Reformation
Jn
8:31-36
10/25/20
In the first verse of our text for the Festival of the Reformation we hear: “So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed in him, ‘If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.’” The reason that there was a Reformation was because, sadly, as the centuries went by the Church didn’t abide in Christ’s word.
While the story of this deviation
may be long and complex, the reasons for it are really very simple. We can
illustrate it by two verses from the Gospel of John. First, Jesus says in John chapter 3, “That which is born of the flesh is flesh,
and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” Our
Lord revealed that sinful fallen nature gives birth to sinful fallen nature.
Only the Spirit of God can give spiritual life.
People must be born again of water and the Spirit.
And the second verse is from chapter
six where Jesus says, “No one can come to me unless the Father
who sent me draws him.” Jesus
expresses the same truth in a different way.
Because we are conceived and born as fallen sinful people – as flesh –
we have no desire or ability to make a move toward God. Instead, only God can call us to faith
through the work of his Spirit.
This means
that as we are conceived and born into this world, our human spiritual
abilities amount to nothing. Actually, they are worse than nothing because as
flesh – as sinful, fallen nature – we are opposed to God. Now this is
what Scripture reveals about man. But you can understand why people really
don’t want to hear it. Who wants to be
told that they have nothing to offer exact opposition to God?
We are,
after all, people who are hardwired to understand the Law. That’s what St.Paul said when he told the
Romans, “For
when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do what the law
requires, they are a law to themselves, even though they do not have the
law. They show that the work of the law is written on their hearts,
while their conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts
accuse or even excuse them
on
that day when, according to my gospel, God judges the secrets of
men by Christ Jesus.”
The work of the law is written on our
hearts. We are created with an understanding of how the law works. The law says you must do something to get
something. There is no such thing as a free lunch. This is how life works, and so by nature,
people want to believe that this is how their relationship with God works. They
want to believe that they have a role to play, because then they also get some
credit for being saved.
So over the centuries the idea arose
that man has not lost all spiritual abilities.
Instead we have been “wounded.”
With God’s grace to heal us, we can get back in the game and have a role
to play. Now as these ideas developed in
the Western Church, no one was ever going to deny that the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ was the reason we are forgiven. That is so biblically obvious that it is
basically impossible to mess that part up.
However, the Church did not remain
in Christ’s Word – in Scripture, the Word of God. And so she began making her own distinctions
that were all aimed at putting us back into the game – at giving us a role to
play. The theologians in the Church said
that Christ’s death and resurrection forgave the guilt of sin. It forgave this. However, by sinning a person
had offended God’s honor. Therefore the Christian still owed God something –
there was a penalty to pay.
This penalty was called penance. A
Christian had to do things in order to pay off the penalty. Over time a whole series of practices
developed – saying the Lord’s prayer multiple times; going on pilgrimages;
paying for Masses to be said for oneself or another. But the problem was that
the penalty far outpaced the ability of the individual to pay it off by what he
or she did during this life.
And so the teaching about purgatory
came into play. If you were a baptized
Christian receiving the Sacraments of the Church and doing penance, you were on
your way to salvation. But at death, any
penalty that was still owed to God had first to be dealt with by time in
purgatory. This was described as a fiery
ordeal of purification. This was not a pleasant experience. It was
something you wanted to avoid – or at least shorten the time there – in any way
possible. The problem was that the system was set up in a way such that people
racked up thousands and thousands of years in purgatory.
Now if you were really serious about
your salvation, you did what Martin Luther did.
You entered into “religious life” – you became a monk or a nun. This was basically a life of penance. Another option available was to buy an
indulgence. This was still connected to some action of penance but by buying an
indulgence you could get a much larger amount of penalty – of time in
purgatory – removed.
At the beginning of the sixteenth
century, this is how Christianity in western Europe worked. The life of the
Christian revolved around doing enough penance to escape purgatory and thereby
have true salvation with God. Martin
Luther was deeply serious about his eternal welfare. He through himself into doing
this theological system that the Church had created. But he found that it provided no peace.
Because of what Scripture actually
teaches, this was inevitable. Jesus
says in our text this morning, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my
disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set
you free.” The Lord Jesus pointed to
himself as the source of truth and freedom.
