O Jerusalem, Jerusalem
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“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city
that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I
have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her
wings, and you were not willing!” (Luke 13:34).
Grace to you and peace from God our Father
and the Lord Jesus Christ!
I bet you can relate. You’ve heard it
yourself—that drawn-out repeating of your name. Maybe accompanied by a sad head
shaking. Preceded by a little sigh. “Robert, Robert.” You understand instantly
that you’ve disappointed someone.
Or maybe you’ve heard this
variation. A little more drawn out, higher pitched, increasing in volume.
“Robert! Robert!” Your mind wanders or you are otherwise distracted, and someone
needs to catch your attention.
We don’t see this happen very often
in Scriptures, but when we do, it catches our attention, as it highlights a sense
of urgency, true concern, or deep-felt emotion. Especially when it is used by
God Himself.
For example, when Moses looked to
see the burning bush, God called to him, “Moses! Moses!” (Exodus 3:4). Here the
doubling of Moses’ name was meant to warn and to reveal. “Do not come near,”
God said. “Take your sandals off your feet, for the place on which you are
standing is holy ground” (Exodus 3:5).
In 1 Samuel, we read how the boy was
lying down in the temple when the Lord called, “Samuel! Samuel!” to gain
attention that He was calling him as a prophet (1 Samuel 3:10).
When she was too preoccupied with
serving and had no time for hearing the Word in Bible class, Jesus admonished, “Martha,
Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary”
(Luke 10:41).
And then there was the time a son of
David hung on a tree, his body pierced three times, with wounds that cut him to
the heart. Below him stood soldiers who surrounded him and struck him. And when
the word of his death reached his father, King David cried out, “O my son
Absalom, my son, My son Absalom!” (2 Samuel 18:33).
Do you hear the hurt and pain and
sorrow? This is the same sort of lament Jesus makes as He sees before Him the
city of God, the abandoned temple, the prophet-killing place: “O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it”
(Luke 13:34).
Do you hear the heart of God in
these words? The lament expresses His inmost desire. God wants all people to be
saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. It hurts Him more than we can
imagine when His children reject Him and spurn His offer of grace and love.
Jerusalem—the city that kills
prophets and stones apostles—how’s that for a nice slogan for a publicity
campaign? That would get people flocking in, wouldn’t it? But here we have a
prophet purposely headed for that very city. One might think that He can’t be
much of a prophet if He doesn’t realize the danger that He’s in. Even His
enemies warn Him to stay away because “Herod wants to kill you.”
But this was the Prophet, the
One sent by God to deliver His people from sin. Not only did He know of Herod’s
plans, He knew the murderous hearts of the Pharisees. Jesus headed for the
city, knowing full well that suffering, pain, and death lay ahead. Yet He went
resolutely and willingly to Jerusalem.
Jerusalem hadn’t always been known
as “the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it” (Luke
13:34). Ironically, it had first been called “Salem,” the city of peace. Throughout
Israel’s history, it was identified as the city of God. The Lord Himself
referred to it as “My city.” And because it was the place where God had put His
name, it was often called “the Holy City.”
With all the honor and favor that
God had shown Jerusalem over the years, it should’ve been a leader in welcoming
prophets and showing them honor. Instead, “the holy city” became known as the
city that kills prophets and stones apostles. Their reputation for rejecting
God’s messengers was so bad, even Jesus said in our text, “It cannot be that a prophet
should perish away from Jerusalem” (Luke 13:33). And so, the Lord Jesus
announced, that after centuries of rejecting the Word of God and silencing His
prophets, the day of grace had finally passed for Jerusalem. He would no longer
visit in mercy, peace, and grace, but His advent would be one of judgment,
dread, and desolation.
There comes a moment for the city
that kills prophets and stones apostles… there comes a time for a congregation
that casts out faithful pastors… there comes an instant for an individual who
lives in unrepentant sin, who continuously rejects the Word... there comes an
hour when the time of repentance is past. That which the city, a congregation,
or an individual seeks is suddenly realized. That’s what had happened at the
synagogue in Nazareth when those in attendance rose up and forced Jesus out of
their midst. They sought to rid themselves of Him, and the result was that they
no longer had Jesus among them.
Similarly, the people of the “holy
city that kills prophets” will lead the Prophet Jesus outside the gates to a
cursed place to be crucified. The City of God will remove the Son of God from
their midst, and their ears, stopped by sin will not even hear Jesus’ lament on
their behalf: “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!”
The congregation that silences the
Word by rejecting faithful pastors, or that abandons the Word by listening to
false shepherds will eventually get what they seek. Though they will still gather,
though they’re religious and zealous, they’ll no longer have a faithful pastor
to feed and nurture them on Word and Sacrament, but rather a false pastor who
is a wolf in shepherd's clothing.
But the frightening thing is
this—those who depart generally don't even know that this is taking place, and
they’re not even able to hear the lament: “O Congregation, Congregation! ... O
Pastor, Pastor!”
If that’s possible to happen to the
congregation or her pastor, it certainly also can happen to a member of the
congregation who, either through being careless, taking offense, expressing
sinful pride, or just plain ignoring God’s Word, neglects to come to the holy
place where the Lord meets His people. Such an individual will discover, if not
in this life, on the Last Day, that he has not heard the Lord’s Word of
forgiveness and has no place at His banquet.
