God's Desire, Your Desire
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The text for today is our Gospel lesson, Matthew 9:9-13, which has already been read.
Grace to you and peace
from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ!
Most parents have felt
the disappointment of having a carefully chosen gift spurned. You give a gift
you hope will bond you together or re-create a particular joy of your own
childhood—the thrill of your first fishing rod or the warm feeling you got from
your Cabbage Patch doll—only to have the gift barely glanced at and quickly
tossed aside. In such cases, even a polite “thank you” brings little comfort.
On the other hand, few
things delight parents as much as having a child so excited and thrilled with a
particular gift that he abandons the remaining unopened gifts to start playing
with it. I remember the year that Andersen got his first combine. The joy in
his face and whole body said it all. No formal “thank you” was necessary. The
gratitude was evident in the joy and excitement.
So, it is also with our
Father in heaven. He desires mercy, rather than mere outward formalities and
manners. He gets immense joy out of watching us
receive His gift of mercy and sharing that mercy with others. “I desire
steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings,”
the Lord says (Hosea 6:6). In our text
Jesus uses this verse to warn the Pharisees of the danger of their
self-righteousness: “Go and learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy and not
sacrifice.’ For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matthew 9:13).
God did not give the
Law that anyone would keep it and make himself righteous. That’s impossible.
God gave the Law so that people would recognize they are sinners, in need of
His mercy. God doesn’t need our sacrifices any more than parents need a formal
thank you. He can see our thankfulness by actions—by the way we receive His
mercy and then go on to show mercy to others.
From all appearances, Matthew seemed the most
unlikely prospect to become a disciple of Jesus. He was a tax collector, a
traitor who worked for the despised Roman government. Tax collectors had the
reputation of being dishonest. Many of them would collect unreasonable amounts
and enrich themselves in the process. No wonder the Jews regarded them as the
vilest of creatures. No wonder tax collectors were barred from the synagogue
and forbidden to have any religious or social contact with “respectable” Jews
like the Pharisees.
When Jesus saw Matthew, He said to him, “Follow
Me.” And immediately “[Matthew] rose and followed Him” (Matthew 9:9). He
abandoned his business and gave up his livelihood. He was willing to lose his
life that he might save it. This was not an irresistible command of Jesus’
almighty power. It was a gracious invitation of mercy, and Matthew accepted it
eagerly. Matthew could not have dared to hope that he would receive such a
direct personal invitation, but when he received one, he did not ask for time
to think it over or to get his personal affairs in order. He got up and
followed Jesus without hesitation.
To celebrate the occasion, Matthew prepared a
dinner at his home to honor Jesus and to introduce Him to his friends and
associates. The Pharisees who observed this were extremely critical of Jesus
for associating with such unsavory characters. But as often happens with one’s
sharpest critics, the Pharisees did not have the courage to confront Jesus
directly. They spoke to His disciples instead. “Why does your teacher eat with
tax collectors and sinners?” they asked.
Jesus made the observation that sick people
need a doctor, not people who are perfectly healthy. Likewise, those who regard
themselves as spiritually healthy won’t seek a physician for their souls. Those
who believe they are righteous in God’s sight by means of their own works are
not interested in a call to repent of their sins. But those who recognize their
personal sinfulness and unworthiness can appreciate the good news of
forgiveness through faith in Christ Jesus.
Through the prophet Hosea the Lord had said, “I
desire mercy, not sacrifice and acknowledgment of God rather than burnt
offerings” (6:6). Samuel had also said to disobedient King Saul, “Has the Lord as
great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the
Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to listen than the fat of
rams” (1 Samuel 15:22).
We please God by conscientiously obeying His
commandments, not by making our own rules and boasting about our observance of
manmade rituals. Even careful outward obedience to God’s commandments is not
sufficient. God wants us to recognize our personal sinfulness and unworthiness,
to see His gracious forgiveness for Jesus’ sake, and then, out of gratitude for
His mercy, to strive to obey all His commandments. This is His greatest desire.
But what about you!
What do you desire! Do you desire to keep all of God’s commandments! Do you
desire to show mercy! Do you desire God’s mercy! Do you desire the things of
God!
If you’re honest, you
must admit that you do not. Neither do I. We cannot. We are
all, by nature, sinful and self-centered. We have all sinned and fall short of
the glory of God. We all deserve damnation. We are all guilty. And even if we
have managed to keep the Law in an outward way, we have broken it in our
hearts. God desires, even demands, perfection. God desires mercy, not
sacrifice. But we cannot meet the Law’s demands. We cannot fulfill God’s
desire. We cannot save ourselves. We are in desperate need of a Savior.
Fortunately, God meets
His own desire in Jesus Christ. Christ fulfills the Law for us. He is mercy.
Jesus is merciful. He keeps the Law without fail. He keeps the Law externally
and internally. Through Jesus, God is also merciful to us and does not hold our
sins against us but forgives us, and for the sake of Jesus’ death on the cross
has taken those sins upon Him.
