Matthew 5 1-12 All Saints 2007
All Saints Day
November 4, 2007
Matthew 5:1-12
“All Saints Day”
Introduction: We live in a world of instant gratification. We want it our way right away. Is your internet too slow? Get high-speed internet! Does it take to long to gas up your car? Pay at the pump! Is regular mail too slow? Send email. We have fast food and phones in cars, we microwave we overnight express. Everything must be done now, now, now and fast, fast, fast. The one thing we don’t have, it seems is patience. No patience and no desire for the understanding that some things take time to come, something’s must be waited for and in turn we must look forward to there coming. But on All Saints Day, this is precisely what we confess as Christians: there is an eternal city, a paradise of God, an eternity of rest and being with the Lord. But we don’t have it yet. Now we walk by faith, not by sight, confessing the eternal joys of the life to come while yet struggling in this sin filled world of death.
Rest, peace and joy…One great struggle we face as Christians in this life is that we think we should have all of these right now. We should have them with out waiting for them. When we are Christians, God should bless and reward us with a lack of problems. Christians shouldn’t get sick. Christians shouldn’t have trouble paying their bills. Christians shouldn’t have problems with their marriages or difficulties raising their children. All of the peace and joy and bliss of heaven ought to be ours immediately, instantly, and right now.
Maybe this is why so many people, that confess to be Christians, find it hard to show up in church on a regular basis? Why come to church, why work in church organizations, sharing time and talent, why give money…after all, where are the instant gratifications and blessings? Where is the value of it right now for this time and place?
What is worse, when these hardships do happen, when we turn from God, we are tempted to despair and unbelief. Through all of these things during all of these times, we don’t feel much like saints do we? Why? Because we have let go of Christ’s word and in our unbelief we have not heard what our Lord has said to us about being saints. As baptized Christians, faithful and unfaithful alike, we are the saints of the living God.
Christ’s word describes our life as saints. His word tells what "real life" is like as a Christian and at the same time comforts those who receive this word. "Blessed are the poor in spirit. Theirs is the kingdom of God. Blessed are those who mourn; they shall be comforted. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness. Blessed are those who are persecuted for my sake." All of these Beatitudes that our Lord speaks describe the life of saints in this world. Since we’re celebrating All Saints Day, let’s be very clear first of all about "saints." A saint is a holy person. Those who are in Christ through Holy Baptism , fed by the Holy Supper and hear and live the Holy Word of God, by the power of the Holy Spirit: these are the saints. You are saints. When we celebrate All Saints Day, we not only remember those people that are experiencing the rest, peace, forgiveness and joy of heaven, we also recognize that all of us are saints in God’s sight through Jesus Christ. They are saints triumphant and we are the saints militant, at war, undersiege in an embattled world where Satan still roars. To silence His voice we proclaim the gospel, the life and death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
It is not how we live that makes us saints, but how Christ lived for us, died for us and rose for us. Your Baptism into Jesus Christ makes you a saint. Your eating and drinking the flesh and blood of Christ makes you a saint. Your being absolved of your sins makes you a saint. But the saints, in this present world are poor, mourning, harassed, hungering, struggling saints. In this life, the path of sainthood--that is, of being a Christian--is one of hardship and sorrow that does not bring with it the "instant gratification" our world tries to buy and sell.
Let me explain what I mean by taking just a couple of these Beatitudes. "Blessed are the poor in spirit. Theirs is the kingdom of God." "Blessed are those who mourn; they shall be comforted." If you listen closely to the Beatitudes, you hear a description of those who are in Christ. The Beatitudes describe those who have been crushed by God’s Law over their sins and have nothing going for them except Jesus Christ and His perfect life, death and resurrection for them, and His gifts delivered to them in the Gospel and Sacraments. The saints described by Christ are poor in spirit. That means they have nothing to bring before God to show how well off they are. They have a poverty of spirit, of themselves they are empty. Yet by faith, they have it all in Jesus Christ, for "to such is the kingdom of God." They mourn over their sins. They are troubled and frightened by their lack of faith, they are grieved and sorrowful because they do not live to serve their neighbors in love. Such sin causes them to shed tears of repentance. But they are comforted. Not just dried tears, but the Comforter, the Holy Spirit comforts them by delivering to them Baptism and the Word of God and the body and blood of Jesus. In the Beatitudes, in short, Jesus describes those who are troubled by sins, frightened by death, suffering for His Name, and who have nothing in themselves and their lives to cling to; rather, these saints have only Christ and the promise of His future blessings.
