Sunday, October 25, 2009

Pentecost 21

People who make their living as inspirational speakers will tell you that if you want to be successful you have to be goal oriented. You have to set your sights on one thing and then devote yourself to accomplishing it. No matter what gets in your way, no matter what you have to sacrifice. Set your goal, put your mind to accomplishing it, and do whatever it takes to get it done.

Jesus takes this to a whole other level. Jesus was single focused. Jesus had his purpose, his goal in mind. He knew what he had to do and he was willing to sacrifice, to pay whatever the cost so that he could get the job done. Jesus came with the intention that he save sinners from hell. His plan for accomplishing this single minded goal was to get the job done through his own death and resurrection on the cross. Jesus would let nothing stand in his way of accomplishing this goal for you.

The Gospel writer who penned the book of Mark tells us as much in chapter 8 when he records for us that Jesus took his disciples to the side and informed them that he would be handed over to the Jewish authorities to suffer and to be killed and then on the 3rd day to rise. From then on, as you read through to the end of the Gospel, you should take note of Jesus' focus and read the remaining chapters, the things that Jesus does, the thing that Jesus says, with that in mind. Jesus has a purpose in mind, a goal that he has set. He is on his way to die. And he will stop at nothing until his task is complete.

Our text for today, is from Mark 10. Jesus is right in the middle of his trek to Jerusalem to suffer and die. His face is set, he is resolute, he is determined. He is going to complete his mission, yet even in his determination he takes time to listen to the cries of this one single blind man who cries out to him for mercy.

This Jesus who has come to accomplish his mission has come on a mission of mercy, a mission of love, and Jesus in his compassion for his creation stops, takes time from his purpose of the salvation of the entire human race so that he can save this one. A blind man, named Bartimaeus who was crying out to him to be heard. “Jesus. Son of David. Have mercy on me.”

How many times do you suppose Jesus has heard that cry? Here in our text, the voice belongs to a beggar, blind Bartimaeus. If we read the same account from the other gospels we find out that Bartimaeus had a friend with him, a second blind man. Both requested mercy. Both were healed. Mark only tells us of one. But there must have been hundreds, thousands, crowds and crowds of people who had some illness, some affliction, a disease, a disorder, a demon. They all needed mercy. How many do you suppose there were? The gospel writers only have so much paper and ink to spend. They can only tell of a few examples, but these few represent the rest. How many do you think there were?

How many have there been? From the beginning of time, from the time of Adam and Eve up till now, how many do you suppose there have been who have cried out in their suffering to God. “Lord, Have Mercy!” There are thousands, millions, beyond billions – a countless host. Perhaps your voice has been among them. “Jesus, Son of David, Have mercy on me.” I know mine has been.

And although his face was set, although he was firm and resolute in his purpose, Jesus heard the cries of the blind man. He stopped along the way. He ignored the voices of the crowds who wanted to silence the needy. He reached out to the man in mercy and he saved him.

How often is that single little word lost on us? Our text doesn't even translate the word, it simply says that Jesus made him well. Yes. But... the text literally says that Jesus saved him. In Greek it's se,swke,n from swzw “to save”. Jesus saved him. The man needed, not just healing for his blindness, these days any old ophthalmologist with the right training and the right equipment could give him that. No, this man needed something no doctor could provide. He needed to be saved. The man asked to be healed and Jesus gave him that, but not just that. Jesus saved him. For all those voices calling out to him for mercy, begging him for help with their afflictions, Jesus comes not just to take away blindness, not just to take away afflictions – he comes to save.

So often we don't even fully understand how severe our problems really are. We ask for help when we need to be saved.

The man was blind. He couldn't see, couldn't work, needed help to get around, had to beg for food. His blindness was a problem.

The same could be said of those who were (or are) crippled. They're handicapped, they're kept from living and leading the life that people do, most people who have all of their arms and legs working in good order.

