John 1:29)
When you enter into battle… against sin, death, the devil, the
Law, and God’s wrath, beware that you do not boast of your merit
or work, but rather with sure faith lay hold of Christ, who has
overcome sin, death, devil, and hell for your benefit. For only
Christ’s merit and suffering is so powerful, so precious, so
infinitely valuable in God’s eyes that it covers all your sin,
appeases God’s wrath, and overcomes death, the devil, and hell.
Therefore, it alone should possess the glory. Your works cannot
accomplish all this…. But when you have… righteousness before
God through faith in Christ, then see to it that you demonstrate
your faith and do good works to extol and praise God and to
serve your neighbor.
[Martin Luther, Sermons on John 19 (1529)
Luther’s Works 69:270.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
December
27,
2020
Saint John, Apostle and Evangelist
The Third Day of Christmas
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray: Heavenly
Father, we give you thanks for the witness of Saint John,
Apostle and Evangelist. May his writings shine the light of
Christ on your Church and in the world. In the name of Jesus we
pray. Amen.
First Lesson:
Genesis 1:1–5, 26–31
Psalm 116:10–17
Second Lesson: 1 John 1:1–2:2
Gospel: John 21:20–25
Opening Hymn:
“O God of Light” (LBW 237)
Sermon: December 27, 2020
“Walk in the Light”
(1
John 1:7)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Let’s
thank God today for Saint John – whose gospel was Martin
Luther’s favorite (Luther’s Works 35:362). Let’s thank God for
Saint John’s witness
that Jesus, by virtue of his holy incarnation (John 1:14), is equal
to God the Father himself (John 5:18, 10:30, 14:9). This is an
amazing claim if there ever was one – that a man is God. How can
this be, we ask?
Jesus is a limited, visible human being; but God is the
limitless, almighty, invisible and eternal One. Clearly these
two don’t go together. Even so, can’t you see why we still thank
God for Saint John during Christmastide? It’s during this time
of the year, after all, when we hear from the angel Gabriel that
Jesus is the Son of the Most High (Luke 1:32) – making him far
more than any carpenter’s son (Matthew 13:55). But still this
revelation is difficult to fathom, and so it’s good to ponder it during this most holy time of year
(Luke 2:19, 51). For “darkness reigns,” Martin Luther wrote,
“wherever Christ is not present…. Christ [thereby] exalts His
ministry and elevates it above the proclamations, doctrine, and
ways of all the world” (LW
23:319). And rightly so if indeed he is the Son of the Most
High – and the only one who can bring us to God the Father (John 14:6).
But oh how this exalted revelation rankles people! Over the
generations we have not jumped aboard, en masse, on the gravy
train singing praises to God the Father for the gift of his only
begotten Son, Jesus. No, not at all! The vast majority have always
stood against Jesus – as the one who was prophesied long ago to be
the one “spoken against” (Luke 2:34). In fact, as Luther
notes, “many people are bent on destroying and totally
discrediting the Gospel” (LW
23:320)! Indeed, “the Church never has and never will exist
except under adversaries” (LW
73:321). Why all this hostility? It’s because of the greatness of
Jesus, whereby he “tears us away from all other lights,
teachers, and preachers, so that we may remain with Him alone
and cling to Him, lest we perish and die in eternal darkness” (LW
23:327). Why is Jesus so rigid and dramatic about this? It has to do with
the very word of Christ which “works not in the flesh but in the
spirit, [and therefore] must suppress and cast out the
salvation, peace, life, and grace of the flesh. When it does
this, it appears to the flesh harder and more cruel than
iron itself” (LW
14:335). This pits the whole human race against Jesus. And
he knew it – “the world... hates me,” he tells us, “because I testify of it that
its works are evil” (John 7:7).
How will we then walk in the light which Christ brings and
he himself is (1
John 1:7, John 8:12) – a light “which He has lit in a dark
cellar, as it were” (LW 24:374)? Well, never on our own, that’s for sure, since
to walk in
“the Christian faith is so difficult” – it’s like walking on
“razors” (LW 56:316, 21:245). For
those who deny this, they haven’t been paying attention to
our ingrained antipathy towards Jesus. “No one becomes better
because of God’s great goodness,” Luther argues. “If anything,
they become worse…. We have become foolish through our own
wisdom….Our nature is evil and corrupt” (LW
73:137). And so there is nothing trustworthy in us (John 2:24). Indeed, “there is no steel so hard as the human heart”
(LW 69:426). We “love
the darkness rather than the light” of Christ (John
3:19). “Our nature is totally corrupt” (LW 73:204).
Indeed, “no one is so dangerous to me as I am to myself” (LW
57:196). How then can we break through this log jam and enter the life of faith? Luther was right:
“To love God and the neighbor freely and steadfastly is
equivalent to raising the dead” (LW
73:377). That puts faith well beyond our reach. How is it then
that any of us believes at all – albeit only a few at that
(Matthew 7:14)? Here Saint John steps in with a sharp, cutting
word from the Lord Jesus that he alone records: “You did not
choose me but I chose you” (John 15:16). How shocking! This says
that when we believe, it actually isn’t we who believe.
“God… reverses the order and declares: ‘You cannot and shall not
choose Me, but I must choose you. Things will not go as you
plan, but as I will. I will be your Lord and Master; I refuse to
be taught by you’” (LW
24:260). This is as it should be if faith indeed is a gift and
not of our own making (Ephesians 2:8). Luther took this to
heart and so was flat-footed about it. “You must guard against
thinking that you are capable of faith,” he unhesitatingly
proclaims, rather “God must give it to you” (LW
51:110). That’s because faith is all tied up with a “new birth” (John
3:3), which we can’t muster on our own – just as we couldn’t our physical
births. And so at Christmastide we rightly sing – “Cast out our
sin and enter in, be born in us today” (“O Little Town of
Bethlehem,” 1868, Lutheran Book of Worship, 1978, Hymn
41). “Apart from me you can do nothing,” Jesus adds with clarity and
daring conviction (John 15:5).
If faith in Christ were less than that, maybe we could pull it off. But to believe in Christ is to believe in what’s
stupefying and stupendous and so it has to be a gift. “Behold,
the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world” (John
1:29). And to believe in this magnificent one, you have to poke out your very own eyes (John 9:39),
something which none
of us can do. And no one can stop laboring for the bread which
perishes either (John 6:27) – let alone seek a peace that the
world doesn’t
give (John 14:27, 16:33). No one can climb alone to the
heights of faith –
loving God with “all of your heart” (Matthew 22:37). And what are those
heights? “There is always enmity between God and the natural
man, and they cannot be friends and in harmony with one
another…. Therefore Christ must come, that he might go before
the Father’s face, reconcile us to him, and obtain for us
everything we lacked…. Christ has made atonement for our sins,
and an angry judge he has changed into a gracious and merciful
God” (Luther’s House
Postils, ed. E. Klug, 3:198–99). Changing God in that way
through reconciliation and atonement is
what none of us can do. It’s
the Mount Everest none of us can scale. Just give it a try! “Who are you”
(Romans 9:20), my friend, to change God for the better? Only Christ, when
lifted up onto the cross, can draw us to himself (John 12:32).
Otherwise when we meet God, we meet only a fierce, growling bear
(Amos 5:19, Hosea 13:8). Only Christ placates God’s
anger (LW 69:36–37, 58, 270, 79:310), and when he does,
he finishes it off, once and for all. “It is finished!” he
famously yells from the cross as he breathes his last (John 19:30).
And besides not being able to master faith, neither is doubt a
celebrated part of it (contra Val Webb, In Defense
of Doubt–An
Invitation to Adventure, 1995). Never can it be, since
“to commit a sin and then to deny it and try to justify
it, is not human; no, that is devilish”
(LW 23:397). So no, not at all! Because faith is a gift it can’t
be subject to doubt as is
your faith in your favorite team that they’ll win the championship.
Faith, after all, is supposed to be “a constant, unquestioning,
unwavering confidence in divine grace” (LW 75:129).
Indeed, “if God’s
Word... stood on the worthiness of men, then all would be
uncertain” (LW 69:358). We can’t
follow God’s
will if we don’t
know “for certain what it is and how it is done” (LW
78:300). But thanks to God, we do. For “against doubt, the Holy Spirit works certainty in us
through the Gospel” (LW
73:304). For “a mind that reveres God and earnestly fears
eternal death and desires eternal life cannot be set at rest by
uncertain and dubious teaching” (LW 60:63). Christ
himself wants us to regard his words as “divine, unchangeable
truth” (LW 77:98). “Don’t
be faithless, but believing,” he thunders after his resurrection
from the dead (John 20:27). So if you doubt, you must never put up with it, but
instead fight against it with all of your might (LW
69:114, 73:392). For “God did not make doubt. Doubt was not
created but comes with our corrupted nature” (LW
73:312). While what the weather will be is not known for
certain, nor how much money will be in your estate when you die
– what the church has to say is certain. Even though many
modern Christians think uncertainty and being tentative are next
to godliness, Luther did not. When it came to the Christian
message of salvation (LW 23:330), he was certain that “we should be certain”
(LW 67:419). On these matters the preacher “must stand
firm like a wall,” Luther insisted, speaking with “certainty and
boldness” (LW 68:106, 58:211). Therefore “nothing
[should] be taught in Church other than what we are certain is
God’s
Word, not what human reason and wisdom think is good and right”
(LW 78:47). Abiding in this certainty, and enriched by
these over sixteen unique passages from John’s
Gospel, let us having been filled
with God’s power
and the knowledge of what’s involved
in following Jesus, walk in the light. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Thy Strong Word” (LBW
233)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Robert Shull family
Alan Morgan family
Geri Zerr
Wayne Ducheneaux
Israel McNearney
Julie Godinez
Joey DiJulio and family
Haley Marshall
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Death
Randy Vater
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“O Little Town of Bethlehem” (LBW 41)
When the Lord departs with the words “It is accomplished,” He
means by this that all Scripture has now been fulfilled…. The
Son of God has given and offered up His body and life as a
payment for sin; sin has been blotted out; God’s wrath appeased;
death overcome; the kingdom of heaven won and heaven opened.
Everything is fulfilled and completed, and no one may dispute,
as if anything yet remained to be fulfilled and accomplished.
(Luther’s Works
69:264–65.)
Online Christmas Liturgy
December 25, 2020
Bulletin Cover
“The magnitude of God’s wrath is far surpassed by the magnitude
of Hismercy, whereby so great a person, the Son, became the victim in
place ofruined
human beings. It seems just for reason, being ignorant of God,
to grumble against God as an unfair and utterly cruel tyrant.
Many have sought relief here, to reconcile God’s justice with
His mercy, but outside of faith in the incarnate God, there is
no reason, there is no relief.”
(Luther’s Works 73:519).
Online Abbreviated Christmas Day Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
December
25,
2020
The Holy Nativity of Our Lord
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray: Heavenly
Father, you have revealed yourself in your blessed Son, Jesus
Christ, the redeemer of the world, born to Mary in Bethlehem
long ago. May he set us free from the old slavery of our sin. In
his name we pray. Amen.
First Lesson:
Isaiah 9:2–7
Psalm 96
Second Lesson:
Titus 2:11–14
Gospel: Luke 2:1–20
Opening Hymn:
“Oh, Come, All Ye Faithful” (LBW 45)
Sermon: December 25, 2020
“Fear Not”
(Luke 2:10)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
“It’s
a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God”
(Hebrews 10:31) – that’s the
Dei viventis, the
living God of the old Latin Bible. Saint Mary found out about
this. She was terrified when Gabriel, God’s angel, showed up
representing him (Luke 2:10). Zechariah also discovered fear in
that same Dei viventis
(Luke 1:12). And it goes on and on. This is no rare occasion.
The shepherds too were scared by the glory of the Lord (Luke
2:9). And that fear doesn’t end at Christmas. Later when Jesus
raised the dead he scared those who saw him do it (Luke 7:16).
He also put fear into the whole “country of the Gerasenes” when
he killed a herd of pigs in order to set a man free from his
demons (Luke 8:37). And when Jesus taught about hell, he
expected us to be afraid (Luke 12:5). That same fear of hell was
sounded again when Jesus was dying on the cross (Luke 23:40). So
there’s plenty of fear to go around. And it has to do with
punishment and loss. That’s why God is scary – we’re afraid he’s
going to hurt us. He may even subject us “to a miserable death”
(Matthew 21:41). He may have us “eaten by worms” (Acts 12:23).
He may “chasten” us in love (Revelation 3:19). He may sicken and
kill us in church (1 Corinthians 11:30). We must not forget that
“God is a consuming fire” (Hebrews 12:29).
Even so, Christians regularly cover up this fierce, severe side
of God (Romans 11:22). As a result we take our ease, eat, drink
and make merry (Luke 12:19). But this is illusory and naïve as
well. We pretend that God never killed all the people on the
earth in a massive flood except for Noah and his family (Genesis
6:7). But he did. “He blotted out every living thing that was
upon the face of the ground, man and animals and creeping things
and birds of the air” (Genesis 7:23). And he did that because
the thoughts of our hearts were “only evil continually” – and so
“the earth was corrupt… and filled with violence” (Genesis 6:5,
11). Martin Luther thought this report was particularly gruesome
– “What loud cries there are, what grief, and what wailing when,
from the shore, we observe a boat overturned and human beings
perishing wretchedly!... We are indeed devoid of feeling if we
can read this account with dry eyes” (Luther’s
Works 2:97). And what has happened since? After two major
world wars in the 1900s and massive regional slaughters in north
Africa and southeast Asia, violence in our time is all the more
“endemic” (Jacque Barzun,
From Dawn to Decadence, 2000, p. 776). Are we then on the
verge of another global holocaust like the great flood, once
again purging the world of violence by way of violence? Well,
dystopian novels and movies are abounding in our day (Bryan
Walsh, End Times,
2019).
But at Christmas none of this has the final say. That’s because
joy has come into the world. Nevertheless it isn’t rooted in the
food which perishes (John 6:27). This joy instead comes by way
of God’s revelation as Luther argued (LW
4:4). “I bring you good news of a great joy,” we’re told, “which
will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the
city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10–11).
And this is true even if his own received him not (John 1:11).
It is true even if no one wants to hear God’s good news (Romans
3:11 – Charles Marsh,
Wayward Christian Soldiers, 2007, and David Horowitz,
Dark Agenda, 2018).
“Miserable were the circumstances,” Luther notes regarding the
first Christmas, “with a world more hostile and loveless toward
this King than to lions and bears” (Luther’s
House Postils, ed. E. Klug, 1:101). Just think of it! And
yet it abides. It beckons us every day and every year at
Christmas. Salvation is standing at your door (Revelation 3:20).
And what does it bring? How is such a great joy delivered? It
comes by a word. And it comes through a sacrificial and terrible
death. Luther preached that this joy is all tied up with that
fact that Jesus was the one who was “crucified and died” for us
(LHP 1:106). And we
need that sacrifice. For “the human race has become little more
than a stinking, shameful, disguised tool of the devil. So
despicable has he made mankind through sin that we could not
possibly become more base. Eternal death and God’s wrath takes
us by the throat; we are never at peace but constantly plagued
in body and soul here on earth, making it an enormous, woeful,
fear-ridden kingdom of the devil” (LHP
1:111). To find “relief” from this degradation, Christ Jesus had
to be sacrificed “in place of ruined human beings” (LW
73:519). He was stricken by God, and by his wounds we are healed
(Isaiah 53:4–5). “Christ… stepped into the place of our sinful
nature,… loaded onto Himself all the wrath of God [and] overcame
it” (LW 76:19). And
this sacrifice saves us from God’s wrath when we believe in it
(John 3:16, 3:36).
What is more, all of this had to come at night – if we truly are
to believe in it. How else could the stars shine so brightly,
Luther notes, if it all happened in summer under the midday sun?
In this way it was demonstrated, Luther explains, that “this
King was born for those who live in fear and trembling, and that
they alone belong in his kingdom…. That signified that this joy
would be proclaimed to all people, but only those would be
receptive whose consciences were stricken and hearts troubled” (LHP
1:105). So even the great flood of ancient times has its place at
Christmas now. Or that is at least what Luther thought. “Therefore,
all who gladly believe in their hearts that Christ is nothing
other than pure joy,” Luther goes on to explain, “these have learned well.
When [they] hear that the first world was destroyed by the
flood,… and similar terrible visitations… of God’s wrath and
judgment, they immediately respond: Be that as it may; I
perceive who Christ is and I believe” that he’s my great joy (LHP
1:107). So to properly celebrate this Christmas joy, you’ll
need to “fear no one and trust no one except God” (LW
51:139). With that “fear of God and with trust in His grace,…
you will be useful both to God and the world and will carry out
and maintain your work against the opposition of the devil” (LW
78:105).
But because “faith apart from works is dead” (James 2:26), we
can’t leave out our yuletide good deeds during Christmas.
So don’t
get too carried away with joy! Let us
then remember to give “light to those who sit in darkness” (Luke
1:79). That would be fitting because, as Luther argued, “we live
on earth so that we should be a help to other people…. [God]
lets us live that we may bring other people to faith as he has
done for us” (The Church
Comes From All Nations: Luther Texts on Mission, ed. V.
Stolle, 2003, p. 20).
This light is a wonderful gift of “surpassing worth”
(Philippians 3:8), and greater than anything else we could ever
give (John 8:12, Colossians 2:3). And while offering it to all
who ask about it (1 Peter 3:15), you must ever remember that
while what you’re doing is necessary (Matthew 28:19), you still
cannot “rely on what you do, as if you had accomplished it
yourself” (LW
78:210). Modesty and humility are always important when
witnessing on behalf of Christ. Then all of the glory goes to
God as it should (1 Corinthians 10:31). Then you’ll be believing
in Christ as you should – while everybody else you’ll be sure
not to fear.
Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Good Christian Friends, Rejoice” (LBW 55)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Robert Shull family
Alan Morgan family
Geri Zerr
Wayne Ducheneaux
Israel McNearney
Julie Godinez
Joey DiJulio and family
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Death
Randy Vater
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” (LBW 60)
Albrecht Altdorfer (1480–1538)
I have been in Munich [doing] some Christmas shopping…. I bought
one hundred postcards with the Altdorfer Holy Night on them.
This picture seems quite timely to me: Christmas amid the
rubble…. Very impressive.
(11/29/1940)
(Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Works,
volume 16, p. 95)
Online Sunday Liturgy
December 20, 2020
Bulletin Cover
God regarded Mary’s low estate.
(Luke 1:48)
It is God’s nature to make something out of nothing; hence one
who is not yet nothing, out of him God cannot make anything….
Therefore God accepts only the forsaken, cures only the sick,
gives sight only to the blind, restores life only to the dead,
sanctifies only… sinners, gives wisdom only to the unwise. In
short, He has mercy only on those who are wretched…. Therefore
no proud saint… can become God’s material, and God’s purpose
cannot be fulfilled in him. He remains in his own work and makes
a fictitious, pretended, false, painted saint of himself, that
is, a hypocrite.
[Martin Luther, Commentary on
Psalm 38 (1525)
Luther’s Works 14:163.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
December
20,
2020
The Fourth Sunday in Advent
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray: O
Lord, our God, stir up your power and come. Take away the
hindrance of our sins and make us ready for the celebration of
your birth. In your name we pray. Amen.
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Why did God pick Mary to give birth to Jesus? Martin Luther
thought it would have looked better to pick a noble young woman,
from an important Jewish family – maybe the daughter of Annas or
of Caiaphas (Luther’sWorks 21:314). So why
did God pick this nobody – of lowly birth (Luke 1:48) – Mary of
Nazareth? It’s because “God abhors the confidence which we have
with regard to ourselves” (LW
3:4). And that’s what a prosperous, powerful young woman would
possess. So God picked Mary instead. God strikes us with
lowliness “to awaken us with many awe-inspiring examples of His
wrath, that we may learn to despair of ourselves and to put our
trust in His grace alone” (LW
2:4). Trusting in God alone is what’s required of the Messiah’s
mother. And her lowliness embodies that trust. If God is going
to favor her (Luke 1:28), then she must be lowly of heart. For
indeed, God “loves the remnant of those who fear Him [Luke 1:50]
and hates the mass of the unrepentant sinners” (LW
2:53).
In order to exalt the only Son of God, we ourselves must
decrease (John 3:30). If we inflate ourselves, then Christ will
be diminished “because the world and Christ cannot be in
harmony…. [So] faithful heralds of the Gospel… do not seek their
own greatness,… do not curry the favor of others,… do not hunger
after wealth and honor, but… seek only to enrich Christ, to
return both the talent they received and rich interest [Matthew
25:27]” (LW 20:103).
This requires lowliness – recognizing that “sticks and stones
are not as ignorant and mad as we are” (LW
75:43). And so God picked Mary of Nazareth to be the mother of
Jesus. By so doing he favored what was of low estate (Luke 1:28,
48) – a favorable exaltation that she could never do for
herself. This is what God does – “to place before us all things
beyond our grasp, things impossible and clearly desperate, so
that we might cast all things aside and believe in God. [For he
wants] to humble the proud and exalt the humbled” (LW
16:183). And so he chooses what is “foolish in the world to
shame the wise” (1 Corinthians 1:27). Making Saint Mary glorious
in and of herself, would then be contrary to God’s purposes.
It’s rather her lowliness that is to catch our eye and inspire
us to walk down that same lowly path.
