THE POWER OF THE CROSS OF CHRIST

As winter approaches, there’s deep concern about a looming energy crisis in Europe, caused in no small part by the war in Ukraine. And our country is also experiencing its own problems regarding energy. Debates rage about how to transition to non-fossil fuel sources as energy prices go up and our power grids in some places are strained almost to the brink of collapse. And very moderate estimates say that we would need to double the size of our power grid just to begin to meet the energy requirements for a future in which the electric vehicle (or EV) is the dominant form of automotive transportation.

As brownouts roll across high population centers, people are increasingly asking: Where are we going to get the power? Is it going to come from low-carbon natural gas? From solar, wind, geothermal, or nuclear? Or is it simply a robust combination of all of these sources?

This question, in a spiritual sense, is also a question that Christianity is asking these days within our American society. Of course, I’m not talking about how we’re going to power the lights and air conditioning. What I’m saying is, spiritually speaking, where are we going to get the energy for these times of colossal societal shifts that are so much bigger than us? Where are we going to get the power?

Brothers and sisters in Christ, we face a different kind of energy crisis as Christians within our secularizing American culture. Our declining denominations of every branch of the Church, dwindling Christian institutions, and struggling congregations, are causing us to wonder (and even worry) where we’re going to get the power to move into the future. Yes, COVID took its toll on the Church, no doubt about it. However, this spiritual energy crisis for the Church in the United States was already in place, and growing, long before any of us ever heard about the coronavirus. The pandemic was merely a kind of accelerant which exacerbated trends within American Christianity that were already well established.

Seminary enrollments have seen a marked drop in recent decades. Worship attendance has been trending downward for years in every single county of the United States. The fastest growing religious affiliation in our country is “none” — no affiliation whatsoever. Volunteerism is way down across the board in our American society, which has a huge impact on service clubs, fraternal organizations, youth organizations, and, of course, on congregational life. And Church bodies and institutions have been made to reorganize, then reorganize again, and then reorganize yet again, in response to dwindling resources. So, essentially, we have an energy crisis in the Church throughout our nation, even within the mega-church congregations now.

Nonetheless, at the risk of sounding overly simplistic, I would like to suggest that we have a power source which can fuel the future of the Christian Church in America (whatever form that future might take), and this power source is right under our noses. It’s a renewable resource of inexhaustible supply, and this power is the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is the message we have been given to proclaim to the world that [1] there really is such a thing as sin, [2] our sin separates us from God and one another, and [3] we sinners are reconciled to God through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It’s the message that we are forgiven and freed by the sacrificial blood of the cross of Christ our Lord, so that we might live a new life with God which begins now and continues forever.

In fact, the New Testament refers to the gospel as “the power of God” for our salvation in the Book of Romans. And the actual Greek word translated into English as the word “power” is the word dynamis. So if this word sounds to you like the word “dynamite” then you are correct. That is, according to the New Testament, the full gospel concerning the reality of sin, the spiritual consequences of sin, and then the forgiveness of sin granted to us by the infinite atonement of the sacrificial offering of Christ on our behalf, is an explosively saving and redeeming message. It’s a message that detonates within the receptive ear and open heart, igniting the living fire of faith and salvation. The gospel is the very power that drives faith and fuels the Church.

I believe a major factor in the energy crisis of the Church in America is that we’ve lost our focus on the power of the gospel. Far too many think it’s insufficient as an energy source — that it must be combined with something else, such as the latest fashions in entertainment and media. Or, too many people these days seek to dilute the significance of the cross of Christ, making Jesus into merely a grand religious example, a great spiritual ethicist, or the ideal leader of a liberation army. Therefore, as long as the cross is treated as an afterthought — or worse, as an embarrassment — you can expect the energy crisis in the American Church to continue.

But I’m optimistic. As other power sources we run after prove to be insufficient, the Church will continue to grow dim for a time, BUT within the growing darkness of our culture we will more and more come to see the True Light who was hanged on a central cross between two criminals. For as we see in Luke chapter 23, amid sarcasm and scoffing from those who mockingly call Jesus messiah and king, our Lord Jesus Christ reveals that he, as the Universal Messiah and Everlasting King, gives his life in love for the sake of the world. Enthroned on his sacrificial cross, Jesus uses his divine authority to welcome a penitent sinner into God’s heavenly paradise. And Jesus does the same thing for us! Thanks be to God!

