Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Forgiveness

Dear Weekly Readers!

As we walk as Christians forgiveness is so important for us to receive and to give. Please enjoy this week's article sent in by Pastor Mark Matson!

May God Bless your week! 

John



Will You Forgive Her, as God Has Forgiven Her?

A TEENAGE GIRL STOOD BEFORE the congregation as her pastor made an unusual announcement and a special request. Looking at her that day, no one would have known; looking at her a few weeks later, many would have begun to suspect. She was pregnant. She was not married. What should she do now? What should her pastor do?
The End of Her Life as She Knew It. Her pastor announced to the congregation that she had confessed her sin of fornication to him and that she was now with child. He furthermore announced that she had repented of her sin. She had acknowledged her guilt. She knew that she deserved nothing—that is, nothing but condemnation. But her pastor also said more.
 
The pastor announced publicly to the congregation what he already had announced privately to her: that God had forgiven her of all her sins, including this one; that in Christ she is a new creation; that through the Spirit of adoption, she is God’s own dear child and an heir of everlasting life in His kingdom of grace. With confidence, she could look back toward her Baptism, knowing that God has washed away all her sins. With joy, she could look forward to receiving the Lord’s Supper, knowing that Christ once and for all gave His body and blood for her redemption.
Her pastor did not stop there. He had a request as well as an announcement. “Will you, as her brothers and sisters in Christ, now also forgive her? Will you receive her back into this congregation as a fellow heir of everlasting life?” The congregation replied in the affirmative.
And that was the end of the matter, but also a new beginning.

No longer did she live in fear, no longer would she wear the rags of shame. As the baby grew and she began to show, people did not whisper any of the standard inquiries: “Did you know she’s pregnant?” “Which boyfriend was it?” “Doesn’t she know any better?” “If my daughter ever....”
In place of gossip, there would be generosity. When people spoke about her it would be to help, not to humiliate. “Let’s sit next to her this Sunday.” “I’m sewing some booties for the little one’s feet.” “I wonder if she’ll need help finishing high school. Perhaps I could tutor her this summer.”
Most of all, there was grace. “I’m so glad you know you are forgiven,” people could tell her. “I know I need God’s forgiveness for my past, too. That’s really what church is all about.”

Unfortunately, the young man who got her pregnant did not attend church. He did not step inside the building. Nor was he a member of the 501(c)3 organization registered as a church with the IRS. But the sad part has nothing to do with these externals and everything to do with the real meaning of church.
“The church,” wrote the Lutheran reformers of the sixteenth century, “is the congregation of saints, in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments are rightly administered” (Augsburg Confession VII, 1). When the pastor and the young lady met privately for confession and absolution, that was church. When the congregation gathered publicly around the same Gospel message that in Christ all our sins stand forgiven, that was church. As Luther explained (Large Catechism II, 55):
Everything, therefore, in the Christian Church is ordered to the end that we shall daily obtain there nothing but the forgiveness of sin through the Word and Sacraments, to comfort and encourage our consciences as long as we live here. Thus, although we have sins, the grace of the Holy Ghost does not allow them to injure us, because we are in the Christian Church, where there is nothing but continuous, uninterrupted forgive- ness of sin, both in that God forgives us, and in that we forgive, bear with, and help each other.

Ordinarily, the mutual forgiveness of which Luther speaks can take place quietly. “Love covers all sins” (Proverbs 10:12). Sometimes, however, the situation requires a more open corrective. “For where the sin is public, the reproof also must be public, that every one may learn to guard against it” (Large Catechism I, 284). What a joy it is when public reproof is followed by public repentance and public reconciliation!
The preceding story is true. A young lady really did confess her sin before her congregation, and they really did forgive her. This happened on the basis of what Christ Himself accomplished for her and her congregation two thousand years earlier.

As in the Church, So Also in Our Homes
Because the Christian home is the Christian church in miniature, a cycle of reproof, repentance, and reconciliation regularly takes place within godly families, just as it does among the larger family of God. When a parent pauses to help two feuding children get to the root of the matter, apologize, and forgive, that parent models for them what occurs on a grander scale in the divine service when the members of a congregation confess their sins and the pastor absolves them in the name of Christ...
What a privilege parents have to herald that Gospel message in their homes, even as pastors proclaim it in their congregations. Wherever such a message is heard and believed, there the Holy Spirit grants lasting peace.
 
Submitted by Mark Matson 
MacPherson, Ryan C. “Will You Forgive Her, as God Has Forgiven Her?” The Hausvater Project,

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

God's Tabernacles


Dear Weekly Readers! 
Thank you for your prayers for our mission trip to India. We are back home and well. We hope you enjoy this article by Pastor Wayne. 
May God bless your week, 
John R. 


GOD'S TABERNACLES
There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the most High. (Psalm 46:4)
Many questions arise in our minds as we meditate on this verse--1) What is the river?  2) What are the streams?  3) What is the city of God?  4)  What is the holy place of the tabernacles of the most  High?
The water the Lord spoke about to the Prophet Ezekiel is the water of the Holy Spirit.  In Ezek 36:25-27, God said to the Prophet:  " ... will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you. 26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. 27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them."  Later Ezekiel was shown a river that flowed out of the temple that deepened and enlarged as it flowed (Ezek. 47:1-13).  This pointed forward to our Lord Jesus Christ who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, upon whom the Holy Spirit descended when baptized by John in the Jordan River as a confirmation to John that Jesus was the true Messiah who was to be made known to Israel, and who, Himself, would baptized with the Holy Spirit (Jn. 3:24-34).
All the streams and rivers of this world begin at a small rivulet and grow larger as other streams flow into the main stream.  The river of God, however, begins at the throne of God and continues to expand and enlarge the farther it  flows.  It needs no added source.  Only God can bestow upon all believers the Holy Spirit.  This was the answer to the Samaritan woman who came  to draw water from Jacob's well to whom Jesus said:  " Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst again: 14 But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life" (Jn. 4:13-14).  
Hence, every believer is one of the streams of this Holy Spirit River.  The outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples at Pentecost shows us how this River of Life expanded and began to spread to people of so many nations around the Mediterranean Sea as believers empowered by the Holy Spirit began to share the Gospel in their homelands.  These streams, or individual believers, make glad the city of God through the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22-25) in relationship to one another, and through their evangelistic work in sharing the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to others.
The city of God is the host of true believers.  This is confirmed by what the Apostle John saw when exiled on the island of Patmos when he saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, as bride adorned for her husband (Rev. 21:2).  The Church is the bride of Christ and the city of God is made glad as believers walk in love with one another and whose chief desire is to please the Lord (2 Cor. 5:9; 1 Thess. 4:1).
We are the holy place of the tabernacles of the most High as Paul writes in Romans 8:9-11: "... ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. 10 And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness. 11 But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you."  
We are the living stones who are a testimony and witness to the world of God's loving mercy and grace; having taken us out of the miry clay and set our feet upon the Rock, Christ Jesus our Lord (Psa. 40:2).  Dear brothers and sisters in the Lord, let us rejoice in the Lord, living daily for Him who was slain to Whom belongs  "power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing" now and forever! 
Pr Wayne Juntunen