Now dear friends, be assured that
this is not the way Jesus desires the city, the congregation, or the individual
to be. But if any of them is impenitent, then he, she, or it will suffer the
divine consequences. They will hear those words of judgment: “You would not!
Behold, your house is forsaken” (Luke 13:35).
This word “forsaken” in our text is
another example of a type of doubling, because the same Greek word for “desolate
or forsaken” is also the word for “forgiven or released.” Both have to do with
leaving or separating. With the Holy Trinity there will always be a releasing
or departure of one sort or the other. There will either be the releasing
forgiveness of sins, or there’ll be forsakenness, the departure of God’s
merciful and gracious Presence.
Let this be a serious reflection for
every Christian. Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit. You are in Christ
and Christ is in you. Indeed, since the Father and the Son are also One, you
have the Holy Trinity living within you. The only way this can be is if you
have been released from your sin, and your transgressions have been removed
from you “as far as the east is from the west."
This happened when you were baptized
in His name for the “releasing,” that is, for the forgiveness of your sins. You
remain the temple of God as you live in your baptismal grace by confessing your
sins and hearing the Absolution—the Word of forgiveness—that is announced and
applied to you. Christ is graciously within you as you commune at His table and
feed on His body and blood.
No, the holy Lord and your sin
cannot live together. Jesus bore it once when He died upon the cross. He does
not bear being with it again. Though He is patient and longsuffering, there
comes a time when Jesus says, “Either your sin is removed from you or I am. If
you will not let Me release you from your sin, then I will not live with you. But
even now, I seek to have you with Me, even as my Bride, the Church, seeks to
keep you gathered under her wings.”
Dear friends, there is no salvation
apart from Christ and no eternal life outside the Church, the Body of Christ. How
sad and tragic it will be for those who’ve departed from God’s presence as they
seek to do their own thing. How sad it will be for those who take God’s grace
for granted or who look at His atoning death as a sort of spiritual “get out of
jail free card” that entitles them to go on living in unrepentant sin.
How sad it will be, for then will
come to pass what Jesus foretold, “On that day, many will say to [Him], ‘Lord,
Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and cast out demons in Your name, and do
many mighty works in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew
you; depart from Me, you workers of lawlessness’” (Matthew 7:22-23).
This same truth concerning the
individual also applies to the congregation. In Revelation, Jesus warned the
church in Ephesus, as it teetered on the edge of unbelief, that they had
forsaken the sacrificial love of the Lord. The consequences of their corporate
failure to repent would be that Christ would no longer remain with them. Jesus
said it like this: “I will come to you and remove your lampstand from its place,
unless you repent” (Revelation 2:5).
A congregation that permits false
doctrine to be taught, and as a result, false practices to take place and even
be promoted, will no longer be the holy place where people may enter into God’s
gracious presence. Indeed, the Lord will depart from such a place as He did
centuries ago.
For Jerusalem it was too late. The
day of grace had passed. And Jesus lamented: “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city
that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I
have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her
wings, and you were not willing! Behold, your house is forsaken. And I tell
you, you will not see Me until you say, ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of
the Lord!’” (Luke 13:34-35).
Yes, Jesus will return to Jerusalem.
It will be on Palm Sunday as foretold by Zechariah. He’ll come as a king, “righteous
and having salvation,” “humble and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of
a donkey” (Zechariah 9:8).
Yes, Jesus will return also to the
Temple in Jerusalem, when He leads the children in and they sing their hosannas
to the Lord. But before He leaves the temple area, He’ll overturn the tables of
the moneychangers and drive out those making His holy house of prayer into “a
den of robbers.” He’ll heal the blind and the lame and teach all who will
listen about the kingdom of God.
And a few days later, Christ will
once more wind through the streets of the city that kills the prophets. As
Simon of Cyrene helps to carry His cross, the Lord will turn to those women who
mourn and wail for Him, and say, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for Me;
weep for yourselves and for your children.”
You see, even in the midst of
rejection and rebellion by His chosen people, Christ is still in control. No
one takes His life. He lays it down of His own accord. Incredibly, He’ll use
even Jerusalem’s penchant for killing the prophets to accomplish His good
purposes, to bring His salvation, and to gather His chosen people under His
protection and loving care.
The Son of David will hang on a
tree, His body pierced three times, with wounds that cut Him to the heart. Below
Him will stand soldiers who will surround Him and pierce Him. But His Father
won’t lament His death as David did for his disobedient, rebellious son,
Absalom. Rather, the heavenly Father will turn His back on His obedient Son, condemning
Him, as He bears the sins of the world. The haunting, repeating words will come
from Jesus’ mouth instead: “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Matthew
27:46). On that cross, Christ will suffer an eternity of God’s wrath, so that
you and I might never be abandoned by God. So that you and I might be released
from our sins and have eternal life.
By God’s grace, may we all be willing to
repent of our sinful ways and be gathered into Christ’s body, the Church, like
chicks gathered under a hen’s wings. Released from the bondage of our sin
through Baptism and faith, may we never again depart from our Savior’s love. May
we all rest in Christ’s forgiveness until the Last Day when we will say again,
“Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord.” May God grant this to us all.
Amen.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from
the Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles,
a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
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