Todd
A. Peperkorn, STM
Messiah
Lutheran Church
Kenosha,
Wisconsin
Ash Wednesday (Feb. 28, 2001)
Psalm 6
TITLE: Save me because of your unfailing love
In the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit. Amen. Our text for tonight is the Psalm for Ash
Wednesday, Psalm 6.
Lets cut right to the point. For many people,
Lent is kind of a warm-up for Easter. It I sa time where they give up
something. It may be meat, it may be alcohol, caffeine or sugar. It
could even be something like television or a sport you may enjoy. And
there is a good and salutary point to this. But oftentimes, this is as
deep as it goes. Like the Pharisees in our Gospel lesson, it is easy
to turn Lent into a time to show off your piety. Look at what a Christian
I am! I gave up dessert for six weeks.
This attitude may be common, but it has nothing to do
with the Bible or how God looks at us through the eyes of Law and Gospel.
Nor does it have much to do with Lent. Lent in the Church really has
two foci: first it is a time to reflect on Christs Passion and death,
and secondly it is a time of learning and spiritual renewal through the
Word of God. In the early church it was during Lent that those preparing
for Baptism received their final instructions in the faith before being
baptized. So what we will be doing this Lent is hearing about Christs
Passion and death, and about what that has to do with who you are as a
Christian who needs Confession and Absolution.
Take a look once again at the Psalm. Page 314 in the
front part of your hymnal. This Psalm is one of the Psalms of David that
we call the Penitential Psalms. The word Penitence or Penitential is
related to another very Lutheran word: repentance. What is repentance?
Repentance is turning away from your sins and turning to Christ for forgiveness.
Repentance, then, is ultimately a gift from God, because only God can
turn the sinners heart toward him. It reminds me of Luthers words
about baptism in the Small Catechism:
What does such baptizing with water
indicate or mean for daily life?
It indicates that the Old Adam in us
should by daily contrition and repentance be drowned and die with all
sins and evil desires, and that a new man should daily emerge and arise
to live before God in righteousness and purity forever. (1986 Catechism)
This process of contrition and repentance is daily,
not once. Law and Gospel. Sin and forgiveness. This is the cycle of
the Christian life. Thats why we continue to repent and receive
absolution. Thats why you go to the Lords Supper week after
week. Its about living the Christian life, not simply knowing right
answers.
This is why God is going to teach us in the Penitential
Psalms. In Psalm Six David begins by lamenting that it seems like God
has abandoned him. Law. God is angry with him, and so David prays that
God will have mercy on him because he is weak and troubled.
Where does this start for you? What does this tell
you about God? Well, if first of all tells you that God hates sin, and
when you sin God hates you. Does that sound harsh? You bet! Gods
Law is very harsh. As the Psalmist writes in Psalm five, You
hate all workers of iniquity. The Law doesnt
wink at sin. You and I try to wink at sin. Yes, our sin is bad, but
Im just going to ignore it. This is something like saying that
my cancer isnt that bad, its just on the top of my skin.
You cant ignore sin, sooner or later it will dig in and do its
work of destruction.
But lets go on to verse two. David prays that
the Lord will be merciful to him and heal him. Like blind Bartemaeus
from last Sunday, David is not going to let God off the hook just like
God wont let him off the hook. You see, David knows Gods
true character. He hates for a time but loves for eternity.
Now think again to the effect that this sin has on David.
He is faint, is bones are in agony, his soul is in anguish. He even cries
out no one remembers you when he is dead, Who praises you from the
grave? (v. 5). David is afraid for his very life. Worn out from
groaning, flooded with tears, eyes weak with sorrow that fail because
of all his foes.
Davids picture in Psalm Six of the effect of sin
is profound and even painful. Its a picture that makes you squirm.
It makes me squirm. I dont like to talk about my sinfulness or
think about it. I would much rather think of myself as a basically nice
person. Im a Christian, and that means all this sin talk is for
someone else. But remember, David is a Christian, too. David grew up
in a household that looked forward to the coming of the Messiah. Sin
isnt just something that unbelievers have to deal with and address.
I think sometimes in the church we can get the mistaken idea that sin
and forgiveness is for the bad people, but that the Christians just praise
God because hes so great. Well, thats a false comparison.
The angels in heaven rejoice over one sinner who repents. That means
you.
Now there is hope. That is the message of Psalm Six.
No matter how messed up your life has become. No matter how far down
the path of sin you have trod. No matter what nightmares trouble you
and pain you have caused to yourself and to others. God is merciful
and forgiving. He hates the sinner for breaking the Law BUT He loves
the sinner in Jesus Christ even more. He loved you so much that His Son
Jesus went to the cross and death for you. God hates the sinner, and
He took all of that wrath out on the cross. Gods unfailing love
will put you back together when nothing else can. Only God can scatter
your enemies: sin, death and the devil. Only the mercy of God in Jesus
Christ can turn your life around and remake you in the waters of baptism.
Only God has given His Son in a Holy Meal to feed you and forgive you.
This Lent we are taking a journey together. We are
taking a journey together to the cross of Jesus Christ. On this journey
we are going to learn about Gods mercy for lost sinners like you.
We are going to hear about Gods gift of forgiveness that He gives
in Confession and Absolution. For some of you, this will be an old journey
that youve taken before many times. But for most, this may be a
new journey. Confessing your sins, not generically but specifically,
that is a hard thing. So hard, in fact, that many will never even try
it. But I am here today to hold up Gods gift of forgiveness to
you, and everything He has to give in His Son, Jesus Christ.
The Lord has heard my cry for mercy; the Lord accepts
my prayer (Ps. 6:9). In the name of Jesus. Amen.
The peace of God, which passes all human understanding,
keep your hearts and minds in true faith, unto life everlasting. Amen.
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