Sunday, April 7, 2013

We Thank Jesus for Redeeming Us!



Series: Growing Together in God's Grace 
Second Sunday of Easter  
April 7, 2013

Dear friends in Christ.

What would you do if you were suddenly jolted awake by the screaming of the smoke alarms ringing all through the house?  What would you do if you found yourself coughing from the acrid smoke pouring in through the door?  The billowing black clouds growing thicker and thicker forcing you to the floor to find clear air to breath!  Trying to find your way to the door, you find yourself lost in your own bedroom, your house suddenly becoming a traitor to your safety as you are unable to make the simple 10 foot trip to your children’s bedrooms!  You grow weaker and weaker as you worry about your family, you begin to lose consciousness and realize that death is only moments away for you and your children.  A tear carves a trail through the soot that has accumulated on your face as you come face to face with your own inability to do anything to save yourself or your children.  But then, just as all hope is lost you hear the sound of breaking glass.  You feel someone lift you off the floor and carry you outside into the cool, crisp, clean, breathable air.  Later, as you begin to recover, you move your head from side to side and see your entire family is there!  They are safe and sound, recovering just as you are.  How would you feel?  What thoughts would be on your mind?  How would you react when you met the person who risked his life to save your family from perishing in that terrible fire?

In so many ways, this is exactly what Jesus, our Savior, did for us!  At the beginning of Lent, way back on Ash Wednesday, we heard the screaming of the smoke alarms waking us up from our slumber.  We saw the billowing clouds of our own sins surrounding us, and very quickly it became very clear that there was nothing we could ever do to make ourselves right before our God.  We knew that eternal death was the only thing in our future, until Jesus ran to the cross and gave his life in our place; until Jesus suffered the punishment that we deserved and died the death that should have been ours.  Though we knew that eternal death was in our future, when Jesus died on that cross and rose again on the third day, he rescued us!  He ransomed us from the Devil!  He redeemed us!  He paid the price of our sins with his own blood so that we could be his own and live to serve him!  This is why we have gathered in worship today!  We have come to give thanks to the Lord Jesus who redeemed us!

On this Second Sunday of Easter, we have gathered, just as we did last week, to give thanks to the Lord Jesus who redeemed us by making us his own through the blood he shed for us!  This, in fact, is the very thing of which the Apostle Paul reminds us when he writes in Colossians, “When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, 14 having canceled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took it away, nailing it to the cross. 15 And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross." (Colossians 2:13–15, NIV84)  And again in 1 Corinthians, “Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; 20 you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body." (1 Corinthians 6:19–20, NIV84)

If you’ve ever owned a pet, then you know the bond of loyalty that forms between that animal and its master.  Regardless of what type of animal it is, dog, cat, bird, fish, etc, that animal belongs to you because you bought it.  You are the master and you are the provider.  Your pet relies on you to care for it and provide for it.  In many ways this is a picture of what Paul is telling us in the passages we just read.  We are no longer our own, we have been bought at a price.  Because Jesus redeemed us by his death and resurrection, we now belong to him, and we rely on him to provide for us, which is exactly what he does.  He provides for us by forgiving our sins, by standing by our sides and even carrying us through our troubles.  He blesses us with everything that we need for our bodies and our lives, and gives us even more than we could ever use or need.  Because Jesus redeemed us, we do belong to him in the same way that children belong to their parents.  In the same way that parents teach their children to honor their family through their words and actions, so also Paul calls on us to honor our God in all that we say and do.  Just as he writes in 2 Corinthians, “Christ’s love compels us, because we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died. 15 And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again." (2 Corinthians 5:14–15, NIV84)

