Sunday, September 15, 2024

Sermon for the Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity - 1Kg 17:17-24

 

         Trinity 16

                                                                                                1Kg 17:17-24

                                                                                                9/15/24

 

            It was a feel good story that we heard in our Old Testament lesson last week.  Yahweh announced through the prophet Elijah to the wicked king Ahab that there would be no rain.  A drought ensued, and at first God sent Elijah to live by a brook that was east of the Jordan River.  Yahweh fed Elijah as he sent ravens who brought him bread and meat.

            However, when the brook dried up, God sent Elijah to a widow who lived in Zarephath which belonged to the region of Sidon.  Elijah must have been surprised when God told him to go there. After all, many of the problems in Israel had come from Sidon.  Jezebel was the daughter of the king of Sidon. She had married Ahab, and had brought the devotion to the false god Baal into Israel. Now, Yahweh was sending Elijah to live in Jezebel’s backyard.

            At Zarephath Elijah encountered the widow who was suffering from the drought that had come upon the land.  In fact, she was gathering some sticks with which she was going to make a fire and bake a little bread using the last of her flour and oil.  It would be the last meal for her and her son as they then faced starvation.

            Elijah did something surprising. He told the woman first to make a cake of bread for him, and then to do so for her son and herself.  He announced to her, “For thus says the LORD, the God of Israel, ‘The jar of flour shall not be spent, and the jug of oil shall not be empty, until the day that the LORD sends rain upon the earth.’”  The woman trusted the word of Yahweh spoken by Elijah.  She did as he said. And then Elijah, the woman, and her son ate for many days because the jar of flour and the jug of oil never became empty just as the word of Yahweh spoken by Elijah had promised.

            Elijah was living with the woman and her son as they were fed by the jar of flour and the jug of oil that did not run out because of God’s provision.  However, we learn in our text that things took a tragic turn.  The woman’s son became ill, and the illness was so severe that the boy died.

            While we are fully aware that death is certainly present, we also live with a sense that it can always be held off.  The advances in medicines, surgeries and procedures mean that we don’t die from things that used to be fatal. There is always the expectation – the hope – that modern medicine can do something about the problem.

            The ancient world had no such expectations.  Death was an ever present reality for which they had little understanding.  However, in the death of her son, the woman did not see a random event that was just part of life.  She knew that Elijah was a prophet of Yahweh.  He was a mysterious and powerful figure who had delivered the miracle of food in their midst.

            Yet now while Elijah was present, the woman’s son had died.  And she saw a definite connection.  She says in our text, “What have you against me, O man of God? You have come to me to bring my sin to remembrance and to cause the death of my son!”  The woman knew that she was in the presence of God’s representative.  And she believed that this divine presence had caused her sins to be remembered. 

In the widow’s words we find a perspective that we often lack.  She knows that Elijah is the representative of a holy and frightening power – a holy power that makes her keenly aware of her sins.  We are prone to lose sight of this fact – that God is the holy God who is completely other.  He is the One who determines what sin is - for sin is any thought, word or deed that violates his will for life. And this God is no doting grandpa handing out candy.  Instead, Scripture tells us that he is a consuming fire.  He brings death; he brings judgment to all who sin, because sin is always committed against him.

The woman perceived her sinfulness, and believed that the death of her son was God’s act of judgment. But Elijah then acted to show that Yahweh is the gracious God who gives life.  He told the woman to give him her son, and he took him to the upper chamber where he lodged.

            Elijah laid the boy on his bed. He cried to Yahweh, “O LORD my God, have you brought calamity even upon the widow with whom I sojourn, by killing her son?”  Then he stretched himself upon the child three times and cried to the LORD, “O LORD my God, let this child's life come into him again.”

            We learn that Yahweh listened to the voice of Elijah.  Life returned to the child and he lived. Elijah took the child and brought him down into the house and gave him to his mother. The prophet said, “See, your son lives.” Then the woman said to Elijah, “Now I know that you are a man of God, and that the word of the LORD in your mouth is truth.”  The restoration of life to her son had shown the woman that Elijah was the prophet of the true God, and that the word of Yahweh spoken by Elijah was truth.

