Sunday, October 11, 2009

Draw Near to the Lord (James 4:7-10)

Dear friends in Christ.

At one time or another during their years in grade school, children learn about magnets. They learn how magnets attract metal objects to themselves and how those metal objects can become magnetized by prolonged exposure to a magnet. But they also learn about the positive and negative attraction of magnets. For example, when you take two magnets that are both positively charged and try to force them together, they will repel each other, and the same thing happens when you try it with negatively charged magnets. But if you take one magnet that is charged positive and one that is charged negative, and bring them together, there will be a point when they almost try to leap out of your hands and snap together. In fact, if you would set them down at just the right distance apart, you could watch as the two magnets draw themselves closer and closer to each other until they finally connect. Well, in our text today, this is the point which James is trying to get across to you and me as he encourages and assures us that when we draw near to the Lord, the Lord will draw near to us. Just listen to what James it telling us in verses 7 and 8 of chapter 4: “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you,” (James 4:7-8a).

Now, when James wrote this letter less than twenty years had passed since Jesus had ascended into heaven, and yet there were many Christians who had simply forgotten what being a Christian was all about. There were some Christians who were simply going through the motions of Christianity without really letting the message of salvation affect their hearts. There were others who had stopped focusing their attention on God and the blessings he had bestowed upon them and were focusing on all the great things they could get for themselves so that they could rise in stature and power within their congregation. There were even others who were so taken with their Christian freedom that they really didn’t worry about how they lived their lives, they went out and did pretty much whatever they wanted to, figuring that Jesus’ death and resurrection was their get out of jail free card—their license to sin and do whatever they wanted to because they had been forgiven. So when James wrote these words calling on them to draw near to the Lord and submit themselves to him, these were words that hit them hard. They were words that cut them deep making them realize how they may have proudly walked around with their Christianity on their shoulders for all to see, and yet they failed to act like Christians. They were words that made them realize that by not submitting themselves to God they were not drawing near to God, and because they were not drawing near to God they were not resisting the devil, and because they were not resisting the devil, they were falling into his many traps and in many ways finding that they were actually lost in their sins.

How often don’t we find the same thing to be true in our lives? Rather than drawing near to the Lord and submitting ourselves to his will, how often doesn’t it happen that we actually distance ourselves from the Lord because we can’t stand the idea of submitting ourselves to anyone? After all, isn’t the idea of submission connected with the feeling of weakness? Doesn’t our national pride scream out that as Americans we never submit? We may make others submit to us, but we never submit? Isn’t it true that as soon as we hear even the remotest concept of submission our sinful nature rears up its ugly head and cries out, “Why do I have to submit to God? Why must I be subservient to him? Why must I be treated as his slave?”

Yet when we look at the truth of it, submitting ourselves to God and his will simply means that we are drawing ourselves closer to him so that he might draw himself closer to us. When we look at the truth of submitting ourselves to the Lord we begin to understand that placing ourselves under our caring and gracious God is not such a terrible thing, after all, it is exactly what Jesus did for each and every one of us. Even Jesus, who is God himself, submitted himself to the Lord, followed his will and saved us from our sins. And this is what the Apostle James is calling on us as Christians to do today. He is calling on us to submit ourselves to God and draw near to him by listening to his Word. For it is through his Word, which we have gathered to hear, that we draw near to the Lord and the Lord draws near to us, and it is through that Word that he calls us to repentance.

Back on April 30, 1863 President Abraham Lincoln was essentially calling on the American Nation to the very same thing when he proclaimed a National Day of Fasting, Humiliation and Prayer. For on that day he said, “We have been the recipients of the choicest bounties of heaven. We have been preserved, the many years, in peace and prosperity. We have grown in numbers, wealth and power, as no other nation has ever grown. But we have forgotten God. We have forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us; and we have vainly imagined, in the deceitfulness of our hearts that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and virtue of our own. Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to pray to God that made us. It behooves us, then to humble ourselves before the offended Power, to confess our national sins, and to pray for clemency and forgiveness.[1]

Well, in the same way that our 16th president called on a nation to draw near to the Lord and repent of her sins, so also James is calling on each and every one of us to do the very same thing. James writes in verse 7-10 of chapter 4: “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you, wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up.” (James 4:8a-10).

