John 8:31–36
…36So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed. (Read the whole passage here)
Sermon
This week our nation has endured great tragedy.
On Monday two soldiers were run down with a car, and one of the them, Patrice Vincent died of his injuries. And then on Wednesday we all heard the news come over the radio, tv or internet. There had been a shooting on Parliament hill, a solider had been killed at the National War Memorial, and then there were shots fired inside Parliament. Security officials and police locked down Ottawa for hours as the rest of us waited to hear if there was going to be more… more gunmen, more bullets, more violence, more chaos.
In the days following, we learned just how dangerous this situation was. We learned that shots were fired just outside of the rooms where many of the members of our federal government were meeting. We learned that the gunman had passed by dozens of bystanders and had easily gained access to heart of Canadian democracy and government.
And since then, all Canadians have been shaken to some degree. And we have already seen the beginnings of over-reaction to this incident. We have heard our political leaders declare that our enemies will be punished and that our resolve to defend our freedoms will not be shaken. We have seen increased security measures across the country. We have even seen vandalism of a mosque in Cold Lake, Alberta.
As we are left to sort out what to make of these events, it is perhaps appropriate that today we gather on Reformation Sunday. Reformation Sunday is the day we set aside each year as Lutherans to remembers our 500 year history, and where we came from. We remember the catholic monk Martin Luther, whom we are named after, standing up against the injustices of the pope and the church – the selling of salvation, the abuses by church leaders, the exploration of the faithful. We remember that our faith and our beliefs are important. Important enough to die for, important enough to defend.
But on Reformation Sunday we also remember the division that change caused. We remember that people did die because of Martin Luther’s actions. We remember the between 125,000 to 250,000 people that died in the peasants war that resulted. We remember that after Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door the church in Wittenberg, Christianity was split from 2 denominations (Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox) into as many as 25,000 today. And these divisions have been caused violence, chaos, oppression, abuse, suffering and death for 500 years.
Reformation Sunday is day of two realities. Of promise, hope and freedom, contrasted by division, conflict and oppression.
Today, you might notice the red parents that adorn the chancel area. Red is one of the 5 liturgical colours, but it is only used a handful of Sundays each year. Red is the colour we use to symbolize the Holy Spirit. The changing, transforming, reforming work of the holy spirit among us. Red is used on Pentecost when we celebrate the Holy Spirit coming to the disciples, and today Red is for Reformation. However, as Canadians, we might take some liturgical and theological license and think that Red reminds us of our national colour and of the the reality of tragedy, fear and death in our midst. And lastly, Red is used to remember martyrs in the church.
And while the gunman may or may not have considered himself a martyr, we have discovered that Cpl. Nathan Cirillo is in fact the martyr this week, the one who died for principles and for a cause.
Even still, as we are left to make sense of tragedy, Canadians have discovered signs of courage and honour this week. Even as the events of Wednesday unfolded, we saw our news broadcasters deliver calm, respectful, accurate reports of the events, rather than sensationalism. And then the courage of Sergeant at Arms Kevin Vickers was revealed, recounting his dramatic actions that ended the danger and prevented more violence. Then there are the residents of Cold Lake who showed up to clean, repair and show support for the mosque that was vandalized only hours earlier. Then there was the political cartoon from Halifax that captured the emotions of a nation, as it depicted one of the bronze world war one statues on top the of the tomb of the unknown soldier stepping down to Nathan Cirilo below, where only the recognizable feet and argyle socks of his uniform could be seen. It was as if those soldiers from a hundred years ago was saying, “You belong here with us.”
And overwhelmingly, the rhetoric since Wednesday has been for Canadians to remember who we are. To remind us not to lose ourselves to grief and fear, to remember that we are a nation of peace and openness, that our values are about tolerance and freedom.
It was been a week of mixed emotions, of conflicting experiences, of hard-to-make- sense of events. And fittingly, Reformation Sunday is about that too. About the conflicting experiences of division, conflict and war that accompanied the Reformation, as well as the striving for justice, the proclamation of grace and mercy, the hope we have in God’s promises.
God’s promises like we hear Jesus utter today, promises like,
“So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed.”
And if there is anything to remember today it is that.
Even as Canada struggles with tragedy and celebrates the heroism born out of it. Even as Reformation Sunday demands that we recall the both the gospel proclamation of Martin Luther and the reformers, the bold declaration of grace through faith alone, that there is nothing we can do to earn God’s love and that this belief is important enough to stand up for contrasted with the division, conflict, violence and suffering caused by the reformation. Even as these realities both this week and 500 years old sit with us, ultimately today is not about those things. Today is about what each Sunday is about for Christians.