In other words, if we were to die tonight, and we were to enter God’s paradise, what would we say about our entry into glory? Would we say, It’s because I…? It’s because I made a covenant with God, or it’s because I am faithful, or it’s because I am this or that… No! Rather, it is because HE (Jesus). It’s because HE died for me. It’s because HE made a baptismal covenant with me. It’s because HE is faithful and true. Like the thief on a cross next to Jesus, it is entirely because HE granted us access to God’s paradise. The thief in paradise can only and ever say, It’s because the man on the middle cross said I could come. Likewise, when we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun, it can only and ever be said by us that it’s entirely because the man who was hanged on the middle cross said that you and I could come to be there.

The gospel of the cross of Christ is the saving dynamite that, when harnessed through his Word and Sacraments, fuels the Church. So as we try in vain to plug into other energy sources, we will come to see once again that the good news of the forgiveness of sin and the promise of eternal life through Jesus Christ provides us with all the power we will ever need.

Good Advent & Merry Christmas!!! Pastor Tim

PASSING THE FAITH ON

As I write this article, our son Nicholas just flew the family nest for the first time in his young life. He’s done well here in California making custom lighting for the entertainment industry, including for Disney Parks both here and in Florida (for example, lighting for Disney Star Wars, Avengers, the Haunted House, Pirates of the Caribbean, Snow White and so forth). He also did custom lighting for some movie sets, and individually for celebrities here like Adam Sandler and Gary Oldman. But he’s excited to start a new chapter in life back in Wisconsin. His WI friends prevailed upon him to move back and get an apartment together, so he’s really looking forward to being on his own back up north in the deep freeze. We love you Nick, we’re very proud of you, and we hope you have a lot of fun!

So as I reflect on this major life transition for us, I’m reminded of the supreme importance of passing on the Christian Faith to new generations, and I’m reminded of the crucial part that the family plays in this mission and ministry.

“Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, for the sake of the promise of life that is in Christ Jesus, to Timothy, my beloved child: Grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord… I am reminded of your sincere faith, a faith that lived first in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice and now, I am sure, lives in you.” – (from Second Timothy 1:1-5)

Just as the biblical Timothy first received his Christian Faith through the witness of his grandmother Lois and mother Eunice, I also am the beneficiary of the sincere Christian Faith that was first held by my parents and then transmitted to me. Thanks be to God!

I really don’t know what I’d do without the faith and love of Christ my Savior. Without the inner peace and joy of his Holy Spirit, I don’t know what I’d do with all of the grief and loss of this life. Because of the spiritual new birth that Christ has given me, I am able to grieve my losses in life while simultaneously rejoicing in the never-failing grace and eternal hope of my Lord Jesus Christ.

Passed down to us through our ancient forebears like Peter, John, Mary, Paul, Lois, Eunice, Timothy, and so on, our Christian Faith is an amazing thing. It’s amazing because it allows us the ability to deeply grieve a loss while, at the same time, to rest in Christ’s blessed assurance of “the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting” (from the Apostles’ Creed).

And just as we have benefitted from the faithful witness of our Christian forebears, we (like Olympic relay runners) are now responsible to pass the baton of Christ and his Church to the next generations. But, interestingly, we have to contend with a general shift in cultural attitudes and behaviors regarding religious faith and spiritual life.

This shift in American culture is a general move toward being a predominantly “spiritual but not religious” population. However, we are those who know (by the grace of God in our lives) that religiosity and spirituality are not mutually exclusive. As Christians, we know that being spiritual helps us to be authentically religious, and being religious helps us to be sustainably spiritual. So, spirituality without communal religious practices (which act as transmitters of God’s grace) is simply unsustainable in the long run. Therefore, despite this shift in culture, we must be faithful to our calling, duty and joy to share the good news of Jesus with others, and to pass on the Christian Faith to all those who would come after us.

Furthermore, because of this cultural shift in America, we may have to start evangelizing our grandchildren and even our great-grandchildren. If your children aren’t taking up the baton of Christian Faith, then you’ll need to pick it up and pass it on to their kids for them. So, if your children are not doing it, I encourage you to bring your grandkids and great-grandkids to Sunday worship, Sunday school, Confirmation class, and congregational events, because the greatest legacy we can leave to them is a living faith in Jesus Christ.

“Do not be ashamed, then, of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner, but join with me in suffering for the gospel, relying on the power of God, who saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace… For this gospel I was appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher, and for this reason I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, for I know the one in whom I have put my trust, and I am sure that he is able to guard until that day what I have entrusted to him. Hold to the standard of sound teaching that you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. Guard the good treasure entrusted to you, with the help of the Holy Spirit living in us.” – (from Second Timothy 1:8-14)

Together in Christ, Pastor Tim