But will we ever do that? We who love the darkness rather than
the light (John 3:19)? What chance do we have to be lowly? How
shall we find help – we who love money, pleasure and ourselves
(2 Timothy 3:2–4)? Can anything turn us around? Is salvation
possible? Well, guess what – “what is impossible with men is
possible with God” (Luke 18:27). Just as God could bring Jesus
from a virgin’s womb (Luke 1:37), so he can bring forth
lowliness out of the corruption of our self-aggrandizement
(Romans 4:17). For indeed, “Mary… grasped the word and through
faith became pregnant with it in her heart [and] also became
physically pregnant with that which the word in her heart said
to her” (LW 37:90,
36:341). God’s word is that powerful. It “breaks the cedars of
Lebanon, it makes the oaks whirl, and strips the forests bare”
(Psalm 29:5, 9) – bringing forth the virgin born along with
believers in him.
When God implants his word in us and bestows on us the gift of
faith (James 1:21, Ephesians 2:8), then we follow Christ (John
10:4). And he’s worth it! He’s “from the Holy Spirit” (Matthew
1:20). And that’s what we need. For Luther was right – “I do not
want a Christ… as my Savior who is only a man. Otherwise I would
go to the devil. For mere flesh and blood could not erase sin,
reconcile God, remove His anger, overcome and destroy death and
hell, and bestow eternal life.” (LW
24:108)! These words about Christ’s saving sacrifice go with
Christmas. They aren’t reserved for Good Friday. The death of
Jesus is always at the center of our faith – regardless of the
church season (1 Corinthians 2:2, 2 Corinthians 4:10). In a
newly translated Christmas sermon from 1544, Luther joins the
death of Jesus with his birth – “Ah, heavenly Father, You put
Your Son at a maiden’s breast to nurse Him with a spoonful of
milk, and then let Him hang upon a cross to die – and all this
takes place for our sakes” (LW
58:194). So you see my friends, the nursed one is also the
nailed one!
Celebrating Christ’s nativity, then, without concentrating on
his death, rips the truth right out of Christmas. No wonder in 1525
Luther snapped – “At Christmas, they rock a baby and practice
their nonsense rhymes” (LW
76:386)! Give up on that and diligently dwell on these words
instead from another of Luther’s Christmas sermons: “By His
blood [Christ] has made satisfaction… so that we receive both
forgiveness and grace without our cost or labor, but not without
Christ’s cost and labor…. Our faith…. is not righteous unless
it… firmly believes that not we but Christ for us can and has
satisfied God’s righteousness…. In the entire Gospel He does
nothing more than draw us out of ourselves into Him…. What a
rich, inexpressible thing is Christian faith, which brings such
great, incomprehensible treasures to all believers!... Crawl
into Christ [and] remain under His shelter” (LW
75:246–47).
And in Christ’s shelter be sure to bless Saint Mary as Scripture
calls us to do (Luke 1:48). Luther thought saying The Hail Mary
was a wonderful way to do that.
Through those words we “penetrate to Christ and to God himself…
through her” words (LW
43:39). But he cut off the last line from The Hail Mary about praying for us
sinners at the hour of our death. That was because it wasn’t
Biblical to “surrender… our death wholly to her care” (Catechism
of the Catholic Church, 1999, §2677). It’s enough to pray –
“Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you. Blessed are you
among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.”
That’s because all of these words are Bible verses (Luke 1:28,
30, 31, 41, 42, 43). So hold onto
that abbreviated Hail Mary as one good way to show God that you,
following the example in his word, also want to honor Christ by favoring
his mother, Saint
Mary. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Savior of the Nations, Come” (LBW 28)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Robert Shull family
Alan Morgan family
Geri Zerr
Wayne Ducheneaux
Israel McNearney
Julie Godinez
Joey DiJulio and family
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Cite clear Scripture and obey it so that nothing more than the
naked sword, the word of God, rules everyone. Saint Paul taught
us this when he wrote, “Test every doctrine” (1 Thessalonians
5:21)…. What kind of touchstone should we use other than
Scripture?.... [We shouldn’t let others teachings be] the judges
and testers of God and God’s Word…. [Instead we should] most
certainly consider Scripture the principal light and the
greatest clarity…. [It is] the most obvious and the clearest
teaching to judge and to test all teaching.
[Martin Luther, “Answer to Emser” (1521)
Luther’s Works
39:165–66.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
December
13,
2020
The Third Sunday in Advent
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Heavenly Father, God Almighty, hear our prayers and come to us,
bringing light into the darkness of our hearts. In the name of
Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Isaiah 61:1–11
Psalm 146
Second Lesson: 1 Thessalonians 5:16–24
Gospel: John 1:6–8, 19–28
Opening Hymn:
“On Jordan's Banks the Baptist's Cry” (LBW 36)
Sermon: December 13, 2020
“Test Everything”
(1
Thessalonians 5:21)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Generous, yes; gullible, no. That should be our Christian
mantra. Every day those words should guide our steps. Generous,
yes; gullible, no. But they don’t. And that’s because we’re
gullible and stingy instead. Alas – “wretched man that I am!”
(Romans 7:24). Stingy indeed we are – we don’t help “those in
need.” And we’re surely gullible – being “tossed to and fro and
carried about with every wind of doctrine” (Ephesians 4:28, 14).
Just think of it! And it’s probably our gullibility that brings
about our lack of generosity. That’s how those two are
connected. We buy into the false teaching that we’re better than
everyone else, and so we don’t want to sacrifice anything to
help others (Philippians 2:3, Romans 12:3, 10, 16, 1 Peter 3:8).
That’s how generosity flies away. The best secular account of our
collective meanness is that slender volume by Peter Unger –
Living High & Letting
Die: Our Illusion of Innocence (1996). You can’t go wrong by
it. It exposes as threadbare the many excuses we have for
not being generous.
So how shall we fight against our gullibility – and lack of
generosity? How shall we
block them? The Bible says we can stop being gullible, or at least reduce it,
by testing everything (1 Thessalonians 5:51, 1 John 4:1). That
means take nothing for granted. Learn to be suspicious. Don’t
trust anyone (Jeremiah 17:5, John 2:24). Martin Luther put it
this way – “entrust duties… but [then] watch with unceasing
vigilance” (Luther’s
Works 45:123). For we live in a world that is “mad and
foolish, wild and wicked” (LW 22:198). But how are we to develop
Luther’s vigilance?
He goes on to explain – “believe nothing unless it is
founded in the Scriptures” (LW
36:195). We are to rely on Scripture “so much that where
something is not in Scripture, it is not to be held as true” (LW
75:270). The Bible is to “regulate” our lives (LW
17:144). We are to “yield to the Word” (LW
14:339). We are to think “in the way Scripture does” (LW
25:261). In those ways the Bible becomes our habitation, our
domicile, our home – for we are “surrounded on all sides by the
rays of the Word” (LW 2:353). Then the creed that we live by will be that
“we should disregard all human… teaching… and pay attention only
to the clear Scripture…. We should retain the right [to] accept
with discretion only what agrees with Scripture” (LW
76:86). Then we will “flee for refuge to the most solid rock of
Divine Scripture and not… believe rashly any, whoever they may
be, who speak, decide, or act contrary to its authority” (LW
27:156). That gives us godly equilibrium. We then have spiritual
stability.
That happens because the Bible brings us to “port” – “so that we
are certain of what we should teach, learn, and hold, and… no
longer vacillate” (LW
59:289). Without Scriptures we are then at bay – “O unhappy
Christians that we are!.... We rely upon human doctrine and
wandering spirits, putting God’s Word last and scorning the
advice of the Holy Spirit…. We poor creatures leave God’s Word
and follow our own opinion. We order, we institute, we bid and
forbid, we do and omit whatever pleases us” (LW
36:194–95). But then we no longer are suspicious and critical as
we’re supposed to be. Remember that for Christians “everything
must be read and accepted with fear and trembling, even that
which is handed down by great and holy men” (LW
31:223). And that’s done with the Bible which “alone is the true
lord and master of all writings and doctrine on earth” (LW
32:11–12). Christians, therefore, will “reject the word of man,
or else read it with discrimination” (LW
32:217). That rejection or discrimination is our suspicion –
it’s our criticism. And so we must be “bound… by the chains of
Scripture and the holy Word” (LW
32:119). That’s what it’s like to be “slaves of righteousness”
(Romans 6:18).
But none of this will happen unless first that strong man, the
prince of darkness, the god of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4),
is bound (Mark 3:27). For as long as he remains unbound, we are
not bound by the chains of Scripture. We are wild and sinful –
“living in the passions of our flesh, following the desires of
body and mind” (Ephesians 2:3). But in God’s great mercy we are
not left like that. Instead Christ Jesus, God’s only son, comes
and “destroys the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8). Luther
called them “sin, death, God’s wrath, the devil, hell, and
eternal damnation” (LW
23:404). These are cancelled by nailing them to the cross
(Colossians 2:14). These are defeated by the blood of the cross
(Colossians 1:20). That blood washes us clean (Revelation 7:14);
that blood saves us from God’s wrath (Romans 5:9). That’s
because the sacrifice of Christ is certain (LW
12:380). For only Christ has made “satisfaction for the sins of
the world.” Only through him can we “throw wrath into the
corner” and “learn to reconcile… the wrathful God with man the
sinner” (LW 12:363,
321). So let us with joy shout out – “Christ, our
Asylum” (LW 16:195)!
Strengthened by this freedom and faith and joy in Christ Jesus, may we
now continue with our fast before Christmas
– even though we know that
“laws
do not make Christians” (LW 8:264). And in addition to
that, may we also take up the discipline of being ruled by Holy
Scripture, which is here to correct us and keep us from the
wayward teachings of our own liking (2 Timothy 3:16, 4:3).
Luther shows us twelve ways to do this. Holy Scripture,
he writes, “crushes the great, that is, humbles the proud; it
straightens the crooked, that is, corrects the disorderly; it
bends the straight, that is, bows down the exalted; it levels
the rough, that is, soothes the angry; it extends the short,
that is, encourages the timid; it shortens the long, that is,
terrifies the presumptuous; it widens the narrow, that is, makes
the stingy generous; it narrows the wide, that is, makes the
spendthrift economical; it sharpens the blunt, that is, gives
knowledge to the unlearned; it blunts the sharp, that is, makes
the wise ignorant; and it repels rust, that is, banishes
laziness” (LW
14.338). This stirring litany echoes John 9:39 – that God
both blinds those with good sight, and gives sight to the blind! May the depth and breadth of these
insights “rule” over us, and be the “womb” that gives us life (LW
23:51, 17:93). May this “whole counsel of God” (Acts 20:27)
manifest in Luther’s
litany
never leave us. And may we daily recall these twelve
Scriptural corrections, that they intensify our discipleship as
we struggle now, and until our last days on earth, to test
everything. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“O Lord, How Shall I Meet You” (LBW 23)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
The Rev. Samuel Sseba
Richard Holmes
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Robert Shull family
Alan Morgan family
Geri Zerr
Wayne Ducheneaux
Israel McNearney
Julie Godinez
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. And
pray for those suffering from the Southern California fires.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending” (LBW 27)
R. S. Thomas (1913–2000), Welsh Poet, Anglican Priest.
“Thomas, like other good poets, discovers that to write a poem
is to write a living foreign language, and that in the writing
one becomes quite foreign to oneself. The inevitable conclusion
is that Thomas found salvation as a poet by moving in a
direction diametrically opposite to the course that he had (not
without political sentimentality) set himself to follow: that
is, self-identification with a nation, a history and a people.”
[Echoes to the Amen:
Essays After R. S. Thomas,
ed. D. W. Davies, 2009, p. 56.]
Online Sunday Liturgy
December 6, 2020
Bulletin Cover
The fiery angel, Saint John the Baptist, the preacher of true
repentance, intervenes. With a single thunderbolt he strikes and
destroys both [those] who think, “We have already done penance,”
and [also those] who suppose, “We need no repentance.” But John
says: “Repent, both of you. Those of you in the former group are
false penitents, and those of you in the latter are false
saints. Both of you need the forgiveness of sins, for neither of
you knows what sin really is, to say nothing of repenting and
shunning sin. None of you is good. All of you are full of
unbelief, blindness, and ignorance of God and God’s will”…. [We]
must hear such a judgment as this: “You are all of no account.
Whether you are manifest sinners or saints, you must all become
other than you now are and do otherwise than you now do, no
matter who you are and no matter how great, wise, mighty, and
holy you may think [of] yourselves.”
[Martin Luther, Smalcald
Articles (1537),
The Book of Concord,
ed. Tappert, pp. 308, 304.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
December
6,
2020
The Second Sunday in Advent
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
O Lord our God, have mercy on us and inspire us that we may
repent of our sins and be forgiven. In the name of Jesus we
pray. Amen.
First Lesson:
Isaiah 40:1–11
Psalm 85
Second Lesson: 2 Peter 3:8–14
Gospel: Mark 1:1–8
Opening Hymn:
“Prepare the Royal Highway” (LBW 26)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Why doesn’t Isaiah 1:27–28 settle it? It says that “Zion shall
be redeemed by justice, and those in her who repent, by
righteousness. But rebels and sinners,” the Lord warns, “shall be destroyed together, and those who forsake the
Lord shall be consumed.” So why don’t we repent? Jesus thought
we should, and so in Luke
13:3–5 he threatens us twice – “repent or perish.” So why don’t
we join
Isaiah and Jesus and repent? Why risk being destroyed? Why
resist repenting? Well, because first it’s too hard on us. And second, it waters
down God’s mercy. That sounds like two strikes and you’re out.
In one fell swoop repentance is cut out of the Christian life –
and with it Isaiah 1 and Luke 13 as well. A positive self-image
and taking God for granted rules the day.
So let’s look at these. First there’s our self-image. It’s what first blocks our
repenting. That’s because it hurts our feelings. It highlights
what’s wrong with us. Repentance doesn’t cut us any slack. We
long for compliments over repentance. So do we need to sing a
round or two of that popular song of old, “Accentuate the Positive”
(Johnny Mercer, 1944)? Well, it all depends, doesn’t it? We
shouldn’t ever sing that song if Mark 7:20 is true – “what comes
out of a man is what defiles a man.” Neither should we if Romans
7:18 is true – “nothing good dwells within
me.” Nor if Revelation 3:17 is true – “you are wretched,
pitiable, poor, blind, and naked.”And if John 3:19 is true, we also should never sing it – that “men loved the darkness
rather than the light.” If these divine revelations have it right, then
self-castigation is just what we need.
So forget that Johnny Mercer
song! Rather, take up Martin Luther when he said that “we are
obnoxious [and] human nature will ever remain the same” (Luther’sWorks 19:73). Follow
Luther when he says that our lives are filled with “utter
darkness, and [contempt for] God, lying, deceiving, greed,
gluttony, drunkenness, whoring, knavery, adultery, violence, and
murder [with] neither love nor trustworthiness” (Luther’s
House Postils, ed. E. Klug, 1996, 1:126, LW 22:390). Follow
Luther when he
says that we’ll need to “learn… how great the... depravity of
human nature is” (LW
7:235). Follow Luther in the Lutheran Confessions when he
says that “you must all become other than you now are and do
otherwise than you now do, no matter who you are” (The Book
of Concord, ed. T. Tappert, p. 304). Follow Luther because
he followed 2 Corinthians 13:5, 9 – “Examine yourself, to see
whether you are holding to your faith. Test yourself [praying
for] your improvement.” And that improvement comes from
the Gospel which “preserves nothing of the old man but destroys
him completely and makes him new, until hatred of himself
utterly roots out love of himself through faith in Christ.
Therefore all boasting of erudition, wisdom, and knowledge is
useless; for no one is made better by these, no matter what good
and laudable gifts of God they are. Indeed, besides the fact
that they do not make a man good, they become a covering for
wickedness and a veil over the disease of nature, so that those
who are pleased with themselves because of them and seem to
themselves to be good and sound are incurable” (LW
29:119). Only the faithful can live with these condemnations – “lest
the penitent perish” (LW 7:257). We run that risk
because when we become “fully occupied with the feeling of
sin,.... [we shrink] back and cannot see the rays of mercy in
the clouds of divine wrath” (LW 12:375, 316). So faith
is needed because then we can repent and still move away from
being “coarse [and] hard” sinners (LW 12:334, 323) –
receive forgiveness and finally be saved.
And then there’s God’s mercy. It also is used to dump
repentance. For we suppose that if we have to repent before God
forgives us, then his mercy looks compromised and puny. For more is needed than
just pure grace. So an
evangelical alarm goes off – and we pull the plug on repenting.
But should we? God promises that he will not despise a “broken
and contrite heart” (Psalm 51:17). Should we then play with
fire – should we provoke God’s displeasure by not repenting, by
not being broken and contrite? Shall we tempt him to despise us? If we refuse to repent in God’s name and for his sake,
it’ll surely boomerang on us – for “impenitence is the
unforgivable sin” (LW
33:35). In fact, not repenting “condemns” us (LW
67:11). Repentance is how we acknowledge that “God is right and…
we are… all condemned” (LW
51:318). Therefore God wants you to “grieve over the sins you
have committed and [become] ashamed of them” (LW
56:304). Indeed, joy comes to heaven when we repent (Luke
15:10). And why shouldn’t
it? What’s
being eradicated in us through repentance and forgiveness are
“works of the devil, works of sin, works of darkness, works of
folly” (LW 31:65). Indeed, “what a great evil sin is” (LW
7:280). So when we “realize that sin is in [us, we] will surely
fear to become [servants] of sin” (LW 25:301). And we’ll
take up Luther’s
clarion call that “the entire life of believers [should] be one
of repentance” (LW 31:25). We need to be “converted day
by day,” every day of our lives (LW 17:117). And this
is not contrary to God’s mercy, but part of it. God makes
repentance a condition for his mercy, for he “wishes to forgive
sins to those who acknowledge them and does not wish to forgive
sins to those who do not acknowledge them. This promise is the
sole cause, the first, middle, and last cause; that is, it is
everything” (LW 12:333). Therefore “you must confess
your sin. If not, everything is in vain” (LW 58:240).
But even with all of these testimonies and explanations, we
still have problems with repentance. That’s
because it is so hard to change our minds once we’ve
made them up (Elizabeth Kolbert, “That’s
What You Think: Why Reason and Evidence Won’t
Change Our Minds,” The New Yorker, February 27, 2017).
Because so many of our problems are rooted in refusing to change
our minds for the better, some are now proposing to “contain and
harness the Dionysian energies of psychedelics,” in order to push
us in the right direction (Michael Pollan, How to Change
Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About
Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence,
2018, p. 404). But for us, we have another word to hear, that’s
about a divine force that takes us right into the kingdom of God
(Colossians 1:13). It’s
that power that pushed the murderous Saul into a holy life – not
of his own choosing (Acts 9:3–9, John 15:16). Now that’s
some doing! Power like that gives us hope – for it’s
far more than a “name for the people [we] can become together” (The
American Scholar, Winter 2021, p. 44). It rather is a power beyond
anything any of us can muster on our own. It helps us when we cannot help
ourselves. And it’s
in the word about the Lord being patient, “not wanting you to perish, but… to come to
repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). To bring that about, God has given us Jesus
to suffer for us that he might be “our repentance and
satisfaction before God” (LW
40:345). That makes possible what otherwise would never be –
that we might repent and be saved from our sins (Mark 1:4).
His repentance brings about ours. That’s
because by way of it we’re
“plagued by a desire for salvation and for the mercy of God” (LW
5:154).
Just think of it – a good plague for once! For God’s
word meddles with us whether we like it our not. It cuts into
our souls (Hebrews 4:12). That word implants itself into us to
change us for the better from within us (James 1:21). And it barges
in without asking permission – through closed doors (John
20:19). It is a mighty word even when it looks inert and weak –
unable to move things around like a big steam shovel does (2
Corinthians 12:9, Acts 5:38–39). It is that almighty word made
flesh in Christ Jesus, who on the cross “stepped into the place
of our sinful nature,... loaded onto Himself all the wrath of
God which we deserved with all of our works, and... overcame it”
(LW 76:19). Now that’s
some power!
It overcomes divine wrath (Romans 5:9) and brings
forgiveness to the repentant. And because
Jesus refused to end his prolonged suffering and come down from
the cross (Matthew 27:40), “it must follow that no one through
his own work or holiness can atone for his sins or put away God’s
wrath” (LW 77:321). Only the death of Jesus does that.
And this gracious message is manifest even when God uses us to
get it across – as in the case of Ananias (Acts 9:10). So “get
busy and work, and yet expect everything from God alone....
Labor, and let Him give the fruits. Govern, and let Him give His
blessing. Fight, and let Him give the victory. Preach, and let
Him win hearts. Take a husband or a wife, and let Him produce
the children. Eat and drink, and let Him nourish and strengthen
you” (LW 14:115). We do not have this power within us
(2 Corinthians 4:7). We are only witnesses to it (Acts 1:8) –
that his saving power among us may increase (John 3:30).
And there’s still more to this Christian message because of the
season. During these days before Christmas we should
also fast – and even sanctify a fast for the church to share in
together (Joel 2:15).
Luther warned that we should not “tolerate hypocritical
Christians who consider it sufficient… to believe that they are
Christians, remain in sins and filth, and are not changed. If
they believed sincerely [they] would… purify themselves” (LW
30:268). So we also need to join that purification project. But we
have to be careful as we already have been saying. We have to remember that faith is “preached
against works, even if works cannot be left out afterwards” (LW
67:76). They’re needed but they can’t save us sinners. They’re
needed because they’re “works of faith,… done out of the spirit
of liberty and solely for the love of God” (LW
25:234). So be cautious, but still fast. Deprive yourself of the
foods you especially like, to help reinforce that you are just
an “unworthy servant” of the Lord, doing your duty (Luke 17:10).
None of us are hotshots.
Know, then, that it is good to fast. Hold on to that. And
remember that “one
fasts in the right way by not giving the body more food than is
needed to keep it healthy, and by letting it work and wake, in
order that the old ass may not become too reckless, go dancing
on ice, and break a leg but may be bridled and follow the
spirit” (LW 30:28).