Today is firstly about Christ. Today is about God and God’s mighty deeds among God’s people. Today is a reminder we simply cannot save ourselves on our own.
Just as in today’s Gospel readings the Jews said that as descendants of Abraham they were slaves to no one (even though they had been slaves to the Egyptians, Babylonians, Persians and now Romans). Just as Martin Luther declared that he and we we were not slaves to law and freed by God’s grace (even though he was threatened by the Pope and others). Just as Canadians declare that we will not loose ourselves to fear, to revenge, and hate.
We are still slaves to all of those things. We are slaves to enemiy nations. We are slaves to the law. We are slaves to fear, fear of the other, fear for our safety, fear of losing power.
No matter what our leaders declare, no matter the bravery we display, the sacrifices we make, the peace we try to uphold. We simply cannot save ourselves. We simply cannot free ourselves.
We are slaves to sin, slaves to suffering, slaves to death, and there is nothing we can do about it.
And that is why today is ultimately about Christ.
Today is about the promise that God gives to slaves. To those enslaved by sin, those enslaved by suffering, to those enslaved by death. Today, is about the promise that God gives to us. The promise that despite our condition, despite our slavery, that God is showing us mercy, God is giving us grace, God is making us free. Free in the son.
And this promise of freedom comes to us first in baptism. In baptism where we drown and die to sin, and where we rise to new life in Christ.
So perhaps it is fitting today, that we are going to extra lengths to celebrate those promises of baptism, because confirmation is really about baptism, about these young people in our midst recognizing their baptism, recognizing the promises made to them in water and word, made by God.
And just perhaps it is a powerful act of defiance against violence, against oppression, against fear for us to bless and support our confirmands. Perhaps it is beautiful act of hope that not only do we welcome again these young people into the Body of Christ, but we pass on this church, this faith, these promises to them. Even while we are slaves to sin, to suffering and most of all to death, we pass on our hope for the future to these young confirmands. A future promised by God in the midst of slavery. A future given by grace and mercy, even though we are dead. A future found with New Life in Christ.
Amen.
Rev. Erik,
Several weeks ago in a Bible study one of the class questioned why Jesus all of a sudden proclaimed that he did not come to bring peace to the earth, but a sword, that family members will be divided. Matthew 10: 34- 39. She couldn’t get her head around why the Jesus we think we knew would say such a thing. Thank you for your post, it was beautiful. I had neer thought of it the way your described…the Reformation brought the sword, dividing a family and bringing violence in some ways.
Although it’s tough to hear in the wake of such violence, “…we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” God reminds us through these connections between our faith history, acts today, and your words in a blog that peace comes to those who realize that Christ only is our help and hope. In the face of such violence, I can only call on God to win the day.
Blessings!!
Rev. Lauren, Loveland, CO
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thank you for your thoughtful sermons and blogs….. .. I most definitely appreciate that you took time to reply to a question i asked several weeks ago, and thank you for your insights… You helped me a great deal.
One thing i would share from the above posting…. is that i might ‘reframe’ the word rhetoric … to dialogue.
In my mind, rhetoric is something that slips into the negative side of jargon… I like to think, that, as the hours and days moved forward this last week, Canadians were sharing conversations connecting…about that most intrinsic and deeply held virtues called patriotism… Some folks discovered over these last several days, that.. within them ..beats the heart..of a patriotic Canadian. I would like to call that a ‘dialogue’ …a sharing … from the heart.
I totally enjoy reading The Millennial Pastor. thank you for your gift.
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Reblogged this on Shades of the North and commented:
A beautiful piece of writing .. A Sermon for ..this time…& this place.. in our history. by The Millennial Pastor.
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I liked this your sermon. Nevertheless, I have two remarks.
First, by the time of the Reformation, the Church had already been split. Nestorius, falsly accused, and the Church of East (Assyrian), while orthodox in belief, was cut off the rest. Then, the non-Chalcedonian Churches, while in full communion with one another, were separated from the other communions. Therefore, by Fr Martin Luther’s time, Christendom was already split in, at least, 4 different communions of Churches.
The pre-Lenten tide (Septuagesimatide) is the more appropriate feast of the Remormation, because: Septuagesima Sunday is about sola gratia; Sexagesima about solo verbum; Quinquagesima about sola fide.
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