St. Augustine famously argued that evil is a privation of the
good. God is the Creator and what he
creates is good. All that the devil and
sin can do is corrupt what is good (Enchiridion, chapters 11-13). As a liar and murderer, it is not surprising
that the devil seeks to corrupt some of the greatest goods in God’s
creation. He takes a great good and
through sin turns it into an evil.
Man was created in God’s
image – man was created as male and female (Gen 1:26-27). In that ordering as male and female, man
reflected the unity and plurality of the Triune God. The union of male and
female in sexual intercourse bound the two as the one flesh of marriage (Gen
2:24) and produced life as the fruit of that union just as God desired (Gen
1:28).
Sexuality is intrinsically
part of God’s gift of human life. And so
it is that from the beginning the devil has used lust to pervert this good and
turn it into an evil in the lives of people.
In our own day the devil works both old and new versions of evil. The “sexual revolution” has freed sex from
marriage in ways that are the same as the first century A.D. world. And yet the
view that homosexuality is perfectly normal and acceptable would have surprised
the ancient world. The notion that two
people of the same sex can be “married,” or that a man is really a woman or
vice versa, would have struck the ancient world as absurd.
It is easy to spot how the
good of sexuality is perverted into an evil and an idol. But there are other goods – tremendous gifts
– where the same thing happens. In fact
the devil creates some of the most powerful idols in the most surprising
places.
Family is a great gift of
God. The product of marriage which was instituted in the Garden of Eden, this
is the location where people take their place in the ordering God provides as
they fulfill the vocation of husband and wife; father and mother; son and
daughter. These unique bonds of blood
join people in ways that call forth love, service and obedience.
And yet the devil takes this great good and twists it into a
great evil. He twists it into one of the
most powerful idols you will encounter.
Martin Luther writes in the Large
Catechism: “For these two belong together, faith and God. Anything on which your heart relies and
depends, I say, that is really your God” (1.3).
Whoever or whatever holds the number one place in our life is really our
god. All too often, family takes on this
role. It becomes the thing that is
valued over God and his Word.
Jesus Christ said:
Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a person's enemies will be those of his own household. Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me. And whoever does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. (Matthew 10:34-39 ESV)
This good
becomes an evil – it becomes an idol - when a parent rejects the ministry of
the pastor who seeks to speak the truth of God’s word to the son or daughter
who is living together outside of marriage.
It becomes an idol when parents of a son or daughter who is practicing
homosexuality reject a church and the teaching confessed there because the
church calls homosexuality what it is – sin.
It becomes an idol when family members reject a pastor and his ministry
because he will not permit division to be introduced to the sacrament of unity
by allowing those of a different confessional fellowship to commune.
These
actions prompted by the false idol of family take place in the local
congregation. Yet the local congregation
– the local church – is also a great good that the devil turns into a great
evil. The congregation is the place
where, as the Means of Grace are administered in the midst of people, the Church is present.
It is the place where the saving reign of God is present as faith is
created and sustained, and forgiveness is delivered.
Yet the
devil takes this great good and perverts it.
He turns it into a great idol. The congregation becomes “my congregation”
and “our congregation” in a way that distinguishes and opposes it to
others. The Gospel mission is given lip
service, but other people – especially people who are different in some way –
are not really welcome or wanted. The
local congregation becomes an idol when decisions are based on preserving the
institution. All things are sacrificed
at the altar of keeping the congregation going in the way members want. Fidelity to God’s Word and the pastor who
serves in the Office of the Holy Ministry become mere obstructions to be
ignored, or ultimately, to be eliminated. When people say, “My family has been
in this congregation for one hundred years.”; when people say, “We were here
before you and we will be here after you...,” they are often serving their idol
– the congregation.
All people
fail to fear, love and trust in God above all things as we break the First
Commandment. Yet it is important for
pastors to recognize these two evils that they uniquely encounter in their
service in the Church. The manner in which they produce hardship can
be disorienting because they are good gifts of God. The fact that they cause harm to the pastor
and others in the congregation itself can challenge faith because the
congregation is the place where new pastors don’t expect such threats. Yet upon reflection we find that it is not
surprising that the devil seeks to create evil using these good things. After all, that is what he does. And so sustained by Christ’s gifts we meet
these evils with faith and forgiveness as we pray: “Come, Lord Jesus!”
No comments:
Post a Comment