Showing posts with label Gospel of Luke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gospel of Luke. Show all posts

Jun 23, 2015

Our fathers on earth and our Father in heaven

David T. Ernst, Sr.
My father, Rev. David T. Ernst, Sr. Photo taken by
Charles O'Rear for the DocuAmerica Project,
in Plymouth, Nebraska, 1973.
I thought of my own father on Father's Day 2015.

For most of my life I resisted the thought of entering the ministry as my father had. I did not think I should make that decision just based on a desire to imitate my Dad and I did not think that I could imitate him. I could not be as patient and suffer fools as gladly as he did. Yet I always was fascinated by the stories of missionaries who carried the Word of God to far corners of the world, especially when they would tell those stories in person. But then, again, I doubted that I had what it took to leave behind everything familiar and adapt to a new language and culture. I thought perhaps if I could not be David Livingstone, I could be Henry Stanley, the intrepid journalist who found Livingstone after he had disappeared into the African bush.

Dad never pressured me into living up to any expectation that he had or expressed disappointment in me. But when he preached at my high school baccalaureate service, he was speaking to me as much as anyone else when he said, "Whatever you do in life, my wish for you is that you know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior."

As the years passed by, I heard more stories of people who spent their retirement years as missionary volunteers. I began to think maybe that was something that I could do someday. Finally, when I was 42 years old, I reached a turning point in my life. My chosen career path had not taken me where I wanted to go. I had no family, no home, no business of my own to tie me down. I was ready to try something new.

That was the year that, after taking his morning walk and working in his garden all afternoon, my father passed, instantly, painlessly from this world. His funeral was a beautiful testimony to his faith, as his entire life had been. In his funeral sermon, Pastor Bruce Keseman of Christ Our Savior Lutheran Church, Freeburg, Illinois, said that my father had spoken to the world in a language that it did not understand, the language of God's love, but he had gone to a place where that was the only language spoken. Dad's epitaph was the same as his confirmation verse: "For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek." (Romans 1:16)

I did not decide to enter the mission field then and there. But I did realize that I wanted my life to end as his did, as a confession of what I truly believed. Also I began to ponder that life on this earth is indeed very brief and that there was no guarantee that I would have many years ahead of me to do what I felt moved to do.

Thanks be to God doors began opening for me from that point onward and so, here I am, doing what once I thought I would not be able to do. Above all, I give thanks that I had such a pastor and father to guide me until I was ready to take the steps than needed to be taken.
Jhoan Andres Leal Santana with his father, Juan Carlos and sister, Maria.
Jhoan Andrés Leal Santana with his father,
Juan Carlos, and sister, Maria.

But I did not talk about my own experience on that Sunday morning. Instead I preached on all of the 15th chapter of the Gospel according to St. Luke, which contains not one, but three parables about God's desire to save sinners. The longest and most appropriate for Father's Day is known as the Parable of the Prodigal Son, although it really is about two sons.

Perhaps everyone recalls the younger son who takes his inheritance and squanders it on an immoral lifestyle. The Greek text literally means "living unsaved" (ζῶν ἀσώτως), which one could take to mean either wastefully, in a material sense, or sinfully in a spiritual sense. Reduced to hunger and poverty, he returns to his father, hoping only to be accepted as a laborer on the family farm. Instead, the father restores him to sonship and throws a big party in honor of his return.

However, the parable also includes the rebellion of the older son, who followed all his father's rules until it appeared that he would not receive preferrential treatment. He, like the self-righteous Pharisees to whom Jesus told the parable, was reluctant to celebrate the repentance and salvation of his younger brother who received the father's undeserved favor.

The father in the parable represents God the Father, of whom our earthly fathers are only images. As a loving Father, He desires that all His children be restored to the family, not lost in sin. We preach the Law, God's universal will for how we should live our lives, but which in itself only condemns us for all are sinners and have disobeyed it, to call sinners to repentance and salvation.