The same can be said of those who have lost jobs in this economy, those who have cancer, those who suffer from allergies, those who suffer from chronic back pain, those who suffer from old age, those who suffer from abusive spouses or parents, those who suffer from all kinds of handicaps, those who suffer under the burden of caring for another, all kinds of suffering, all kinds of pain, all kinds of needs, all kinds of reason to cry out to God for mercy.

But guess what. The thing that moved you to cry out to God, the thing that moved you to pray, the thing that brought you to your knees, with nowhere else to turn... that is not even your problem. That is not thing that you need to be saved from. That is not the thing that is causing you your big problem.

You see, we so very regularly forget that our big problem is sin.

In modern warfare, when generals and commanders decide to take out a military target they go in with a bomb that is big enough to do all the necessary damage to render the target neutralized. Even though our modern weapons are equipped with laser guidance systems and can strike a target with pinpoint accuracy, there are always those things around the target that wind up receiving damage in the explosion. We cal lit “collateral damage”. Stuff that you weren't aiming at that got blown up anyways.

All those things we mentioned, the sicknesses, the injuries, the griefs, the abuse, the pain, the loss: all that stuff is “collateral damage”. Those things that cause you pain and drive you to cry out for mercy, they were not the original target, they were not the original aim, but they have been affected. Your health and wellbeing, your peace, your sanity, your prosperity, all these things crumbled to pieces when your world got blown apart by sin.

Adam and Eve, living in God's good created perfection chose the route of disobedience. The explosion of sin went off and all of the suffering in the world is its collateral damage. Sin results in suffering.

The child crying herself to sleep after the beatings from her father is collateral damage for sin.

The husband and father pouring over his monthly budget trying to figure out what else to cut so that the family can stay afloat until he can find work is collateral damage from sin.

The soldier looking on in horror as his brother in arms is pulverized by a grenade is collateral damage for sin.

The young mother weeping beside the hospital bed as her husband succumbs to cancer is collateral damage for sin.

Yes, my friends, this world is filled with suffering. It is filled with beggars, just like Bartimaeus who sit beside the road and cry out to God, “Lord, Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me.”

And Jesus hears their cries. Their cries for mercy and their cries for help.

With Bartimaeus he stopped. In the midst of fulfilling his purpose, his plan, in the midst of his single minded goal, he stopped. Even with the crowds shushing the blind man. He stopped. He stopped to hear what Bartimaeus needed. He asked. Bartimaeus answered. He wanted to see. You might include your petition, your request. Jesus granted Bartimaeus his. Bartimaeus went home with vision. He could see.

But that was nothing special. Again, any doctor could probably do the same. If all we needed was to be healed from the collateral damage then we wouldn't have much need for Jesus. We could depend on science and medicine and technology to perform all the miracles we would need. But Bartimaeus had bigger problems. Problems he wasn't even wise enough to understand. So Jesus healed that one.

Remember where Jesus was going. To Jerusalem. And not to be Jerusalem's king. Not to be a Jewish king. Jesus came to be Heaven's King. He came to be your King.

So that he might be your king, he had to die.

If sin is a bomb and suffering is its collateral damage, then the cross is nuclear holocaust. The bigger bomb of forgiveness went off when Jesus died on the cross. In that instant all of your sin was vaporized, obliterated, completely destroyed.

Jesus died on the cross to save you from your sin. All of the suffering in your life, that occupies your time and your attention and eats away at the thoughts in your mind. That is all peripheral, incidental, marginal. It is the stuff off to the side that is not even the real issue. Jesus knows that issue. He died to save you from that issue. He died to save you from sin.

Jesus came to be a man and to walk His creation as one of us. He did this so that he might die for all of us, so that he might die to do away with sin. Sin causes so much evil, so much suffering, and Jesus permits the suffering to occur. But suffering is not our biggest problem. Sin is. And sin has been destroyed.

You very well may suffer. You very well may experience grief and sadness and pain. Your life might see hard times. But don't be afraid. Those things are not the big thing. The big thing... sin... has been removed.

