GOD’S GRACE & PRESENCE

There are two ways of living: one is the way of resisting Almighty God, and the other is the way of surrendering to God’s eternal grace and steadfast love. Resistance to God always brings anxiety and distress, restlessness and hopelessness. Surrender to God’s grace, however, brings inner peace and joy, true happiness and hope.

The worldly person is always in a state of resistance and inner conflict. The spiritual person, on the other hand, has given up the struggle through sweet surrender to God. For as St. Augustine famously stated in his autobiographical confessions, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Therefore, true religion is about surrender, and a wonderful symbolic representation of this is the California condor. When it steps out off the cliff, it simply stretches wide its wings and floats in the rising air thermals. Likewise, yielding to God’s baptismal grace by faith in Christ our Savior, we are thereby freed to no longer flap our spiritual wings to exhaustion. With the uplifting power of God’s Holy Spirit freely given us through the Word and Sacraments of Christ, we are free to float weightlessly on God’s unlimited atmosphere of grace and renewal.

“Even youths will faint and be weary, and the young will fall exhausted; but those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings like eagles [and condors], they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint” (Isaiah 40:30-31).

So, very truly, all the weight in our hearts and minds can be tied in some way to our willful and sinful resistance to the free and unlimited grace of God in Jesus Christ. The more you fight God, the lower you fall. The more you yield and surrender to him, the lighter you become and the higher you soar spiritually.

The Season of Lent is all about dying to our sinful rebellion and rising up unto the abundant Life and Light and Love of Christ. For this is what our Lord Jesus Christ meant when he said, “Those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it” (Matthew 16:25).

Consequently, as we move into Lent (meaning “length”) and the days lengthen toward Springtime, may we ever seek (by God’s grace) to give up the fight, surrendering to the forgiveness and renewal of the Lord our God given freely to us in Christ. Moreover, may we also be ever mindful of God’s Holy Presence with us and for us in the here and now, realizing that we stand spiritually before the amazing throne of the Eternal God each and every moment of our daily lives.

As the days lengthen and become warmer, may we come to understand more fully that the grass and flowers of the field, the trees and mountains, the rocks and rivers, as well as Christ’s Word and Sacraments, are altogether amazing means of God’s grace to us and for us. Truly, in/with/through Christ, we stand before the throne of God Most High right now… Right here and now, and forever… So, for this Lenten Season, and for the rest of our God-given life, may we remember our most Wonder-Full Lord God every single day, who is the ever-present Source of all creation and salvation, in whom “we live, move and have our being” (Acts 17:28a).

Blessed Lent to All of You!  Pastor Tim

PLANTING TREES

There is no doubt that we live in a time of colossal and world-shattering change: socially, religiously, culturally, nationally, globally, etcetera. It is indeed the end of the world as we know it.

Historians have recognized that approximately every five hundred years human civilization goes through some kind of major transition from an older structure of things to a new one, and it sure feels like that’s exactly what’s happening in our time. In fact, the last major civilizational shift was the Protestant Reformation, five hundred years ago, when Martin Luther and the other Protestant Reformers sparked this world-changing transfiguration through their reforms of the Medieval Roman Church.

Today, the world as we have known it is rapidly being replace by an emerging reality that is not yet fully clear. Consequently, speculations of the various end times theologies and ideologies abound. And due to the influential pre-millennial theology of the Left Behind novels, some Christians have started to regard any global peacemaking initiative as automatically some kind of great antichrist deception.

Consequently, such Christians (in the name of Jesus) often orient themselves against work for international peace and reconciliation because their Left Behind theology says that such work is always secretly on the side of the evil one. However, our Lord Jesus says, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God” (Matthew 5:9). And when Martin Luther was asked what he would do today if he knew the world would end tomorrow, Luther said, “I would plant a tree.”

In other words, even if we knew that tomorrow the world was going to end and the Kingdom of God was going to come in its fullness, we are called to never stop planting “trees” today (both literally and metaphorically). That is, we are to especially plant the metaphorical trees of peace and truth and grace today, no matter what God has in store tomorrow.

God’s people are to always and continually take part in the creative and redeeming work of God today and every day! By the grace and power of God in Christ Jesus our Lord, we are to plant trees of faith in the midst of fear, trees of hope against all hope, and trees of righteousness and peace. And of course, we are to not forget to plant real trees that give us oxygen and help regulate the balance of life on God’s green Earth. Therefore, to prescribe and do anything other than this is to be “anti” (against) Christ.

As our Lord Jesus declares in Matthew 25:31-46, we are called to continue to labor to make the world a better place right up to the great Day of the Lord, the great Second Advent of Jesus Christ. By God’s grace, we are to continue to work (right up to the very moment of Christ’s return) to ease human suffering, to promote equal treatment under law, and, of course, to be peacemakers in the name of Yeshua (Jesus) our Eternal Savior.

Together in Christ, Pastor Tim