The third temptation of Christ, by Norma Boeckler. "Bow down and worship me, and all this will be Yours." |
Pastor Gregory L. Jackson
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/bethany-lutheran-worship
Bethany Lutheran Worship, 6 PM Phoenix Time
The Hymn # 558 All Praise 4:44
The Order of Vespers p. 41
The Hymn # 558 All Praise 4:44
The Order of Vespers p. 41
The Psalmody
The Lection The Passion History
The Sermon Hymn # 657 Beautiful Savior 4:24
The Lection The Passion History
The Sermon Hymn # 657 Beautiful Savior 4:24
The Sermon
– Access to Grace
The Prayers
The Lord’s Prayer
The Collect for Grace p. 45
The Hymn #538 Now the Shades 4:53
The Hymn #538 Now the Shades 4:53
Access to Grace
KJV Romans 5:1 Therefore
being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ:
2 By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and
rejoice in hope of the glory of God. 3 And not only so, but we glory in tribulations
also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience; 4 And patience, experience;
and experience, hope: 5 And hope maketh not ashamed; because the love of God is
shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us.
In the last 50 years, the word used most has been peace.
Many times it referred to world peace, to the point of becoming a joke in
movies. But the other emphasis has been upon inner peace. From the hippies of
the 1960s to the Indian gurus of the present, inner peace has been a goal.
This passage teaches us about inner peace, something far
more important than outward peace, since many people feel anguish and turmoil
while everything seems to be going well for them. Celebrities are good
examples. The moment they become famous and rich they start worrying about when
they will lose it.
Davy Jones just died of a heart attack. He went from fame to
obscurity to a bit of fame again. He was most famous in a group, but the group
could not operate together in peace, so peace is quite important, by any
definition.
The ultimate meaning of peace is peace with God. The Bible
uses peace in relation to forgiveness of sin and salvation.
The other dominating word in the last 50 years has been
grace. Everyone is in favor of grace, and Amazing Grace is a popular (if vague)
hymn, appropriate for almost any occasion, including the burial of a Vulcan in
a science fiction film.
Apart from the superficial use of grace, there is a real
longing. The Biblical meaning of grace is complicated, because it means so much
at the same time. Grace means God’s favor and love, but it also means a divine
favor and love that is given away free rather than earned.
In these two verses we have the entire Gospel message
summarized, but summarized so that we want to know more. That is how the Gospel
works. When God teaches us the Good News, we want to hear even more, know more,
and pursue even more knowledge about it.
When we follow Luther’s method of reading the Bible, we see
the unity of the Biblical message, because the Holy Spirit is the unity. Every
Word of the Bible comes from human authors speaking through the Holy Spirit. As
one pope said so eloquently, the Bible has a human nature and a divine nature,
like Christ. The human nature we can see in Paul’s personality. This is an
ordinary human being, with flaws and faults and sins, but the Holy Spirit
speaks through him in this apostolic letter. Because it comes from the Holy
Spirit, the harmony of the Scriptures is evident. The Bible is like Jesus in
having a divine and a human nature, yet free from error, as Jesus was free from
sin.
Paul, as a perfectionist
and follower of the Law, had no peace. He was restless and sought peace
by persecuting the Gospel.
So this opening to Romans 5, which is also the conclusion of
Romans 4, is deeply person as well as being apostolic and Spirit-inspired.
Let’s start with grace. How do we enjoy the grace, favor,
love, and forgiveness of God? That can come only through the Spirit/Word. I use
the slash to express this because one cannot be separated from the other, as
Isaiah 55:8-10 reveals (supported by many other passages).
God’s grace can only come through God’s Word, specifically
the Gospel Word – Scriptural passages of forgiveness, blessing, comfort, and
hope.
For that reason the Word is called a Means of Grace.
Sometimes an Instrument of Grace. I like the second term, because Instrument is
even more concrete.
God’s grace comes to us only through the Means of Grace,
because the Holy Spirit is bound to the Word at all times and never works apart
from the Word.
That is the origin of so much confusion and false doctrine,
separating the Holy Spirit from the Word.
The Word can be invisible in teaching and preaching, visible
in the Sacraments. Non-Lutherans get their chasubles in a bunch, saying, “Why
so many means? Isn’t one enough?”
Why so many Gospels? Isn’t one enough?
Who so many Epistles? Isn’t one enough?
Why so many Gospel Promises and blessings and comforting
passages? Why not one, good, easy to memorize passage? People are always
grabbing God by the shoulders and telling Him to do things differently, better,
their way.
Luther subordinated himself to the Word, the Word that belongs
to God alone and not to us.
Therefore, the peace that people long to have is there is
the Means of Grace. It comes to us through the forgiveness that is objectively
true because Christ died for our sins.
Romans 5:1 Therefore being
justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ:
We could say – Having been
justified by faith… That is important, because believing is forgiveness.
That is saying – We have
peace with God the moment we believe in Christ as our Savior and Redeemer.
2 By whom also we have
access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the
glory of God.
Faith in Him gives us access
to this grace, favor, love and forgiveness – so we stand upon this Truth and rejoice
in all future glory accomplished by God.
3 And not only so,
but we glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience;
The “dear holy cross” (as Luther
expresses it) is placed in the midst of this great Gospel passage.
We glory in tribulations
because they produce patience.
4 And patience, experience;
and experience, hope:
The cross, attached to the
faithful adherence to the Gospel, produces good effects in our lives.
Many do not want the cross
or to teach the cross, so the divorce the Gospel from the cross. In avoiding
the cross they also lose the Gospel.
5 And hope maketh not
ashamed; because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost
which is given unto us.
Paul was able to see the Gospel spread throughout the Roman
Empire in the midst of persecution and all the other bad experiences of Paul,
including imprisonment, which served to glorify God and serve His purpose.
This passage should bring the greatest comfort to anyone,
because Romans 5:1-5 teaches us the truth of the Gospel, the grace of forgiveness,
and the blessings of the cross.