When Bartimaeus requested that Jesus heal him, Jesus did not just meet his request, he did not just give him sight. Jesus saved him. Jesus saved him from sin. Likewise, Jesus has saved you. Your sin has been washed away, blown apart, done away with. You are forgiven. Heaven awaits.

Amen.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Pentecost 20

Brothers and sisters in Christ.
We could all use a little rest. Could we not?
With all the busyness and hustle and bustle of life. With all the things there are to be done. With all the commitments and requirements that are attached to our lives, we could all use a little rest. We are busy people.
And we're right in the middle of it, aren't we? This is the busy season (as though there is a season that isn't busy)! We have work to be done. Farmers are out in the fields working long hours harvesting. The kids are in school, which carries lots of obligations, such as class, homework, sports schedules, fund raisers, extra curricular activities - throw them all in the mix. Work has deadlines, stress, possibilities of being laid off or downsized. Home has it's usual to-do list of fixing and cleaning and managing. There is lots to do. So much so that we could all use a little rest. I know I could. I am sure you could too.
And so into all of our busyness and stress and into all of our desire; no, our need for rest comes God's promise of our reading from the Epistle of Hebrews. “For we who have believed have entered (that very thing that we so need) REST!”
Most of the time when we think “rest” we think vacation. We think “go somewhere”. Get away. Relax. Kick back. Enjoy life. We think travel. Somewhere south. The beech. A good book. A golf course. Some warm air. Some time to do nothing.
When God presents for us what his rest entails it looks a bit different. What God has in mind for us is less about leisure. Not that leisure is bad. Vacations, time away, a trip with the family. All of these are good things. Blessings! Gifts from God, even. And while these leisurely trips are good things they are not the rest that God has to give, that God really wants to give and that you need to receive.
God's rest is time for worship.
Remember the 3rd Commandment? “Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.” Sabbath is a Hebrew word that means “rest”. It literally means “to stop”. It is rooted in the creation narrative where God did his work of creating and then on the 7 day he took his Sabbath – he rested. The 3rd Commandment is God's command that we do the same. And so the Catechism asks the question: “What does this mean?” It provides the answer. “We should fear and love God that we may not despise preaching and his Word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it.
God's rest involves going to church. Preaching. The Bible (God's Word). Hearing it. Gladly learning it. Listening. Studying, even.
How can that be rest? There is far too much brain activity, far too much work involved in all of those things for that to be rest. We all know what it means to go to church. You have to get up early on a Sunday morning, get the kids up out of bed, get everyone cleaned up, dressed up, and straightened up so that you can go and sit for an hour. Not exactly what we would call rest. Is it? What about sleeping in? What about relaxing? What about catching up on our personal to do lists? That's what we need, isn't it?
Not according to God. God's commandment, the God who made you from nothing, who brought you into this world, who is the architect of your very existence seems to think that this is exactly what you need. This is the very rest that you require. All that other rest is fine. It has its place. It is worth while every now and then if you can get it. But that is not the rest that you need, that you really need, that your very life is depending on. The rest that you need is the rest that God offers you today, here at church. Here in the preaching of His Word.
Why? Perhaps you already know. The reason we need rest is because we are sinners. Yes. We are sinners. Sinful people, living in a sinful world. We live through every day of our lives with the temptations to fulfill the desires of our sinful flesh – to be selfish, greedy, to get angry, to hate and despise, to lust, to covet, to be jealous, to disrespect, to steal. We carry the weight of this ever present burden every day of our lives.
Even when you go on vacation to get away from it all, your sinful nature follows you. You can struggle and fight with your sinful nature on a golf course or on a beech or a cruise-ship or at a theme park just as much as you can sitting at your desk, on your combine, or in your living room sofa. Sometimes even more so – leisure time just means your sinful nature doesn't have the distractions of work to keep itself from cooking up new ways to sin. (Perhaps that is why what happens in Vegas stay there!) We are sinners! The real rest that we really need is the rest that God offer here at church.
But look at how our text describes that rest. This might throw you for a real loop. It might even make you uncomfortable.
“Let us strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience. For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of sword and spirit, of joints and marrow and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. And no creature is hidden from his sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.”
That's it. I don't know about you, but that doesn't sound like rest to me. That doesn't even sound pleasant or desirable, let alone restful. It sounds worrisome, concerning, frightful even.
Being cut apart and dissected by a two edged sword. No thank you. Being naked and exposed, laid bare for all to see. I think I'll pass – there have been too many of those “what happens in Vegas” sort of experiences to want to have to relive them, to draw them all back into the open and have to think about them again. That surely does not sound like rest.