Though words like this can be difficult to hear, as we draw near to the Lord we begin to realize the extent of the sins that have piled up in our hearts like the leaves piling up on our front lawns. When we draw near to the Lord and hear his word proclaimed to us, we are reminded of the perfection we have failed to achieve. When we meditate on the commandments of our God we are reminded that no matter how hard we’ve tried to honor him above all things, we have not succeeded. No matter how hard we’ve tried to love our neighbor as ourselves, we have failed. No matter how hard we’ve tried to honor our parents, to keep our hearts pure from evil, keep from lusting, coveting, and hating, we have simply not been able to do it. For we know how we have sinned against our God with the words we have spoken, the things we have done, the thoughts that have echoed through our minds and we are laid bare and all our many sins are exposed before the Lord!

Yet, even as we draw near to the Lord and are condemned by his word, it is through that same word that we are moved to repent. It is through that same word that we are enabled to confess our many sins and iniquities to the Lord, and it is through that same word that we draw near to the Lord our God who covers over our many sins with the blanket of our Savior’s forgiveness. For it is through that message of Law and Gospel that we are convicted of our sins, comforted by our Savior, assured of his forgiveness and drawn closer to our God through repentance. It is through the message of the gospel that we learn about God’s Son, who threw himself in front of the bullet of sin so that it wouldn’t take us to hell with it. It is only in the gospel that we learn how Jesus ran into the street to push us out of the path of the Mac Truck of death, which was speeding toward us, and was killed in our place. It is only in the gospel where we learn about Jesus who gave us the life saving transfusion of his blood, which cleanses us from our sins, makes us members of his family, and gives us the gift of eternal life. This is why James calls on us to draw near to the Lord in repentance so that through his forgiveness he might draw himself closer to us and move us serve him with gratitude as we seek to follow his will for our lives.

It is gratitude that prompted an old man to visit an old broken pier on the eastern seacoast of Florida. Every Friday night, until his death in 1973, he would return with a large bucket of shrimp. The sea gulls would flock to this old man, and he would feed them from his bucket. Many years before, in October, 1942, Captain Eddie Rickenbacker was on a mission in a B-17 to deliver an important message to General Douglas MacArthur in New Guinea. But somewhere over the South Pacific the Flying Fortress became lost beyond the reach of radio. Fuel ran dangerously low, so the men ditched their plane in the ocean...For nearly a month Captain Eddie and his companions would fight the water, and the weather, and the scorching sun, and even starvation. Eight days out, their rations were long gone or destroyed by the salt water. They knew it would take a miracle to sustain them, and a miracle occurred. In Captain Eddie's own words, "Something landed on my head. I knew that it was a sea gull. I don't know how I knew, I just knew. The gull meant food...if I could catch it." Captain Eddie caught the gull. Its flesh was eaten. Its intestines were used for bait to catch fish. The survivors were sustained and their hopes renewed because a lone sea gull, uncharacteristically hundreds of miles from land, offered itself as a sacrifice. Captain Eddie made it, and he never forgot, because every Friday evening, about sunset...on a lonely stretch along the eastern Florida seacoast...you could see an old man walking...His bucket filled with shrimp was to feed the gulls...to remember that one which, on a day long past, gave itself without a struggle...like manna in the wilderness.[2]

As Christians who have drawn near to the Lord who has forgiven their every sin, we now seek to live lives of gratitude and thanks like Captain Eddie. But unlike his life of feeding gulls, we seek to live our lives in service to the Lord. We seek to follow his law for our lives, not because we have to, but because Jesus fulfilled every demand of that law for us. We seek to follow his law for our lives in order that we might say thank you to the one who gave us the life giving transfusion of his blood. We seek to follow the Law of our God so that by our lives we might please him and thank him for the salvation he bestowed upon us. We seek to follow his law so that as we live our lives in service to him, we might continually draw near to him in the same way that oppositely charged magnets will draw themselves to each other.

For in the same way that grade school children learn about magnets and how they can attract and draw other magnets to themselves, so also today we have learned why it is so important for us to draw near to the Lord our God. So let us do just that, as we continue on in our lives. Let us draw near to the Lord in repentance submission and thanksgiving, so that the Lord our God may continue to draw near to us.

Amen.

Pastor David M. Shilling
Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church -Le Sueur, MN


[1] http://www.sermonillustrations.com/a-z/r/repentance.htm (Accessed Oct 8, 2009)

[2] Paul Aurandt, "The Old Man and the Gulls", Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story, 1977, quoted in Heaven Bound Living, Knofel Stanton, Standard, 1989, p. 79-80. From http://www.sermonillustrations.com/a-z/t/thanksgiving.htm (Accessed October 10, 2009) Modified