All this demolishes the world’s and our own notions about what it means to be a saint. The world sees saints as those who lead some extraordinary life doing things for others. A life of near perfection and godliness. People who have a lot of faith and can talk easily about God. Saints are, in the world’s eyes, those "goody-goody" perfect people. To the world, saints are those who are pure in heart because they do good all the time. The sinful flesh of a Christian grabs hold of this notion of sainthood and applies it himself. I must be a saint because I live a good life better than others. Or, the opposite: there is no way I can ever be a saint because I am not good enough; I am too sinful. Or, another idea: If I just learn to live as Christ describes in the Beatitudes, I shall be a saint and shall have all these blessings. Let us repent of all such notions that sainthood is about us! It is about Jesus Christ and the rest, joy, forgiveness and hope that come to through His Word and the Sacraments.
After all, who is the One who is truly poor in spirit, that mourns the most over sin. Who is it that is truly meek in spirit and hungers and thirsts for righteousness? Who is it that is truly merciful and is pure in heart? Who is it that makes true peace between man and God. It is Jesus Christ. It was Jesus Christ that was ultimately persecuted for His righteousness, was insulted, persecuted and accused falsely and ultimately put to death. It is Jesus. But by faith in Jesus Christ we know that our life is in Christ and our life is Christ. As Christians, we are baptized into Christ. His life, His death, His resurrection our ours by faith. So the beatitudes describe our lives, not by virtue of what we have done, but what Jesus has done for us. Thereby, being in Christ through Baptism, you are poor in spirit. Christ is pure in heart; in Christ you are pure in heart. And so on for all of these Beatitudes. This is why He says, "Blessed are those who are persecuted for my sake." People are not attacked by the devil, world and flesh for "being good" but for having a righteousness that is not their own but Christ’s. The world cannot abide, it can’t stand those who trust in Jesus Christ instead of themselves. Believe it! If you are in Christ, then the world will hate you, the devil will target you and your sinful flesh will give you no rest. That is why we flee to the Divine Service, hear God’s Word, receive absolution for our sins, eat and drink Christ’s body and blood, and live in our Baptismal grace.
The Gospel and Sacraments in which Christ comes to us are all we have in this world. There is no guarantee of easiness, comfortableness, riches, fame, fortune, etc. No, all we have in this life is our Savior. But what else do we need? Nothing. Moreover, the promise of Christ in your Baptism is that you have a down payment, a guarantee of the blessings of the world to come. Having Christ, you do indeed have everything, but some things have not been given to you just yet. Those we confess also in the Creed: "I believe in the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting." It’s coming. But it’s not here yet. We know it is ours in Christ, through the promises of Baptism and the body and blood of Jesus. But it isn’t now. It’s not like this world which demands it instantly. The everlasting city of paradise seen by Daniel and St. John with its golden streets, its crystal clear waters, and with the Lord Himself as its light: this the saints who have gone before now enjoy and we too will someday. For now, we live in Christ, poor in spirit, mourning, persecuted, and so on. In this life, we hold forth Christ as the One who calls us saints and who goes with us as we walk by faith and not by sight. Then, in the life to come, we shall see Him as He is, for we will be like Him and we shall live forever in a paradise without fear, darkness, shame, sin, death, pain, suffering or tears. This is the joy of the saints who have gone before us. This is the hope and future of all who are called saints in Christ. Happy All Saints Day, saints! Amen.