The Dogmas of Emperors

World power makes audacious claims. The power to tax and make war.

“A decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered,” which is to say, taxed. The word for decree here is δόγμα – a dogma went out from the Emperor who styled himself Augustus, “the exalted one.” These are the audacious claims of world power. The exalted ones issue dogmas, and the little ones obey.

The dogmas of today have us racing, chasing tinsel as worthless as FTX crypto. The dogmas of world power demand we find satisfaction in a moment of purchase, pleasure in a hit of Soma or a night at the Feelies. The dogmas of world power declare blue is pink and always has been….

Read More

Blue Christmas?

A new version of “Blue Christmas” hit the charts this month, sixty-five years after Elvis Presley’s popular rendition. Christmas is blue (the idea goes) when we are without the person we love. “I’ll have a blue Christmas without you.”

Some churches now offer “Blue Christmas” services. One church advertised their service like this: “a space for those not feeling so merry & bright during the holidays.” The church offers “a space where you can be still and quiet and not have to pretend to be jolly.”

It’s well meaning, responding to the cultural demand we put on a veneer of gaiety. Happy holidays! And if they’re not happy for you, at least pretend.

The assumption is that the big Christmas service—which here at Immanuel is this one—is merry and bright and doesn’t really offer anything for the losers: the people whose lives are difficult, and lonely, and painful.

But that’s not Christmas. Christmas is for losers….

Read More

Advent Midweek Sermon: Saint Thomas the Apostle

“We have seen the Lord.” Thomas doesn’t believe it.

It’s hard to blame him. The dead remain in their tombs.

Jesus heard Thomas’ words: “Unless I see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and put my hand into His side, I will not believe.”

Jesus repeats Thomas’ words back to him: “Put out your finger, and see the wounds; thrust your hand into My side.” And Thomas confesses: “My Lord and my God!”

That confession is Christianity: God is in the manger; God is on the cross. God was made man in Mary’s womb. The God-man died and was laid in a tomb….

Read More

Gaudete 2022

One of my favorite scenes of The Simpsons is from the episode “Bart the Murderer.” Bart is in jail, pumping iron, when two guards usher in the family pastor to visit Bart. “Rev. Lovejoy!” Bart exclaims. “You’ve come to comfort me?” “Yes, Bart,” he says, then sits next to him, and pats him on the shoulder, saying, “There, there. There, there.”

Rev. Lovejoy has no real comfort to give. The prophet Jeremiah accused the clergy of his day of the same thing. “They have … healed the hurt of My people slightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace!’ When there is no peace” [6:14].

A few months ago my son had a seizure. In the ER he was non-responsive. He wasn’t breathing. He had to be intubated. It seemed like the end. And that’s when a hospital chaplain showed up….

Read More

Populus Zion 2022

“Daily the world is oppressed by new and growing evils.” Thus spake Gregory the Great, in the 6th century. “Daily the world is oppressed by new and growing evils.” A thousand years later, in the 16th c., Luther said, “There has never been greater error, sin, and falsehood on earth from the beginning as there has been in the last century.”

It feels like our day is different. The transgender craze seems a unique rebellion against nature itself. But each age has its madness, as we spin closer to the day of judgment. Luther saw the immorality of the clergy as a harbinger of the end: “Unchastity has taken forms against nature and has drowned no estate as much as the spiritual estate” - the spiritual estate meaning the clergy and monastics. The depravity of our day may be uniquely celebrated by government and corporations, but the rebellion against the Creator is not new. The historic Lutheran complaints about abuses testify that the deep perversions inside the Roman Catholic monasteries and seminaries were already scandalous five hundred years ago….

Read More

Saint Andrew the Apostle 2022

Advent begins by calculating the Sunday closest to St. Andrew’s day. That’s today, November 30. That calculation ensures there are always exactly four Sundays in Advent. But there is more at work here.

Andrew is among the first called to be a disciple of Jesus. The Greeks titled Andrew Prōtoklētos - the “first called.” Andrew and a friend had been disciples of John the Baptist. They listened to John, who pointed them to Jesus and said, “Look! That’s the Lamb of God!”

