Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Wake Up!

Sermon preached at Our Savior on August 15, 2010 for the 12th Sunday after Pentecost. Sermon text: Revelation 3:1-6

Desktop-Bible-Verse-Wallpaper-Reveltion-3-5 American author Mark Twain is famous for having a lot of memorable quotes. One of my favorites goes something like this: "The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated." Mark Twain was usually pretty funny, and when he said the reports of his death had been exaggerated, that was his own unique way of saying that he was alive. Maybe there were people out there who thought he had died, but they were wrong. At the time he made that quote, he was very much alive.

Unfortunately, that quote can be changed around a little bit and applied to the people right here in this church today. This version of the quote is a little less funny: "The reports of your life have been greatly exaggerated." You all look alive. Your smiling faces. Your attendance here at church today. The movements you make. The words you spoke before the service and whispered during it.  The signs all point to your being alive. But you're not.

There is death here today at Our Savior Lutheran Church. I don't mean physical death; I can see that you're really all physically alive. I mean something far more deadly, far more dangerous. You have been infected with a spiritual plague, a spiritual disease: spiritual death. You can't see it with your eyes. For all intents and purposes everyone here, myself included, look like there is nothing wrong. Just a group of the faithful attending a church service. But things are not as they appear. There is death in this room.

Normally, death means the end. It means the battle's over. It means there's no more hope. But that's not how it is with Jesus. With our Savior Jesus Christ, death is never the end. There is always hope. Because he is the life.

In the book of Revelation we see letters that Jesus himself wrote to seven churches. Jesus dictated the letters to the Apostle John in John's vision that takes up the entire book of Revelation. The letter we're looking at today was written to the Christian church in the city of Sardis in the modern country of Turkey.

The book of Revelation can be kind of intimidating. There is lots of figurative language and strange imagery all over the place. It's very easy to read a little bit of Revelation only to say: "I just don't get it." The beginning of our text might make you feel that way. To the angel of the church in Sardis write: These are the words of him who holds the seven spirits of God and the seven stars. (Rev. 3:1)

It doesn't need to be confusing, though. The angel of the church is another way of talking about the church's pastor. Jesus wrote a message to the pastors of seven churches in Revelation, and he explained elsewhere that the seven stars are also the pastors of those churches. The seven spirits of God is another way of saying the Holy Spirit. Jesus just meant that he is closely connected to the Holy Spirit, which makes sense because they are both persons in the Triune God. The point is clear: God had a special message for these churches.

Jesus didn't mince words in this message. I know your deeds; you have a reputation of being alive, but you are dead. (Rev. 3:1) Jesus was telling this church in Sardis, "You think you're alive, huh? Other people seem to think you're alive, too. Well, I've got news for you. You're not." And then Jesus went on: Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die, for I have not found your deeds complete in the sight of my God. (Rev. 3:2)

It might sound like Jesus gave some mixed signals here. First he says, "You're dead." Then he says, "Wake up!" Dead people aren't supposed to be able to wake up. But remember, this is Jesus we're talking about. He didn't stay dead. He rose. He's the one who said, I tell you the truth, a time is coming and has now come when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and those who hear will live. (Jn. 5:25) In him, death isn't the end.

But what did he mean when he said the people of that church in Sardis were dead? What did I mean when I said that death was here in this church this morning? Sure, Jesus wasn't talking about our church specifically, but as I look at myself, I know it's true. As you look at yourself, chances are you will see the same thing.

You have a reputation of being alive, but you are dead. (Rev. 3:1) What's it take for a church to look like it's alive? Well, there have to be people going there. Here you all are today! There have to be things going on and meetings and activities and budgets and offerings, and sure, we've got all of those things.

But all those activities, the meetings, the budgets, the church services, the hymns, the prayers, they are worth absolutely nothing if they don't flow from a living faith. "But wait," you say. "Church services are good! Helping out the church is good! How can you say they're worthless?" It doesn't matter what you do, how great it looks, how faithful it seems, if it does not flow from a living faith it is worthless and dead.