But it is exactly the kind of rest that we need.
In the movie The Shawshank Redemption Morgan Freeman's character, a seasoned prisoner in the Shawshank prison relayed the following quip to Tim Robbins. “We're all innocent in here.” Indeed psychologists tell us that murders and those who have committed violent crimes often construct different memories for themselves with different events and different details so that they don't have to remember the truth of the crime they committed. They convince themselves that this alternate memory is exactly the way things happened. It's true. And you do the very same thing every time you tell yourself “It's not my fault.” Every time you pass the blame for your sin along to somebody else, every time you defend yourself and your own innocence for some sin that you have committed, every time you deny your guilt and act like you haven't done anything wrong you have done the exact same thing. You have constructed for yourself a memory of the event that is more convenient for you, a memory that lets you off the hook.
The Word of God doesn't let you get away with that. Does it? God's Word sees through your lies. It sees beneath the layers of excuses that you have made. It unravels the tales you have spun to justify your actions and explain away your guilt. God's Word can't be so easily fooled. And your conscience knows it. Perhaps that's why people stay away from church. Perhaps that's why you have skipped from time to time. You feel guilty. You know your sin. And you haven't wanted to be reminded of it. It makes you too uncomfortable.
That's what God's Word does. No one can hide before the piercing, laser focused stare of God's Word. It opens you up, lays you naked and exposed so that you can no longer lie to yourself, so that you can no longer lie to God.
How can that be rest?
“Come to Me,” says Jesus, “all you who are weary and heavy laden...” All you who are weighed down with not just the cares of the world, but weighed down with guilt and sin. Weighed down with the failures of your life, with your misuse of your time and energy, with the faults, with the missteps, with the impulsive sins, with your scars from the many sins you have done with all those things that you have done, those things that you are trying to leave behind you, those sins that haunt you from your youth, from your past, from only yesterday, those things that are too painful to bring up and that you have tried so hard to bury so deeply but that just won't go away. “Come to me” says Jesus, “and I will give you rest.”
This rest is rest that only Jesus can give. Because once all of those sins are dragged back out into the open and we are naked and bare and exposed for all the world to see, we find ourselves in an uncomfortable spot. We find ourselves frightened and scared, we find that we deserve punishment and ridicule and hatred – not just from each other, from our spouse, our children, and so on – after all, how much can they condemn anyway? They are just as sinful as you are. Where we really need forgiveness is from God.
And the God who slices into your soul and spirit to lay bare all your sins, past and preset is the same one who himself was naked and exposed, who was laid bare for all to see and to ridicule and slander as he hung for you on the cross. Jesus was pierced, but not for his own transgressions. When he was divided and dissected there were no sins to be found. The blood that flowed from his hands and feet, from his side was pure – sinless, not deserving of the punishment he received. But he did it for you.
And this Jesus who died, who was pierced, who hung naked and exposed on the cross – he hung there in your place, for your sin so that when you come here to church, when you come here with your guilty conscience and your painful memories he speaks his word of pardon and forgiveness. I know what you did. I was there with you... yesterday. Last week, last month, last year, in your youth, in your anger, in your sin. I saw it all. I know it all. And I do not hold it against you. I paid for that sin with my own suffering and the shedding of my blood. I do not condemn you. Instead I forgive you.
“When I kept silent my bones wasted away within me” writes David in the Psalms (32) “through my groaning all day long. For day and night your hand was heavy upon me; my strength was dried up as by the heat of the summer. I acknowledged my sin to you and I did not cover my iniquity; I said, “I will confess my transgression to the Lord”, and you forgave the iniquity of my sin.”
Your God is merciful. He lays his word of law on you to convict you of your sin and then he takes that sin from you . He pays for it himself and he restores you. He restores your soul. So that you don't have to hide, so that you don't have to run, so that you can stop the internal wrestling that goes on with your heart, so that finally you can rest. And that is where our Worship comes in to the picture. It is here at church that we have come for a meeting with God. Jesus Christ himself is here with us this morning to pardon you from your sins. He is here in his word. He has commissioned me to proclaim to you pardon and peace for your sin. He has commanded that this word of forgiveness be preached and proclaimed to you so that you may have forgiveness, so that you may have rest.
Today God offer to you rest. Not leisure. Not vacation. Not time away. But Rest. From sin. From guilt, from the past that haunts you. Real rest in the confidence that comes from the forgiveness of Jesus who died for you on the cross.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Pentecost 19

