Jesu Juva
St. Matthew 10:34-42
June 28, 2020
Proper 8A
Dear saints of Our Savior~
I love my
wife. I love my son. I love my daughter. I love my mom and my step-dad. I love my sisters and my sisters-in-law and
my brothers-in-law, nieces and nephews.
I love them all—my family. But
I’m not expressing anything unusual here.
I mean, you love your family too, don’t you? Love for family is as normal as fireworks on
the fourth of July. It’s God who gives
us our family. Family is God’s gift to
you; and you are God’s gift to your
family.
Today Jesus
puts the focus on the family. Family is
the foundation of human life. Our
families teach us. Our families protect
us. Family is the sacred space where
children are conceived and raised. The
second table of the Law begins with God’s gift of family: Honor
your father and your mother. Luther
goes so far as to write in his Large
Catechism that “God has exalted the estate of parents above all others;
indeed, He has appointed [parents] to be His representatives on earth.”
Perhaps this
is why Jesus’ words in today’s Holy Gospel sound so outrageous. Today Jesus describes our family members as enemies!
“Do not think I have come to bring peace on earth,” Jesus said. “I have not come to bring peace, but a sword
. . . 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.” There’s a
radical statement for you. The Christian
church teaches the beauty and value of family.
But the church’s Founder—He says, “The members of your own family—well, they
just might be your enemies.”
And that
statement might just be hyperbole. Jesus
did that sometimes—exaggerated to make an important point—made an extreme
statement so that He could highlight an important truth. It’s like the time when Jesus said, “If your
hand causes you to sin, cut it off.”
That’s hyperbole. Jesus isn’t
advocating self-mutilation; but He is
saying that it’s better to go through life one-handed than to spend eternity in
hell.
There’s at
least a little hyperbole in today’s focus on the family. After all, Jesus certainly did not come with
the express purpose of turning family
members against one another. Jesus came
to save His people from their sins.
Jesus came to seek and save the lost.
Jesus came to give us life that lasts forever. But sometimes the result of Jesus’ work in our lives—the net effect—can be conflict in the family. Sometimes the new life that Jesus gives is in direct conflict with the family life we’ve all come to know. And division sometimes results. This is why Jesus went on to clarify: “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.”
Peace among
family members is a good thing. In fact,
Jesus desires that there be peace and harmony in every family. But that peace can never be achieved by
turning away from Jesus and His Word.
But too often that’s the kind of peace we aim for. We aim merely to “keep the peace” among
family members. And we do it by setting
aside Jesus and His will for our family members. But this kind of peace is really no peace at
all. It’s a declaration of war against
God. It’s a sham peace that puts a shiny
veneer over the sins of the family. Let
me give you some examples . . . .
Peace in the
family is just a sham when we see family members headed for divorce, but we
don’t do a thing to bring help and healing to that marriage because that’s none
of our business (and we have to keep the peace). Peace in the family is just a sham when parents
don’t help their children make God-pleasing choices when it comes to
relationships and movies and music—when parents refuse to say “no” because they
want to avoid conflict and “keep the peace” and be a friend instead of a
parent. Peace in the family is just a
sham when grandpa (a widower) decides to move in together with his new lady
friend without getting married—and no one says a thing in order to keep “peace”
in the family. Peace in the family is a
sham when the use of porn is tolerated in the family—because confronting the
sin might lead to conflict (and we have to keep the peace at all costs).
Beloved in the
Lord, this kind of peace isn’t just a sham; it’s a shame. And it can
be a damning shame. When we fear
confronting a family member more than we fear Almighty God—when our desire to
avoid conflict is greater than our desire to speak up for the well-being of a
family member—when we settle for being peace-keepers instead of being peace-makers—we
are sinning. Peace-makers also have to
be risk-takers. Making the kind of peace
that pleases God necessarily involves risk—risking conflict, risking hard
feelings, and risking rejection. But by refusing
the risk—by refusing to speak the truth in love we are sinning against our
family. We are sinning against God who
is the Giver of families. It’s a
sham. It’s a shame. It’s a refusal to take up our cross and
follow Jesus.
Nowhere do we
need Jesus more than when it comes to our own flesh and blood. And this is precisely why Jesus Himself took
our human flesh and blood. This is why
He joined our human family as the Son of Mary.
When you keep quiet to avoid conflict and confrontation, remember Jesus
who spoke up and walked headlong into conflict and confrontation and
crucifixion. When you don’t want to take
the risk to rescue a family member, remember how Jesus risked everything to
rescue you—how He took up His cross so that He might bring forgiveness of sins to
every member of your family—so that He might give your family a peace that is
real and grounded in truth. You simply
need to repent of loving family more than Jesus—of treating family members as
gods instead of gifts.
We all fail
our families everyday. There’s probably
not a day that goes by that we don’t sin against the members of our
families. And no one sees our sins in a
more up-close-and-personal way than the members of our families. Jesus wants your family to enjoy the genuine
peace that He earned by the shedding of His blood. For all the times we have failed our family
members, there stands Jesus who was forsaken by His heavenly Father as He hung
from the cross. For all the times we
have feared or loved our family more than we have feared and loved God, there
stands Jesus who was unafraid to love you by carrying His cross and enduring
the shame, the scorn, the nails.
Jesus endured
it all because He loves you and He wants you in His family forever and
ever. Your baptism was the moment of
your adoption into the Savior’s family.
There you received His forgiveness for your sins, all His good for all
your bad, His life instead of the death you deserve.
The Savior who
made you a member of His family, has also given you your earthly family. And we don’t love our family any less by loving Jesus more.
In fact, the deeper our love for God, the deeper our love for our
children, our parents, and our spouses will be.
Our love for our family members goes off the rails into idolatry not when we love them too much, but when we
love them too little. For how can
love be true love when it’s working against the God who is love?
Our job as
family members is not to keep the peace, but to live in the peace that Jesus
died and rose to secure for every family.
Living in that peace begins here in the Divine Service. It’s only as we ourselves each receive the
forgiveness of Christ that we can then take that forgiveness home and share it
with our families throughout the week.
Families that
enjoy the genuine peace of Jesus will still have conflicts. But those family feuds are followed by
repentance and forgiveness for Jesus’ sake.
Jesus teaches us not to ignore sin, but to confess it and receive His sure
and certain forgiveness. The peace of
Christ is not cheap. Don’t settle for
fake imitations. Your family matters too
much to settle for anything less.
I love my wife
and my kids. I love my parents, my
siblings and my in-laws and outlaws. I
love them all. But by the grace of God,
I love Jesus even more. I think you love
Him more too. Why? Because He first loved us—because He gave
Himself for us—because He took up His cross for us.
In the
name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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