So fast, bridle yourself, and follow the Lord and the Spirit of
his might, that you may,
with God’s gracious help, use these days before Christmas to
repent. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Comfort, Comfort Now My People” (LBW 29)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Richard Holmes
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Robert Shull family
Alan Morgan family
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. And
pray for those suffering from the Southern California fires.
Death
Tom Peterson
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
The life of Christians should be so directed that they are not
thinking only of living on this earth… as do sows…. Rather they
should hope and wait for another and better life,…. an eternal,
imperishable life and heavenly existence in which there is pure
joy and bliss…. We were not baptized and became Christians… so
that we can fill our weak, stinking belly and remain here in
this dismal, doleful world forever…. Christians [should] learn…
to turn our back to this present life since it is passing,… and
always to keep that future life in view, firmly and certainly to
hope for it…. This is rightly taught, but not easily learned;
rightly preached, but not easily believed; finely admonished,
but not easily followed; well said, but poorly done… The
heavenly inheritance [is] all too often forgotten,… but the
temporal life… on earth [is] thought about all too much…. This
life [we] chase after day and night; that life [we] cast to the
wind…. [But] if we want to be Christians, our final goal… should
be… the blessed inheritance in heaven, which does not pass
away…. This life on earth is not our… proper life…. Therefore,
we… belong elsewhere, in another… kingdom…. [Our] heart and
thoughts are directed elsewhere…. [to] the other life… which
human reason cannot grasp or comprehend.
[Martin Luther, Sermon on Titus 2 (1531),
Luther’s Works
57:21–26.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
November 29,
2020
The First Sunday in Advent
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Almighty God, we give you thanks for your Son whom you anointed
King of creation and Judge over all. May we all be united under
his watchful eye. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Isaiah 63:16-17; 64:1-8
Psalm 80:1-7
Second Lesson: 1 Corinthians 1:3-9
Gospel: Mark 13:33-37
Opening Hymn:
“Wake, Awake, for Night Is Flying” (LBW 31)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Christians are supposed to be good people – always trying to
help everyone (1 Thessalonians 5:15). Indeed, we’re even
told that whoever “does good is of God” (3 John 1:11). But
there’s a hitch. And that is that good deeds don’t make you rich
toward God (Luke 12:21). For that you have to set your minds on
him rather than on earth, where good deeds are done (Colossians
3:2). For what’s on earth is transient (2 Corinthians 4:18).
Indeed, it’s passing away (1 Corinthians 7:31). But God’s word
lasts forever (1 Peter 1:25). And those eternal words are not
found on earth (John 6:68). Martin Luther knew this – and that’s
why he said that “this life is useless;... this life is nothing”
(Luther’s Works
60:119, 52:14). It can’t direct us to what’s of “surpassing
worth” (Philippians 3:8). For he knew that the Holy Scriptures
didn’t “spring from the soil of the earth” (LW
22:484). “Flesh and blood” can’t give us God’s word (Matthew
16:17). That wisdom must instead come down from heaven (James
1:17). It’s not left to smart people to dream up – like Plato
(429–347
BC)
did with his philosopher king in the
Republic. No, all of
us are “worthless” (LW
33:257). So eternal life takes something else to make it happen.
Christ has to “prepare” it for us (John 14:3). He has to
“transport us to heaven” (LW
73:136). To tune into it, Luther thought, we have to “be dead
to… earthly life. We should not receive and tolerate those
earthly doctrines and false opinions from ourselves,” he goes on
to say. For they are “only earthly, nothing more.” They do not
“ask or strive for God’s will and kingdom and eternal life” (LW
77:107).
All of this is true because good deeds are not uniquely
Christian. They don’t turn us into children of God – away from
being “children of wrath” (Ephesians 2:3). For that we have to
be born from above (John 3:3). Good works can’t do that. Think
of Muslims. They are very good people. Martin Luther thought – even during a time of war with them – that not even
“Christ Himself… presented such a fine appearance,” and that any
Christian spending only “three days among” them, would convert
to Islam (LW 59:259).
In fact, he thought, it would be better to be ruled by a
“prudent” non-believer than by a “good” Christian who knew
nothing about government, even if the non-believing ruler were
to “harm” Christians in the process (LW
9:19).
But none of this makes Muslims children of God. That’s because
good fruit cannot make a tree good (LW 76:210) – it’s actually the other way
around (Matthew 7:17). For indeed, a good tree is a person with
a “good heart” – and not just good deeds. And a good heart comes
from being born of the Spirit, and being grounded “in the Word
of God,” which enables obedience to God and love for the
neighbor (LW 21:265,
266). So good works are not enough, because they can’t make us
good. No, righteousness “precedes works” (LW
25:152). Works in themselves, then, are actually “dirt” – because after
we do them “we want to boast” about what we’ve just done (LW
56:320). So in good deeds we are “nothing but sows” (LW
57:33). The only way to do truly good deeds is first to become a
good person by way of faith in Jesus. In that case, good works
“follow” faith, and “count for something by virtue of faith; but
they are not at all the equal of faith even though they arise
from faith. And faith does not cleave to the works but solely
to… the works of God” (LW
23:182). That leaves us with this, that faith should “preach
against works, even if works cannot be left out afterwards” (LW
67:76).
So faith matters more than good works – because we’re saved by
grace “through faith” (Ephesians 2:8, Romans 3:25). No one is
saved by good works – for a person is only saved “by faith apart
from works of the law” (Romans 3:28). We should then believe and
be baptized (Mark 16:16) – and stay alert, and stay awake (Mark
13:35). We must be ever vigilant. For as Luther warned – “faith
takes no holidays” (LW
35:378, 75:329). And why’s that? Why the need for utter
diligence in matters of faith? “Oh, what a difficult task it
is,” Luther writes, “to come to God.… [It’s] like making your
way through a wall of thorns” (LW
19:74). Wow, somebody better warn the evangelists! So be careful
never to take faith for granted. Once you’ve received faith as a
“gift” from God, struggle mightily with “fear and trembling” to
live within that very “household of faith” (Ephesians 2:8,
Philippians 2:12, Galatians 6:10). So you’ll be “misusing the
gospel” if you remain “sleepy and secure” – imagining that
you’ve been “so liberated by the gospel that there is no further
need to do anything, give anything, or suffer anything” (LW
51:207). What a sham that would be! No wonder faith “can be
easily lost” (LW
26:114) – and indeed many raised in the faith do in fact “toddle
off into some form of emptiness” where they find a counterfeit
repose that suits them (Handing
Over the Goods: Determined to Proclaim Nothing But Christ Jesus
& Him Crucified – Essays in Honor of James Arne Nestingen,
2018, p. 254).
So stay awake and look to Christ the pioneer and perfecter of
your faith (Hebrews 12:2). So great is the power of faith – for
by it we “cling” to Christ (LW
21:263). So “in the very hour in which we begin to believe and
to take hold of the Word we also begin to live in eternal life”
(LW 8:190). Therefore
we must never be “so caught up in the world as if we wanted to
remain here forever and leave heaven to God” (LW
57:26). Instead we should “seek the glory of God alone” (LW
17:263). We should “only strive to be in Christ forever” (LW
79:275). It’s bad for us to be “deeply enmeshed in temporal
things” (LW 45:280).
It’s best for us not to “settle down” here (LW
77:197). We can’t forget that it was “for eternal life” that we
were baptized (LW
57:27). So we should leave the temporal behind and “always
stretch for the eternal” as the goal set before us (LW
77:200). And why not? Heaven is that “better country” (Hebrews
11:16). It’s where a room awaits us in the heavenly mansions
(John 14:2). It’s where sin, suffering, sadness and death are
finally wiped out (Revelation 21:4).
Because Christ is so great, due to the salvation he brings, much
is at stake. For if you don’t believe in him, then “the wrath of
God rests on you” (John 3:36). That will surely bring suffering
from “the punishment of eternal destruction and exclusion from
the presence of the Lord and the glory of his might” (2
Thessalonians 1:9). When that happens, he is “a frightening
Christ… for those hardened hearts…. He, without mercy, must
trample them under His feet” (LW
77:85). And we should worry about this because even though faith
in eternal life may be rightly taught, it’s
“not easily learned.” It may be “rightly preached, but not
easily believed; finely admonished, but not easily followed;
well said, but poorly done” (LW 57:22). But that threat doesn’t take away
Christ’s mercy for the
broken, contrite, and heavily ladened (Psalm 51:17, Matthew 11:28).
No, that venerable Christian formula still stands, that “the
obdurate and stubborn,… you should rebuke sharply. But those who
are overtaken in a trespass and sorrow and grieve over their
fall [you should comfort] with sweet words and embrace… in your
motherly arms” (LW
27:111, 20:176). May we do just that –
“terrify the hardened and console the afflicted”
(LW 17:264) – in order that more and more
may come to long for heaven.
And in that same regard may we also constantly pray (1
Thessalonians 5:17). May we pray to God that his Holy Spirit
brings new birth and the longing for heaven among us all (Luke
11:13). May this come about by having Christ’s words “dwell
richly” in us (Colossians 3:16). And let us do that knowing that
the greatest work of faith is to “teach others the Word,” and
that whoever “works faithfully prays twice” (LW
51:139, 43:194). In one of his famous 1522 Wittenberg sermons,
Luther said, “I can drive no man to heaven or beat him into it
with a club” (LW
51:79). What a relief! Thank God instead for his word and his
Spirit that graciously and mercifully sees to it that we, in his
good time (Galatians 5:5), are also found to be among those who
long for heaven.
Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Rise, My Soul, to Watch and Pray” (LBW
443)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie Storbakken
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Richard Holmes
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Susan Curry
Karin Weyer
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Deaths
Douglas Minter
Esther Braafladt
Anna Marie Klein
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
For every parcel I stoop down to seize I lose some other off my arms
and knees, And the whole pile is
slipping, bottles, buns– Extremes too hard to
comprehend at once, Yet nothing I should care to
leave behind. With all I have to hold with,
hand and mind And heart, if need be, I will
do my best To keep their building
balanced at my breast. I crouch down to prevent them
as they fall; Then sit down in the middle of
them all. I had to drop the armful in
the road And try to stack them in a
better load.
[The Poetry of Robert
Frost,
ed. Edward C. Lathem, 1969, p. 266]
Online Sunday Liturgy
November 22, 2020
Bulletin Cover
A single work of Christ excels the works of all men…. Christ’s
works are divine works, but our works are human works…. Whatever
God does, even if it were as insignificant as a straw, still
presents a greater and more formidable work than heaven and
earth…. By comparison our works are nothing but reeking and
filthy offal…. We exalt faith so because it transmits divine,
yes, Christ’s works to me, namely, His suffering, His death… and
makes them our own. By comparison our works are nothing….. He is
all and… we are nothing. After a Christian has come to faith,
good works follow…. They count for something by virtue of faith;
but they are not at all the equal of faith even though they
arise from faith. And faith does not cleave to the works but
solely to… the works of God.
[Martin Luther, Sermons on John 6 (1533),
Luther’s Works
23:182.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
November 22,
2020
Christ the King Sunday
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Almighty God, we give you thanks for your Son whom you anointed
King of creation and Judge over all. May we all be united under
his watchful eye. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Ezekiel 34:11–24
Psalm 95:1–7
Second Lesson: 1 Corinthians 15:20–28
Gospel: Matthew 25:31–46
Opening Hymn:
“Crown Him with Many Crowns” (LBW 170)
Sermon: November 22, 2020
“Live in Christ”
(1
Corinthians 15:22)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
The Holy Scriptures declare that Christ is King (1 Timothy
1:17). And for a hundred years we have been singing “crown
him with many crowns” (Lutheran
Book of Worship, 1978, hymn 170). But now that’s coming to
an end. Yes, you heard that right. And it’s because of the
attacks being waged by the best and brightest in the church.
“God the king no longer fits,” they argue, in a world of “change
and chance,” nor does it properly express how “passionately” God
loves us (Brian Wren,
What Language Shall I Borrow? God-Talk in Worship: A Male
Response to Feminist Theology, 1989, pp. 126, 234). This
revision has trickled down into our worship by taking the word
king out of Psalms 10, 68, 95, 97, and 149 (Evangelical
Lutheran Worship, 2006). This onslaught is undergirded by
trenchant theological arguments against God’s well attested
almighty power (Charles Hartshorne,
Omnipotence and Other
Theological Mistakes, 1984). And they’re everywhere. When
God, for instance, looks almighty as the potter shaping the clay
in Jeremiah 18:6 and Romans 9:21, it isn’t really so, because
there’s a “give-and-take relationship” between the two, which
requires the potter to remold the “animate,” resistant clay to
get it into the right shape (John E. Sanders,
The God Who Risks: A
Theology of Divine Providence, Revised Edition, 2007, p.
92). Or when God overpowers Jonah in his flight from
responsibility by “interrupting” his getaway (Jonah 1:4, 3:3) –
it really doesn’t mean that God’s “in control of the situation”
because Jonah is still free to complain about it (Terence E. Fretheim, Reading
Hosea–Micah, 2013, p. 177). Or when God knocks Saul to the
ground in Acts 9:4 to force him to preach Christ, he’s not
acting like a “mob boss,” but only showing loving compassion (T.
J. Oord, God Can’t: How
to Believe in God and Love After Tragedy, Abuse, and Other Evils,
2019, p. 58).
How did we get into this mess? How did we ever get started down
this road with a God of our own making who would never push any
of us anywhere against our wills? How did we end up with a God
who no longer can overthrow the mighty and destroy nations (contra
Job 12:19, 23)? Was there
skullduggery and deceit involved? Actually we came by it quite
naturally – and it has taken all these many years to finally
catch up with us. For when they saw Jesus in the Bible they
didn’t bow down before a grand potentate, in charge of the whole
world, but instead scratched their heads saying – “Isn’t this
the carpenter’s son?” (Matthew 13:55, Mark 6:3). Martin Luther
knew where this quip was headed, and it’s finally
coming true. “If… someone wants first to know who Christ is,” he
cautioned, “and then afterward to believe on account of the
status of the person, it will do no good” (Luther’s
Works 69:235). How bizarre! You’d think if he looked like a
king you would more likely treat him like one. “Clothes make the
man,” you know – from the 16th century Latin maxim,
vestis virum facit.
But not in this case. With Jesus you start with “what He
preaches and teaches” and go on from there. Then you will
“understand well enough who Christ is and where He is from” (LW
69:235). He’s the word made flesh, after all (John 1:14) – and
his glory is in his words and deeds (John 12:23). And they have nothing to do
with establishing a kingdom on earth that dominates culture and
society, by someone who looks regal. “My kingship is not of this
world” (John 18:36) – Jesus ardently reports. And so
“everything which is God’s Word and work must be troublesome,
bitter, and difficult to the outward man” (LW
75:246). Indeed, Luther warned, “what is of God must be
crucified in the world” (LW
25:177).
So how do we make any headway in the kingdom of God? How can we
get a grip on what doesn’t even look right? First, we will have to
“abase” ourselves and sincerely believe that we are “the lowest
in all the world” (LW
51:38). We have to wish to “become nothing” (LW
48:288). You must realize that “everything that is yours must be
cast aside, and new things must be done. These old things of
yours cannot contain these new things, nor can the righteousness
of the Law and the righteousness of faith both stand
simultaneously or agree with each other” (LW
67:73). Christ is all and “we are nothing” (LW 23:182).
And so God only exalts those who are humble
(Luke 18:14). Indeed, “it is impossible for someone who does not
first hear the law and let himself be killed by the letter, to
hear the gospel and let the grace of the Spirit bring him to
life” (LW 39:185).
For God “accepts only the forsaken, cures only the sick, gives
sight only to the blind, restores life only to the dead,
sanctifies only the sinners, gives wisdom only to the unwise” –
indeed, he only makes “something out of nothing” (LW
14:163). That’s because it all goes back to the word (Luke
11:28) – and fit hearers of it are those who have been “reduced
to nothing” (LW
4:49). They are the ones who do not follow their own insights
(Proverbs 3:5), but are instead “regulated” by God’s word –
verbo esse debent (LW
17:144). We stand in its debt! They are the ones who know that
“the majesty of God is supreme,” and that “we are completely
worthless” (LW
16:16–17). Then we’re off our high horse, and can actually
listen to God’s word – rather than “find fault with it and
dispute it” (LW
23:229). Then we have quit trying to turn God into the most
“insignificant and despised disciple on earth” (LW
51:384). Then we have at long last come to cherish that “the
glory of the grace of God… makes us enemies of ourselves” (LW
27:364). Suffering is integral to this realization (Romans
8:17). And so it’ll be important to challenge our children – “I
hope you will be treated unfairly, so you will know the value of
justice. I hope that you will suffer betrayal, because that will
teach you the importance of loyalty.... I hope you will be
ignored, so you know the importance of listening to others. And
I hope you will have just enough pain to learn compassion” (Joan
Biskupic, The Chief: The Life and Turbulent Times of Chief
Justice John Roberts, 2019, p. 323).
And secondly we will have to look to Christ above everything else
(Colossians 3:2) – for he is the only one of “surpassing worth”
(Philippians 3:8). Indeed, “it is the absolute truth that
without Christ all is darkness” (LW 23:321). That’s because he died for our sins (1
Corinthians 15:3). No one else has done that for us. Only he was
obedient unto death, even death on a cross (Philippians 2:8).
Only he shed his blood to save us from the wrath of God (Romans
5:9). This is great because by believing that he died for
us, we “shall not be judged…. for through… faith the judgment
has been abolished” (LW
22:376, John 5:24). This makes Christ our king, even if he
doesn’t look like a worldly king. And that is because he instead
is our king “for the express purpose of destroying death
completely as His enemy” (LW
28:134). “It requires great insight and understanding to tear
the false christ out of our hearts and to learn to think of Him
correctly” (LW 77:83). And when we do, we live in him, both now and
forever (1 Corinthians 15:22). And when you live in Christ,
“what damage can be done to you by… the censure of the whole
world?... You have God’s Word; they don’t! You are in [His]
grace; they are not! You are [His] child; they are [His]
enemies!” (LW
14:134). For when we believe in Jesus – that “transmits
divine... works to [us], namely, His suffering [and] His
death... and makes them our own” (LW 23:182).
What an amazing gift! Not only does it give a peace which the
world cannot give (John 14:27), but this “unspeakably great
person” also inspires us “in a friendly way to serve others.”
For we exhort both “faith and good works” (LW 60:15).
Those who miss out on this joining together are “justly condemned, harder than
stone, darker than hell” (LW
76:421). May we never be numbered among them. May we instead
have a new birth (John 3:3) which leads us “into a completely
new way of life” (LW
78:322).May we instead
gladly (2 Corinthians 9:7) feed the hungry and thirsty, welcome
the stranger, clothe the naked, visit the sick and imprisoned
(Matthew 25:35–36). May we do all of this steadfastly, knowing
that we in effect have heard from our Savior – “Fear no one and
trust no one except God alone, who says [to] fear nobody but me,
for I can smite you, and put your trust in none but me, for I
can help you. No prince will give you either good or evil, for
both are in my hand” (LW
51:139). May we “always walk in this rule, constantly continue,
pursue it, and reach for it” (LW 79:296). And in this
we rejoice and pass it on to our neighbor. For fear dwindles in
us. Bravery begins to mark us (LW
12:222, 386, 388, 32:29, 33:150, 67:158). Christ is the “head of the body, the
church” (Colossians 1:18), and that makes him our master and king. So if you
“trust in him then you need fear no one and trust no one except
God.” With Christ as your king, you will do far more than
merely “fall upon your knees” (LW
51:139). You will also stand up boldly and serve your neighbor as you
enter into the fray to live in Christ Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “At the Name of Jesus” (LBW 179)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie Storbakken
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Richard Holmes
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Douglas Minter
Susan Curry
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Deaths
Mary Lou Jensen
Terry Fretheim
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“The Head That Once Was Crowned” (LBW 173)
Becoming nothing in this world is the condition for being able
to become something in the other world [John 12:25]. Thus they
are inversely related to each other…. [But in the church it] is
finiteness from one end to the other, everything revolves around
finite objectives for finite purposes, and at best Christianity
is fitted in as a mood, a mood one has on Sundays, lest he
overdo it. [The church] is afraid of nothing more than of
overdoing. Well, it can hardly be said to be guilty of this,
unless it should be that in exaggerated fear of overdoing it
extravagates.
[Journals, trans.
Hongs (1854) §4:4814.]
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
November 15,
2020
Twenty-Fourth Sunday After Pentecost
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Lord, when the day of wrath comes we have no hope except in your
grace. Make us so to watch for the last days that the
consummation of our hope may be the joy of the marriage feast of
your Son, Jesus. In his name we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Amos 5:18–24
Psalm 63:1–8
Second Lesson: 1Thessalonians 4:13–18
Gospel: Matthew 25:1–13
Opening Hymn:
“Awake, My Soul, and with the Sun” (LBW 269)
Sermon: November 15, 2020
“Watch
& Be Ready”
(Matthew
25:13)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Christianity is a contest (Micah 6:2, 1 Corinthians 9:24). Do
you believe that? And if you do, are you in it? Or do you think
the Christian faith is something else?
– maybe ease and merry-making (Luke 12:19). Now if you’re actually in
the contest, what is
it? What’s the fight over? What’s
the contest about? “Unfaithful creatures!
Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with
God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes
himself an enemy of God” (James 4:4). So is that the contest?