Suppose you are Jesus. How would you have handled this situation?
A man runs up to you as you are on your way out of town and he wants to come with you. He is well dressed, apparently wealthy. He kneels down in front of you and tells you he wants to be a disciple. His way of asking is a bit unorthodox. “What must I do to be saved?” says the man. He wants to do something. Salvation doesn't come by doing, not by your doing anyways. So the man has some lessons to learn. How would you have handled the situation?
I would do exactly the way Jesus did? Isn't that the obvious answer?
Look at what Jesus did and do that. He was Jesus. He always did the right thing so all we have to do is what He did. Right?
But look what Jesus did. Jesus turned the man away. Ironically, he looked at him, loved him, and then made choose. Jesus and only Jesus. Not Jesus and loving myself. Not Jesus and loving my money. Jesus and only Jesus. The man chose himself and his money and he went away sad.
Is that what you would have done?
Our modern sensitivities tell us there can never be just one way. There always has to be a choice. There always has to be a middle of the road. We don't ever want to say somebody is out, that they are wrong, that there is only one way. Jesus has no problems with it. He pulls no punches. Allows no middle ground. Accepts no substitutes. It is Jesus and only Jesus. Nothing else will do.
The man was wealthy. Jesus did not have to be told that he was rich. We usually assume Jesus knew the man was rich because he was Jesus. He always knew the whole story; he could tell you what you were thinking (as in the case of the Pharisees), what you were doing before he saw you (Bartholomew), what you were going to do after he saw you (Peter)... We figure this was another one of those situations. But the man was rich. If a rich man walks comes to church, usually we can size him up pretty quickly. We know the difference. We can tell the difference between Wal-Mart and Abercrombie. Between Kia and Cadillac. Between Ford and John Deer. We are all very in touch with labels and their status. We know, and so did they. It was apparent to everyone in the crowd that this young man bending Jesus' ear was wealthy. He wore it on his back.
Not only was the man rich, he was religiously devoted. He was committed. These days we would say that He was on fire for the Lord. He committed himself to obeying the commandments. He honored his parents. He did not kill. Did not covet. Never had an affair. Never even stole – which is unusual for a business man these days. He had held up under the pressures of the busy and stressful corporate lifestyle. He was a winner at business. He was a winner at life. He was a winner at church.
Funny, isn't that usually what we are looking for? Isn't that usually what we look up to? These are the guys who write books about the right way to live. And we go out and buy them. We put them on our bookshelves, on our coffee tables. We even go to the seminar and buy the dvd. This guy did life the right way! He did it God's way! And he's rich! Maybe I can be too.
But that wasn't enough for Jesus. Jesus wouldn't accept any self made men. There was no room among the followers of Jesus for any do-it-yourself disciples. Jesus didn't come to build a winning team. Jesus didn't come to attract life's winners. Jesus came to save sinners. Jesus came to heal the sick, care for the poor, bind up the broken hearted. Jesus came, not for the healthy, not for life's winners. Jesus came for the loosers.
So the man came to Jesus, wanting to join his team, wanting to sign up and climb on board. He came with all his success and his long and impressive list of credentials. He won at life. He won at religion. He was ready to conquer the next challenge. He was ready to be one of Jesus' disciples. And his attitude was reflected in his question. “Good teacher. What must I do to be saved?” What must I do... Salvation doesn't come by doing. Not your anyway. Oh it does come by doing. It doesn't' just happen. But it is not, it is never, it could never be your doing. It is God's doing. God's doing for you!