For that reason, the other two parables in Luke 15, that of the lost sheep and the lost coin, both conclude with the assertion that God's holy angels rejoice over the salvation of even one sinner. The entire chapter, of course, refutes the Calvinist errors of limited atonement and double predestination, which lead either to despair on the part of the sinner or the self-righteousness of the Pharisees. God the Father desires that all might be saved and therefore sent His Son to die for all on the cross. In that we have our peace and hope. Amen.

Jan 9, 2014

Death and new life in the new year

New Year/Naming of Jesus
Attendance at our January 1, 2014 service of morning prayer.
We began 2014 with the service of morning prayer on January 1, celebrating the circumcision and naming of Jesus, according to the Gospel of Luke, chapter 2, verse 21. Also we reflected on Joshua 24:14-24 as a basis for renewed dedication to walking with the Lord in the new year.
Javier Mirabal

On January 2, we learned of the death of Javier Mirabal. The 38-year-old man had been hospitalized with an infection, but appeared to be recovering. He was not a communicant member of our mission, but rather of another "evangelical" church (in Venezuela, the word "evangelical" refers to almost any congregation that is not Roman Catholic). Nevertheless he was a great friend and supporter of our mission and in 2007 had stood up as a sponsor at the baptism of one of our members, Jimmy Perez. Javier was a schoolteacher and the only member of his family to earn a university degree. He enjoyed passing out tracts provided by "Cristo Para Todas Las Naciones" (the Spanish arm of Lutheran Hour Ministries). A respected and well-liked young man, his family's misfortune moved the entire community and his funeral drew a remarkable number of guests. We had prayed for Javier's health on January 1, and remembered the family in our prayers in our celebration of the Epiphany on Sunday, January 5.

The following week, the death of Monica Spear, former Miss Venezuela and actress, garnered international headlines. On Monday, January 6, she and her husband, Henry Thomas Berry, were murdered on the highway near Puerto Cabello, Venezuela's main seaport. The couple’s car reportedly broke down and they resisted a robbery which occurred while they were awaiting a tow truck. Their five-year-old daughter was with them and lived to tell of the crime. The couple had been separated for a year and a half, but were in the process of reconciliation. They had celebrated with a trip to the Venezuelan Andes and were on their way back to Caracas.

Their deaths rocked the entire nation and led to a historic summit between opposing political factions in this deeply divided country on resolving the problem of Venezuela's level of violent crime, one of the highest in the world.

 In Job 14:1-6 , Job cries to the Lord , "Man that is born of a woman is of few days, and full of trouble. He cometh forth like a flower, and is cut down: he fleeth also as a shadow, and continueth not.  And dost thou open thine eyes upon such an one, and bringest me into judgment with thee? Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? Not one. Seeing his days are determined, the number of his months are with thee, thou hast appointed his bounds that he cannot pass; Turn from him, that he may rest, till he shall accomplish, as an hireling, his day."
 It was a deep cry of misery for the universal sinfulness of the human race , which brings the judgment of God upon us all. Rich or poor, famous or unknown, we all must face the hour of our death. Even though we might think we have years of life ahead of us, we have no guarantee that the end might not be upon us this very day.

Yet for all that life is short and fragile, it is not with sadness that we say , God has put limits on our time here. St. Paul writes in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18, " Nor , brothers , do we want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep , lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus . "
 Many people think that there is no existence beyond this earthly life , so we must enjoy as many of the good things of this life as we can. This is the path of greed and envy because we can never have enough of the good things of this world. This lifestyle leaves us feeling empty , because we know the purpose of life is more than being born , competing so we can acquire what we can and then die . We know that we were created to live as children of God , in communion with Him.  For those that believe in Him, there is the promise of eternal life in Christ.

The gospel of Jesus Christ says that Christ has fulfilled the will of God in our place, also suffered the punishment for our sins in our place, so that on the Day of Judgment when we must give account of our lives, no matter the duration, we will escape the wrath of God by being clothed with the righteousness of Christ. and not have to worry about our short-term destiny, because God has decreed our long-term destiny: eternal life with Christ. Amen.
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