Are we in a battle over who our friends should be – God or the
world? “Do not love the world or the things in the world. If
anyone loves the world, love for the Father is not in him” (1
John 2:15). So it looks like that is our battle! The world
wants us to love ourselves (2 Timothy 3:2–4). Jesus says we
better not, because if we do, we’ll never make it into heaven
(John 12:25). Therefore when we deal with the world, let us
learn to do so in such a way that we really are not dealing with
it at all (1 Corinthians 7:31). That odd way of life is
rejected by many, seeing the
“mercy”
that’s in
“dumb luck”
on earth to be good enough for worthwhile living (Sean Carroll,
A Series of Fortunate Events: Chance and the Making of the
Planet, Life, and You, Princeton University Press, 2020,
pp. 11, 16).
And surely
it is an odd way of living, but it’s our way –
even though it makes us fools and aliens (1 Corinthians 4:10, 1
Peter 2:11). Martin Luther helps us think through this
strangeness. He thought that we can be both in the world and not of the
world by withholding any enjoyment or feeling for what we do
here on earth (Luther’s
Works 25:516). Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) – that great
champion of Luther – agreed with him, arguing against “using
eternity to give a flavor to the enjoyment of life,” and then
calling it good enough to be Christian (Journals, ed. Hongs, §4:4725). Furthermore he argued that the
church, in pursuit of only “finite objectives for finite
purposes,” has reduced Christianity to “a mood one has on
Sundays, lest he overdo it” (Journals,
§4:4814). Harsh though that may be, it’s fitting because “God in
heaven is the only power who does not hold sales or reduce the
prices; his prices remain eternally unchanged, more firmly fixed
than the North Star” (Journals,
§2:1821). If that wasn’t the case, then God would be at most “a handsome
ornament, a luxury item – for there [would be] no duty toward”
him (Journals,
§2:1808).
How best shall we wage this battle in favor of God – and against
the world? What can we do to make sure that we win this contest
our faith has dragged us into?
There’s no better place to go than the parable of The Ten
Maidens in Matthew 25, for there we have losers to avoid
and winners to join.
The story is old and familiar. The ten maidens are waiting for a
wedding to start, and they need to keep their oil lamps burning
until it begins. Five came prepared with extra oil, the other
half didn’t. When they begin to run out, they ask the others to
share some of their extra oil. They say they can’t because they
need it. So the five unprepared maidens leave to get extra oil.
While gone, the wedding starts and the door is closed. Upon
returning, they knock on the door to get in late, but
are denied entry. The parable then ends with the admonition –
“Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour”
(Matthew 25:13).
There’s
much not to like about this parable – including the stinginess
of the five prepared maidens, to say nothing of the
inhospitality of the wedding host. But Luther doesn’t let these
things distract us. He says we have to focus on the main point
of the parable which is that “it is very horrible... when God in wrath turns
someone away with nothing but scorn” (LW 79:211). Included in his assessment is a reference to
Aesop’s fable of the cricket and the ants (Aesop, The Complete Fables, trans. R. Temple, 1998, §336, p. 246).
Luther loved those fables (Carl P. E. Springer, Luther’s Aesop, 2011). In this one the cricket runs out of
food in the winter, and asks the ants to share what they have
stored up from the summer.
The ants ask what he was doing in the summer when he should have
been storing up food for later. The cricket says that he was
singing. Then the ants respond – “Ah well, since you sang in the
summer you can dance in the winter.” Luther thought this
harshness was a perfect fit for Jesus’ parable.
So
watch! Watch, my friends, and be ready! Don’t be so enamored with what’s going on in the world
around you that you forget God (Colossians 3:2, Philippians
3:8). Don’t think that what’s happening now is more
important than what will happen when the world ends (John
5:28–29, 2 Peter 3:10). “True Christians [encourage] the fear of
the Lord and a dread of sin, and [to keep] weeping, praying,
admonishing, and rebuking” (LW
31:188). They know that the best way to prepare for the end is
“coming to the end of oneself” (Lin Enger, American Gospel: A
Novel, University of Minnesota Press, 2020, p. 204)
– by being “displeasing... to ourselves” (LW
27:181). Kierkegaard, whom we commemorate today, knew that this
ending, this displeasing, linked up well with learning “that
Christianity is suffering, anguish, [and] a death struggle” (Journals,
§4:4725). So rather than seeking self-fulfillment and the
enjoyment of life (Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to
Death, 1987, 2005, Lance Strate, Amazing Ourselves to Death, 2014), seek first the kingdom of
God (Matthew 6:33). If you do you will win the contest. Pure and
simple. If you
do, you will be included with the five maidens who were prepared
and ended up getting into the wedding party. It’s
not rocket science. So don’t be like
the cowboys of old, “wandering the open prairies, free from the
confines of the city, of marriage, of capitalism, and of the
many other fetters and fetishes that plague our lives”
(Christopher Knowlton, Cattle Kingdom: The
Hidden History of the Cowboy West, 2017, pp. 339–40).
For he who
“loves
his life more than Christ does not yet possess Christ through
faith” (LW 25:318, Matthew 10:37).
So seek
first the kingdom of God. “This is a general teaching for all
Christians,” Luther believed, “that they should treasure that
eternal blessing which is theirs in the faith, despising this
life so that they do not sink too deeply into it either with
love and desire or suffering and boredom, but should rather
behave like guests on earth, using everything for a short time
because of need and not for pleasure” (LW
28:52). True indeed, but still befuddling! And Kierkegaard
makes it more so. He says there is nothing we can do to seek first this
kingdom – neither helping the poor nor witnessing for Christ
will do it. Instead “become nothing before God, learn to be
silent,” he insists. “In this silence is the beginning, which is
to seek first God’s kingdom.... [And this is also] the beginning
of the fear of God, because just as the fear of God is the
beginning of wisdom [Proverbs 1:7], so silence is the beginning
of the fear of God.... In this silence the many thoughts of
wishes and desires God-fearingly fall silent; in this silence
the verbosity of thanksgiving God-fearingly becomes silent....
And so it is; to pray is not to listen to oneself speak but it
is to become silent and to remain silent, to wait until the one
praying hears God” speaking from his holy word (Kierkegaard’s
Writings, 18:10–11).
Well that is a mouthful
– albeit a Danish
one. No wonder we’ll
need help in seeking the kingdom of God first. Christ, who is at
the center of it all (Colossians 1:13), is the one alone who draws us into
the kingdom through his word and Spirit. For indeed, his
“pain is my comfort; his
wounds, my healing; his punishment, my redemption” (Luther’s
House Postils, trans. E. Klug, 1996, 3:474). That’s
because, as Kierkegaard explains,
“I stand saved beside
this other one, beside him, my Redeemer, who puts himself
completely in my place” (KW
18:123). And so Kierkegaard is quick to add that
“he
who trusts in the atonement is greater than the most profound
penitent” (Journals,
§3:3078). That sacrifice, that atonement, that standing
beside us, is so important for us because
God “hates, damns,
and wills evil to all sinners, that is, to all of us”
(LW 25:382). And it is this sacrifice that makes Christ
our
“advocate”
(1 John 2:1)
– so that when he stands beside us as our substitute
before God, it works. Hallelujah! As Kierkegaard argued, God
beats up Jesus rather than us (Journals,
§3:2976). Hallelujah! Therefore may we ever delight in him, and so be drawn to him, who
dies for us, that we may be forgiven and saved for eternal life
(John 12:32). Surely Christ is a wonder to behold!
So
favor God and his dear Son, our Savior Christ Jesus! Favor him
over the whole world. Know that while we are thankful for the wonders
of God’s creation, Kierkegaard was emphatic that the forgiveness
of sins through the cross of Christ reveals the greatness of God
– in an even “deeper sense” (KW 17:289). Jesus therefore surmounts creation. Know this passionately – even though we may
never know for sure who was actually elected president in America sixty
years ago (W. J. Rorabaugh, The Real Making of the President: Kennedy, Nixon, and the 1960 Election,
The University Press of Kansas, 2009, pp. 186–91, Edmund F.
Kallina Jr.,
Kennedy v. Nixon: The Presidential Election of 1960,
University Press of Florida, 2010, pp. 189–214). Know this
passionately – even though “nobody knows what gravity is, and
almost nobody knows that nobody knows what gravity is except for
scientists, and they know that nobody knows what gravity is
because they know that they don’t know what gravity is” (The American
Scholar, Autumn 2020, p. 90).
But still know for
sure that Christ is our joy (2 Peter 1:3, 2 Timothy 3:5,
Philippians 4:4) – and not some “wildly exciting,
worldly joy with dancing and leaping, with eating and drinking,
or the likes of what is prompted by wealth and riches, or a
worldly kingdom” (LHP 3:322). Know that this heavenly kingdom controls “what
sort of person” we ought to be (2 Peter 3:11) – anything but “a
familiar, good-natured, decent chap” (Journals, §2:1816). For it’s no good to
“go into church and come out again little changed” (LHP
1:115). Luther thought that all Christians should be “rebels” (LW
13:414)! Know therefore with
Kierkegaard, that our new life will include seeing that “heavy suffering is
beneficial.” Just think of it! And this is especially so even if
our suffering never results in a “happy ending,” but
only an “increase”
in suffering, as one walks down “the narrow road of faith,” with
the test of faith getting “harder and harder as faith”
increases, while all along being wrongly discouraged “to regret
his faith, as if that person were fortunate who goes on living
carelessly and never really becomes involved with God but
comfortably walks the broad road,” missing that “faith sees best
in the dark” (KW 15:238–39, “Kierkegaard on Suffering,” The Messenger, November 2015, on Joe
Biden’s misuse of this passage). Catch your breath, and know
that all of this is true. Know this and believe
in Jesus instead of loving the world, that you may be on the
watch, and when the world ends, be ready for it. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“The Lord Will Come and Not Be Slow” (LBW 318)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Rollie Storbakken
Rollie
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Richard Holmes
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Douglas Minter
Susan Curry
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Love Divine, All Loves Excelling” (LBW 315)
Otis, the bartender, played by James Westerfield, talking to Doc
Storrow, played by John Archer, in the 1957 movie,
Decision at Sundown.
“If you’d been tending bar
as long as I have,
you wouldn’t expect so much
out of the human race.”
(scene at 53 minutes, 30 seconds.)
֎
“Cursed is the man
who trusts in man,…. for the heart
is deceitful above all things,
and desperately corrupt.”
(Jeremiah 17:5, 9)
“Jesus did not trust himself
to… all men… for he himself knew
what was in man.”
(John 2:24–25)
“My father and my mother
have forsaken me, but the Lord
will take me up.”
(Psalm 27:10)
“From the Scriptures…
putting trust
in men is frequently forbidden.”
[Martin Luther, “Sermon on Matthew 3:13–17” (1534),
Luther’s Works
57:184.]
“To make use of creatures is not forbidden,
but to put confidence in them
is extremely destructive.”
[Martin Luther, “Lectures on Isaiah 57” (1529),
Luther’s Works
17:274.]
“All
Scripture speaks against this innermost ungodliness of the flesh
because it is the source of every evil and most frequently takes
us captive. You see that the whole world is nothing but a ruin
because it goes about in this ungodliness and relies not on God
but on men.”
[Martin Luther, “Lectures on Isaiah 31” (1528),
Luther’s Works
16:270–71.]
“You are to take the risk of entrusting matters to others, but
you are yourself to trust and rely on God alone…. You should
trust [others] only as [folks] who might fail you, whom you must
continue to watch with unceasing vigilance.”
[Martin Luther, “Temporal Authority” (1523),
Luther’s Works
45:123.]
Online Sunday Liturgy
November 8, 2020
Bulletin Cover
A human heart is like a ship on a wild sea,
driven by the storm winds from the four corners of the world.
Here it is struck with fear and worry about impending disaster;
there comes grief and sadness because of present evil. Here
breathes a breeze of hope and of anticipated happiness; there
blows security and joy in present blessings. These storms teach
us to speak with earnestness, to open the heart and pour out what
lies at the bottom of it…. What is the greatest thing in the
Psalter but this earnest speaking amid these storms of every
kind? Where does one find finer words of joy than in the psalms?
(Martin Luther, Preface to the Psalter (1545)
Luther’s Works
35:255.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
November 8,
2020
Twenty-Third Sunday After Pentecost
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Dear Heavenly Father, increase in us the gifts of faith, hope,
and love, that we may live forever in heaven once our days on
earth are done. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Leviticus 19:1–2, 15–18
Psalm 1
Second Lesson: 1Thessalonians 1:5–10
Gospel: Matthew 22:34–46
Opening Hymn:
“Holy God, We Praise Your Name” (LBW 535)
Sermon: November 8, 2020
“Suffer
& Rejoice”
(1
Thessalonians 1:6)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Who doesn’t want to be happy? Who doesn’t believe that when it
comes to happiness
– “the least can lift a ton” (The
Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, ed. T. H. Johnson, 1890,
1960, p. 383)? We know that happy times help us forget sad
moments that have depressed us just days before. The Bible even
chimes in saying that “a cheerful heart is good medicine”
(Proverbs 17:22). Martin Luther cherished this verse because he
knew from personal experience that whoever
“does nor bear
his suffering with rejoicing, becomes sullen” (Luther’s
Works 30:127). So we long for those good days – those happy
days – because they make life sweet. Laughing together, and
having good times with family and friends, makes life enjoyable and
memorable.
So it’s arresting, to say the least, when the Bible
also tells us to rejoice in our sufferings and leap for joy when
people hate us (Romans 5:3. Luke 6:22–23). This linking of
happiness with pain is not what we were expecting. It puts
together opposites that have no business being joined. But the
Bible is relentless about this – “You received the word in much
affliction, with joy inspired by the Holy Spirit” (1
Thessalonians 1:6). Once again we have the unanticipated – in this case,
affliction combined with joy. But if we
“wish
to be Christians, it is necessary that we... both fear and
rejoice” (LW 12:77). But we can’t
just have joy now
– that’s
reserved for life in heaven (Revelation 21:4).
“Whoever
does not want to do this may have a good time here and live to
his heart’s desire, but hereafter we will have to mourn forever”
(LW 21:18, Luke 16:25). Even so, there is still room
now for some joy, just not joy by itself. Indeed,
“where
there is faith, it is impossible
for... joy not to be there too. [For joy] in tribulation
necessarily results from faith” (LW 30:304).
God, after all, is
“repelled
by sorrow of spirit.... He came to refresh us, not to sadden us”
(LW 27:93). It’s
that basic.
But whence cometh this strange coupling, then? Why – contrary to
most of us – does the Bible insist on putting together what we know shouldn’t
go together? Well, the Lord gives and the Lord takes away, blessed be the name
of the Lord (Job 1:21). And, “whether we live or whether we die, we
are the Lord’s” (Romans 14:8). So it’s because of God that his
word reveals this strange understanding of how things unfold. Joy is supposed to go with sadness because God gives both
joy and sadness – just never sadness alone (LW 27:93).
So to think that our happy times shouldn’t be co-mingled with
our dreary days, would be to go against God and his will for us. For
not one sparrow dies “without your Father’s will” (Matthew
10:29). All things that happen come from God – whether for good
or for evil; for weal
or for woe (Isaiah 45:7).
Who
can possibly believe this? Well,
Martin Luther comes barging into the room and says that “it is for
certain,” mind you, “that it is by the Father’s sure knowledge
and will that we suffer [and so] we ought to rejoice and to
embrace the will of the Father with a joyful heart. We should
set,” he goes on to explain, “God’s wondrous and fatherly care
against all evils and all our sufferings, however wretched.
Indeed, we should take all of our tribulations and swallow them
up and drown them like a spark in the sea of God’s infinite love
and care for us” (LW 67:109).
But mind you, there’s no way to see this without beholding the Lamb of God,
Christ Jesus, who takes away the sins of the world (John 1:29) –
for the “human heart is like a ship on a wild sea, driven by the
storm winds from the four corners of the world.” “He who is sad
and disturbed is... of a stormy mind.” Indeed, what “a miserably
divided thing is the human heart” (LW
35:255, 25:518, 69:18).
But Christ is steady, strangely helping us by being derided and murdered – and then
exalted and risen to glory in heaven (Philippians 2:8–9, Romans
4:25). He resolutely combines both in himself. He joins together what we
think flies apart. He makes reasonable what looks
crazy, for in him all things cohere, or hold together sensibly
(Colossians 1:17). In him is suffering and joy, defeat with
victory, death and life combined together. So his life wasn’t
one of unmitigated happiness. No, “Christ was not always
joyous.” In fact, “during His entire earthly sojourn He was
consumed with a constant sorrow” (LW 52:147, 22:236).
But that didn’t keep him from being productive, for by his very dying
he restored life – indeed “through death” he destroyed “the power
of death” (Hebrews 2:14). That is because when he died on the
cross he sacrificed his life for sin (Hebrews 9:26). And on the
cross he, in effect, cried out – “My blood intercedes loudly for
you” (LW 22:146). By doing so, he destroys what is deadly in sin – its power to send us to
hell for everlasting punishment, for “eternal destruction and
exclusion from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of
his might” (2 Thessalonians 1:9).
Here we finally see clearly
“the super-abundant goodness that God shows us in Christ,
causing Christ to die for us before we would ask it of him,
indeed, while we were still enemies” (LW 35:374, Romans
5:8). “What
can the sins do when [Christ] Himself... has taken them away?...
What can terrify when He has given Himself for you?” (LW
75:203). Because of Christ’s sacrifice, our damning “conscience
is one drop; the reconciled God is a sea of comfort.” Therefore
we have benefited from a miraculous exchange – “on our side
there are nothing but sins. We share His good things; He shares
our wretchedness. I believe in Christ. Therefore my sin is in
Christ” (LW 30:280, 225). What a glorious message of
deliverance and salvation (Romans 7:24, Colossians 1:13)! For who could “express fully what it means
to be in the hellish darkness, under God’s eternal, unbearable
wrath, judgment, and condemnation?” (LW
57:282).
No wonder we are to rejoice in the Lord, over and over
again (Philippians 4:4). No wonder, at his first coming to earth,
the angels sang about this “good news of great joy” (Luke 2:10).
So joy limited to Christ’s work is the best joy – knowing that if we
were “always glad, the devil would befoul us.” And so our joy is
limited to the Lord Jesus. And this is so even if “a Christian
should and must be a cheerful person” (LW 54:96). It is
just that this joy in Christ is the only happiness that can
“stir the depths of the heart” (LW 75:158). It “is a
genuine and complete joy.... It is not worldly or outward, but
rather a secret and hidden joy” (LW 69:83). It “does
not come from temporal goods, or honors but from the Lord, who
makes the victory... through His mercy” (LW 20:305,
25:518). And so “the faithful rejoice... when the Gospel is
disseminated, and when many come to faith and thus the kingdom
of Christ is increased” (LW 27:93–94).
And so “whoever has desire and joy in Him has died and been
severed from the world” (LW 56:273).
So believe in Christ, for he says to us all
–
“unhesitatingly set your foot on Me [for] I will be the
Bridge to carry you across [into heaven, so] wager boldly on Me, go
cheerfully and happily, and die in My name”
(LW 24:42). For Christ is
“the blessed
and joyful redemption from this vale of misery and wretchedness”
(LW 35:316). May all then who believe in this joy amidst the sorrows of life,
share it with all who ask about the hope that is within you (1
Peter 3:15). Remind all who ask that living a life without joy
is like planting
“a tree in a narrow pot”
(LW 15:176). It cannot expand and flourish! But note that
“to have pleasure in sins
is of the devil, but participation in good and honorable
pleasures.... is pleasing to God, even if one may at times carry
playfulness too far” (Luther: Letters of Spiritual
Counsel, trans. T. Tappert, 1960, p. 93). In this way we
“live differently than previously”
– pursuing
“a divine, heavenly life”
(LW 77:106).
For “true faith does not permit you to be impatient and
to do harm”
(LW 57:193). So may God inspire us all to move beyond the shame
(Mark 8:38) that strikes us periodically in our walk of faith,
tripping us up because of that odd call to not only suffer but
also, along with it, to rejoice. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Jesus, Thy Boundless Love to Me” (LBW 336)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah, Melissa, and Felicia Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Richard Holmes
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19,
Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and
granddaughter in Texas)
Dona Brost
Douglas Minter
Pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Pray for those affected by the wildfires in
California.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Love Divine, All Loves Excelling” (LBW 315)
Three Flags (1958) by Jasper
Johns
O Lord our God, preserve our nation in justice and honor. Grant
health and favor to all who bear public office in our land,
especially to our President-Elect Biden and Vice-President-Elect
Harris. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
(from Lutheran Book of Worship, 1978, p. 52,
altered.)
Jasper Johns, 90, one of the greatest living American
artists, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. In
his famous painting, Three Flags, he tries to change
the way we look at the US flag. He wants us to see it as more
than our national symbol, flying in the wind, high up on a pole.
So he painted it three times, putting the three paintings in a
tiered arrangement, five inches thick, that contradicts
classical perspective. Rather than receding into the background
of the painting, Three Flags projects outward toward
the viewer. This invasion of our space provokes us to ask
ourselves what the flag and our country mean to us. Johns wants
to make the meaning of the American flag fluid and open to
continual reinterpretation.
Online Sunday Liturgy
November 1, 2020
Bulletin Cover
Presuming or saying your own opinions is of no avail…. What
avails is hearing and knowing God’s counsel, will, and
intention. No one can tell you this from his own head; no book
on earth can teach this except the one Word and Scripture given
by God Himself, which tells us that He sent His Son into the
world to redeem it from sin and God’s wrath, so that whoever
believes in Him will have eternal life…. These high, divine
matters – that is, both His real divine essence and also His
will, government, and works – are and remain simply above all
human thought, understanding, and wisdom; in short, they are
incomprehensible, inscrutable, and hidden. Everything [those who
meddle in His deity] undertake to search, know, teach, and
investigate about this is in vain, and even darkness and lies.