Jesus' answer was appropriate to the question. If you want to get to heaven by doing, then there is a way. You can get to heaven by good works. (That sounds off to us. Doesn't it? We believe we are saved by grace.) But the man asks the question – what must I do to be saved. Jesus gives the answer to the question that he asked. If you want run your salvation according to doing, according to achievement, then here it is – obey the commandments. If you want a religion of good works God has given a list of things for you to accomplish. 10 things, 10 commands follow those and you will be saved. The man asked the question, Jesus gave the answer.
The man should have heard the answer and understood that the game was up, it was over before it started. He didn't have a chance. That was too tall an order. He had already broken the commandments. He was already guilty.
But he didn't. He kept going. He didn't understand the point.
“I have kept the commandments, all of them, from my youth.”
And that is what so often gets us into trouble. The man was convinced that he had already accomplished God's list of commands. He thought he was already doing all those things. He thought that because he had worked hard and disciplined himself and succeeded at everything he had ever done that salvation was going to work the exact same way.
He was wrong.
Jesus looked at him and Jesus loved him. And because Jesus loved him he showed him just how wrong he was.
“There is one thing you lack.” said Jesus. “Go and sell everything you have and give it to the poor and then come and follow me.”
The man couldn't do it. His money, all that he had worked for, the symbol of his success, give it all away? What would you do?
What is that thing that you hold on to? That you prize above all else? Is it your money? Your reputation? Your place in the community? Your intelligence? Your independence? Your will? We all have something... what's yours?
Whatever it is, lay it at the feet of Jesus. Whatever it is take it and use it not for your own glory – that is nothing but vanity. Use it instead for the service of your neighbor. Use it to show the love of Jesus to the world.
Because that is what Jesus has done for us.
Jesus has seen all of our accomplishment and he has seen the sin that lies behind each one of them. He has seen the sickness of sin that lives beneath the surface. And Jesus has come to die for that sin.
For all the accomplishments, for all the things that people have done, there is only one thing that matters, there is only one accomplishment that is worth anything and that is the one thing that Jesus accomplished on the cross. What Jesus accomplished for you.
Jesus was the only one who has truly obeyed the commandments. When the man went away sad he revealed the true condition of his heart. He couldn't give up his wealth. We all have similar idols that we insist on holding on to. Jesus did not have any idols, no other gods that he had hidden away in his heart. He had kept the commandment perfectly.
And then Jesus, the only true commandment achiever not just before men, but before God died for our lack of achievement. For our failures. For the times that we have not lived up to the mark, that we have fallen short. Jesus has taken all of our sin and he has died for it on the cross. He has even paid for that sin of pride that wants so badly to be convinced that we have actually pulled it off.
The only way to salvation is the gospel. The only way to salvation is forgiveness, not by your own merit, not by your won hard work, not by your own bootstraps, not by the purity of your own heart. It's by Jesus. Jesus on the cross for you and only Jesus. There is no other way.
Jesus sent the man away sad, poured out and dejected because he couldn't' do it. There is another way. There is Jesus. Confess yours sin to him, lay your treasures at his feet. Serve him serve your neighbor. Be forgiven.
Amen.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Pentecost 18

