1. Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Heavenly Father, and our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit, who by grace grants us wisdom to receive the strength and structure of the Ten Commandments as foundational to our Christian faith. Our message from God’s Word today, as we begin our Summer Catechism Sermon Series, “Perspectives on the Cross” is taken from Matthew 5:17-20. It’s entitled, “Cross Bones-The Ten Commandments,” dear brothers and sisters in Christ.
2. The Six Chief Parts of the Christian Faith are well known among us Lutherans. The sainted Martin Luther in the Small Catechism identified the Ten Commandments, the Apostles’ Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, Baptism, the Office of the Keys, and the Lord’s Supper as the six teachings of Scripture that all of us ought to know well. For the next seven weeks we’ll seek to provide a fresh look at the Small Catechism, plus one more sermon that shows further how they fit into the daily walk of the Christian life. What binds them all together is that they all grow from what Jesus did for us on the cross.
3. The first of the Six Chief Parts is the Ten Commandments. In Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5, we find recorded the 10 Commandments that the Lord delivered to Moses to be presented and proclaimed to the children of Israel. These were not mere suggestions but rather a list of actions to life stations, issues, and activities that would be pleasing to God our Father. Consider this comparison: Viewed through the cross of Christ, the ten commandments are like the skeletal structure of the Christian faith: cross bones.
4. There are three main types of skeletal structures in living things: hydrostatic skeletons, which use fluid-filled compartments for support (such as in earthworms); exoskeletons, which are hard outer coverings that protect the body (such as in crabs and insects); and endoskeletons, which are internal bones that support the body, protect organs, and enable movement. Humans have an endoskeleton.
5. Today we consider how the Ten Commandments may be viewed through the cross as an endoskeleton that provides the foundational structure for Christian faith and life. These Commandments are the structure—the “cross bones,” upon which we followers of the Lord Jesus Christ, are empowered to live, move, and have our being. Our activities are discerned to be in keeping with the Father’s will if they align with the skeleton, the Ten Commandments. Cross bones, as in a skull and crossbones, we know used to strike terror in the hearts of sailors. God’s Law, the Ten Commandments, can—and should—strike terror in hearts as well, because it also threatens death. But seen in our comparison as the skeletal structure of the Christian faith, the Commandments also have a purpose we can appreciate deeply. “What does this mean?” the catechism asks.
6. By studying the Ten Commandments, we come to understand that without the structure they give us, we are like blobs without a definite shape, form, or guiding principle to direct our behavior. That is what sin does in our lives. It destroys the structure and form of our discipleship, and after a while, our behavior is totally indistinguishable from the actions of the “nations” and people around us. We are to be salt and light, with a definite form so that we provide flavor and light to the world around us. The Ten Commandments supply our form and substance.
7. A simple example is when we are cut off in traffic. Without some structure, some cross bones to help determine our response, we are as likely to curse, swear, and seek retribution as we are to pray, praise, and give thanks that the offending driver didn’t cause a collision. When our spouse or a friend offends us, if we have no form or structure to guide our response, we may lash out in retribution as opposed to seeking forgiveness if we were wrong or offering forgiveness when we are offended. Without some skeletal structure, we are intolerable when we believe someone has more than we do and has come to this increase using some dishonest means. We look at what they have and think, “That should be me in that house”; “We should have that swimming pool.” We may think they have more members in their church than we do and we deserve those members because our doctrine is so much better. This is all sin, and without some structure, some cross bones holding us, we don’t feel the pain when things break and we need the cast of grace to hold our structure in place while the healing occurs.
8. When we view the Ten Commandments through the cross, we understand how necessary the suffering and death of Jesus was to save us from our sins, faults, and failures. We can’t perfectly keep the Ten Commandments, and forgiveness is essential to set us free to serve even in the midst of our failures. There are those who say that the Law, the Commandments, are in the Old Testament and that they really do not relate to humankind in this new, enlightened era in which everyone gets to do whatever is right for themselves. Jesus reminds us that the Commandments continue to be the heart of the Father for our lives, as he encouraged believers in Matthew 5: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished. Therefore whoever relaxes one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” (Mt 5:17–20)
9. Our need for this structure is so extreme that Jesus must come to fulfill that which we lost the capacity to do in the Garden as a result of the sin of our first parents. The Law, the Commandments, the structure is not going away. God’s heart and mind are not changing and shifting. He wants people to be consecrated, holy, and set aside for his purposes. So the Father sends us Jesus whose righteousness will surpass that of the scribes and Pharisees, and through his suffering, death, and resurrection, we have access to that righteousness and restoration of the kingdom of heaven.
10. We know the Ten Commandments with their “Thou shalt nots,” and we understand them to be the basis for our life and behavior that is pleasing to our Father. We know that in ourselves it is impossible to perform these Commandments, and we need someone to come and save us from our failure to keep them, which is sin and deserves eternal punishment in hell for breaking them. The One who comes to rescue us must be perfect in keeping the Law—must never, miss the mark or transgress the Father’s boundaries, the skeletal structure the Commandments set.
11. We need someone to come who is able to step in on our behalf and without fault or failure do for us that which we can’t do for ourselves. Jesus comes for this purpose. He doesn’t come to condemn us for our failure but to supply what we lack—holiness and total devotion to the Father in all his Commandments and expectations. That means that Jesus must take our failure, our sin, upon himself and boldly go up the way of sorrows to the cross of Calvary. He must suffer, bleed, and die to save us from sin, hell, and death. But even in death, his cross bones could not be broken (Jn 19:36). Neither could they stay in the grave and see corruption. Those bones must live again, be resurrected and restored, so that by faith we receive his life and resurrection, which delivers the grace of salvation and resets our broken, sinful life, restoring our relationship with the Father.
12. It’s at this point that another classic catechism question posed by Dr. Luther helps bring into focus the impact of these Commandments on everyday life, which is “How is this done?” The answer is best summed up in the command found throughout Deuteronomy: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets” (Mt 22:37–40).
13. The Ten Commandments are more than a list of “Thou shalt nots.” Through Christ’s grace, they become the framework for a life of faith, guiding us to love God and serve our neighbors. As Christians, we are called to be “little Christs,” reflecting God’s mercy and living according to His will. The Commandments are the foundational “cross bones” that support the Christian life, while Jesus’ death and resurrection provide forgiveness for our failures and strength to rise again and continue serving Him. Through faith in Christ, our lives become a witness to God’s grace, forgiveness, and love in the world. Amen. Now the peace of God that passes all understanding, guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus, until life everlasting. Amen.