But when those who had believed in
him heard this they
answered, “We are offspring of Abraham and have never been enslaved to
anyone. How is it that you say, ‘You will become free’?” Now the statement itself was absurd. After all the Israel had been conquered and
ruled by the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Persians, the Greeks, the
Seleucids and the Romans. In fact
between 587 BC and Jesus’ day, the Jews had only ruled themselves for about one
hundred years.
However, Jesus was speaking about a
far deeper spiritual truth. Jesus answered them and said, “Truly, truly, I say to
you, everyone who commits sin is a slave to sin.” As people who are conceived and born as
fallen and sinful, sinning comes naturally.
Even after we have been born again of water and the Spirit in Holy
Baptism, there is still the old Adam present that seeks to draw us back into
sin and causes us to commit sin in thought, word and deed. If you are going to base things on doing
– on the Law – then the end result will always be enslavement to sin.
This is what Martin Luther
discovered. Our life is one ongoing struggle against sin in which we often
fail. In fact we sin in ways that we don’t even recognize. As soon as you link your salvation to any
aspect of doing, the question will always arise: “How do I know that I have
done enough?”
Martin Luther was a spiritually
troubled, but intellectually gifted Augustinian monk. He was sent to do advanced study in Scripture
and theology, eventually receiving a Doctor of Theology. He was assigned to teach on Scripture at the
University of Wittenberg. In the course
of those studies he did abide in Jesus’ word.
The more he studied Scripture, the more he realized that our doing has no
part in salvation. Instead, he
recognized that we are saved on account of Christ alone – Jesus’ death as the sacrifice
for our sins and his resurrection by which he defeated death. We are saved by grace alone – God’s
undeserved loving favor shown towards us in his Son Jesus. He learned that we are saved by faith alone –
faith in Jesus Christ our crucified and risen Lord.
In our text Jesus says, “The slave does not
remain in the house forever; the son remains forever. So if the Son
sets you free, you will be free indeed.”
Only the Son of God can free us from sin. John the Baptist saw Jesus approaching and
said, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” God the Father sent the Son into world as the
Word became flesh and dwelt among us.
Jesus Christ came to be the sacrifice that atoned for sin – that removed
the sin that cut us off from God and put us under his judgment. In his first
epistle the apostle John wrote, “In
this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and
sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”
It was God’s unmerited and undeserved love that prompted
him to do this. And now this forgiveness
and salvation is received by faith in Jesus Christ. Our Lord said, “For
this is the will of my Father, that everyone who looks on the Son
and believes in him should have eternal life, and I will raise him up
on the last day.”
The Reformation break through was
based on Scripture alone. It occurred as
Luther abided in Christ’s word. It was
the rejection of every attempt by fallen man to bring the law back in as a
means by which people receive forgiveness.
It was a rejection of all theology that uses human reason to give us a
role to play in receiving salvation.
Christ alone, grace alone and faith alone humbles man, even as it gives
assurance of forgiveness and salvation because this is God’s work from
beginning to end in Christ. And because it is God’s work it is certain
and sure.
That’s about where our Reformation
sermons often end. But that’s not where Jesus or the Scriptures stop. All is
based on God’s love and forgiveness in Christ by which we receive salvation
through faith. Freed from trying to do things to be saved, this faith now acts
in love serving the neighbor. Jesus said,
“A new commandment I give to you, that you love one
another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.” John
went on to say in his first epistle, “Beloved, if God so loved us,
we also ought to love one another.”
Because
this is what Scripture says, this is what Martin Luther also said. He wrote in a brief work entitled, “What
Should Be Sought and Expected in the Gospels” that, “The main point and basis
of the Gospel is that before you grasp Christ as an example, you must first
receive and apprehend him as a gift and present given to you by God to be your
own.” But then he went on to say, “When
you now have Christ in that way as the basis and chief blessing of your
salvation, then the second part follows, namely that you take him as an example
and devote yourself to serving your neighbor, just as you see that he devoted
himself to you. Then faith and love are
both active, God’s commandment is fulfilled, and the person is cheerful and
fearless to do and suffer anything.”
As we
celebrate the Festival of the Reformation, we give thanks to God that he used
his servant Martin Luther to bring the pure Gospel back into the Church. On the basis of Scripture alone, Luther
directed believers to Christ alone, by grace alone and through faith alone.
Freed from thinking that we need to do things in order to be forgiven and saved,
he showed that our faith is now free to act in love toward our neighbor just as
Jesus Christ loved us.
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