Dear People of St Paul,
You are a strange bunch of people.
You might think I am kidding. You might think that I am making a joke, or taking a crack at your affinity for the local sport team or just going for the shock value.
None of these are the case. You are strange! You're weird! An odd bunch of people who are completely outside of the mainstream! Your thoughts, your beliefs, your values are far and away different from the rest of the world.
And let me tell you why – as a people, as a group, as a classification you value the institution of marriage. You think it's important, worthy of protecting and preserving. You consider it to be precious, a gift even. And that makes you weird!
Yes, it is true – you're view of marriage makes you weird. But, let it be said, that is a good thing.
Consider the view of marriage in the world around us today.
Most (if not all) of your coworkers, the parents of the other kids on your ball team, the people you see in the grocery store, while they are likely to think marriage is good, they are likely to believe that it is a man made, a social institution made up by people. That it is something that has come to be a part of our society and the way we order ourselves as a people only because of a humanly devised value. A psychological construct – if you will. It's a contract, a piece of paper, a legal document that ultimately doesn't mean anything.
Some of your friends and coworkers might even believe marriage is unnecessary, outdated, old, and even useless. There is no point to it, no value to it, there is nothing positive that it has to offer. Truly modern people, evolved people (if you will) can just simply love each other sufficiently without it, some might even go so far as to say that they can love each other better without it.
But you? Not you. You see marriage – not as a piece of paper, not as a social contract, not as a means for stamping your mark of ownership on another person – you see marriage as a gift from God. You see marriage as God's blessing and you cherish this gift and desire to see it flourish for yourself and in your own family. Marriage is a part, a piece of God's own creation, established by him even before his first week of creating was done.
You after all, believe to be true our text from Genesis. In Genesis chapter 1 we get the cliff notes version of the six days of creation. But then in Chapter 2 we are taken back into the week of creation. Back to day 6. God wants us to know more. You see, the creation of the man and the woman was important, significant – the brief version offered in the first chapter is not enough so we are treated to a second look.
God made the man. He formed him from a lump of clay and breathed into him the breath of life – with every other living thing God simply spoke and it came to be, but with the man God took greater care and more deliberate intention. A lump of clay and His own Breath. Man was alive with body and soul. Of the same stuff as earth, sharing the same matter with the rest of it, but with a spiritual dimension added in that was not given to the dogs and cats and rocks and trees.
But the man was alone. There was nothing else in all creation that was like him. The creation was good but the man was alone and God said that this was “not good”. So the Lord God brought to the man all these other creatures so that he might name them, but among all the other created things in God's good world there was not one thing found that was like Adam in his uniqueness from the rest of creation. So God put him to sleep and performed a surgery on him – He took from the man a rib that was of his flesh and bone, built from the same raw materials and then God constructed a new creature: like the man but different. Of the same flesh, but unique in her construction. One who made God's creation (and therefore the man) complete. What was “not good” had all of a sudden become not just good – now, with the creation of the woman God's work was done and it was “very good”.
A man and a woman made to be “one flesh”. Two made to be one. A single unit. Two parts united together so that they make a new thing. A marriage – a one flesh union that God has joined together. “Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be united to his wife and they shall be one flesh.”
This creation; this gift of marriage is such a blessing. In spite of the dishonor that this good creation and gift of God has received, those who have received this gift can attest to its goodness. Marriage completes you. When a man and woman are joined together the two parts together become better than the individuals were apart. The two help each other.
The man loves and cares for his wife so that she feels the safety and security of his love. Rather than being restrained by being “possessed” by another she knows she belongs the way she is created to be.
And the man is better with his wife than he would otherwise be alone. He is turned outside himself to the care of another and his wife turns his attention to where God would have him to serve not just her, but his neighbor.
And then God blesses this union, this joining not just with a personal union, not just with a relationship, not just with a shared space and shared emotion – God makes this union of the flesh of a man and the flesh of a woman into a new flesh when God creates from this union a life, a new person, a child that is literally the flesh of the man and the flesh of the woman joined together into a new flesh. This is a profound and beautiful mystery that we can only begin to understand. And God has given this as a good gift and a blessing for the benefit and the joy of the man and the woman, of the husband and the wife.
