3-15-20 Grace-Tucson Sermon

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Ephesians 5:8-14 [3rd Sunday in Lent—CWS A]

Pastor Ron Koehler

Grace—Tucson, AZ

March 15, 2020

In the name of Jesus Christ, the Light of the world, dear friends, If you are giving much thought to Jesus’ sufferings and death right now during Lent, you are very much aware of the somber note the season sounds. We are painfully reminded of our sins and Jesus’ punishment when it should have been us receiving not only the torture and pain, but even worse, total separation from our God. Although difficult to consider, the message of the season is necessary for our life of faith. While Wednesday Lenten services strike that somber chord, still in the midst of the season, we go on with Sunday worship, pretty much as we usually do, and can even do so by singing a song like we just sang: Shine, Jesus, Shine! How can that be? Jesus’ sufferings and death do not appear to the world to be shining moments! But in reality, they were. Through everything and through all of time, JESUS SHINES! 1. IN A DARK WORLD 2. SO THAT YOU MAY SHINE We live in a world—and are part of a world—that is dark with sin. God sets the expectation that people are to worship him as the only true God and to set him and his Word as the priority in their lives. God also expects that we love one another and show that in a number of ways. Really, those two things—love for God and for people summarize the expectations God puts forward in the Ten Commandments. Whenever and wherever those things don’t happen—whether in the heathen or in those of us who believe—the dark cloud of sin is hovering and it brings the judgment of God. So, it is a dark world we live in as we see people who have no regard for God and his will. It is a dark world we live in as we see the love for others surrendered, leaving only self-serving individualism. It is a dark world we live in as we see hatred and murder and a million other sins. But you know something? Paul had to break it to the Christians in Ephesus that they were not just living in the darkness of the world. In fact, they were not even just part of the world’s darkness. They were darkness itself! So corrupt was the sinful nature in each of them—and in each of us—that God considers us totally dark with sin even from birth. Before our baptism or before we came to hear the wonderful gospel of salvation through Jesus Christ, we were not just affected by darkness or influenced by darkness around us, we were darkness. Try to picture the world—maybe think of a globe. Picture that globe painted black. Now imagine a tiny spot of light on that darkened sphere. Imagine that light as Jesus Christ shining in a dark world. When he came to be our Savior, he came as a man who could only physically be in one place at a time so you could watch that little light travel around on that blackened globe. And as true God and true man, he was the only person shining with perfect righteousness—everyone else was tainted with sin. The light of Jesus began shining at his miraculous conception and birth. It kept shining as he preached and taught about salvation through faith in him. It kept shining as the conspiracy was put together by Judas and the religious leaders to have him put to death. Jesus shone as they led him before Herod and Pilate and the soldiers—and the


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