September 20, 2020 Grace - Tucson Sermon

Page 1

Matthew 18:15-20 [Pentecost 16—CWS A]

Pastor Ron Koehler

Grace-Tucson, AZ

September 20, 2020

Dear Friends in Christ, Two weeks ago, we focused on Jesus’ promise that the gates of hell would not overcome the Church because it is based on Christ. But at the end of that lesson was another promise from Jesus that we did not emphasize that day. It was this: I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven (16:19).” This is something that Jesus told his disciples more than once, and so it is found in our lesson for today. But it’s at the end, so we’re going to back up and see what led to this promise and one more. Actually, it would be good for us to back up just a little bit more to catch why he says what he does in our lesson. Jesus said to his disciples, “What do you think? If a man has a hundred sheep, and one of them wanders away, will he not leave the ninety-nine on the hills and go looking for the one that wandered away? If he finds it—Amen I tell you—he rejoices more over that one sheep than over the ninety-nine that did not wander away. In the same way, your Father in heaven does not want even one of these little ones to perish (18:12-14).

Jesus explains the great love of God, that he wants people to live—not die—eternally. He used the example of a wandering sheep. A shepherd would care enough about an individual sheep, that he would seek it out in order to bring it back to the flock. This is the way God feels when a person’s eternal life is threatened because they are spiritually wandering. That sets the stage for the words before us now in Matthew 18. Jesus suggests that we are to have a God-like love for sinners. And he gives us a blessed privilege to show that love: handling his law and gospel for the salvation of souls! We get to serve others with the gospel of forgiveness! Our doing this is how Jesus Guides His Church. He uses his people to Call Each Other to Repentance Are you a procrastinator? Do you put things off until the very last minute? You know, sending out a birthday card only a couple days before the birthday, banking on the post office to do its thing in a timely way? Or waiting until right before an assignment is due to work on it? Maybe you’re a December 23-24 Christmas shopper. Or perhaps it only happens with things you don’t really want to do, but know you need to. We all can probably relate to that. I think that over the course of my ministry, I have seen more procrastination with this work that Jesus calls all Christians to do for each other than with anything else. That goes for church members, Christians not in our church, pastors—all of us! There’s a whole bunch of us who are about to feel really uncomfortable because we know we have ignored Jesus’ command here. Or at best we have procrastinated, which stems from a sinful reluctance to listen to Jesus and show love for someone else.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.