If anything is to be learned, known, and found about [these
divine matters], it must be only through revelation, that is,
God’s Word given from heaven.
(Martin Luther, Sermon on Romans 11:33–36 (1544)
Luther’s Works
78:8–9.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
November 1,
2020
All Saints' Sunday
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Almighty God, grant us grace to follow your blessed saints in
lives of faith and commitment, and to know the inexpressible
joys you have prepared for those who love you. In the name of
Jesus we pray. Amen.
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Are saints dignified, well-spoken, decent people? Well, if you
dwell on the kindness and patience in Galatians 5:22–23, then
they are. But what if exhorting and reproving are also part of
sainthood (Titus 2:16)? What then? Are they to be ignored or
dropped altogether? If so, is that then the end of the good
fight of faith for saints (1 Timothy 6:12)? Are we then too nice to any
longer wage war against the “principalities, powers, and world
rulers of this present darkness” (Ephesians 6:12, LW
56:113, 58:178)? Are we too placid to be struck that the
remnants of our “recent past are scattered in the wild wind”
(Bob Dylan, “Black Diamond Bay,” Desire, 1976, The
Lyrics. Since 1962, 2014, p. 528)? Are we too
polite to reiterate our Lord’s words against the serpents and
brood of vipers who are being “sentenced to hell” (Matthew
23:33)? Are we ashamed of the Apostle Paul for saying that the
sons of the devil, the enemies of righteousness, are “full of
all deceit and villainy” (Acts 13:10)? Where shall we go to
resolve these contradictory descriptions of sainthood?
“Take Christ out of the picture,” Martin Luther carefully
delineated, “and in whatever concerns me I will gladly humble
myself and even let you walk all over me.” Here Luther gives us
saintly kindness and patience galore. “But,” he quickly goes on to add, “do not tread on Christ or His Word, for when Christ is
concerned, I stand my ground [and] must pass for [a] stubborn
and impetuous [hothead] (Luther’s
Works 23:330). There we have reproof – to say nothing of
caustic condemnation – as being part of sainthood. What does
that give us – Luther’s wild and wooly combination of calm and
calamity? A Biblical
dialectic – that’s what he gives us. He takes two contradictory
goods and shows how they – contrary to displacing each other –
can actually work together. What Saint Paul does, Luther does as
well – be “sorrowful,” Saint Paul admonishes, “yet always
rejoicing” (2 Corinthians 6:10). Just as he combines sorrow with
joy, so Luther combines affirmation with assault, calm with
calamity. Just think of
it. No flat, boring, cartoon figures here (Herbert Marcuse,
The One Dimensional Man,
1964).Instead what
we have is a complex agent who empathizes – while carefully and
judiciously holding in
reserve – biting criticism as well. According to Luther we can and must
both cut people slack and then pull them up short when needed. At
their best, then, Christians are “strange beings and wonders to
the world” (LW
20:216). They are the ones who have “a spirit of restlessness
amid the greatest calm” (LW
24:88). Too bad there are so few of them (Matthew 7:14, 22:14,
LW 45:91, 79:245). This
agility and scope of concern enhances our much needed service in
the world. The world doesn’t need any more lop-sided suck-ups
and bullies. It doesn’t need the throwaway line – “Seems like
every time you turn around there’s another hard-luck story that
you’re gonna hear” (“Black Diamond Bay,” p. 529). It rather
needs Luther’s dialectical disciples. Without that duality, all that the church has to offer are
“pseudo saints”
or, worse yet, “demonic” ones (LW
22:141,
21:190).
How shall we go about building real saints – beginning even on
this All Saints’ Sunday? We have no better place to start than
with Matthew 5:6 about God blessing those who hunger and thirst for
righteousness. Pray that this hunger will take over people near
and far away. Pray that the hungers that now grip us will give
way to being “filled with the Spirit” of Christ (Ephesians
5:18). Competing hungers – just like contrary loyalties – can’t
work together (Matthew 6:24). So Luther warned: We “must be
fervent in one of the two, either the spirit or the flesh…. So a
lazy cook, about to prepare a meal, does his work in such a way
that the food gets cold during serving. Who would not despise
him, and rightly” so? (LW
25:456). Make sure then that you hunger after God. Indeed, “the
hens that eat at home but lay their eggs elsewhere deserve to be
killed” (LW 21:187).
Divided loyalties are damnable!
So don’t under-estimate the problem. Hunger after God rather
than after worldly delights. Don’t set your mind on those
concerns
(Colossians 3:2). Take up thinking and speaking “in the way
Scripture does” (LW
25:261). Then you’ll be hungering after God. To do so is to have
God take you “on His lap.” And there is no better place to be,
because if you aren’t there, then you’re going to “plunge into the depths of
hell” (LW 3:139). But
it’s a bumpy ride on God’s lap, and so many won’t last long. For
indeed, “the word of God comes… to change and renew the world
[and this] cannot take place without commotion and tumult” (LW
33:52). That’s why Luther said “my books are very stormy and... warlike. I have to dig out the roots and stumps, chop out
the thorns and underbrush, and fill in the potholes. Thus I am
the rough woodsman, who has to clear and straighten the path” (LW
59:250, Ronald F. Marshall, “Luther the Lumberjack,”
Lutheran Quarterly,
Spring 1996).
When we abide in God’s word – making it our womb (LW
17:93) – we grow in our hunger for God (1 Peter 2:2).His word nurtures us. It’s our spiritual food. “No book
on earth” can feed us but the Holy Scriptures (LW
78:8). As we grow in grace, we discover that we have to hunger
for God because we are never perfectly accomplished (Philippians
3:12). We’re always longing for him. Indeed, the longing, this
wanting “is righteousness, not just a large part but all the
righteousness [we can have] in this life…. For this
entire life is a time of willing to be righteous, but never
achieving it, for this happens only in the future life” in
heaven, after we die and are raised to be with Christ forever. And, what
is more, this longing, wanting, and hungering, “compels us to
grow weary of this life and to hope for the future life” (LW
25:268). Our hungering also teaches us how much we need Christ –
for apart from him we can do nothing (John 15:5, LW
67:53, 68:96). We know that
some menial things we can do on our own. But Christ has power
“where the authority, power, and wisdom of men stop. He can save
and help where no man, no creature on earth or in heaven can
help – against sin, that we may not be damned by it; against
death, that it may not devour us; against the devil, that he may
not keep us captive” (LW
13:239, 56:59). For this we rejoice and are glad that we hunger after
God. Finally our hungering teaches us that we must never be
half-hearted (Matthew 22:37, LW 69:376). We have been baptized with “fire”
(Matthew 3:11) after all, and so we must be ardent and fervent
and burning hot in our longing and hungering for Christ. No
wonder Christians desperately “cling” to him (LW 5:48,
24:42, 26:33, 28:163, 29:185, 43:201, 52:34, 56:117, 69:80, 75:367,
76:23, 77:281, 78:321).
But how shall we get our fires burning brightly? “No sooner
heard than done” – that can’t be true (LW
22:142). Why we can’t even own “a favorite skipping stone”
(Austin Smith, Flyover County, 2018, p. 35). So we’ll
certainly need help
with this larger task. And it comes from Christ who
himself is filled with fire (Luke 12:49). That fire compels him
to “come storming in… to transform… men’s hearts” (LW
69:212). And that’s exactly what we need. For “man drifts,”
indeed the most successful “have drifted into their successes”
(Joseph Conrad, Victory, 1915, III.3). And when Christ comes to
transform us, what is it again that he does? Luther says that
this song is so good that it “bears repetition.” It’s the word
of grace, “that God is merciful to us… for the sake of Christ
our Lord, forgives us all our sins, and that He does not impute
them to us or punish us with eternal death. [That is because of]
the death of Christ. He alone has brought us grace and truth. He
died and shed His blood for us in order that all who believe in
Him and call on Him might attain forgiveness of sin…. The custom
of holding a crucifix before a dying person has kept many in the
Christian faith and has enabled them to die with a confident
faith in the crucified Christ” (LW
22:139, 147). That’s our song of grace, and it brings light into
our dark world (John 8:12, Luke 1:79). We desperately need
this light because even the best that we do,
“the most excellent thing,... is ungodly, wicked, and
deserving the wrath of God” (LW 33:249, Isaiah 64:6).
With these fires of Christ “rekindling” our faith (2 Timothy
1:6), how then shall we live in his favor and grace? We’ll want to share the comforting
warmth from these fires with those who are despondent
and in despair (2 Corinthians 1:4). And if we live in a land
that comes from “escaped convicts, younger sons, persecuted
minorities, and opportunists” (Louise Glück,
American Originality, 2017, p. 3), then there are
plenty standing in need of the comfort we have to bring. So first, we will want to
affirm that we truly are “outwardly and temporarily… oppressed
by many evils.” We feel like we have been “put to death, and
inwardly crushed by the consciousness of our sins and vexed by
demons.” We don’t want to deny any of this terror. It’s real.
But we also want, all the same, to hold out the hope of being
“alive in Christ, in whom and through whom we are kings and lords
over sin, death, the flesh, the world, hell, and every evil…
How? In faith. For our blessing has not yet been revealed. But
meanwhile we await it in patience and yet already possess it
certainly through faith.” By this faith – mixed in along with
all of the terrors that torment us in this life – we hold on to
Christ, who “redeemed us from our sins and from eternal death by
His death on the cross,…. [as] our only Justifier and Savior” (LW
26:453). May this realistic faith that refuses to deny the
traumas of life, nurture us as we live out our days on earth, never
in full possession of God’s promised glory, but always still,
nevertheless, hungering after him. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Lord,
Keep Us Steadfast in Your Word” (LBW 230)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Leah Baker
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Eva, Jay and Alea Jones (sick with COVID-19, Ernie Hopson’s
cousin, and her son and granddaughter in Texas)
Pray for the United States during this presidential election
year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Pray for those affected by the wildfires in
California.
All Saints Remembrances
Lillian Schneider (1918-2020)
Barbara Schorn (1937-2020)
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Ye Watchers and Ye Holy Ones” (LBW 175)
Three Flags (1958) by Jasper
Johns
O Lord our God, grant that all Americans registered to vote, may
cast ballots for candidates that are pleasing in your eyes. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
Jasper Johns, 90, one of the greatest living American
artists, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. In
his famous painting, Three Flags, he tries to change
the way we look at the US flag. He wants us to see it as more
than our national symbol, flying in the wind, high up on a pole.
So he painted it three times, putting the three paintings in a
tiered arrangement, five inches thick, that contradicts
classical perspective. Rather than receding into the background
of the painting, Three Flags projects outward toward
the viewer. This invasion of our space provokes us to ask
ourselves what the flag and our country mean to us. Johns wants
to make the meaning of the American flag fluid and open to
continual reinterpretation.
Online Sunday Liturgy
October 25, 2020
Bulletin Cover
Human nature has been so corrupted… that it neither comprehends
the magnitude of sin nor feels and dreads the punishment of sin,
God’s wrath and eternal death…. [The truth is that we are]
headstrong, proud, ignorant, and deceitful, unbridled, and
haughty…. [But] no human mind understands how great an evil sin
is…. If a human being were to feel the magnitude of sin, he
would not survive for one moment, so great is the power that sin
has…. [So] we must… be most diligent in impressing on people
that God is angry with sin and punishes it with the greatest
severity.
(Luther’s Works
73:70, 126, 332, 337, 86.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
October 25,
2020
Reformation
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Gracious Lord, pour out your Holy Spirit on your Church. Keep it
steadfast in your Word, protect and comfort it in times of
temptation, defend it against all of its enemies, and grant it
peace. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Jeremiah 31:31–34
Psalm 46
Second Lesson: Romans 3:19–28
Gospel:
John 8:31–36
Opening Hymn: “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” (LBW 228)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Stuck in the mud. That’s what it’s like to sin. Do you believe
that? Or do you think that tomorrow is a new day and that you can
turn it all around by yourself? Jesus figured that you would say that, and so he
emphatically opposes you. “Truly, truly, I say to you,” he
pushes forth relentlessly, “every one who commits sin is a slave
to sin” (John 8:34). Why does he say that? It’s because we’re
in the wrong family. “You are of your father the devil,”
he shockingly reveals,
“and your will is to do your father’s desires” (John 8:44). And
that equals sin. And that equals slavery. But that also sounds
harebrained that the devil is our father! Well, maybe if you only
have gruesome pictures in mind of bats and snakes and babies
being sacrificed. But remember that the devil shows up as “an
angel of light” (2 Corinthians 11:14). And those who do his
bidding are “lovers of self, lovers of money,… lovers of
pleasure” (2 Timothy 3:2–4). That part of the list of
infractions doesn’t sound so bad. Maybe then it’s pretty good to
be in that wayward family. Either way, Martin Luther actually
believed all of this outlandish talk about slavery to sin. “We
sin and err constantly” he insisted (Luther’s
Works 37:233).
“An
ungodly man sins against God whether he eats or drinks or
whatever he does, because he perpetually misuses God’s creatures
in his impiety and ingratitude, and never for a moment gives
glory to God from his heart” (LW 33:264). No new day to turn everything around for him.
Nope, just more of the same, day in and day out. We’re
slaves to sin!
And as slaves to
sin, “your heart seethes with countless horrible passions and
desires against God and other human beings” (LW
73:145). For the demons “wake, sleep, and live with us like an
evil guest whom we have invited to our house and cannot get rid
of” (LW 30:47).
Can’t
get rid of? That’s why we’re slaves to sin! We’ve been taken over by sin.
Just think of it. “If ungodliness and worldly passions were
painted on the wall of a house, then you could run out of the
house;… if they grew in your hair, you could have it shaved
off;… or if they were baked into bread, then you could eat roots
instead. But now that they are stuck in your heart and utterly
possess you, where will you run so that you will not take them
with you? What can you put on where you do not remain under
it?.... In short, what will you do so that you, as you are in
yourself, are not there? Dear man, the great enticement is
inside you” (LW
75:192).! Talk about being enslaved. No wonder that all that we do
– whether we see it or
not, whether believe it or not
– “are works of the devil, works of
sin, works of darkness, works of folly” (LW
31:65). No wonder, then, that
“the whole world
is guilty, all the children of men are turned aside and
worthless, no one fears God, no one is not wicked, no one
understands, no one seeks God” (LW 33:257,
Romans 3:11). No wonder we
“charge
right in like a pig in the mud, inventing opinions with
obstinacy and rashness” (LW 73:525). Indeed,
“what a shameful
den of murderers is lying in the human heart” (LW
67:180)!
Can the Bible pull us out of this mud hole? Not if we peer into it
from within the devil’s family where we’ve all grown up. That’s
because the devil is a “corruptor and slanderer of God’s
majesty, Word and works,” and so we see no more in the Bible
“than a cow sees” (LW
57:155, 56:188). Talk about slavery! We’re
nothing but cows. The Biblical message is one big blank to us.
For even though
“Scripture is clear,... our eyes are not” (LW 75:276). So, alas, there’s no help from God’s Word for us.
Struggle though we may, we see no salvation there. But wait!
There’s
more.
“Whoever realizes that sin is in him, which he must govern, this
man will surely fear to become a servant of sin” (LW
25:301). And there is the breakthrough! It’s right at this
point. For as long as we remain
“smug,” there’s no hope for us (LW
1:159, 12:179, 358, 405, 24:15, 320, 25:268, 338, 478, 26:214,
310, 324, 347, 362, 418). We pass by the Word of the Lord “with
a deaf ear” (LW 67:116). But, when fear grips us, then hope is
ready to spring forth. And we find ourselves running to Jesus
“the pioneer and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2, LW
78:264). This is
why God “allows the devil so much power against humanity: in
order that unbelievers, the godless, and the hardened might be
pierced through and might learn to fear and trust and call upon
God” (LW 67:53). This is why “the aim of...
preaching... is first to magnify sin” (LW 56:302). Then
we “listen to God’s Word with fear and treat it with humility
and not barge in with our own opinions” (LW 56:198).
For only then do we come to see that Christ is
the light of the world (John 8:12). He takes away the sins of
the world (John 1:29). So we trust in him and cling to him.
“Hold on to Christ [then] as the workman for our sins” (LW
73:199). For it is Christ who does “the true works... of God:
blotting out sin, driving off death, extinguishing hell” (LW
57:176). May “the blood of Christ... surge in your heart” (LW
58:185). Become slaves in obedience to him and his righteousness
(Romans 6:16).This is how “God creates the trust to come to Him”
(LW 67:141). And why shouldn’t we, if he is the workman for our sins?
Why not become his slave rather than being slaves to sin? He did
for us what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. He was
the workman for our sins. He came “for sin” and he condemned it
(Romans 8:3). And when he condemned it, he did so by sacrificing
himself for it to save us from having to do it for ourselves
(Hebrews 9:26). He is the workman for our sins. “Workman” is the
translation for the Latin word operarium. Jesus is our
operarium. That also makes him
our great substitute (LW
22:167 and 57:283, 58:45, 79:250). For because of the work that he does for us, as our
operarium, he stands in for us; takes the hit for us; is punished
in our place that we might be set free from the wrath of God
(John 3:36). He is the workman for
our sins!
As believers in Christ you now have strength to do all things
through him (Philippians 4:13). This divine workman transfers
some work even to us mortals to do. That’s
because
“it is
through us [that God] shows mercy to the poor [and] comforts the
afflicted” (LW 33:243). Indeed, Luther is right
that we are
“the
lord’s ladle” (LW 57:204). So, on this Reformation Sunday,
work for the reformation of the church as the lord’s ladle, and
for those afflicted in the church by the church. But do not put your
trust in these works because when you become embroiled in
conflict over reforming the church, you’ll see that they’re
“all… nothing” (LW
4:54). But do them still, just as you now have reconfigured
them. Do them, but don’t trust in them. Call the church to “hate
what is evil, [and] hold fast to what is good; [to] love one
another. [To] never flag in zeal, [to] be aglow with the Spirit,
[and to] serve the Lord. Rejoice in... hope, be patient in
tribulation, be constant in prayer. Contribute to the needs of
the saints, practice hospitality” (Romans 12:9–13). Call the
church
“to
the continuous effort of recognizing, hating, killing, and
burying sins” (LW 67:72). Call the church back
to its one true mark of “following and obeying the divine Word”
where these practices and admonitions are given (LW
68:244). This word with its practices and admonitions is crucial
because where it’s absent – Luther is so bold to warn – “the
devil shits into that church” (LW 68:246). So be
steadfast in encouraging
all Christians to take up with zeal the holy word with its
admonitions and practices, that the
church may be reformed in our day, by the power of the Lord
(John 15:5), and that we, abiding in the righteousness of the
Lord, may all become
his diligent slaves. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Salvation
Unto Us has Come”
(LBW 297)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Ty Wick
Lori Aarstad
Anthony Brisbane
Pray for the United States during this presidential election
year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“O God, O Lord of Heaven and Earth” (LBW 396)
Three Flags (1958) by Jasper
Johns
O Lord our God, grant that all Americans registered to vote, may
cast ballots for candidates that are pleasing in your eyes. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
Jasper Johns, 90, one of the greatest living American
artists, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. In
his famous painting, Three Flags, he tries to change
the way we look at the US flag. He wants us to see it as more
than our national symbol, flying in the wind, high up on a pole.
So he painted it three times, putting the three paintings in a
tiered arrangement, five inches thick, that contradicts
classical perspective. Rather than receding into the background
of the painting, Three Flags projects outward toward
the viewer. This invasion of our space provokes us to ask
ourselves what the flag and our country mean to us. Johns wants
to make the meaning of the American flag fluid and open to
continual reinterpretation.
Online Sunday Liturgy
October 18, 2020
Bulletin Cover
We are to consider the great, serious, and terrible wrath of God
against sin, since that wrath could be averted in no other way
and reconciliation could be acquired through no payment other
than through this one sacrifice, that is, the death and blood of
the Son of God. We are to consider that by our sins we have
merited and been the cause of this wrath of God, so that God’s
Son had to be sacrificed on the cross and had to shed His blood.
This should cause us to be frightened in earnest because of our
sins, since this cannot be any trifling wrath of God when we
hear that no other sacrifice can stand up to this or compensate
for sin except the only Son of God. Do you think that you will
endure that wrath or that you can remain standing in the face of
it, if you do not respect or recognize it?
(Martin Luther, Sermon on 1
Corinthians 5:6–8 (1544)
Luther’s Works
77:19.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
October 18,
2020
Twentieth
Sunday After Pentecost
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Lord Jesus Christ, you have endured the doubts and foolish
questions of every generation. Forgive us for trying to be judge
over you, and grant us the confident faith to acknowledge you as
Lord. In your name we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Isaiah 5:1–7
Psalm 80:7–14
Second Lesson: Philippians 3:12–21
Gospel: Matthew 21:33–43
Opening Hymn:
“The Church’s One Foundation” (LBW 369)
Sermon:
October 18, 2020
“Fear the
Lord”
(Matthew 21:41)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
“He will put those wretches to a miserable death” (Matthew
21:41). Well, that’s not very pleasant – especially to have read
on the Lord’s day. But it’s the way Jesus ends his Parable of
the Vineyard
– with a bang, and a nasty one at that (Matthew 21:33–41).
He quickly goes on to make it clear
that it’s about how God will punish the unbelieving and
disobedient (Matthew 21:43). It’s about how “the wrath of God
rests on” the wayward, smug, recalcitrant and sassy (John 3:36).
It’s about God withholding his mercy due to our
rebellion and his severe reaction to it (Romans 11:22). It’s about God hating
his own heritage because they wouldn’t repent (Jeremiah 12:8).
