3-22-20 Sermon

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Matthew 20:17-28 Pastor Nathan P. Kassulke

Lent 4 Sunday, March 22, 2020 “Be a Slave”

There are times in life that we come to appreciate the blessings that we once enjoyed because they are taken away from us. We realize what a tremendous blessing health is when we get sick. There are many in our world today who are in that very position or situation. And there is another example of that which I suspect many of us can relate to today. We appreciate our freedom when it is limited and taken away. A week ago the sanctuary in which I am being recorded was fairly full with people who were free to gather together and to encourage one another, but it wasn’t long after that when we started hearing the directions to keep a distance, to avoid gatherings, to stay in your own home unless and until it was necessary for you to leave. And that is such a different approach that it has probably hit many very hard. We don’t feel free to do all sorts of things that we did before. Even before these restrictions were shared with us, our society in general has had a certain appreciation for freedom. As a church we have long rejoiced that this country guarantees us the freedom to practice Christianity and to speak the truths of God’s Word. As individuals, we celebrate that there are similar guarantees that the limits placed on our freedoms will themselves be limited. Certain freedoms are assured to us. So it sounds very contrary to that sprit for me to say to you: “Be a slave.” A slave really has no freedom. A slave by the very nature of that position or station or condition or whatever you might want to call it is bound. A slave is required to do not what he or she wants, but what the slave master wants. A slave doesn’t get to make her own decisions. A slave serves according to the will of the master. And yet you know already that it is not my own idea to tell you today that you should be a slave. Jesus said it. You heard his words from today’s Gospel in Matthew 20. He said, “whoever wants to become great among you will be your servant, and whoever wants to be first among you will be your slave.” God’s Word says plenty about freedom and about the things from which God has set us free. And at the same time, Jesus tells us something like this: be a slave. Be a servant. That is what it means to be great. And that is the advice and direction that we are taking to heart today. Be a slave. You are already getting the sense of this, but I am going to point it out specifically. Being a slave goes against both our society and against our nature. Being a master we like. Being in charge is something that people around us aspire to. Jesus in our sermon text says the same thing about people at that time: “You know that the rulers of the nations lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them.” We have an idea that the ones who are the greatest are the ones who can rule others and have authority over them. That’s the same reason that Joseph’s brothers were jealous when they heard about the dreams that Joseph had, dreams that clearly portrayed them bowing down to him. That is not at all what they wanted. When Jesus tells us to be slaves, he is not talking about an arrangement where we actually live in slavery or need to hire ourselves out as servants. He is talking about an attitude that puts the needs and cares and concerns of others above our own. He is talking about always wanting to serve others instead of always wanting to be served. And the reason that is so difficult for us and for our society and really has been for people since the beginning of the world is that our natural way of thinking is the exact opposite. We are inclined to always think of ourselves first and to primarily consider what is best for us. God created us to love him perfectly and to reflect that love by loving others. We fall very far short of that goal. I realize there are a number of wonderful exceptions to the fact that we have been seeing this same sort of sinful attitude around us in recent days, but we have been seeing it, haven’t we? When essential items are off the store shelves not because people really needed them right now, but in many cases because people were so worried about themselves and their own future that they gave no thought to anyone else who might need those things. And even for many of us who did not necessarily act in those ways, our first thoughts when news starts to break turn to “how is this going to affect me?’ instead of saying, “How can I


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