Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Sermon for 12th Sunday after Pentecost, Sept. 4th, 2011: “The Power of Forgiveness” (Matthew 18:1-20)

“The Power of Forgiveness” (Matthew 18:1-20)
1.                  Sanctify us in the truth, O Lord, Your Word is truth.  In the name of Jesus.  Amen.  The message from God’s Word this 12th Sunday after Pentecost is taken from Matthew 18, specifically from verses 15-20, it’s entitled, “The Power of Forgiveness,” dear brothers and sisters in Christ.
2.                  Ravi Zacharias, a famous Christian preacher and defender of the faith in our day, tells a story of a woman named Edith Taylor from Waltham, MA. This is a story that was originally published in Guideposts magazine in March of 1959 about the power of forgiveness.  Edith Taylor was married to a man and started a family with him and then her husband went over to Japan.  And when her husband was over in Japan letters would come over regularly and she would correspond with him.  Edith and the children would look forward to the letters and then all the sudden the letters stopped coming.  Several weeks went by when all of the sudden she received a letter in the mail from her husband.  In the letter he told Edith that she wouldn’t believe what he was going to tell her, the news would crush her heart, but that he had fallen in love with a girl in Japan.  Edith’s husband wouldn’t be coming back home.  The heart of this woman was broken, for many days she didn’t break the news to the children.  One of the children asked if something was wrong, why daddy wasn’t writing anymore.  One of the children said, “Is daddy not coming back home.”  Edith then told them what had happened.  And then one of the little boys said, “Mommy, just because daddy doesn’t love us anymore doesn’t mean we’re not allowed to love him anymore.”  Edith said, “No I guess we can continue to love him.”  The little boy said, “Would you please tell daddy to continue to write, we want to love him and we want to continue to keep hearing from him.” 
3.                  Edith’s ex-husband did continue to write even after he married a 15 year old servant girl from Japan.  And the letters kept coming, and with every letter Edith might as well should have had a steam roller go over her heart with the pain of hearing that her divorced husband now had a new wife and children over in Japan.  Each letter was crushing her more and more, when finally a letter came telling her that her ex-husband was stricken with cancer and that he didn’t have very long to live.  In that letter he was asking Edith if she would be able to send money to support his wife and children in Japan.  Edith wrote back to her ex-husband saying that she hardly had enough money to support her own family in the United States, but that if her ex-husband would send his family over to her home she would provide for them and teach them English, help them stand on their own feet etc…  When her ex-husband’s family arrives in the United States she can hardly contain herself.  She sees the children from a betrayed love and can hardly contain it, but loved them as Christ would have loved them and raised them up.  She culminates her testimony in saying that in that dark dreary, hellish situation; I thank God for the ray of light and hope to share the love of Christ in this very dismal setting.  Jesus Christ enables you to take a disadvantage and turn it into an advantage for the glory of God.       
4.                  Wow what a story!  Edith Wharton’s story reminds us about the power that God gives to us as Christians through His Holy Spirit to forgive our neighbor.  And this power to forgive doesn’t come from our own power or might.  No, instead we must become like children in order to forgive, like Edith’s little boy who said to her, “Mommy, just because daddy doesn’t love us anymore doesn’t mean we can’t stop loving him.  Isn’t that amazing?  Out of the mouths of children and infants God’s amazing grace and wisdom can still come through to shame our sinful pride and lust for power and dominance
5.                  Recently I had the opportunity to hear Dr. Gregory Seltz, the new Lutheran Hour Speaker who had this quote to say,The church is where you learn to love those who you don’t like.”  Those words are so true aren’t they?  They remind us of Paul’s words to the Corinthians where He reminds us that, “Christ has entrusted to us the ministry of reconciliation.”  We are to reconcile the world to Christ Jesus by the preaching and teaching of the Gospel.  And yet, the power to forgive flies in the face of our sinful lusts and passions.  The world says to us don’t get mad, get even when someone sins against you, but God says to us overcome evil with good, just as we learned in our epistle lesson last week from Rom. 12.
6.                  In Matthew 18:15-20 our Lord Jesus tells us, 15“If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother. 16But if he does not listen, take one or two others along with you, that every charge may be established by the evidence of two or three witnesses. 17If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church. And if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector. 18Truly, I say to you, whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. 19Again I say to you, if two of you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my Father in heaven. 20For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them.”
7.                  Now I know what you’re probably thinking, “Pastor this word from Jesus is all fine and good, and this story about Edith Wharton is wonderful, but Pastor you just don’t know who I have to deal with on a regular basis…”  I understand what you may be trying to say here.  Some people are difficult to live with.  They are unlovable, quarrelsome, unkind and spiteful, always having a negative remark.  They’re the glass is half empty people.  You know who I’m talking about.  And these people can get on our nerves.  What can we do to live successfully with such people?  Well, our Lord gives us an answer; in fact, Jesus commands us on how we as Christians should forgive one another, just as God in Christ Jesus has forgiven us through His death on the cross.  Jesus tells us two things.  First, go and tell your neighbor what he has done against you.  Don’t hold in your feelings of anger.  Talk to him about his offending conduct—but do so in Christian love.  Be sure to pray about the efforts you’re making, and ask others to pray with you.  Be sympathetic.  Second, forgive 70 times 70, in other words, forgive unceasingly.  Overcome evil with a forgiving spirit.  Some souls are sensitive, so why dwell on the unpleasant past and yesterday’s quarrels with them?  Some people like to pick a fight, but always remember that it takes two to quarrel.  Be forgiving.
8.                  But Pastor you may say, “This person has offended me so often!”  Well then, consider this, How often have we offended God?  And yet he daily forgives you.  As God forgives you through His Son Jesus Christ’s death on the cross, shedding His blood to cover over your sins, so should we also forgive our neighbor when she sins against us.  Coming from the throne of God, where we have been forgiven we must be kind and compassionate to one another as God in Christ Jesus has forgiven us.  Because the Lord has been so gracious to us, we can’t demand an eye for an eye, can we?
9.                  Here in Matthew 18 our Savior Jesus teaches us that our lives as Christians are not lived in isolation from one another.  In fact He says, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there I am with them.”  More than that, on the 6th day when God was creating man, He said that it wasn’t good for man to be alone.  Brothers and sisters in Christ we are created for community, just as there is a community within the Godhead of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, so too we have a community in which we are called to here in the church where we are to love one another and bear each other’s burdens.
10.              So as much as we might seek to be alone on occasion, the fact remains that we live in community and daily interact with people God puts into our lives.  Therefore, human relationships are a concern for the child of God.  Because we communicate with and live among both believers and nonbelievers, our personal associations give us opportunity not only to show our Christianity but also to share our Christianity. 
11.              It’s important that this section of Matthew’s Gospel isn’t merely considered a “how to” guide to relationships with a law oriented approach regarding what we must do and not do.  Instead, it’s a vivid description of the way life works when the Gospel of our Lord Jesus is the operating principle.  Our Savior Jesus, who came to this world to be among us, not apart from us, brings us peace between God and us.  A natural result of this reconciliation is that we live in peace with one another.  Amen.     

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