Unfortunately, some people don’t
realize their need. They’re sick, but they don’t know they’re in need of a
physician. They’re sinners, but they don’t realize they’re in need of a Savior.
Some of them never did. Others once did, but have fallen away and now fail to
realize just how bad of shape they are now in.
I’m sure you all seen those
pictures of a starving child—ribs showing, abdomen protruding, eyes sunken and
hollow, as fat and muscle tissue is broken down to
keep vital body systems—such as the nervous system and heart muscle—working. There couldn’t be a
worse sight than someone starving to death!
Oh, but there is! And it goes on all around us.
There are people starving to death every day. Even here in Three Strands Lutheran
Parish! And it’s a much worse starvation, for the death to which it leads is
everlasting. The starvation goes on for eternity! I’m talking about spiritual
starvation. And unless we’re careful, it could happen to any one of us.
Many people join a church. As time goes on a
significant percentage of those who join stop attending. When asked why they no
longer attend worship, Bible class, or Communion, people frequently say: “I
simply lost my desire to attend.”
When a person starves physically, he initially
suffers great hunger. However, after a while he gets so weak that he even
ceases to be hungry. The body loses its desire to eat or drink. Those who try
to rescue these half-dead people often must force food or water into them just
so they can even regain the feeling of hunger.
The same thing happens with spiritual
starvation. The devil cleverly works to manipulate Christians in order to
eliminate their desire or hunger for worship or Holy Communion. Listen to
Martin Luther as he explains how the devil works in your life, seeking to take
away your desire to go to worship or communion.
Luther writes: “In order that everyone may
learn what a tricky knave the devil is, I want to give an example out of my own
experience to all who are willing to let themselves be warned. It has happened
to me several times that I resolved to go to the Sacrament on this or that day.
When the day arrived, my devotion disappeared or some hindrance came up, or I
regarded myself unfit, saying: “Very well, I will go in a week.’ But the next
week found me as unfit and encumbered as on the former occasion: ‘Very well, I
will go next week.’
“Those weeks became so numerous that I almost
got away from it entirely and hardly ever went to the Sacrament. But when God
granted me grace to become aware of the devil’s knavery, I said: ‘Do you want
to make a wager, Satan, that I don’t know what you are up to! A plague upon
your cleverness!’ So, I broke out of the vicious circle and participated in the
Sacrament, even without making confession several times (which I ordinarily do
not do) to spite the devil particularly because I was not conscious of any
gross sins.
And so I discovered this about myself: If a
person has no longing or reverence for the Sacrament and yet earnestly makes
the effort to participate in it, then such thoughts and the action itself bring
forth sufficient reverence and longing and do a good job of driving away the
lazy and morose thoughts which hinder a person and make him unfit. For it is a
gracious, efficacious Sacrament, if one thinks about it only a little with
earnestness and prepares oneself for it, then kindles, arouses, and further
attracts the heart to itself.
“Try it, and if you do not find it to be this,
you can accuse me of lying. I am willing to wager that you, too, will find that
the devil has artfully fooled you and has cleverly kept you from the Sacrament
so that he might in time make you lose faith entirely and make you forget about
your dear Savior and all your need” (Luther’s Works, vol. 38, p.127).
Of course, there are some people who feel no
desire or need to go to church and to receive the Holy Sacrament because they
see no serious sin in their life. To such people Luther warns: “But I want to
tell you without jesting: ‘If you do not feel any sin, you are assuredly
completely dead in sins, yes, dead, and sin is reigning over you with might.’ I
do not even have to mention coarse, external sins such as a desire for
unchastity, adultery, anger, hatred, envy, revenge, pride, covetousness… the
fact that you have neither the need nor the desire to partake of the Sacrament
is in itself already a most serious and great sin. From this we perceive that
you also have no faith, that you have no regard for God’s Word, have forgotten
about Christ’s suffering, and are full of unthankfulness, and all kinds of
spiritual abominations” (Luther’s Works, vol. 38, p.129).
Heed this warning in your own life. When you
feel no need or desire to go to church to receive God’s living Word in Holy Communion
(even though you know God is graciously inviting and urging you to attend and
partake), consider this lack of desire in your heart and soul as a bright red
flashing light, a very serious warning that it is a matter of life or death!
When you hunger and thirst, go to Him who IS
the Bread of Life. Run to Him who IS the living Water of Life for
you. When you feel no desire for God’s life-giving Word, know for sure the
devil is manipulating your feelings in order to draw you away from God, forever.
Break through this evil trick of the devil.
Worship God and receive His Bread of Life, even when you have no desire. For
when you do, God will use His living Word to give you new hunger, preventing
you from starving spiritually. God will restore your hunger and desire for Him.
Even now, He does with these words of mercy:
You are forgiven of 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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