            In our Old Testament lesson, the prophet Elijah calls upon Yahweh to raise the boy from the dead.  This miracle performed by Elijah pointed forward to what God would do in Jesus Christ.  We see this in the Gospel lesson.  There Jesus meets the funeral procession that is leaving the town of Nain.  The only son of a widow had died, and now they were going out to bury him.

            Yet when Jesus saw the mother he had compassion on her and said to her, “Do not weep.”  Then he did something shocking. He came up and touched the funeral bier on which the body was being carried and said, “Young man, I say to you, arise.”  The dead man sat up and began to speak, and Jesus gave him to his mother.

            Unlike Elijah, Jesus didn’t pray to God and ask him to raise the man.  Instead, he directly asserted his power over life and death. Luke tells us that fear seized all who saw it and they glorified God, saying, ‘A great prophet has arisen among us!’ and ‘God has visited his people!’”

            The people were right.  In reporting this, Luke wants us to know that Jesus came as the great end time prophet promised by God.  Moses had said, “The LORD your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your brothers--it is to him you shall listen.”  Jesus performs miracles just like the great prophet Elijah because he is this One promised by God.

            After our text, Elijah went on to win a great victory for Yahweh at Mt. Carmel over the prophets of Baal and Asherah. But then the threat from Queen Jezebel that she was going to kill him sent Elijah into the wilderness. Suffering from what today we would probably call depression he said to God, “It is enough; now, O LORD, take away my life, for I am no better than my fathers.”  He asked to die.  And after arriving at Mt. Horeb he spoke words of failure: “I have been very jealous for the LORD, the God of hosts. For the people of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword, and I, even I only, am left, and they seek my life, to take it away.”

            The prophets of the Old Testament suffered. The prophets were killed. Jesus Christ came as the great end time prophet who was more than just another prophet.  He was the Son of God who entered into the world as he was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the virgin Mary.  He worked great miracles such as raising the dead, healing the sick, and casting out demons. Yet Jesus’ greatest action occurred by his suffering and death on the cross.

               He came to die on the cross in order to win forgiveness for our every sin.  Paul told the Corinthians that “in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them.”  How did Jesus Christ reconcile us to God?  Paul says, “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”  Jesus took our sin and received God’s judgment against it.  God justly judged sin when Jesus Christ died in our place.

            And then, God raised Jesus from the dead.  In our Old Testament and Gospel lessons today we hear about two instances of individuals being raised from the dead.  However, the resurrection of Jesus Christ was completely different.  The two individuals raised in our Scripture lessons would one day died once again. 

            However, when Jesus Christ rose from the dead, it was not just a return to life.  Instead, his resurrection was the beginning of the resurrection of the Last Day. Jesus was raised with a body transformed so that it can never die again.  Paul told the Romans, “We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him.”  Christ has conquered death through his resurrection, and we will share in that victory when he raises us from the dead on the Last Day.

            In Christ God has visited his people, bringing forgiveness and salvation.  Yet that visitation did not come to an end with the Lord’s ascension.  Instead, God continues to visit us today.  He visits us through his Word as the Spirit of Christ who inspired that word continues to work through it.  The Spirit leads us to grow and mature in ever deeper faith as we trust and believe in Jesus Christ and what he has done for us.

            God visits us through the Sacrament of the Altar.  Jesus is the host at each celebration of the Sacrament.  His called and ordained servant in his Office of the Ministry speaks his Words of Institution, and those words do what they say as Christ gives us his true body and blood to eat and to drink.  Here he delivers the forgiveness that he won on the cross.  And here he gives his risen body and blood into our bodies in the pledge that that our bodies will be raised to be like his when he returns in glory on the Last Day.

            In our text, Elijah brings the boy restored to life to his mother and she says, “Now I know that you are a man of God, and that the word of the LORD in your mouth is truth.”  We who know Jesus Christ risen from the dead confess the same thing.  The word of the Lord given us through the prophets and apostles is truth.  It is the word in which we hear the good news of the Gospel – the free gift of forgiveness and salvation through faith in Jesus Christ.  It is also the word that now teaches us how to live as the forgiven children of God.

       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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