The Keys to Death and Hades, Life and Heaven
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“Fear not, I am the First and the Last, and
the Living One. I died, and behold I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys
of Death and Hades” (Revelation 1:18).
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and
the Lord Jesus Christ!
In our First Reading, an angel of the Lord
opens the doors of the prison that hold all the apostles, not with the guards’
keys, but miraculously. In fact, the guards aren’t even disturbed. When the
religious officials arrive, they find the jail fully secure, but completely
empty. The Gospel has free course that can’t be held back by prison doors.
God’s saving purposes are not frustrated by locks.
In our Gospel, the apostles are gathered
behind locked doors for fear of the Jews and what they might do to them. But
there is one whom the locked doors did not keep out—the resurrected Jesus. We
don’t know much about Jesus’ resurrected body, but we do know He left a sealed
tomb with even the grave clothes still intact and that He appeared inside a
locked room without use of door or key.
But as miraculous and supernatural as these
incidents are, they are not the most astounding actions or miraculous openings
in our readings for today.
In our Second Reading, John tells us of one Lord’s
Day during the time he was on the island of Patmos. He was in the Spirit when
he heard a loud voice speak to him. Turning around, he saw some amazing sights:
seven golden lampstands and one like a son of man, clothed with a long robe and
with a golden sash around His chest. The hairs of His head were white, like
white wool or snow. His eyes were like a flame of fire. His feet were like
burnished bronze, refined in a furnace, and His voice was like the roar of many
waters. In His right hand He held seven stars, from His mouth came a sharp
two-edged sword, and His face was like the sun shining in full strength.
When John saw the risen and ascended Christ in
all His glory, he fell down before Him as dead. John could no more stand before
the heavenly Christ than he could touch the sun. Indeed, he could no more stand
before the glorified Christ than Moses could stand before God and see His face
at Mt. Sinai—unless given special grace and permission. No sinful mortal can
stand before the exalted Son of Man because of the corruption of sin and God’s
own holiness and glory.
John’s falling down as dead is like the action
of every faithful proclaimer of the Word as he falls down in repentance before
the Word that comes to him. Something good for us pastors to remember: Every
ministry of the Word should begin with the repentance of the minister and
Christ’s forgiveness of his sin.
Jesus gave John the grace and permission to
stand up before Him. Placing His right hand on John, Jesus told John, “Stop
being afraid.” This Word of gracious comfort empowered Christ’s servant to
stand up in His presence.
The Lord Christ identified Himself as “the
First and Last.” Like “the Alpha and Omega,” “the First and the Last” also
denotes the eternalness of God and Christ, an eternalness of Christ in
relationship to His Bride, the Church. In using this title, Jesus assured John
that, as the Eternal One, He is his Savior; therefore, John should not be
afraid.
Furthermore, Jesus identified Himself as “the
Living One,” a title used in the Old Testament to contrast the true God with
all the idols, which are dead and thus have no existence. Jesus Christ was dead
but now lives forever. Because of His death and resurrection, Jesus says, “I
have the keys of Death and Hades.” Some translations say, “death and the
grave,” but “death and Hades” more accurately renders the Greek. In Roman
culture, Hades was commonly thought of as the realm of the dead. Having “the
keys of Death and Hades” is nothing less than holding the power to release
people from the realm of the dead. Christ alone, who has conquered death, has
this authority.
Jesus has the keys. He has the keys of Death and Hades. But that’s not
all. In Matthew 16:19, He declared to Peter, “I will give you the keys of the kingdom of
heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever
you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” This is big stuff. Jesus
has the keys—the keys to heaven and death and Hades. You couldn’t escape the
prison of your grave, but Jesus unlocks the door and delivers you from your
cell—and there is no power that can stop Him. Furthermore, He has unlocked the
gates of heaven for you. You are delivered from death and hell to life and
heaven.
Where does this take place? This is
what ties it to our Gospel lesson for the day, where the risen Jesus suddenly
appears to the disciples who are gathered in the locked room for fear of the
Jews. Jesus hails the disciples with the typical Hebrew greeting: “Peace be
with you!” But on the lips of the risen Savior, it is much more than a casual
wish. He brings them the peace that the world cannot give, the peace that will
sustain them through all earthly troubles.
The disciples react in their fear as
if they are seeing a ghost. But Jesus’ resurrected body still bears the marks
of the crucifixion, to which Jesus points to erase their last doubts. The
disciples rejoice! It is the Lord Jesus, alive!
Jesus again speaks peace to them and
commissions them to carry on His work: “Peace be with you. As the Father has
sent Me, even so I am sending you. And when He says this, He breathes on them
and repeats the gift of the keys to the disciples gathered in the locked room:
“Receive the Holy Spirit. If you
forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you withhold forgiveness
from any, it is withheld.” Where does this great unlocking of doors happen? The
keys are turned with the forgiveness of sins. This is what we call the “Office
of the Keys.”
“The
Office of the Keys is that special authority which Christ has given to His
Church on earth to forgive the sins of repentant sinners, but to withhold
forgiveness from the unrepentant as long as they do not repent” (Small
Catechism).