That’s astonishing on many levels. What kind of preacher sends his own members away? …

Read More

St. James of Jerusalem 2022

October 23, 2022

Immanuel Evangelical-Lutheran Church, Alexandria, VA


Fellow disciples of Jesus: from ancient times the Church remembered on certain days the apostles and other martyrs. Today is set aside to remember James of Jerusalem. James is mentioned in today’s Gospel reading as one of the brothers of Jesus. The NT in other places also repeats that James is the Lord’s brother. While there is no little disagreement, this most likely means that Mary and Joseph had other children.

Those siblings of Jesus did not believe their Brother was the Christ. “A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown and in his own household.” But something changed. That something is the resurrection. St. Paul tells us that the risen Jesus made a special appearance to His brother James (1 Cor. 15.7).

James soon becomes a leader in the Jerusalem church. He is their bishop, and Paul lists James before Peter and John as pillars of the church.

Today’s first reading, from Acts 15, tells us about the first great controversy the Church faced: do the Gentile Christians have to follow Jewish ceremonial laws? It’s James who settles the controversy and gives the parameters: all Christians should stay away from false worship, sexual immorality, and the Gentiles should avoid eating meats cooked in the blood, to not give offense to the Jewish believers.

James comes to be nicknamed “James the Just,” which sounds nice in English. It meant something more like “James the Pious.” Hegesippus in his Ecclesiastical History says James “frequently entered the temple alone and was frequently found situated upon his knees asking forgiveness for the people, so that his knees became hard after the manner of a camel, on account of always bending down upon a knee while worshipping God and asking forgiveness for the people.”

 

The color is red today for the blood of James. It was spilled when they threw him from the pinnacle of the temple. James did not immediately die; he knelt and prayed, “Father, forgive them for they do not know what they do.” He was then stoned and beaten with a fuller’s club.

It’s gruesome. But it shows us that something is more important than a comfortable home and pumpkin spice coffee. Perhaps we are not martyred because we give in long before it comes to that.

James the Just was not given to compromise. Aside from his important sermon in Acts 15, we have his great epistle, from which we heard the first portion this morning.

James teaches us that temptation gives opportunity to desire. Desire begets sin, and sin begets death. Humanity is shrouded in the deception that giving in to desire will bring happiness. It doesn’t. Desire brings death. So “Do not be deceived,” writes James. Listen instead to God’s Word: “Let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath; for the wrath of man does not produce the righteousness of God” [1.19f].

So St. James is clear: the Word of God produces His righteousness. In the preceding verses he uses terms for Baptism, that God gave us His gift “from above,” and “brought us forth by the Word of truth.”

So salvation is God’s work. But James is very concerned that no one thinks it doesn’t matter how you live. For there are people who say they believe, but they never repent, they never turn away from sin. So after James makes it clear that God makes us righteous by His free gift, he then says, “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves” (1.22).

He goes on to rebuke the church for paying more attention to rich people, the sin of partiality (which also applies to things like racism today). Then comes the famous saying, “Faith without works is dead” (2.17). James, you see, is very concerned that we not think of faith as believing there is a god “Even the demons believe” (2.19) that! Faith isn’t an intellectual assent to a set of propositions.

All that is the background to the notoriously disputed saying, “You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only” (2.24). James is speaking here about the faith of demons, the kind of faith that acknowledges there is a god but doesn’t repent. This dead faith turns the neighbor away who is hungry.

What else does dead faith do?

  • Dead faith turns the Gospel into a license to sin

  • Dead faith views relationships in terms of power

  • Dead faith sees people as opportunities or obstacles

  • Dead faith is anxious about money

  • Dead faith is anxious about time

  • Dead faith delights in criticism

  • Dead faith sees the commandments as a way to judge others, never a mirror to judge the self

  • Dead faith likes Lutheranism because they’ve heard you can “sin boldly”

That’s a lie. On the cusp of the Reformation, remember that the best way to understand the Lutheran distinction between salvation and good works is through this important Lutheran dogmatic principle: “Faith alone saves, but faith is never alone.”