It’s about the fury of the Lord burning hot against the ungodly
(Ezekiel 5:13). It’s about God wanting to kill sinners (Isaiah
13:9). It’s about God withering us down to our roots for not
bearing any fruit (Mark 11:20). It’s about God tormenting the
unbelieving and greedy in hell for all of eternity (Luke 16:23,
28). Can you believe it? Can you really believe in such a
rambunctious and violent God?
Martin Luther, for one, could (Luther’s
Works 31:127, 79:341). He believed that God inflicted
horrible punishments on evil people. He believed that “because
there [are] hard and impenitent people in the churches, we must
repeatedly and diligently drive home.... God’s wrath threatening
the destruction of the whole world” (LW 73:100). But how about you? What do
you think? “It is not uncommon for men of outstanding intellect
to be habitually blind in a matter which is plain even to a dull
and uninstructed mind, and to show how weak an argument drawn
from human authority is in divine affairs, where divine
authority alone has weight” (LW 33:150). So how about
you? Are you too smart for this? Do you think that God’s love is
inconsistent with such things (contra
Revelation 3:19)? Do you think that his love always wins the day
(contra Acts 12:23)?
Do you think that God never threatens us with destruction (contra
Luke 13:5)? Or are you really sophisticated and think that God
is too majestic and sublime to be caught up in the give and take
of earthly life (contra Job 1:21, Psalm 75:7, Luke 1:52,
Revelation 3:7) – being unapproachable and that from which everything is
generated instead (Acts 17:28, 1 Timothy 6:16)? (see G. Kaufman,
“On the Meaning of Act of God,” chapter 6 in his God the
Problem, 1972, and Matt McCormick, “The Paradox of Divine
Agency,” chapter 26 in The Impossibility of God, ed. M.
Martin & R. Monnier, 2003). Well, if you do, then you’re fooling yourself. And
that’s because Luther was right – “that God is angry… is innate
in the human heart. His wrath is [also] evident in the world…. in
sickness, pestilence, fever, war, famine, and other distress and
misery” (LW 22:375).
And we know that this is so bad that “nothing can withstand His
wrath” (LW 9:59). His
angry pronouncements come in “frightful and big words” that
cannot be altered because they’re born in “a voice of iron” (LW
28:264). Even so, it’s still the case that he doesn’t like doing any of
it, but has to because
he is “forced into it by the wickedness of man” (LW
2:134). So no happenstance here. No chance occurrences either. And – if the truth be known – God’s wrath makes it
“impossible for man to be happy. He is in constant fear that God
is standing behind him, cudgel in hand, ready to strike him
down” (LW 22:375).
But don’t be fooled – “the longer God puts up with idolatry and
other sins, and the longer He pays no attention to them, the
more intolerable will His wrath reveal itself to be later on” (LW
2:223). So don’t think you have gotten away with murder just
because God’s punishing blows haven’t struck you yet.
Does that box us in? Do we have nowhere to turn? Not if what we’ve heard
so far frightens us “in earnest because of our sins.” To do so
would be to take the Bible “seriously,” by reading it “against
ourselves,” as we should (Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Works 11:378). And we’re also not boxed in if we admit that
we cannot “endure that wrath or… remain standing in the face of
it [if we don’t] respect or recognize
it.” For if we do, then we’ll be ready to embrace that this
“wrath could be averted in no other way and reconciliation could
be acquired through no payment other than through... the death and blood of the Son of God.” And
this is true even if we’ve been “the cause of this wrath of
God, so that God’s Son had to be sacrificed on the cross and had
to shed His blood” because of our sinfulness and wretchedness (LW
77:19). Because God has done so much to rescue us from his
wrath, it would be a very bad move to side with the
wicked and try with them “to invent a new god and in this way to
escape God’s wrath and so to attempt to avert something which
we, because of sin, have justly deserved.” It would be foolish
beyond measure to “attempt to find a way to mitigate an
inescapable evil” (LW
13:96). For it’s only by Jesus dying on the cross that “God is
reconciled… so that he may avert from us the wrath of God which
we by our sins have deserved” (LW
36:177). So God is glorified “if you fear Him and grasp Christ as
the object of mercy. This is true theology about the true God
and the true worship of God. It is false theology that God is
wrathful to those who acknowledge their sins. Such a God is not
in heaven or anywhere else, but is the idol of a perverse heart”
(LW 12:322). That’s
because “Christ is always intent on leading us into the Father’s
heart. If we but love Him, we should have no worry or fear. Then
we cast and tear all thoughts of wrath and terror far out of our
hearts…. [For Christ] Himself vouches for the Father’s love. If
we believe in Him and are in His love, there is no longer any
anger in heaven or on earth; there is nothing but fatherly love
and all goodness. God, together with all the angels, smiles on
[us] and keeps watch over us as His dear children” (LW
24:157).
This love through faith in Christ empowers us to “do all things”
through him (Philippians 4:13). Let us then use that strength to
forgive those who have wronged us. This good work is embedded in
the Lord’s Prayer, with the warning that if we don’t forgive
others, then “neither will our Father forgive our trespasses”
(Matthew 6:15). So if “your brother sins, rebuke him, and if he
repents, forgive him; and if he sins against you seven times in
the day, and turns to you seven times, and says, ‘I repent,’ you
must forgive him” (Luke 17:3). We need this admonition and
warning because while Christ frees us from the wrath of God and
from the fear of
damnation, the fear of the Lord still helps us do good works
like forgiving those who have hurt us and are sorry for it.
That’s why it is essential that Christians go about their tasks
–
if you can believe it – “in full awareness of God’s wrath” (LW
13:130). May this realization ever be with us as we live out our
Christian lives in the very fear of the Lord. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Lord Christ, When First You Came to Earth”
(LBW 421)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Eric Urban family
Pray for the United States during this presidential election
year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn: “Fight the Good Fight” (LBW 461)
Three Flags (1958) by Jasper
Johns
O Lord our God, grant that all Americans registered to vote, may
cast ballots for candidates that are pleasing in your eyes. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
Jasper Johns, 90, one of the greatest living American
artists, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. In
his famous painting, Three Flags, he tries to change
the way we look at the US flag. He wants us to see it as more
than our national symbol, flying in the wind, high up on a pole.
So he painted it three times, putting the three paintings in a
tiered arrangement, five inches thick, that contradicts
classical perspective. Rather than receding into the background
of the painting, Three Flags projects outward toward
the viewer. This invasion of our space provokes us to ask
ourselves what the flag and our country mean to us. Johns wants
to make the meaning of the American flag fluid and open to
continual reinterpretation.
Online Sunday Liturgy
October 11, 2020
Bulletin Cover
I would not give a single one of… whatever small [works] I have
ever done or will do – in exchange for all the goods of the
world. In fact, I hold one of these to be of more worth than my
bodily life, which is and should be of more worth to each person
than the whole world. For if it is a good work, then God has
done it through and in me. If God has done it and it is God’s
work, what is the whole world in comparison with God and His
work? Even though I do not become righteous through such work
(for this must already have happened through Christ’s blood and
grace, without works), it has still been done to the praise and
honor of God, for the help and well-being of my neighbor. None
of these things can be paid for or compared with the world’s
goods.
(Martin Luther, Preface to Menius on the Anabaptists (1530)
Luther’s Works
59:270–71.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
October 11,
2020
Nineteenth
Sunday After Pentecost
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
O Lord our God, you know us better than we do. Help us overcome
our failures; keep us from what hurts us; and guide us onto
everlasting life. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Ezekiel 18:1–4, 25–32
Psalm 25:1–9
Second Lesson: Philippians 2:1–11
Gospel: Matthew 21:28–32
Opening Hymn: “Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Skies” (LBW 265)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
“Are we to sin that grace may abound?” (Romans 6:1). Yes, you
heard that right. It has to be one of the screwiest questions in
the whole Bible. That’s for sure. So why ask it? It seems
obvious that we shouldn’t sin – take God’s name in vain, murder,
steal, and believe in idols, among other things (Exodus
20:1–17). So if we know the answer even before the question’s
asked, why ask it at all? Well, it’s because our
assumption’s wrong. We’re actually worse off than we think – and
we don’t know what we think we know. That’s because we are mired
in defilements from within (Mark 7:20–23). Contrary to the
glowing opinion that we have of ourselves, “there is no
soundness” in us “from the sole of the foot even to the head”
(Isaiah 1:6). None at all. Bad to the bone, as we say. If we
compare ourselves to rank criminals, we’ll never get this. But
if we compare ourselves to the glory of almighty God – then
we’ve all fallen (Romans 3:23). God is perfect and so should we
be (Matthew 5:48, Philippians 3:12). Well that’s clearly not the
case. So case closed. No contest. But
because we won’t draw that damning comparison, we need the law of God to hammer on us
so that our failures may become “sinful beyond measure” (Romans 7:13)
– making it all the more difficult for us to ignore or dispute our
wretchedness.
Martin Luther helps with this escalation of the wretchedness of
our sinfulness. “The remission of sins has not been instituted,”
he preached, “in order that we may have permission to sin” (Luther’sWorks 30:245, 58:236,
78:269).
Remission does not give us permission. Thus
he exposes our trickery. The fact that there’s forgiveness is
actually meant to stop sin – not to further it because forgiveness is
waiting in the wings. But didn’t Luther also famously say that we should
“sin boldly” (LW
48:282)? How about that? Shouldn’t we then throw all caution to
the wind and let the devil take the hindmost? Not at all. On the same
page Luther says that this command is only meant to
expose our sinfulness by
admitting how bad off we really are. “You too are a mighty sinner,” he
writes – and that’s the point of seeing how boldly we sin. At
the heart of this is the realization that “nothing is so common as making
right wrong and wrong right by all sorts of clever artifices and
queer tricks” (LW
21:114–15). This is Luther’s elaboration on Isaiah 5:20 – “Woe
to those who call evil good and good evil.” That’s what’s behind
his admonition to sin boldly (R. F. Marshall, “Only the Remorse
of Judas,” The Bride of Christ, Pascha 1995, Section
6). So if we are going to move ahead with all of this
moral confusion abounding, we’ll need to embrace the confession –
“I have to concentrate all of my earnestness solely on this –
that I am a sinner” (Søren Kierkegaard,
Journals, ed. Hongs,
§4038). And there is a lot to take in, for “Scripture...
represents man as one who is not only bound, wretched, captive,
sick, and dead, but in addition to his other miseries is
afflicted, through the agency of Satan his prince, with the
misery of blindness, so that he believes himself to be free,
happy, unfettered, able, well, and alive.... It is Satan’s work
to prevent men from [seeing] their plight and to keep them
presuming that they can do everything they are told” (LW
33:130). An so Luther uttered his famous line to sin boldly and
quit covering up how bad off we are!
But try though we might, we fail at this. We continue to love the
darkness rather than the light (John 3:19). We continue to think
better of ourselves than we should. We go on loving “false
doctrine and a sinful life.” So “the fact that a blind world
prefers death to life, prefers hell to heaven, bodes a terrible
judgment” upon us (LW
22:390). I continue to refuse to “hush up my sins” (LW
22:373). That’s my problem. Where is my faith when I need it?
Remember that faith is supposed to subdue and curb “sin so that
it cannot burst into the open unhindered” (LW
22:394). The stakes are high. “You will not be saved unless you
stop sinning…. Just as a person who has been healed and cured of
a disease can find no delight in sickness or do anything to
impair his health, so anyone who persists in false teaching and
in an offensive life is under judgment and condemnation” (LW
22:389). Jesus asked which son did the will of his father – the
one who said he would help, then later didn’t, or the one who
first refused to help, and then repented and got the job done.
Well, it’s the second son, alright (Matthew 21:31). And
Luther knew why this mattered so much – simply because, whatever
good works we do, small though they may be, they’re still “of
more worth than... the whole world” (LW 59:270).
But this burden of doing good deeds is heavy. There’s so much to trip us up. “Nothing
is easier than sinning” (LW
30:273). We need another to help us carry this load of acting
properly, of being righteous. And that is Jesus of Nazareth,
God’s own son (Matthew 11:28). He does that by becoming our
righteousness for us (1 Corinthians 1:30). And he becomes our
righteousness by becoming sin for us, even though he never
sinned, and then by being punished for that sin so that we might
become righteous (2 Corinthians 5:21). It’s a blessed,
miraculous, required exchange. “One man sins, another pays the
penalty; one deserves peace, the other has it” (LW
17:225). Why? Because the “whole of Christ’s life was a matter
of taking up and bearing our ills…. He was sorrowful on account
of our sorrow, and thus he took away our sorrow that we might be
made joyful…. And so, to put it briefly, Christ is ours” (LW
67:46). So make him your own by believing in him (Philippians
3:12).
And as a believer, walk in newness of life and righteousness (1
Peter 2:24). “Associate with the lowly” (Romans 12:16). That
will mean having “regard for things despised and the
contemptible,” and giving up what is “highly regarded” (LW
25:463). Work on unraveling being snooty and proud – looking
down your nose at the less fortunate. Expect Christ’s Spirit to
turn you around on this by miraculously providing you with
constant reminders (John 14:26). Take that divine intervention
to heart, so that you do not give up on this spiritual renewal.
Remember also that even though “God demands our virtues and does
not want us to be addicted to the lusts of the flesh but
earnestly charges us not only to hold them in check but to slay
them completely, yet our virtues cannot help us before God’s
judgment; for they are polluted and contaminated by lust.
Therefore unless God averts His eyes from our sins, yes, even
from our righteousness and virtues and reckons us as righteous
because of faith, which lays hold of His Son, we are done for” (LW
3:22). Keep that in mind as you struggle to associate with the
lowly. Keep that in mind as you struggle to act properly. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“O God, My Faithful God” (LBW 504)
Prayers
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Pete Forsyth
Dan Murphy
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Eric Urban family
Pray for the United States during this presidential election
year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering in the southeast from hurricanes.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Deaths
Carmen Apman (Bert and Donna’s
youngest child)
Eric Urban (Cary Natiello’s
friend)
Geraldine Martindale (Pastor Marshall’s
high school English
teacher)
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“Lift High the Cross” (LBW 377)
Three Flags (1958) by Jasper
Johns
O Lord our God, grant that all Americans registered to vote, may
cast ballots for candidates that are pleasing in your eyes. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
Jasper Johns, 90, one of the greatest living American
artists, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. In
his famous painting, Three Flags, he tries to change
the way we look at the US flag. He wants us to see it as more
than our national symbol, flying in the wind, high up on a pole.
So he painted it three times, putting the three paintings in a
tiered arrangement, five inches thick, that contradicts
classical perspective. Rather than receding into the background
of the painting, Three Flags projects outward toward
the viewer. This invasion of our space provokes us to ask
ourselves what the flag and our country mean to us. Johns wants
to make the meaning of the American flag fluid and open to
continual reinterpretation.
Online Sunday Liturgy
October 4, 2020
Bulletin Cover
It is a terrible thing to be involved with God [Hebrews 10:31].
The more you are involved with him, the wilder it gets and the
more he cudgels you…. God is always the inverse of man. Man
believes numbers mean something; for God it is precisely numbers
which mean nothing, nothing at all.
Heaven and earth cannot be commingled. So our thoughts… and
rules are… reproved and driven off by the heavenly…. This is the
way of God…. There are, however, many and diverse ways that
beckon us away.
(Martin Luther, Lectures on Isaiah 55 (1529)
Luther’s Works
17:257.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
October 4,
2020
Eighteenth
Sunday After Pentecost
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Lord God, majestic are your ways and glorious is your wisdom.
Lead us in righteousness all of our days, that we may gain a
heart of wisdom. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Isaiah 55:6–9
Psalm 27:1–13
Second Lesson: Philippians 1:1–27
Gospel: Matthew 20:1–16
Opening Hymn: “Praise the Lord! O Heavens” (LBW 540)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Why does Isaiah 55:9 tell us how great God is? You know, that
his ways and thoughts are so far above ours – the way the
ancient stars in the distant heavens are way above the dirt of
the earth we stand on. Could it be that the answer lies in a
book title? Is the answer there in the book entitled,
Your God is Too Small
(1952) by J. B. Phillips (1906–1982)? I think so. Isaiah tells
us how great God is because our God is too small. We have settled
for less, and that has to change. Isaiah tells us how great God
is in order to set us straight. And two others chime in with
him. Psalm 150:2 says that we should praise God because of his
exceeding greatness – that’s multitudinem magnitudinis
in the old Latin Bible. That’s just the right mouth full, I would say.
And Saint Mary, the mother of our Lord, has her famous and often
repeated words, “My soul doth magnify the Lord” (Luke 1:46). So
Isaiah has backing in telling us how great God is so that we can
have a chance to believe in the one real God. He tells us this so
that we won’t be taken in by today’s arguments for a lesser
God (Frederick Sontag, What Can God Do? 1979, Thomas Jay Oord, God
Can’t, 2019).
But this isn’t just a modern problem. It’s been with us for
generations. Ancient naysayers are even quoted in the Bible – of
all places! – as a warning for all times. And so there we read –
“Who can see us? Who can search out our crimes?” “How can God
know? Is there knowledge in the Most High?” “The Lord does not
see; the God of Jacob does not perceive” (Psalms 64:5–6, 73:11,
94:7). Martin Luther believed we’re deluded about God because of
our reliance on our own ratiocination. Our thoughts about God
are simply wrong, he says. And so reason “plays blind man’s bluff
with God,” Luther continues. “It consistently gropes in the dark and
misses the mark. It calls God which is not God, and fails to
call Him God who really is God” (Luther’s
Works 19:55). That’s why we have Isaiah 55:9. It’s a bolt
from the blue. It says stop fiddling with God. Don’t “whittle
God” down; don’t make him conform with your thoughts (LW
17:17, 108). Luther goes on to
say that we “constantly want to have our hand in the broth” and
see to it that God is the way that we want him to be (LW
57:108). The Bible says that God is in charge of this world,
“yet we carry on and bring our reason in” to fashion things the
way we want (LW
56:125). We’re looking for an
alium deum, Luther
says, or “a different God” from the one proclaimed in the Bible
(LW 46:237). We want
a God who “hardens no one, damns no one, but has mercy on all,
saves all, so that with hell abolished and the fear of death
removed, there would be no future punishment to be dreaded” (LW
33:173). That’s
because we find the Bible to be “deadly poison” –
if you can believe it (LW
24:205). We can’t stomach the Biblical truth that “God
determines everything” (LW
15:121). Therefore we have to make God our pupil and
straighten him out (LW
51:384).
From this it’s clear that if God is going to stand on his own
for our benefit, we must first forsake ourselves (LW
25:411). We must say to ourselves and all others like us – “You
fool! God is almighty. Therefore, all things are possible for
Him” (LW 58:110). So
constraining God in any way through our keen conceptualizations
is wrong. That’s because as an unredeemed sinner “God is
hostile to me and condemns me” and doesn’t want me tampering
with his revealed nature (LW
79:16). And there we would remain in our despair – cut down by
God – if it weren’t
for Christ Jesus our Lord. For he goes to the cross, suffers and
dies, and by so doing draws us to himself (John 12:32). When we
believe in the sacrifice he made on the cross, and repent of our
sins, we are forgiven and new life is ours. The wrath of God no
longer looms over us. And this gives us great joy. For “what is
impossible for us is very easy” for God (LW
6:102). And in that power we rejoice rather than fighting
against it – for now we see it as “Christ, the power of God” (1
Corinthians 1:24). It’s an almighty saving power. And there is
“no other atoner but this Lamb; God recognizes no other” (LW
22:165). So if we deny Christ, “we are done for” (LW
56:87).
Let us then rejoice in Christ Jesus our Savior, and serve him
all of our days. Let us continue to grow in faith (1 Peter 2:2).
Let us become mature in Christ (Colossians 1:28). And may our
love also become mature. Luther says that happens when our love
is “bitter to the old man, but very sweet to the new man.” For
“true love is at the same time a great enemy and a friend – how
harshly it rebukes, and how sweetly it helps” (LW
75:327). Without this duality, love is nothing but “stupid
affection” (LW 13:153). So may true love – dual love – mark our days as we struggle to confess
an unbridled divine power when we magnify the Lord. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing” (LBW 499)
Prayers
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
Litany for the Health of
President Donald Trump
First Lutheran Church
of West
Seattle
October 4, 2020
Let us pray for President Trump (1 Timothy
2:2) and his
wife, Melania, who have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus,
that they may be healed. Lord
in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the medical treatment
that they’re receiving, that they may be comforted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the others on the White
House staff and in Congress who have tested positive for COVID-19,
that they too may be comforted and healed. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Comfort us in our sorrow as we remember the
US presidents who died in office from illness
– William Harrison (1841, pneumonia), Zachary Taylor
(1850, cholera), Warren Harding (1923, heart disease), and
Franklin Roosevelt (1945, brain hemorrhage). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And we thank you for those US presidents who
recovered, by your grace, from various illnesses while in office
– George Washington (1795, carbuncle), James Madison
(1818, fever), James Buchanan (1857, dysentery), Abraham Lincoln
(1863, smallpox), Grover Cleveland (1893, jaw infection),William
McKinley (1901, flu), Harry Truman (1947, flu), and Dwight
Eisenhower (1955, heart attack) (see John R. Bumgarner, The
Health of the Presidents, 1994). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for all of us who are but
sojourners here (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by sickness (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease, may we ever remember
our Savior Jesus who strengthens our faith by restoring our health,
when it is in keeping with his will (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melissa Baker
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly & Terence Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Josie West
Pray for the
United States during this presidential election year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering on the east coast from the hurricanes and west coast from the terrible fires.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn:
“For the Beauty of the Earth” (LBW 561)
The devil prowls around like a roaring
lion, seeking someone to devour.