Repentance
is really a two-part process: first, recognizing the reality of our sin; and
second, turning to God in faith for His mercy.
Someone
who does not believe he is a sinner cannot be repentant—what’s to repent of if
you are not doing something wrong? So, the first step to repentance can only
happen after the Law does its accusing work. People have to hear what God’s
Word says so they can recognize themselves and experience contrition over sin.
The flesh, the world, and the devil spend all their time whispering, “What you
are doing isn’t that bad. In fact, it’s not bad at all!” Our consciences are
assaulted and dulled every day by our own sinful desires. Only the Law of God
can cut us to our hearts, bring us to our knees, and show us where we are wrong
(usually, that is almost everywhere). Once that message gets through and we
know we are slaves to sin, the first part of repentance is accomplished.
But it is
not enough just to know and believe we are sinners. If we stop there, we
despair, knowing that our sin separates us from God. And trying to get out of
sin by our own power will also lead us to despair, because we cannot stop
sinning no matter how much we want to.
So, the
second part of repentance is faith: believing God’s promise that in Christ we
are forgiven and have new life, namely at turning away from sin rather than to
it. In particular, it means that we turn with God’s help from the specific sins
of which the Law convicted us. That turning goes beyond inward resolve and
really wanting to do better. Repentance includes mortifying our flesh and
physically, mentally, and spiritually laboring to leave the sins that plague
us.
“Repent!”
sounds like a harsh message, and it is harsh. Hearing what God’s Word has to
say about our favorite vices makes us angry, ashamed, and afraid. But it also
makes us see that there is only one way out: Jesus. That’s why the call to
repentance is one of love. It is the call God put in the mouths of His prophets
and apostles so that His people could be saved. It is the call of Jesus
Himself, whose love for us was so great that He took on our flesh and lived
among us. He did not come to give us the message we wanted to hear (you know,
the one about how you are really pretty good, especially compared to that other
person). He told us the truth that we needed to hear: We are perverse, we are
lost, we are dead, we must be made new, and He is the one who makes all things
new.
Repentance
is not some theological abstraction. Repentance occurs in the very concrete
practice of Confession and Absolution. Our pastors do not leave us hanging. The
second part of repentance is also theirs to administer. They show us our sins
from the Law, and they show us our Savior in the Gospel.
Our
pastors convict us with God’s Word and then forgive our sins in Christ’s place
and by His command. They may do this corporately in the Divine Service, and
they particularly do it in private Confession and Absolution. There is no real
comfort in going home and crying into our pillows about how sorry we are. Our
pastors are there to restart our crushed hearts with Jesus’ words of ultimate
love: I forgive you all your sins. Those words do not just comfort us, but they
effectively change us, so that even in our daily lives we grow more into the
likeness of Jesus.
You can
fake an apology, but you cannot fake repentance. Repentance is not just
devout-sounding moaning about what rotten sinners we are, but it is leaving the
life of sin we love so much. It means the slanderer keeping her zingers to
herself, the lecher cancelling his Internet, the glutton bypassing the buffet,
and the impious spending Sunday morning at church instead of the lake. It is change
and change hurts. Only the Holy Spirit could accomplish this work in us,
because if there is one thing sinners do not like, it is giving up sin.
Sin dies
hard, so hard that it took the Son of God with it to the grave (albeit
briefly). And the sin in us kills us day after day. This why the Christian life
is one of repentance. Repentance is not a one-time thing, because sin is not a
one-time thing. We sin daily and hourly. Everything we do is tainted by sin. So
every day in a Christian’s life is also characterized by repentance. In our
personal prayers; in our worship together; in our private confession and
receiving Absolution; and in our thoughts, words, and deeds, we are repenting
constantly. We are always seeing our sin and throwing ourselves at God’s mercy,
who spared not His Son to save us. With His help, we turn away from sin again
and again and again.
To all who hear, we declare God’s Law and Gospel. We speak truth that
we’re born in sin, that the wages of sin is death; and we declare the Good News
that Christ has died for our sins and Christ is risen. When someone says, “I
like my sin, so I’m not going to repent,” we tell them what the Word says: as
long as they hold onto that sin, they still have it. That sin is retained,
bound to them—the gates of heaven are shut, the gates of hell wide open. And
when someone repents and trusts in Christ for forgiveness, we tell them what
the Word says then, too: that Jesus has taken away that sin, that they are set
free for eternal life. The gates of hell are shut for them, the gates of heaven
wide open.
It’s all about the forgiveness Jesus has won by His death and
resurrection and gives to you. In fact, forgiveness takes His death and
resurrection and gives it to you. That is also why we always return to speak of
Christ and His forgiveness here, for only forgiveness locks hell and opens
heaven for you—for only Christ and His forgiveness give life. Rejoice in Jesus’
forgiveness for your well-being. That’s what He told the disciples to proclaim
in our Gospel lesson, and that is what prepares you for His return in glory on
the Last Day.
Of this you can be sure. You will see that glory on the Last Day, and
on that day you will rejoice. Your Savior holds the keys to death and Hades,
eternal life and heaven. He has shut hell for you and flung wide the gates of
heaven by His death and resurrection. For Jesus’ sake, you are forgiven for all
your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit. 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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