8-2-2020 Grace - Benson & Vail Sermon

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Pastor Tim Patoka

“Under the Sun” #8: The Sun Rises Over Good and Evil August 2, 2020 Show God’s Perfect Love Matthew 5:38-48 1) Reverse Your Revenge 2) Include Your Enemies

For the past two months, we have been in our “Under The Sun” worship series as we look at some of the Bible’s references to the sun and what God has to say in connection with it. Today’s sun reference is its daily rising and shining it does as it makes its way across our blue skies. Maybe it’s just me, but I find it surprising how something so daily and mundane has left its mark in so much of humanity. Many nature-based religions have a prominent part on the sun’s rise. One that I find especially interesting is from the Aztec people. Not only did they have a detailed account about the sun’s beginning and daily sunrise, but they also horrified the Spanish conquistadors with their daily human sacrifices to fuel the sun’s rise over the horizon. The Renaissance astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus shook the foundations of scientific thought when he theorized that it’s the Earth that goes around the sun, not the other way around. So many of our history’s poets have found countless parallels and commentaries on life in the sun’s daily rising and shining. People have and will continue to say all sorts of stuff about the sun’s daily trek across our sky. And as we see in our verses for this morning from Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount in Matthew chapter 5(:38-48), Jesus too talks about it. As he points out, this daily rising and shining is one of the many ways that God shows his perfect love for all people, both good and evil. While this may like a no-brainer at first, it is also a truth that is worth our time to review and remember. For God’s perfect love does not take revenge on anyone who does evil. Rather, God’s love includes both friends and enemies regardless of how much they do or don’t deserve it. And as children of God through faith in his Son, we too are encouraged and expected to show this same kind of love to both those who do evil and to our enemies. Whenever we talk about Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5 – 7), it is important to remember who Jesus is talking to. He is speaking to Old Testament believers who already have the foundation of faith in place. Since they have the basics covered, Jesus gives them an exhaustive list of what they can do to live as his children. Even though it is the last thing that our Savior said in our Gospel reading, Jesus summarizes this whole idea up by saying, “So then, be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Matthew 5:48) One way to be exactly that is by understanding what God intended in the Old Testament (Exodus 21:24; Leviticus 24:20) when he said, “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’” (Matthew 5:38) God’s intention with this phrase was that the punishment is to fit the crime. If someone lost an eye, a tooth, or something else in an altercation, the most they could demand in repayment was the same loss. 1


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8-2-2020 Grace - Benson & Vail Sermon by gracelutheransaz - Issuu