(1 Peter 5:8)
We do not sit in a rose garden. But in our circles there are
many Satans…. Let us not snore in carelessness, for then we will
have Satan walking about everywhere.
(Martin Luther, Sermon on Acts 2:1–13 (1529)
Luther’s Works
56:270)
Online Sunday Liturgy
September 27, 2020
Bulletin Cover
f anyone has fallen away from Christ, the true sacrifice
for sins, and seeks another way or
method to be saved and enter into heaven, he will never
get
there. He will
accomplish nothing. For when we are brought to Christ, we should
never again let Him out of our sight. For if someone loses Him
and starts climbing up to heaven by another way, it is
impossible for him to receive forgiveness of sins, because he
runs away from the only doctrine that offers us forgiveness of
sins…. Without Christ, not even the least sin is forgiven…. So,
then, we should remain with the Lord Christ if we have sinned
and not turn our back on Him, or else we lose the forgiveness of
sins. When I was stuck in my cowl in the monastery, I was so
inimical toward Christ that, whenever I saw a picture or
likeness of Him as He hung on the cross,… it frightened me, and
I looked to the floor and would rather have seen the devil. For
my heart had been poisoned through and through…. But picture
Christ for yourself as gracious and merciful and as the one who
forgives your sins, if you only ask. Likewise, if your brother,
too, has fallen and stands up again and seeks grace, then he
should have the Lord Christ depicted for him as the one who
carries the lost sheep…. For Christ has instituted forgiveness
of sins in His Church and established the sort of kingdom that
is called “forgiveness of sins.” The Church is the sort of
company in which, if a sinner listens and accepts rebuke, then
he has the forgiveness of sins, and that forgiveness is good as
often as he desires and seeks it.
(Martin Luther, Sermon on Matthew 18:21–22 (1537)
Luther’s Works
67:421–22.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
September 27,
2020
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
O God, you declare your almighty power chiefly in showing mercy
and pity. Grant us the fullness of your grace, that, pursuing
what you have promised, we may share your heavenly glory. In the
name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Genesis 50:15–21
Psalm 103:1–13
Second Lesson: Romans 14:5–9
Gospel: Matthew 18:21–35
Opening Hymn: “Praise,
My Soul, the King of Heaven” (LBW 549)
Sermon:
September 27, 2020
“Be
Merciful”
(Matthew 18:33)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Over thirty years ago Bob Dylan sang in one of his songs that we
live in a political world “where mercy walks the plank” (Oh,
Mercy, 1989). Was he right about that? If he was, then he’s been
right ever since the time of Jesus. And that’s because Jesus
said in his parable of The Unforgiving Servant in Matthew 18,
the same thing. He said that we should be merciful because we
aren’t. We’re like the unforgiving servant in his parable. To
get us off the dime, Jesus ends his parable by throwing the bad
servant into jail until he somehow figures out how to pay back
everything he has ever owed anyone – even those who have
forgiven his debts. That terrifying outcome is to scare us
straight. That’s because as Martin Luther knew, “life is a
help only to those who are dead, grace only to sin, the Spirit
only to the letter” (Luther’s Works 39:185). We have to
be beaten down by God if we’re ever to live anew. And so the
Gospel only comes when “consciences have become hot and thirsty
because of the Law” (LW 20:299).
But we’re so calloused. Not even such assaults sway us –
“whether He sang sweet or sour, it did not do any good” (LW
20:316). “For human nature is so blind that it does not know its
own... diseases, and so proud as to imagine that it knows and
can do nothing” (LW 33:121). That’s because,
as Luther also knew and preached, “our condition must always be that
of the sick man” (LW 77:329). But why? We get off to a bad start and that
sets our course on earth. “As soon as a person is born he
belongs to the devil and is condemned, no matter what he does” (LW
78:93). Indeed, the longer we live, “the worse it gets” (LW
68:333). So Luther laments – “Oh, the hard and unyielding minds
of men!” (LW 60:273).
In Luther’s original Latin it’s – “O
duras et ferreas mentes hominum!” Do you not hear the word iron
in ferreas and in
duras there are the words enduring and durable? So we’re stuck,
that’s for sure. Duras et
ferreas! That’s our plight – we’re unyielding. Since this is the case, “nothing
that is in us or can be done by us makes us Christian” (LW
77:189). Shocking, isn’t it? “In matters pertaining to
salvation or damnation, a man has no free choice, but is a
captive, subject and slave either of the will of God or of the
will of Satan” (LW 33:70)!
Are we then done for? Not if this is true about the God of the Bible: “You do not seek Him; He seeks you.
You do not find Him; He finds you” (LW
75:35). And that’s because “Christ died and lived… to be our Lord”
(Romans 14:9). He didn’t wait for us to get our act together.
Off he trudged to Jerusalem – to die a horrible death on the
cross (Luke 9:51, 13:32). On the cross Jesus “is the very true Price which is paid
for us.” Jesus is “the Price by which satisfaction is made for
divine justice and wrath on our behalf.” Jesus is “the Price of
redemption.” That’s because Jesus has taken “the wrath of God
upon Himself and has carried it on our behalf” (LW
28:264). So rejoice and be glad in this sacrifice and the
redemption it brings, for by this sacrifice “the Lord has
compassion on those who fear him” (Psalms 103:13). Indeed, “no one (except this Christ) has
ever suffered for… other people’s sins, whether the least or the
greatest” (LW
77:159). Our Lord and Savior is unique. Grace and truth are
found only in him (John 1:17). And so it is true that “without
Christ, not even the least sin is forgiven” (LW
67:421). “Therefore, Christ must be painted before the eyes of
the heart so that we look not to ourselves but only to Him who
stands in our midst, so that you may be among the disciples who
forget their fear and look to Christ alone and hear Him alone
speaking” (LW 69:342). And when we do, Christ couldn’t
“come any closer” (LW 58:183). Let us then rejoice and
be glad. Christ brings his “sweet, living, comforting Word” to
us, namely, that he “pleads for us and intercedes for us with
His Father through His blood – for us, who with our sins and
death had been lying in the real prison of Babylon, that is,
under the devil, the ruler of this world (John 16:11)” (LW
20:183). And all of this about Jesus Christ is indeed true, and
can be counted on, because it has been “tested in the presence
of the Church at the bar of Scripture” (LW 33:91). And
this is so even if the world rejects it because it isn’t “what
it seeks and likes” (LW 77:357).
But in our joy over this truth of Christ, we must not forget that the kingdom
of Christ “does not consist in talk but in power” to do good
works (1 Corinthians
4:20). Otherwise we are deceived (James 1:22, 1 John 3:20). Let us
then be very careful here. Rattling off that “we are justified by
faith alone without works” is mind numbing. “You have learned
the words you have heard, the same way mockingbirds learn to
repeat things.” Don’t be like that! Be on your guard and watch out – “Where are the
fruits showing that you truly believe?” (LW
58:237). “Works cannot be left out” (LW
67:76)! For “God wants no lazy idlers” (LW
14:115). That’s because “faith without works is nothing and a
false faith” (LW
76:390, James 2:26). Therefore we must “spend our lives in good works” (LW
57:37, Matthew 22:37–40). Think about that. And then be warned – “God… does not tolerate the hypocritical
Christians who consider it sufficient for them to believe” (LW
30:268). May we then today, take up the good work in Genesis
50:19. There Joseph tells his guilty brothers that God’s mercy
is greater than his – “Am I in the place of God?” he
firmly admonishes. May we do the same – being “vigilant,
penetrating, intent, astute, and determined” (LW
33:114). May we ever remind those
who listen to us that the transcendent power belongs to God and
not to us (2 Corinthians 4:7). We are believers not because we
are so smart, but because God has made us his own (Philippians
3:12). What we have to say is not our own theory of life, but
the words of eternal life from the Bible (John 6:68). Let us
therefore walk in humility with
Joseph of old. And when we do, may we also be grateful to God for
his blessings, by which he is showing us, and helping us all our
days on earth, to be
merciful. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “Forgive
Our Sins as We Forgive” (LBW 307)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melissa Baker
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Angel Lynn
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Pray for the
United States during this presidential election year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering on the east coast from the hurricanes and west coast from the terrible fires.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn: “Give
to Our God immortal Praise” (LBW 520)
Heather Hudson, September 2020
He who has the Son has life; he who has not the Son of God has
not life.
(1 John 5:12)
It is… a mere dialectical fiction that there is in man a
neutral… willing, nor can those who assert it prove it…. The
truth of the matter is… as Christ says: “He who is not with me
is against me” (Luke 11:23). He does not say: “He who is not
with me is not against me either, but neutral.”
(Martin Luther, Bondage of the Will (1525)
Luther’s Works
33:115)
The sinner comes in two kinds. The sinner who is afflicted and
troubled and desires to be free of sin is a son; the sinner who
is secure and does not acknowledge his sin but is righteous in
his own eyes is an enemy and a devil. The former is lifted up;
the latter is accused.
(Martin Luther, Annotations on Matthew 9:1–2 (1535)
Luther’s Works
67:61–62)
Online Sunday Liturgy
September 20, 2020
Bulletin Cover
President James K. Polk (1795–1849) statue by Sherri Treeby
(2005), Grand Rapids, South Dakota. “Probably no other president
presents such a chasm between actual accomplishment and popular
recognition…. A geographical amoeba when Polk became president,
the United States had assumed its present continental shape by
the end of his term…. Historians acknowledge his remarkable
achievements, but many also accept the verdict that Polk waged
an unjust, imperialistic war against a dysfunctional,
defenseless Mexico.” Steve Raymond, “The Sweeping
Influence of an
Obscure President,” The
Seattle Times, December
27, 2009.
There are all kinds of abuse in this
authority…. [The]
government [then, is like] spider webs [which] catch little
flies all right, but the millstone rolls on through. So the
laws… and government of one and the same authority keep a hold
on the little men while the big fellows go scot-free.
(Luther’s Works
44:93)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
September 20,
2020
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Father in heaven, you know our problems and our weaknesses
better than we do. In your love and by your power help us in our
confusion and, in spite of ourselves, make us firm in faith. In
the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Ezekiel 33:7–9
Psalm 119:33–40
Second Lesson: Romans 13:1–10
Gospel: Matthew 18:15–20
Opening Hymn: “All
Creatures of Our God and King” (LBW 527)
Sermon:
September 20, 2020
“Follow
the Government”
(Romans 13:1)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Almost everybody chokes on Romans 13:1 – “Be subject to the
governing authorities…. for those that exist have been
instituted by God.” That’s because we immediately think of Adolf
Hitler (1889–1945) – that butcher of Nazi Germany who killed
millions of his own people after torturing them. Doesn’t that
prove – against Romans 13:1 – that God doesn’t set up every
ruler in power? Surely he didn’t put Hitler in office! Well, if
we weren’t schooled in Biblical thought that would be the
natural way to think. But in the Bible we find that God puts
both good and bad people into power to bless and curse us. God,
after all, creates weal and woe, both good and bad come from him
(Isaiah 45:7, Job 2:10, Romans 9:18). Think of King Saul in
ancient Israel. God fetched that very tall man, hiding in a pile of
baggage, to be their first king (1 Samuel 10:22–23). But before
you know it, God has sabotaged him – sending an evil spirit to
torment him (1 Samuel 16:14). That spirit also drives him to try
to kill his successor, David (1 Samuel 19:9). So Martin Luther
wasn’t surprised to find that “those least capable of
conducting the affairs of state administer them” (Luther’sWorks 3:53). They
don’t do the four basics: “First, toward God there must be true
confidence and earnest prayer; second, toward his subjects there
must be love and Christian service; third, with respect to his
counselors and officials he must maintain an untrammeled reason
and unfettered judgment; fourth, with respect to evildoers he
must manifest a restrained severity and firmness” (LW
45:126). This
disparity drove Luther to the conclusion that because “there is no greater
jewel in the world than a God-fearing lord, so there is no more
hurtful plague in the world than a godless lord.” But much
to our chagrin, Luther also knew that the vast “majority” of
rulers are deeply mired in “tyranny and wickedness.” For they
are empty and idle and do nothing to stop their citizenry from
seeking only “honor, power, luxury, selfish profit, and
self-will.” This rots our common life together. And so “the
miserable admixture of the filth of our arrogance... changes...
the finest reason into the greatest folly” (LW 13:60,
71, 54, 150). Nevertheless, God wants us to obey these bad
leaders – “even when the government commits an injustice” –
because it “improves the soul” to suffer in this way (LW
44:92). We can never forget that suffering builds character
(Romans 5:4). Suffering in this life in fact leads us to eagerly
anticipate a better life to come in heaven (Philippians 3:8,
Hebrews 9.28, 11:16).
But in our democracies we are led to believe that electing a
good leader can make all the difference – turning a bad
situation into a good one, and maybe even helping us gain
everlasting blessedness. But precisely at this point a deep
Biblical truth is missed. And once we hear it we know why – “The
world is much too evil to be worthy of good and godly lords
[Romans 3:23, James 2:10]. It must have [rulers] who suck it dry
and burden it with... laws. These and other punishments are its
deserved award. To oppose them means to oppose God’s punishment.
As humbly as I conduct myself when God imposes a sickness upon
me [Psalm 107:17], so humbly should I also conduct myself toward
the evil authority that the same God now imposes upon me” (LW
39:19). That doesn’t mean to say that those bad leaders are good
and what they do is right. No, Luther thought we should “rebuke”
them, we who know better. But along with that protest, we must
also “endure” the punishment, all the same, and not try to oust
them or flee from them (LW 69:236–37). So we can’t look
to secular rulers to keep us safe –
they are too unreliable for that, even though the pain they
cause can help us in the long run. Besides, they can only change
things without improving on them (LW 13:217, 21:95). Besides, they don’t have the
words of eternal life (John 6:68). But the church does.
Therefore the “office of preaching – where it exists as God
ordained it – brings and bestows… eternal peace and life….
Worldly government, on the other hand, preserves peace, justice,
and life, which is temporal and transient” (LW
46:237). That preaching gives us “the Lamb of God who takes away
the sins of the world” (John 1:29). So we are to believe in him
– Christ Jesus himself, the redeemer, the sacrificial lamb – and trust in him more
than in any secular ruler (John 14:1, Acts 5:29). We are to
believe in Jesus and be delivered from the dominion of darkness
and transferred into his kingdom (Colossians 1:13). We are to
believe that when Jesus died on the cross for us he bore our
sins in his body that we might be healed and kept safe for all
eternity (1 Peter 2:24, John 3:36).
Once we do, we then are to pray for our leaders in government,
that they may keep the peace here on earth (1 Timothy 2:2). For
God’s
people, praying and obeying always matter more than voting and
willing and imagining and figuring out a better world. But when we
pray for peace, we should never hope for our own welfare. Instead we should
care about being able to “discuss the
Word, extend the faith [dilatare
fidem], and bring up our children… in Christian discipline”
(LW 28:259). Here God’s
will matters more than ours. That’s
what the Lord’s
Prayer teaches us
– “thy will be done,”
and not ours (Matthew 6:10). “Our will must be submerged”
because it is “at war”
with God’s
will (LW 42:45). “Thy will be done” should rule in our
hearts even though we hate hearing it. What will turn us around,
and makes us give up this hatred, is getting “caught in
wretchedness” and feeling the pain of it (LW 57:54).
For that helps us fulfill the requirement for praying the Lord’s
Prayer
– knowing that we are “half-dead men, wounded and not
completely sound” (LW 73:414). Otherwise we will remain
offended that “God’s
will alone be done.” Otherwise “we poor little worms [will
continue to] make such a fuss about our will, which is never
free of evil and always deserves to be thwarted” (LW
42:45). Once we start praying in this way, we will then have progressed mightily toward our goal of
following Romans 13:1 and supporting our secular rulers. Amen.
Hymn of the Day: “O
God of Earth and Altar” (LBW 428)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Marlis Ormiston
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Kyra Stromberg
Bob & Barb Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melissa Baker
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
Pray for those who have suffered the death of a loved one:Pray that God will bear their grief and lift their
hearts:Pray for
the family and friends of the Bob, Scott, Eric, Tyler Schorn
family on the death of Barbara on Sunday, September 13th.
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Pray for the
United States during this presidential election year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering on the east coast from the hurricanes and west coast from the terrible fires.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Birth
Give thanks to God on the birth of Daniel William Liang to Steve
and Gina Liang on September 13th at 9:48 am in Seattle. May
Daniel grow up to be a healthy and strong young man who believes
in and follows the Lord Jesus Christ.
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn: “Lord,
Dismiss Us with Your Blessing” (LBW 259)
Everyone has something good about them....
You have to find [that] and love the person for that....
Oh, yeah? How about Hitler?... Hitler loved dogs.
[Jeannette Walls, The Glass Castle: A Memoir
(New York: Scribner, 2005) p. 144.]
Both spirits are God’s, the good and the evil. The evil one God
gives to the proud in heart, as it is written of Saul (1 Samuel
16:14) that the evil spirit from the Lord ruled him, namely, the
angry, raging spirit, with which they fight for their right and
truth, and pursue those who are good, as we read in Romans 11:8
– “God has given them a prickly spirit.” The good Spirit is the
Holy Spirit. He creates gentle, kind, and good hearts, which
walk the right path, on which they seek God in all things and
not themselves.
(Martin Luther, Commentary on Psalm 143:10 (1525)
Luther’s Works
14:203)
Online Sunday Liturgy
September 13, 2020
Bulletin Cover
R. S Thomas (1913–2000), Welsh poet, Anglican priest.
The world… remains the world [and the Christian] must
deprive himself and live contrary to it, rebuking its
worldly desires.
(Luther’s Works
75:198.)
Do not be conformed to this world.
(Romans 12:2)
I chose you out of the world.
(John 15:19)
You [are] aliens and exiles.
(1 Peter 2:11)
Our commonwealth is in heaven.
(Philippians 3:20)
Friendship with the world
is enmity with God.
(James 4:4)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
September 13,
2020
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
O Lord our God, we thank you for your Son who chose the path of
suffering for the sake of the world. Humble us by his example,
point us to the path of obedience, and give us strength to
follow his commands. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Jeremiah 15:15–21
Psalm 26
Second Lesson: Romans 12:1–8
Gospel: Matthew 16:21–26
Opening Hymn: “Lord Jesus Christ, Be Present Now” (LBW 253)
Sermon:
September 13, 2020
“Don't Be
Worldly”
(Romans 12:2)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
God can love the world (John 3:16) but we can’t (1 John 2:15).
Why is that? It’s because by so doing, God manifests his works
in the world (John 9:3, Psalm 79:9, Ezekiel 36:22). He doesn’t
exalt the world by loving it (John 3:30). Nor does he benefit
from the world by loving it (Psalm 50:12). And he doesn’t get
mixed up with the world by loving it (Romans 1:25). That’s
because, unlike us, God’s life is within himself (John 5:26). He
doesn’t need anything from us or from the world (Acts 17:25).
Martin Luther believed in this and so he concluded that “God
does not owe anyone anything” (Luther’s
Works 56:210). He loves the world not because he owes it to
us, but in order to manifest his works in it.
We, on the other hand, come before God with “sheer need” (LW
68:96, Revelation 3:17). We can do nothing without him (John 15:5).
Without him we are a “body of death” (Romans 7:24). Therefore
“divine grace… cannot help if someone says, “I do not need
grace’” (LW 68:216).
That’s because we don’t have life within us – we need what’s
outside of us to live now (air, water, food, shelter, friends)
and for all of eternity (grace). So loving the world would be
useless. It’s passing away, after all (1 John 2:17, 1 Peter
1:24, 1 Corinthians 7:31). Entropy is ineluctably unraveling
everything (Carl Wieland,
World Winding Down, 2012). The world of entropy can’t
sustain us. So being worldly is unpromising. Don’t therefore
conform to the world (Romans 12:2). Don’t worry about it either.
Its ways are not needed to love your neighbor. What you need to
love your neighbor is the light of Christ (1 John 2:9–11). Fix
your minds on the things that are above – not on the earth and
its worldly ways (Colossians 3:2). Christians aren’t supposed to
be like everyone else. Because of our faith in Jesus we are
“aliens and exiles” here (1 Peter 2:11). Our savior has called
us “out of the world” (John 15:19). And we are to rejoice in
that because “friendship with the world is enmity with God”
(James 4:4). So Luther says that the Bible calls us to live
“contrary to [the world], rebuking its worldly desires.” What
this means for us is that we’ll have to live “soberly in a
tavern, chastely in a brothel, godly in a theater, righteously
in a den of murderers” (LW
78:198). There is a better life in heaven (Hebrews 11:16). Hope
for it (LW 8:115).
And when you do you will walk “straight through everything on
earth” so you’ll have it and not have it, you’ll use it but
“not depend on it.” You’ll learn to deal with the temporal in
such a way that you “do not lose the eternal” but leave the
temporal behind “and always stretch for the eternal as the goal
set” before you (LW
77:200). So “renounce this world and await the kingdom of
heaven” (LW 59:269).
But that’ll take a lot of faith to pull off – tantamount to
“raising the dead” (LW
73:377). And such a powerful faith comes through the renewal of
our minds (Romans 12:2, Philippians 2:5). But they are so
volatile. Getting our minds to go in one constant direction is
impossible – trapped as we are in the “fleeting pleasures of
sin” (Hebrews 11:25). We “flit from one idea to another” (LW
23:90). At our best we are fickle (LW 15:99). We’re
constantly being pulled away by the new (Acts 17:21, LW
15:144). And we’re
all troubled by this in one way or another (Nir Eyal,
Indistractable: How to
Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life, 2019). Try as
we may, however, to order our thoughts, we fail. And so we cry
out with Luther – “I’m done for! I’m lost! I’m finished! God
doesn’t want me!... He hates me!” (LW
73:142). But the Bible teaches that self-control doesn’t come
through personal exertion and extra effort to correct ourselves,
but from God’s grace (Galatians 5:23) –
continentia as the
old Latin Bible translates self-control. But how does God
deliver that continentia
to us? It’s all tied up with the Savior who suffered for us on
the cross. His obedience inspires us (Philippians 2:8). We are
to have the control that he had. He was obedient unto death,
even death on a cross. In that suffering and dying he bore our
sins in his own body and thereby paid for them what we owed to
God (1 Peter 2:24, 1:18–19).
