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Eight Sunday in Pentecost, July 6, 2008
Pastor Brian Henderson-Trinity Lutheran Church, San Diego, CA
“Come Unto Me all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
[Matthew 11:28]
INRODUCTION: We Americans don’t like the thought of being held captive by anyone, and the historical proof of this is that 232 years ago, the Declaration of Independence was issued, dissolving the colonies' subjugation to King George III by proclaiming that all people are created equal with certain unalienable rights, including life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Today, over 2 centuries after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, we may be free from the tyranny of King George, but our nation has witnessed and is still dealing with many other kinds of tyranny and captivity.
Terrorism, war, broken families, crime, and racism; these are all signs that tyranny is still at work in this great nation of ours!
Today, it is my privilege to proclaim to you that because of what Jesus Christ has done for you, you’ve been freed from the GREATEST form of captivity and tyranny, SIN!
And today, it is my duty to proclaim to you that there is nothing within you that God would look at and determine that you deserve His passion or His gift of salvation … NOTHING… but as our savior hung on the cross, as He was suspended between heaven and earth, He willing took on your sin and exchanged it with the perfection of God!
And as He hung there, He cried out unto the Father and the whole creation, “IT IS FINISHED!”
These three Words were both your declaration of independence from God’s Law that judges you deserving of death because of your many sins, and they are your declaration of dependence upon God’s mercy.
It is God’s love that calls out to you in the midst of your many sins and says, “Come Unto Me all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
I.
With all of this being true, why do we constantly seem to be overcome by sin?
Why do our sins and the sin of others seem to rob us of the joy of Christ’s gift of salvation?
Listen to St. Paul’s words in our Epistle lesson and see if they ring true with you: “For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want to do is what I keep on doing” (vs.19) “I delight in the Law of God in my inner being, but I see another law waging war against my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members.
Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (Vs.
22-25) We’re a peculiar bunch of people, we Christians!
We hunger for God’s protection and perfection in our lives, yet it seems we constantly fall short of the mark!
We seem to constantly fall into sinful habits that non-Christians enjoy so much yet when we engage in the same activity, not only are we unable to find satisfaction in these things, but they also become a trap, even a prison that takes away our joy.
In short, …WE BECOME MISERABLE!
Why?
Because we are acting outside of Christ’s nature that was provided for us at the cross and then wrapped around us in our baptism!
The story is told of a lamb and its mother, who passed a pigpen each morning on the way to the pasture.
Watching the pigs wallow in the mud seemed like fun to the lamb.
On an especially hot day the lamb asked its mother, "May I jump the fence and wallow in the cool mud with the pigs?"
The Mother replied, "No."
And the lamb asked, "Why not?"
The mother simply stated, "Sheep do not wallow!"
Well, this didn't satisfy the lamb.
He felt his mother had no reason to refuse.
As soon as she was out of sight, the lamb ran to the pigpen and jumped the fence.
He felt the cool mud on his feet, his legs, and his stomach.
After a while he decided he had better go back to his mother, but he couldn't do it.
He was stuck!
His thick wool was weighed down with heavy, sticky mud.
His pleasure had become his prison.
He was a hostage of the mud.
He cried out and the kind farmer, his owner, rescued him.
When he was cleaned and returned to the fold, his mother said firmly: "Remember, sheep do not wallow!"
Well sin is like the mud in that story.
It looks so inviting, and appears easy to escape from whenever we wish.
But, because of God’s Law at work in our hearts, which is like the wool, we don’t find pleasure, but only pain!
What seemed like pleasure becomes our prison.
Because we sin, because we are born in sin and because we sin daily, we are held captive under the Law.
We are caught in what the prophet Zechariah in our Old Testament lesson called the waterless pit.
(Zech.
9:11) This waterless pit was a dry well that was used in biblical times as a sort of jail cell.
Once in, there was no way out accept if someone (your jail keeper) were to lower you down a ladder of some sort.
Friends, for us, our waterless pit is the Law of God that says, “Thou shalt… Thou shalt love the Lord your God with all of your heart and soul.
You must always put God and His will first in your life!
Thou shalt love your neighbor as you love yourself.
You must put the needs of your family, friends and neighbor at a level that is equal to or above your own.”
Oh what wretched people we are!
We try and try to do what the Law says we must but instead of victory we run into failure after failure.
Who will deliver us from this prison of death?
“Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!”
We hear Him now, at the mouth of the pit calling down to us, “Come unto me, you who have been laboring to free yourself from your prison of sin and guilt, and I will give you rest.”
He calls to us and says, “Here friend, here is the ladder of my grace that you will need to leave the prison of the Law.
But before you climb up to me, set your burden down and leave it there in the pit.” “Now that’s odd” we think, “I wonder what burden He’s talking about?”
Reading our minds, He replies, “I’m talking about the heavy burden on your back!
Friend, at least take it off and look inside to see what you are carrying.”
Now this is where our Savior gets personal.
We don’t want to look inside, because what’s in there is hidden for good reason—it’s embarrassing!
We might even try to down play the weight of our burden by replying, “Oh that thing?! Well that’s nothing.
I can manage climbing out of here and still carry the weight.
Don’t worry about me.”
But now Jesus is no longer at the top of your prison calling down to you, He’s right there with you.
And He takes off your burden and opens it.
Inside each burden, you will always find two very heavy things...
II.
Pride and discouragement.
If there is one word that adequately describes the average American it would be pride.
We have many reasons to be proud.
We are proud of our country, which is One nation under God.
We are proud of our brave men and women who valiantly fight and sacrifice their lives for our freedoms.
We are proud of our work ethic, which says along with the Ford Motor Co. that quality is job one.
These are all great attributes that we can and should be proud of, but there is another kind of American pride that is not so admirable.
It is the kind of pride that says, “I’ll be fine.
I can do it myself.”
Young people, your grandparents called this “lifting yourself up by your own bootstraps” and today we say that we “are an army of one.”
Pride says, “I got myself into this mess; I don’t need any help and I can get myself out of it.”
But to our pride Jesus says, “(No friend.
You must do this my way) and then I will give you rest.”
There is another burden within our sack that we must surrender to the Lord, and that is discouragement.
Discouragement is a burden because it is a sin; it is a sin because it’s a loss of faith in God’s mercy and love.
Discouragement says, “Oh Lord, I’d like to put this burden down and climb out with you, but I’m so tired.
And you know Lord, I’ve tried to come out so many times before, but I just end up right back where I started.
No, I think I’ll just rest here a while and maybe someday give this freedom thing another shot.”
Friends, discouragement and pride are the very things that Jesus is asking you to give to Him today.
But He won’t take them from you, you must give them to Him.
You must come to Him and surrender all of your burdens, and then He will give you rest.
He’s made it easy for you to trust Him by providing the very means that creates this trust; we call this trust faith.
He points you to His Word that gives you the faith to believe that each and every promise of rest and peace is for you and that it is true!
He points you to the Baptismal font where He first saved you through the water and the Word, and He says, “I was there with you then and I am with you now.
Believe that I will always be with you!”
Why He even calls you to a Holy dinner where He invites you to feast on His very body and blood, where your faith is strengthened and He ensures you that all of your sins are forgiven!
And now that you are out of the pit and the captivity of sin, He has just one more thing to say to you…
III.
“Now, take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart and you will find rest for your souls.
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