Is coming to church just a habit you got into? Is it something that you feel you should probably do, because God likes it? Do you want to live a good life and do good things, because that's what you're supposed to do? Or are you just going through the motions? You say the prayers and the creed. You sing the hymns. You might even say church is important, maybe that God, that Jesus, is important. But you have to think twice when asked why it's important. You forget what you heard in church just as soon as the service is done. You go through the motions, and it doesn't even bother you all that much.

We all might feel this way to a different degree at different times in our lives, but I'd be surprised if you never felt this way. And it's a dangerous way to be. Jesus gave a stern warning about this apathetic attitude that we can all to easily have. He said, Remember, therefore, what you have received and heard; obey it, and repent. But if you do not wake up, I will come like a thief, and you will not know at what time I will come to you. (Rev. 3:3)

Wake up! Are you just going through the motions in your faith? That's a sin. That's a real sin that brings death! Wake up! Continuing in that sin means that your faith will eventually be snuffed out. You can't just keep on going like everything is okay. It's not. And if it continues, Jesus says, when he comes again like a thief in the night, when all of a sudden your time of grace is over and you are caught faithless, asleep, dead in sins -- it will be too late. You will be lost. Wake up!

Wake up, because it's not too late now. Wake up, because your Savior is still calling out to you in love today. He said, Remember...what you have received and heard; obey it, and repent. (Rev. 3:3) Wake up and remember that even though your sins are real, your Savior is just as real! Put your sins behind you. Confess to your Savior your careless attitude toward him. Confess the times you just haven't cared. And guess what? His forgiveness is free and full!

Jesus lived in this world, not half-heartedly, not going-through-motions. He did everything to obey his heavenly Father's will. He did everything to win your salvation. And that's what he did. All the way to his death, even death on a cross. He conquered death forever. He has conquered the spiritual death that might even have its grips on you.

So what do you have to do to wake up? What do you have to do to make sure that spiritual death doesn't keep its grip on you? That's just it. It's not about what you do; it never was. It's about what Jesus has done for you. He is the one who makes the dead alive; they don't do it themselves.

Jesus gives us life in the means of grace that he has given us. God's Word is not a book that gets read once in a while at church and nothing else. No! It's a source of life! God comes to you in his Word to fill you up and convince you that Jesus paid for your sins unconditionally, that your salvation has been guaranteed free of charge, your eternity in heaven has been bought and paid for.

So wake up! Run to God's Word. Don't listen to it in church as if it were like something in a museum: you know, something really old that a few people find interesting. No! It's your source of life. It's the life preserver that God has thrown to a whole world drowning in sin. Take comfort in it! Hear it! Keep it as the most important thing, something you want to study, something that you can't get enough of.

Wake up! Remember your baptism! Remember that it's not just some event that happened a long time ago where your family took a few pictures. It was so much more. The Bible says that all of you who were baptized into Christ have been clothed with Christ. (Gal. 3:27) In your baptism Jesus clothed you with himself, with his perfection, with his life; he made it yours! Take comfort in your baptism. Wake up! When the devil tells you you're no good, when you fall into sin, when you wonder how you can go on, remember that you have been baptized, so you have been saved.

Wake up! Look to the Lord's Supper. Don't think of the days we take it as the Sundays where church lasts a little longer. Look at it for what it is: another chance for Jesus to come to us with his sweet, free, forgiveness, a chance to taste and see that the Lord is good. And if you're not confirmed yet or you're not a member who can take communion with us, look forward to the time when you can! Take every opportunity to grow in your faith and hunger and thirst for your Savior's love. Wake up!

Jesus' picture in our text is talking about you: He who overcomes will...be dressed in white. I will never blot out his name from the book of life, but will acknowledge his name before my Father and his angels. (Rev. 3:5) Those aren't things that you can do; they're what Jesus has done. He has clothed you in white and given you his perfection. He has acknowledged your name. His love has bought and redeemed you. Wake up and rejoice in his love.

It is not too late. It is not over. In Christ, even the dead can live. So wake up! Repent of your sins. Hold onto the Word and Sacraments. And live in his love. Then all that's left to do is look forward to Jesus' final command. When Jesus returns like a thief and commands all to "wake up!" We and all believers can awake in joy through the life he has won us.

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