There is no contradiction between Reformation doctrine and the words of James, unless we want to say there’s a contradiction between Paul and James. Because the principle “Faith alone justifies” comes from the Bible, not Luther. Luther got it from reading the Bible. That was the whole point. Luther lived in a milieu where good works were identified as venerating bones, renouncing family life, and howling Latin in monasteries. The money went to bishop’s palaces, while people starved. Meanwhile, the people were taught nothing about faith in Christ. Context matters.

But there is no contradiction between faith in Christ and doing good works. The good works show the faith. That’s what St. James is saying. The key word is see: “You see then that a man is justified by works and not by faith only.” You can’t see faith, you can only see its fruits. The Book of Concord, the great collection of Reformation teaching, puts it this way:

The works spoken of here are those that follow faith and show that faith is not dead but living and active in the heart. James, therefore, did not think that we merit the forgiveness of sins and grace through good works. After all, he is talking about the works of those who have been justified, who have already been reconciled and accepted, and who have obtained the forgiveness of sins. [Ap IV.246]

This is the life of the justified. James the Just teaches in the first chapter justification, that we are saved by Christ’s work. He gives us from the above the new birth, as was begun in Miriam this morning. James then goes on to say in chapter two, here’s what that life is suppose to look like. James the Just teaches the life of the justified, a life of showing no partiality, a life that loves the neighbor.

In chapter three he then says that the justified control their tongues. “Out of the same mouth proceed blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be so” [3.10]! Then in chapter four he tells us we can’t look to the world for our pleasures. Instead we must submit to God and spend our lives in repentance. “Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up” [4.10]. But if you live for riches, he says in chapter 5, misery will come upon you. “Your gold and silver are corroded, and their corrosion will be a witness against you and will eat your flesh like fire” [5.3]. The letter concludes by admonishing us to pray, confess our sins, and forgive each other.

In all of this, James the brother of Jesus, James the Just, teaches us the life of the justified. And with his own death he shows us how to die: confess Jesus to the end, and pray that God forgives those who hurt us.

All praise to Jesus, who appeared to His brother James, and made him a teacher of faith and an example of good works. +INJ+

Eleventh Sunday after Trinity 2022

There are two men in today’s parable. Both believe in God. One is saved; the other is damned. Why? Because one is a better person? Not so! In today’s parable, the condemned man is honest and fair; he is faithful to his wife; he tithes (i.e., he gives 10%) to the church; he prays to the one true God. Yet despite all his good works, and his belief in God, Jesus says that this man was not justified.

Justification is the central doctrine of Christianity. Justification is the article by which the Church stands or falls. Justification was the number one issue in the Reformation. More than indulgences, or the papacy, or monks howling masses for money, justification was the central issue. Take away the Bible’s teaching of justification, and you end up with an entirely different religion….

Read More

Tenth Sunday after Trinity 2022

Our church stands in the line of the church catholic of the West. As the power of the papacy became tyrannical and heretical, and scholastic theology drifted further and further from Holy Scripture, a reformation was necessary. The temple needed to be cleansed. We are heirs of that reformation.

One of the major issues needing reform in the sixteenth century was the idea that Mass—what we call Divine Service—was a sacrifice. Go to any local Roman church and you will hear the priest invite the people to pray “that my sacrifice and yours may be acceptable to God, the almighty Father.” This idea—that the mass is our sacrifice to and for God—is the heart of why we still must remain separated from our friends in the Roman church….

Read More

Eighth Sunday after Trinity

The Speaker of the House visited Taiwan last week. Her visit threatened to disrupt America’s official policy on Taiwan: strategic ambiguity. I think that’s what we have going on in our own lives, especially as Christianity intersects desire: strategic ambiguity. We’re partially but not fully committed to being disciples of Jesus. Christianity is good, but let’s not take it too far.

But God demands an end to our ambiguity. “Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God” [James 4.4]….

Read More