Monday, April 29, 2019

“FORGIVENESS STRONGER THAN DEATH” 1 SAMUEL 24.1–20, April ‘19, Easter 2



1.                Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Heavenly Father and our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  The message from God’s Word is taken from 1 Samuel 24:1-20 (READ TEXT).  It’s entitled, “Forgiveness Stronger than Death,” Dear brothers and sisters in Christ.
2.                Christ brings nothing short of life from death. This news is too good to be stuffed into only one day. Every Sunday is a “little Easter,” and today is the second Sunday of the Easter season. Christ is risen. He is risen indeed. He has defeated death!  Like sin, death makes for a separation. No wonder that in Eden the Lord predicted death as the big result of sin! Elsewhere he tells us that death is the wages of sin (Romans 6:23). The Bible says that “sin when it is fully grown brings forth death” (James 1:15). The devil is always promoting both, sin and death. It is especially appropriate in this Easter season for us to see that the Lord’s answer to sin and death is forgiveness, forgiveness stronger than death. 
3.                By the time of our text, David had come a long way since we last saw him fighting against Goliath. He became a soldier in King Saul’s army in addition to being Saul’s personal musician. He had married one of Saul’s daughters and struck up a close friendship with Saul’s son Jonathan. But King Saul had grown jealous of David and attempted to take his life. David fled. He had sought help from Samuel. He even tried to seek refuge from Saul with the countrymen of Goliath, the Philistines. On more than one occasion there had been a “close call” in which Saul nearly succeeded in his goal of killing David. 
4.                As this text begins, the tables seemed to have turned. Saul and a force 3000 strong had pursued David and his much smaller band of men to the region of Engedi, an oasis on the western shore of the Dead Sea where there were many caves. Saul entered one of these caves to answer the “call of nature,” not realizing that David and his men were hiding in that very cave!  Saul was by himself and for the moment defenseless. Might we say he was caught with his pants down? This looked like too good an opportunity to pass up, as David’s men whispered to him. It seemed to them that the Lord was putting their enemy Saul into David’s hand, so they urged David to kill Saul outright. This one act would solve so many of their problems. The way would be opened up for David to become king.
5.                For his part, David knew that the Lord had anointed him through Samuel to be the next king. Then, too, there was no denying that Saul had been sinning by all his attempts to murder David up to and including the present moment. As David crawled toward Saul in the darkness of the cave, his temptation to do what his men wanted must have proven strong.  At the same time, though, David remembered that Saul also was the Lord’s anointed. He should not lift his hand against the Lord’s anointed. David was faced with two things God had said that seemed to conflict with one another. On one hand, David was the Lord’s anointed, yet on the other hand Saul was also the Lord’s anointed. These two facts did not quite add up.
6.                Despite the fact that David had very little time to “do the math,” he arrived at the right answer. He would not use one of these words from God to cancel out the other. Instead, David held onto both of the seemingly conflicting things and let the Lord work matters out. In this case, he was going to wait upon the Lord to work out the timing of his accession to the throne. David refused to take matters into his own hands by killing Saul.  Instead, David showed forgiveness. This forgiveness was stronger than death. Rather than stabbing Saul, David merely cut off a corner of his cloak. Then it bothered David that he had even cut off a piece of the king’s clothing.
7.                When Saul got up to leave, David followed. The king heard a voice calling from behind him. He turned. There was David, bowing. As they talked, David showed Saul the portion of cloth he had cut from the cloak. Saul realized that David had acted toward him in kindness even though he himself had been going all out to kill David. “You are more righteous than I,” Saul said (1 Samuel 24:17). The younger man could have killed the older king, but he didn’t. David had indeed shown forgiveness stronger than death.
8.                It always proves difficult to love the unlovable and forgive the unforgivable. When we relate to other people, sometimes it seems we would rather avoid the entire subject of forgiveness even when it is desperately needed. Maybe we fear that we won’t find a good enough reason to forgive other people, or that they will not be able to come up with adequate reason to forgive us. Sin separates, and sometimes we sinners despair of finding a bridge to re-establish the connection anywhere in this world.  Hard as that can seem, though, how do you connect across the enforced separation of death? All our attempts at love cannot prevent it, and none of our loving intentions can bridge it. Therefore, when loved ones die, we can end up harboring great regrets over things we let go unsaid. Now we will not be able to get these words across to the one who has died. Sin separates, and death separates with a vengeance. Vengeance, of course, is the Lord’s. Separation from him looms as the ultimate horror, and he solemnly says the soul that sins shall die.