How would you react if as you began to recover from that fire, you move your head from side to side and see your entire family is there!  They are safe and sound, recovering just as you are, even as the night is illuminated by the blaze that is consuming your house.  How would you feel?  What thoughts would be on your mind?  How would you react when you met the person who risked his life to save your family from perishing in that terrible fire?  What would be the first words out of your mouth?  Would you try to spring up from where you laid with tears streaming down your face profusely thanking the person who rescued you?  Wouldn’t you want to do something for that person?  Can’t you just see yourself grasping the person’s hand, not ever wanting to let go, as you hear yourself saying, “How can I ever repay you?”  Though so often rescuers humbly decline any type of compensation, how would you react if your rescuer suddenly said, “I just love strawberries, and if you every have any extra ones…”  Wouldn’t you immediately try to run off and collect every single strawberry you could to give to the person who saved your life?  Wouldn’t you take his name and address so that you could deliver strawberries to him to say thank you?  Might you even make sure to bless him with strawberries every year, on the anniversary of the fire, for the rest of your life?

As Christians, this is how we seek to live, since Jesus redeemed us through his death and resurrection.  We seek to live our lives for our Savior because we understand that our lives no longer belong to us!  They belong to the one who redeemed us and delivered us to be his children.  We seek to live our lives according to our God’s commands and our Savior’s will not because we have to, but out of love and thankfulness to the one who redeemed us, and made us his own by washing us clean with his blood.  Because Jesus has redeemed us we cry out with Isaiah, “I delight greatly in the LORD; my soul rejoices in my God. For he has clothed me with garments of salvation and arrayed me in a robe of righteousness, " (Isaiah 61:10, NIV84)   Because our Savior has redeemed us and made us his own we praise him as the Psalmist did when he said, “How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth! 104 I gain understanding from your precepts; therefore I hate every wrong path. 105 Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path." (Psalm 119:103–105, NIV84)

In recent years the “Above the Influence” campaign has challenged and encouraged young children, teens, and even adults to live above the influence of drugs.  Through a simple series of commercials of kids speaking about how they live above those influences, thousands if not millions have been inspired to do the same.  As Christians who have been redeemed by Jesus, our Savior, we seek to do the same.  We seek to live above the influence of sin by delighting in the Lord and his word.  We seek to live lives of thankfulness to the Lord by living lives that lovingly reveal the robes of righteous that the Lord has bestowed upon us.  We seek to indulge in the honey of God’s word so that we might gain wisdom and understanding from his precepts so that we, too, might turn away from every evil path.  This, in fact, is the very thing that Paul encourages us to do as he writes in his letter to the Ephesians, when he says, “You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; 23 to be made new in the attitude of your minds; 24 and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness." (Ephesians 4:22–24, NIV84)

Since we have been redeemed by Jesus, who covered us with his blood and made us his own through his death and resurrection, we seek to do this very thing for him.  In the same way that we daily change from our work clothes and put on our night clothes, so also we seek to put off our old self as we turn to the Lord in repentance, and then put on the new self, the robes of righteousness as we seek to live for him.  This is what we do out of love and thankfulness for the one who redeemed us!  For in the same way that we would be eternally grateful and thankful to the one who saved our lives by pulling us out of our burning homes, so also we are eternally grateful and thankful to the Lord Jesus, who as redeemed us by his death and resurrection.

Though we did hear the screaming alarm of Lent seeking to wake us from our slumber as the billowing clouds of our own sins surrounded us and made it very clear that there was nothing we could ever do to make ourselves right before our God.  On Easter we heard the good news of salvation that is ours through Jesus Christ our Savior.  Though we knew that eternal death was the only thing in our future, we have seen the salvation that Jesus won for us when he went to the cross and gave his life in our place, paying the punishment that we deserved and died the death that should have been ours.  Though we knew that eternal death was in our future, we also know that when Jesus died on that cross and rose again on the third day, he rescued us!  He ransomed us from the Devil!  He redeemed us!  He paid the price of our sins with his own blood so that we could be his own and live to serve him!  This is why we have gathered in worship today!  We have gathered to give our thanks and our praise to Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior; Jesus, our Savior, who has redeemed us!

Amen.

Pastor David M. Shilling