Dear Christians, you see and understand this mysterious and this beautiful gift. You appreciate this gift. You cherish this gift.
And how sad it is to say that this makes you weird.
You live in a world where this beautiful gift has been tarnished and stained. You live in a world where this gift is cast aside as “outdated”, as a “relic of a bygone and primitive era”. You live in a world that wants to throw this gift away and trample it underfoot by allowing and even encouraging the gift to be despised. The bride who completes you has become your “ball and chain”. The husband who you cherish and is cherished by you has become “the idiot father of your children”.
You live in a world where the mysterious joining together of a man and a woman by God has become a “contract” that we can extend to any two people who feel like having sex with each other. Marriage is more than emotion. It is more than sex. It is more than a social or a civil arrangement. It is much more.
Out of two God makes one. That is what our text says. That was the way of the original creation. No one was separate. No one was alone. God made the man and the woman to be one with each other. And this, as God said, was “very good”.
But then look what happen. Adam sinned. His wife Eve sinned. And instead of being one, instead of being joined to each other we see them pitted against each other. Notice Adam's words. “That woman you gave me”. Notice how his view had changed – the one who he had rejoiced over because she was of his flesh and bone had all of a sudden become “that woman”. Husbands, how many of you have ever thought this way of your wife?
And then notice God's word to Eve – “your desire shall be for your husband and he shall rule over you”. Wives, how many of you have ever resented your husband? Who he is, what he has done or has not done? Why couldn't he be more romantic? Responsible? In tune with your needs?
Instead of enjoying the one flesh union, the sameness, the togetherness, the unity that God has designed and intended we so often become little more than two people occupying the same space. Our joining of one flesh as a gift from God turns into that “contract”, that “social institution”, that we hear so much about. May the Lord God forgive us for our sin.
But then consider Paul's word in Ephesians. “This is a profound mystery.” he writes. But he is talking about Christ and the Church. Christ gave himself up for us and offered himself so that he might sanctify us, cleansing us by the washing of water with the Word so that He might present us to himself in splendor without spot or wrinkle so that we might be holy and without blemish.
Those of you who are married, consider your wedding day. Husbands, the day that you took your wife to yourself and pledged yourself to her. She was beautifully dressed. When you saw her she took your breath away. You pledged yourself to her to be faithful to her and to cherish her above all else. Wives, you walked down the aisle of the church to be given to your husband so that he might be the one that you love and that you cherish and who is also loved and cherished by you.
Christ has done that for you. But let us understand. Just as a bride is dressed from head to toe elegantly and beautifully and fittingly, you too were dressed. But not in clothes that you made, that you even purchased. Christ your bridegroom clothed you. Adam and Eve were naked and unashamed because they had not sinned. But you? You were exposed. You were naked and your nakedness was the result of your unfaithfulness. When Christ came to you and found you, you were like a prostitute lying in the gutter offering yourself to all manner of uncleanness and vileness. But Christ your bridegroom came to you and found you and he loved you and he cherished you in spite of the fact that you were wholly unlovable. He chose you, against all odds that anyone would even have you. He made you to be his very own. And he washed you with water and the Word, that is to say, He baptized you and in so doing he clothed you with a garment that he himself purchased for you.
When he found you, you were filthy and dirty and diseased – covered in the muck and mire of your sin. But he washed you. He cleansed you. He healed your diseases. He purified you from your sin. You have received a spiritual makeover. It's hard to recognize that you are even the same person. You have been dressed with all the wealth of heaven, dressed in the garments of righteousness made for you by God himself. Jesus Christ is your eternal bridegroom and he has chosen you for the eternal wedding feast of heaven.
So God restored you to himself. He re-joined you to him. The rift, the rupture in the relationship has been repaired and you and God are once again in communion with each other. But the same can be said for you and your husband, or your wife. Your sin tears you apart. Like Adam and Eve in the garden, you run off and hide from God and from each other to cover your shame and to cover your nakedness. But God has covered you. He has clothed you. He has washed you clean and He has restored you. In so doing he has restored you, husbands and wives, to each other.
So be weird. Cherish your wife. Honor your husband. Rejoice in your marriage.

Amen.