June 4, 2023 – Holy Trinity; Matthew 28:16-20 June 5, 2023 — Psalm 49

June 4, 2023 – Holy Trinity; Matthew 28:16-20

“Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. 17When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

In this final commissioning, Jesus tells his disciples to go and make disciples teaching people to obey everything he had commanded them. In the two thousand years since his commissioning, people have cheapened religion, refusing to be obedient to the commands of G-d let alone teaching others to do the same. And too many have reduced worship to nothing more sacred than a concert in the park. To me all of these are reasons that Trinity Sunday remains so important to us as Lutheran Christians. The Trinity not only informs our faith, it bookends our worship – we begin and end each worship service “In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”  And it is so important that it bookends our Christian lives – we are baptized in the name of the Trinity, and when we are buried the pastor speaks these same words.

The G-d who created the heavens and earth is the G-d who loves you infinitely more than any earthly father or mother. And like our earthly fathers and mothers, G-d gives us the freedom to make our own decisions – decisions about faith, decisions about doing good or bad, decisions about relationships. We are not mindless, religious robots. G-d gives us the free-will to be open to the influences of faith, or not. Faith cannot be forced upon people. You don’t come to such conclusions by force, your reason, intellect or brain. You discover those conclusions about faith and about G-d through a relationship with G-d that begins with the revelation in Scripture. To learn that G-d loves you so much that he was willing to suffer and die for you on the cross, well, you don’t find that truth by your reason or intellect. Instead, you find it in the revelation in the Scriptures – you learn by reading and studying the scriptures that G-d is fully present in your heart and is with you this day, in fact every day

And so much about our faith begins with the “Ruach” – the Holy Spirit – which has been in existence from the beginning of everything. And our Holy Spirit along with the Father and the Son continue to have enormous potential for good throughout the world. This is why Jesus commissioned his disciples to do his ministry — beginning with baptism, and then teaching, to make disciples of all nations, not just members, but people who want to be at the forefront of ministry of love, forgiveness, equality and justice.  

No matter how much you hurt today, G-d loves you because G-d created you, and G-d’s love is revealed in the simple ways that G-d continues to make G-d’s self known in your life. No matter how much you doubt, Jesus loves you because he loved his own disciples who never could quite get out of the way of their own doubt and yet continued to do ministry to grow the church. No matter how much you have or have not done in relation to faith, the Holy Spirit will enlighten you with gifts and sustain you with its presence.

No matter if you understand the Trinity or not, G-d is all, is in all, and though remains a mystery to us, we know G-d best as G-d reveals G-d’s self – Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Pastor Dave

June 5, 2023 — Psalm 49 

“Hear this, all you peoples; listen, all who live in this world, 

both low and high, rich and poor alike: My mouth will speak words of wisdom; the meditation of my heart will give you understanding. I will turn my ear to a proverb; with the harp I will expound my riddle: Why should I fear when evil days come, when wicked deceivers surround me—those who trust in their wealth and boast of their great riches? No one can redeem the life of another or give to God a ransom for them—the ransom for a life is costly, no payment is ever enough—so that they should live on forever and not see decay. For all can see that the wise die, that the foolish and the senseless also perish, leaving their wealth to others.” Psalm 49:1-10 

The problem that gave rise to the psalm is identified in the middle verses: certain wealthy persons are making the lives of others in the community miserable so that they live in fear. The Psalmist gives three reasons why those being oppressed should not fear the wealthy: 1. They too will die — their wealth will not save their lives; 2. When they die, they will not take their wealth with them — no one does; 3. Like so many sheep, these oppressors are marching toward death. 

What we need to remember every day is to take time to stop binge watching television and spend some time with G-d — remembering that it is G-d alone who has ransomed you and me from the power of death. It is Christ who has redeemed us — “So do not be afraid!” 

Prayer

Lord Jesus, you condemned the rich because they have already received their reward, and you proclaimed the poor blessed because the kingdom of heaven is theirs. Teach us to seek imperishable goods and to have confidence in your blood, poured out as the price of our redemption; and to you be the glory now and forever. 

Amen.