9.                Can we really believe in a forgiveness stronger than death?  There is One who has defeated death, the crucified and risen Christ. Any lasting forgiveness stronger than death has to come from him, and it does.  Christ beat death at its own game. Yes, in our sins God’s law has us dead to rights.  But, there is help in the fact that the Man Jesus Christ has come and has assumed and borne our sin and death, which we had justly deserved, and that he now steps forth in our behalf, confronts the Law, sin, and death and says: “I am of the same flesh and blood; these are My brothers and sisters. What they did, I did; and I paid for it. Law, if you want to condemn them, condemn Me. Sin, if you want to bite and kill them, bite Me. Death, if you want to consume and devour, devour Me.” (AE 28:210)
10.             This is what Christ our Lord says. He has defeated death and all his other enemies. For they failed to accomplish what they had intended to do. For through the very event by which they expected to kill him and to win the victory, he emerged again and said to the Law, sin, and death: “Do you not know that I am your Lord and God? What right do you have to accuse and to slay your Lord? Therefore you shall do this no more; but rather I will accuse and condemn you and dispatch you so thoroughly that you will henceforth have no claim on anyone who believes in Me.” (AE 28:211).
11.             When Christ rose from the dead and showed himself alive to his disciples, he came right through the wall of their locked room and said, “Peace be with you” (John 20:19). Jesus gave them his peace, the peace that comes from his victory.  A bit later he “breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you withhold forgiveness from any, it is withheld’ ” (John 20:22–23). Here you have it: a word of forgiveness, stronger than death! This word comes from the risen Christ. It is accompanied by his Holy Spirit. This word packs all the power that raised Christ from the dead, all the power that made the world in the first place.
12.             This forgiving word brings about what it says. It gives forgiveness that endures, now and forever. It proves stronger than death, for it takes away death’s power to kill us and, behind that, the law’s power to accuse us. It bridges the separation between God and sinful people, totally from God’s side. For it brings us Christ the Mediator and his forgiveness, which is stronger even than death.  We need this forgiveness otherwise nothing looms on the horizon but death. When we look around ourselves, we see a world of sin and death. We see sin in ourselves, too, and God’s law finds that sin unfailingly. Is there an adequate basis for us to be forgiven before God? His law has us dead to rights. Unpleasant as this condemning word is, we dare not minimize it, for it is God’s.
13.             Yet God has another word for us, too, the word of forgiveness from none other than the risen Christ. “By this we shall . . . reassure our heart before him; for whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart” (1 John 3:19–20). Like David, we let the Lord work matters out. Anything we might try to add would turn into a disaster!  Jesus worked out the matter of our forgiveness and salvation in his life and death. So it was finished. Then he was raised from the dead. “What the Son had given the Father on Calvary, the Father now in the garden of the tomb gave to the world.”3
14.             When Christ rose, the treasure of his atoning work was offered to everyone in the word of forgiveness that is stronger than death. It is offered to you right now.  Christ’s forgiveness becomes the basis for us to forgive others. For my neighbor’s sin is no longer his, for me to hate him. Nor is it mine to hold against him. God has placed that sin on the shoulders of the Lamb of God, who carried it away with the rest of the sin of the world.  In confirmation class you have learned that you need God’s forgiveness within the Church all the years of your life for we daily struggle with sin all the years of our lives.
15.             That’s why confirmation is not graduation! You’ve heard me say it. Today simply begins another part of your journey, or your pilgrimage, that our Lord has set before you. For that journey, that pilgrimage, you’ll need strength. When you go on a hike, you might walk ten miles the first day, but without rest and food, the second day will bring only eight or nine miles. So it is with faith. It needs to be fed. If it’s not, it will weaken to the point of death.
16.             That strength, that endurance for the pilgrimage, is yours in the receiving of God’s gifts to you. It began at your Baptism, when he washed away your sins. That faith is strengthened as that spiritual food is poured into your ears through the spoken and sung Word proclaiming Jesus and his life and salvation; it’s yours as you hear those comforting words of his Absolution. Your sins are forgiven in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. That strength will soon be yours as our Lord pours and places into your mouth his very body and blood, given and shed for you, for the forgiveness of sin.
17.             In the text David showed his faith. He had not yet been enthroned as king. He was hardly experiencing the kingship at this point. To the contrary, he was on the run from Saul. Still, David already was the king by God’s anointing. At this point, he could participate in this reality only by faith. So also, you and I participate in the reality of Christ’s forgiveness, and everything else that it brings, by faith. In faith, we say with the apostle, “If God is for us, who can be against us? . . . It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn?” (Romans 8:31, 33–34). In the risen Lord Jesus Christ we have forgiveness stronger than death. In him, nothing can separate us from God’s love.  Now the peace of God that passes all understanding guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus until life everlasting.  Amen.


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