Gott mit Christum
bezahlen – Luther preached! “Pay God with Christ,” is its
translation (LW
30:12). Because of this payment, Christ shouts out to us – “I’m
death’s death, hell’s hell, and the devil’s devil…. Do not be
afraid, My son, I have conquered” for you (LW
73:122).
But for us to share in this victory – in the “steadfastness of
Christ” (2 Thessalonians 3:5), we’ll have to die with Christ (2
Corinthians 5:14). We’ll have to join in with his sufferings (1
Peter 4:13). “We die to sin through Christ, who was made a
sacrifice for sin and thereby killed sin so that it is no longer
able to rule in us (LW
73:94). This is how we finally acquire self-control (2
Corinthians 5:14). It is “produced” through suffering (Romans
5:3–5) – or operatur
in the Latin Bible again. You can hear the English word
operation in that
Latin word for production. Suffering starts the operation going
that brings about self-control. Nothing else can awaken us from
our waywardness – being “always sleeping” as we are (LW
73:223). Faith “requires trouble and toil in order that we may
come through and be saved,” that we may pass through the blazing
fire (LW 30:130). And so our self-control cannot be of our
own making. It is
a gift – that comes only through suffering. No one, after all,
gets into the kingdom of God except through many tribulations
(Acts 14:22). Luther believed in this verse so much that he
ended his famous Ninety-Five Theses (1517) with it (LW
31:33). And may we do the same by the grace of God. For it is
the suffering of the gospel that changes us for the better –
that “makes a robber a pedagogue,” a “wolf... a sheep,” a sinner
a believer (LW
73:135, 37:101, 12:388). Then we simply “depend on the Word”
and give up disputing whether God is telling us the truth in it
(LW 67:353). For there is no help from God for us until
“all things seem hopeless” (LW 7:100). We have to
despair in ourselves before we can trust in God (LW
25:386, 26:315, 33:62, 40:241, 51:58).
With that transformation once begun in us, we then have the
power to go the narrow, difficult, hard way [arta
via] (Matthew 7:14, LW 20:272). We then have the strength to finally join the true
church – the one that “in this life is called militant, not
triumphant” (LW
73:168). Then we discover why this is so tough, and that’s
because “the Christian is free by faith,
but as far as the flesh is concerned, he is a slave of sin. Yet
these things, though contraries, are nevertheless reconciled in
the Christian because the same Christian is saint and sinner,
dead and alive, all sin and no sin; hell and heaven are
correlatives” (LW
73:185). Then, and only then, have we started giving up on being
worldly. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Come Follow Me, the Savior Spake” (LBW 455)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Pete Morrison
Kyra Stromberg
Bob & Barb Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melissa Baker
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Hillary Thoren
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Pray for the
United States during this presidential election year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering on the west coast from the terrible fires.
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn: “Praise and Thanks and Adoration” (LBW 470)
[The ungodly] do not recognize the plainest testimonies of
Scriptures. This is the fault not of the [Biblical] prophecy but
of their blindness and ungodliness. As it is not the fault of
the book and the letters that a peasant cannot read, but the
peasant’s, so it is not the fault of the Bible, which is very
clear so that even boys understand it, but it is the fault of
the ideas and darkness of the [ungodly].
(Martin Luther, Lectures on Isaiah 29 (1532)
Luther’s Works
16:243.)
Online Sunday Liturgy
September 6, 2020
Bulletin Cover
Saint Peter's Confession of Faith
The words are clear: “I will build My Church” [Matthew 16:18].
Christ does not say that He is going to build a kingdom of the
world or a temporal empire involving the present life, but “My
Church,” that is, the kingdom of heaven and of the life to come....
Christ is speaking of something far different from... temporal
power, wealth [and] pride....
Next, He says “upon this rock,” that is, not upon a human being
or a power that will perish…. Moreover, the Church is in no way
a temporal kingdom, and so it does not contend with flesh and
blood but with the gates of hell. And the gates of hell are not
powers of the world [stones and timbers, earth, water, gold and
silver] but the power of Satan, the kingdom of sin
and death. These are the Church’s enemies; with them she fights;
against them she is victorious…. To the Church He gives a good
that is far better and more excellent than these pieces of
dung…. [Therefore the Church] is the front line of an army, a
warrior heroine, arrayed against the very gates of hell, that
is, against the trials of sin, death, and hell. Therefore, we
Christians are responsible, if we bear that name in earnest, for
an endeavor far greater and more difficult than bringing the
kingdoms of the world under our rule by deception and lies.
(Luther’s
Works 67:282–83.)
Online Abbreviated Sunday Liturgy
Pastor Marshall
September 6,
2020
In the Name of God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Let us pray:
Almighty God, you reach out to call people of all nations to
your kingdom. As you gather disciples from near and far, count
us among those who boldly confess Christ. In his name we pray. Amen.
First Lesson: Exodus 6:2–8
Psalm 138
Second Lesson: Romans 11:33–36
Gospel: Matthew 16:13–20
Opening Hymn: “Guide
Me Ever, Great Redeemer” (LBW 343)
Sermon:
September 6, 2020
“Build on
a Rock”
(Matthew
16:18)
Grace and peace to you in the name of God the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit. Amen.
The church looks like a regular place. It has buildings.
It has people running it. It has schedules. There are bills to
pay. It recruits people to sign up for activities and join the
membership rolls. It invests money and
provides services. But the church isn’t really what it looks like – it isn’t
another human organization. No, it’s the body of Christ
(Ephesians 1:23). And that’s because it is built on a confession
that Jesus Christ is the Son of the living God (Matthew
16:15–20). In the face of that confession, all of those
schedules, services and people fall by the wayside. Oh, they’re
still there, but they’re
no longer the focus. We care about
other things. Martin Luther deeply believed this about the
church. He was convinced that the gospel of Jesus wasn’t
“preached to us for the sake of this worldly existence and life,
but so… we might be helped to eternal life” (Luther’s
Works 57:25). “We have not been baptized for this life, but
that we should wait for another life” (LW
57:29). And Luther also knew that the church was rarely
what it should be. Therefore he lamented
that
“there is almost nothing more unlike the church than the
church itself”
(LW 27:297). Indeed,
“the church is not the Church,
and what is not the church is the Church” (LW
67:211). Would that more Christians today regularly used these two lines
to guide them back to the truth about the church. We, after all,
are living in a time when we want to
“curate our own funeral [because we want to do the same
for] our own Facebook page”
(Tara Isabella Burton, Strange Rites: New Religions for a
Godless World, 2020, p. 24).
But, alas, Luther goes begging. We instead keep longing for that
misguided church – made by people, run by
people, and for people in the here and now (Philip Terzian, “The
Church of What’s Happening Now,”The Wall Street Journal, August 25, 1997). We like
our false church (Gibson Winter, The Suburban Captivity of
the Churches: An Analysis of Protestant Responsibility in the
Expanding Metropolis, 1961). This places us firmly in “the prison and
power of the devil.” And we’re stuck there. We cannot
“work our way out…. We [are] lost with all of our power and
strength, merit and works, unable with all of our doings to
escape sin and death.” And we can never sufficiently grasp this
because “the prison and chains of darkness in which the devil
holds us prisoner on account of sin are too thick” (LW
57:284). Therefore we need some divine bolt cutters to sever
those chains. We need deliverance (Romans 7:24).
In one of his recently translated sermons from 1537, Martin
Luther spells out this rescue in some detail. Jesus is the one
who delivers us – pouring out his blood “at the cross for our
redemption.” Why is such a ghastly sort of rescue needed? Well,
“there was an unchangeable, eternal, irrevocable judgment on
sin.” Because of that, “God cannot and will not look kindly on
sin, but His wrath remains over sin eternally and irrevocably.”
This sets up the need for the deliverance Christ provides for us
sinners on the cross with his sacrifice. This is the reason that
“a payment must take place which would make restitution, and
pay, and thus take away and cancel sin.” One might wish that
this payment could be picked up anywhere, and by anyone, and so
have God “reconciled with us” in various ways, in different
cultures. But this is not so. Our redemption isn’t that readily
available. For you see that “no creature could do such a thing,
and to this day there has been no other remedy nor help than
this, that God’s eternal Son thus stepped into our need and
misery,... took such dread, eternal wrath on Himself, and for it
He offered His own body, life, and blood as an offering and
payment for sin.” But how does this sacrifice rescue us?
Christ’s death takes God’s wrath away from us by bearing “the
judgment of eternal wrath and death,” and so making satisfaction
and payment for us. What should have hit us sinners, hits the
innocent Jesus instead, and so God’s wrath lands on him and not
on us. It passes us by. That’s how we are delivered from God’s
wrath. The reason this death works, like no other can, is
because Jesus, with God the Father, is “one divinity and
majesty.” That’s what gives the suffering and death of Jesus so
much value. But there’s one last hitch. None of what Christ has
done for us on the cross helps unless we believe that it works
and that it is true. And so we must also hold to this message of
deliverance “with firm faith” if we are to be saved by it (LW
57:283). That’s because faith is what makes redemption
beneficial for us (Romans 3:25). Indeed, salvation lies “in a
heap,” unused and ineffective, if it isn’t believed in, if it
isn’t “distributed or applied” by way of faith (LW
77:327, 30:159).
So let us build the church on God’s word and on his Son –
knowing that we are to go to church “to hear God’s Word, to
learn to believe aright, to pray and to call upon God” (LW
58:271). Let us not
worry that when judged “by external appearances,” we’ll see
“nothing splendid about [this] church.” Let us not worry that
our church isn’t one that flourishes in the here and now,
relevant and hip with the times. And let us not forget that
“even the poorest village in which there is a pastor and some
believers,” there can still be a stunning church – a veritable
“palace of ivory.” What makes the church so glorious is the fact
that “the Word is there, Baptism, the Eucharist, divine
governance, the consolation of consciences, the fear of God,
trust in God, waiting upon God, [and] the imitation of Christ…..
Though this kingdom is nothing in appearance, it is nevertheless
most delightful in God’s eyes” (LW
12:255). And that’s all that matters. In all of this the focus will
be on “the words of eternal life” – because Christ’s kingdom is
not of this world (John 6:68, 18:36). His church, then, should
take believers “into a different, new existence and life, in
which there is no longer any need for food and drink, clothing
and shoes, money and goods, sleep, work, marriage, and things
like that, which belong to this life” (LW 58:136). And Luther thought that
the focus of those eternal words drives us to “neither fear
death nor love this life” (LW 44:85). May we then build
up the church with this double focus in mind – knowing that just
as Christ rescues sinners from divine wrath, so he “must always
rescue and help the Church when it is in... danger and distress”
(LW 58:418). And when we do this,
may we ever rejoice that the foundation of the church – upon
which we build it – is Jesus Christ, the
Rock. Amen.
Hymn of the Day:
“Built on a Rock” (LBW 365)
Litany on the
Coronavirus Disease 2020 (COVID-19)
Let us pray for all those worldwide who have
died from COVID-19. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us give thanks for the government
agencies and other medical research teams who are diligently
working to curb the spread of this virus. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are sick and
suffering from this disease. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
And let us also pray for all those grieving
the loss of loved ones who have died from COVID-19. Lord in your
mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for the many who are caring for
the infected and the sick, that full health and strength and
peace may be granted. Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Let us pray for our world where we’re but
sojourners (Psalm 119:19; Philippians 3:20), that we may not be
punished by disease and pestilence (Ezekiel 14:21, Luke 13:5,
John 5:14), and that health and peace may abound for all – for
it is Christ who takes upon himself “our infirmities and
diseases” (Matthew 8:17). Lord in your mercy,
HEAR OUR PRAYER.
Finally, in our fear of disease and sickness
– may we ever remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14,
James 5:14), those many kept safe from COVID-19 and other
infectious diseases, and our Savior Jesus who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in this
vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts 3:6).
GLORY BE TO CHRIST OUR LORD & GREAT HEALER!
AMEN.
LUTHER on epidemics
“Some people are of the firm opinion that one… should not run
away from a deadly plague. Rather, since death is God’s
punishment, which he sends upon us for our sins, we must submit
to God…. I cannot censure [this] excellent decision…. It takes
more than a milk faith [1 Corinthians 3:2] to await a death
before which most of the saints… are in dread…. [But since] it
is generally true of Christians that few are strong and many are
weak, one simply cannot place the same burden upon everyone….
Peter could walk upon the water because he was strong in faith.
When he began to doubt,… he sank and almost drowned [Matthew
14:30]…. Let him who has a strong faith wait for his death, but
he should not condemn those who take flight…. [Even so, know
that] all illnesses are punishments from God…. [These
punishments] come upon us, not only to chastise us for our sins
but also to test our faith and love…. [So] my dear friends,… use
medicines… which can help you; fumigate house, yard, and street;
shun persons and places wherever your neighbor… has recovered,
and act like a man who wants to help put out the burning city.
What else is the epidemic but a fire?... You ought to think this
way: ‘Very well, by God’s decree the enemy has sent us poison….
Therefore I shall ask God mercifully to protect us. Then I
shall… administer medicine and take it. I shall avoid places and
persons where my presence is not needed in order not to become
contaminated and thus perchance infect and pollute others, and
so cause their death as a result of my negligence. If God should
wish to take me, he will surely find me and I have done what he
has expected of me and so I am not responsible for either my own
death or the death of others. If my neighbor needs me, however,
I shall not avoid place or person but will go freely…. This is
such a God-fearing faith because it is neither brash nor
foolhardy and does not tempt God.’”
[Martin Luther, Whether One May Flee from a Deadly
Plague (1527), Luther’s
Works 43:120, 124, 127, 131–32.]
Intercessions:
We remember in prayer church
members.
Eileen & Dave Nestoss
Connor Bisticas
Pete Morrison
Kyra Stromberg
Bob & Barb Schorn
Sam & Nancy Lawson
Joan Olson
Melissa Baker
Melanie Johnson
Dorothy Ryder
We also pray for friends of the
parish
who stand in need of God’s care.
Tabitha Anderson
Marie Magenta
The Rev. Howard Fosser
The Rev. Dan Peterson
The Rev. Kari Reiten
The Rev. Rick Reynolds
The Rev. Alan Gardner
The Rev. Dave Monson
The Rev. Albin Fogelquist
Terry Fretheim
Heather Tutuska
Sheila Feichtner
Yuriko Nishimura
Leslie Hicks
Eric Baxter
Mary Lou & Paul Jensen
Hillary Thoren
Maggie & Glenn Willis
Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm
Karen Berg
Bjørg Hestevold
Garrett Metzler
Lesa Christensen
Noel Curtis
Antonio Ortez
Garrison Radcliffe
Marv Morris
Randy Vater
Doreen Phillips
Deanne Heflin
Will Forrester
Richard Patishnock
Jeff Hancock
Randy Lonborg
Yao Chu Chang
Holly Finan
Wayne & Chris Korsmo
Pray for the
United States during this presidential election year, and for unbelievers, the addicted, the sexually abused and
harassed, the homeless, the hungry and the unemployed. Prayers
for those suffering in the southeast from the hurricane.
Deaths
John Paulson
Professional Health Care Providers
Gina Allen
Jane Collins
Janine Douglass
David Juhl
Dana Kahn
Dean Riskedahl
Holy Communion
in Spirit and Truth
Without the
Consecrated Bread and Wine
[The
ancient church doctrine of
concomitantia teaches that the faithful can receive Christ’s
Presence in Holy Communion by drinking the wine without eating
any bread, or by eating the bread without drinking any wine (The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. F. L. Cross,
1958, 1966, pp. 320–21). By extension, in extreme cases, the
faithful can also, then, receive Christ’s Presence without
eating the bread or drinking the wine. Those would be cases of
illness when nothing can be ingested through the mouth, or when
lost in the wilderness – living off nothing but wild animals and
berries. In those cases we keep the memory of Jesus in the
Lord’s Supper (1 Corinthians 11:24) – honoring our Savior “in
spirit and truth” (John 4:23). So pray the words below, all you
baptized, who love the Lord Jesus, and “hunger and thirst for
righteous,” that you may be satisfied (Matthew 5:6). This is not
a substitute for Holy Communion, but rather a devout practice
when receiving Holy Communion in times of pestilence and plague
would recklessly endanger the church
(Luther’s
Works
43:132–33).]
Let us pray:
O Lord, our God, we remember this day our savior Jesus, who “was
put to death for our trespasses and raised for our
justification” (Romans 4:24). May his Spirit “bring to
remembrance” all that he did for us, and continues to do, to
bless us (John 14:26). Fill us with the assurance that our sins
are truly forgiven for his sake, and that the promise of eternal
life will not be taken away. Amen.
Let us pray:
On this day, heavenly Father, we also pray in the name of Jesus,
that one day soon we will be able to gather together at the Altar
of our church, and so eat of the flesh of our Lord and drink of
his blood, that his very life may well up in us so that we may
abide in him forever (John 6:53–56). Amen.
The Lord’s Prayer
Benediction: The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his
face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord look upon you
with favor and give you peace. In the name of God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Closing Hymn: “My
Hope Is Built on Nothing Less” (LBW 294)
Library of Congress flag collection. Two confederate soldiers
holding a Rebel battle flag at a Confederate reunion in 1917.
First, I have to make a confession. I own a Confederate flag,
more accurately known as the battle flag of the Army of Northern
Virginia.
In my defense, I was ten years old when I received it. My
older brother saw it in a store and said I needed it because it
was part of my Southern heritage.
I didn’t know much about my Confederate
[forbears],
although I was fascinated by the Civil War. Ironically, my
sympathies were always more with the Yankees than the Rebels. I
even asked for and received a blue Union uniform for Christmas
when I was six years old. Still, I have kept the Rebel battle
flag all these years. It’s currently propped against a tall
stack of Civil War books in my library.
But now that the Rebel flag has become a hot-button issue
and Southern states are being hammered about getting rid of this
symbol of the Confederacy, I’m far more ambivalent about it.
Are the stars and bars nothing more than an alternate
symbol of the swastika? Are they symbols of slavery and racism?
To some, yes. To the white supremacist who shot and killed the
members of a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal
Church in Charleston, South Carolina, the flag is a rallying
standard for hate. For the African-American, it may well be what
the swastika is to the Jew – a symbol of oppression and genocide
and brutality.
But there is another view. A view that makes me reluctant
to burn my childhood battle flag or throw it in the trash. It
symbolizes the schizophrenic inner conflict and the inner demons
of our nation, and also the noblest, if misguided, aspiration
for autonomy and sovereignty.
This is a conflict still not resolved.
The Black Lives Matter movement reminds us that there is
still the feeling in the Black community that Black lives are
regarded in our culture as subhuman, dispensable, and marginal.
And on the other hand, there are still those who argue
that the Federal government overreaches its constitutional
limits, and exceeds the rights that are reserved to the
sovereign states.
And then there are those who have a stake in the south –
who have ancestors who fought, bled, and died for the
Confederacy, who have lived with the echoes of musket fire and
the smell of cannon smoke. For them, there is a sense that this
Rebel flag is more than a symbol of racism – although it is
that. For them, it is a symbol of valor and idealism – albeit
misplaced and in the end defeated.
So for some of us, the Rebel flag creates a sense of
ambivalence. Perhaps not unlike the brazen serpent that God told
Moses to make in the wilderness of Sinai [Numbers 21:4–9]. The
serpents had come among the Israelites and bitten them; and
Moses told the Israelites to look at the brazen serpent and
live.
But some 500 years later, the brazen serpent had become
an object of worship, an idol. As part of his reforms, King
Hezekiah took the dramatic step of destroying this relic from
the past [2 Kings 18:1–4].
This might be an argument on behalf of destroying the
flags and removing them from public places in county seats and
capitals.
Still, I haven’t destroyed my flag. I haven’t thrown it
away. Not yet, anyway. It sits in the corner with my collection
of facsimile minié balls and shelves of Civil War books.
The Rebel flag reminds me that even good, valorous,
well-intentioned people can be absolutely
wrong in their
priorities and choices. And this might be an argument for
allowing the flag to be displayed in museums, Confederate
monuments, and Confederate cemeteries.
All of this debate provides a helpful dose of humility
when I become too certain of my options and my ideologies.
Let us pray: Our
Lord, give me a sense of clear discernment so that cultural
symbols and historical artifacts don’t become idols to me. Help
me to focus my ultimate loyalties and allegiances only on you
and your Kingdom. Amen.
(The Rev. Tom Letchworth,
War Ain’t No Picnic:
30 Civil War Stories & Devotions,
2017, pp. 66–69.)
I am aware that some churches do not accept Martin Luther’s
concept of the simul
iustus et peccator [Luther’s
Works 26:232,
73:185] – the belief that a Christian after baptism is still a
sinner. Try as I might, I am not able to grasp the objection
that some Romans Catholic theologians have raised against the
treatment of the simul
in the “Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification,”
signed [in 1999] by the Lutheran World Federation and the
Pontifical Council for the Promotion of Christian Unity. If a
Christian is not still a sinner after baptism, what is the point
of confession, in which he or she asks God for forgiveness and
absolution? It seems that the objection is a mere quibbling with
words.
(Carl E. Braaten, My
Ecumenical Journey, 2018, p. 76n29.)