Sermon
A sermon preached at New Hope Lutheran Church,
West Melbourne, FL on May 9, 2010 by Pastor Dale
Raether
Getting Ready to Take on the World…
…through the Word and for His Church
Revelation
21:10-23
Today is the second to the last in our sermon series on
Revelation. Would you say Revelation is a comforting book? Maybe not! It
warns us of all the different kinds of troubles we can expect till Jesus comes
again. That’s not so comforting. On the other hand, because He told us these
things ahead of time, when we see them happening, we have the comfort of knowing
Jesus has got things under control. But sometimes we need more comfort than
that. So did Jesus as true man. When He was on the cross cried out, “My God,
my God, why have you forsaken me?” Now, in His case He really was forsaken by
God, because He was suffering for our sins. Nevertheless what got Jesus through
that time was continually reciting God’s promises to Himself, especially the
promise that He would rise again, and so will we. This morning the Book of
Revelation also helps us get through our rough times. It shows us what the Holy
Christian Church is going to look like in heaven and what God is doing now to
make this happen. May this vision give us so much comfort that we’ll be ready
to take on the world with His Word and for His Church!
We read, “And he carried me away in the Spirit to a
mountain great and high, and showed me the Holy City, Jerusalem, coming down out
of heaven from God. It shone with the glory of God, and its brilliance was like
that of a very precious jewel, like a jasper, clear as crystal.”
The Holy City, Jerusalem, is picture language for the Holy Christian
Church, which is the total number of everyone who trusts in the Savior, both Old
and New Testament.
However here the Church isn’t that glorious. One problem
is we’re all sinners. For example Paul writes in Galatians 5,
“The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: sexual immorality,
impurity and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy,
fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness,
orgies, and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like
this will not inherit the kingdom of God.” How would you like to belong to a
church, where the members are doing these things? Some of Paul’s members in
Galatia were, and that’s why he had to warn to them. We on the other hand would
prefer belonging to a congregation where everyone is filled with the fruits of
the Spirit, such as, “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, 23gentleness and self-control – Galatians 5:22.”
Does this truly describe New Hope? Does it describe us? Not always, because
we’re sinners!
Another reason the Church may not seem glorious is many
grade it by the wrong standards. For them a glorious church is one that has
lots of members, and lots of money for all the latest marketing tools in order
to give people what they want, which is to feel good about themselves. How does
such a church compare to the eternal Church? The eternal Church shines with
God’s glory, not man’s. And so the true glory of a church is not its buildings
or programs. The true glory of the church is that God’s Son became a man, and
in His body paid for every sin, whether it was in thought, word or action.
And now let’s apply this to ourselves. We can attempt to
feel good about ourselves by covering up our sins from our own memory, or by
lopping off the commandments that don’t suit our situation, or by comparing
ourselves with others. These ways of feeling good about ourselves are not
real. Real is confessing our sins to God. Real is knowing that by Baptism our
sins have been washed away and we’re covered with the righteousness of Christ.
As we rely on this hope, the Holy Spirit causes us to grow in all these fruits
of faith, you see on the screen. He also makes us to be a precious jewel in His
eternal Church with an eternally important work to do.
Now, here we may not see our purpose. Moms sometimes
suffer from that. Maybe they don’t feel appreciated, and so they start
wondering if they’re accomplishing anything. Well, they are! In fact moms are
among the most important people in the world. Furthermore they’re an example of
what’s truly glorious in God’s Kingdom. It isn’t necessarily the big, showy
things. Rather it’s the little things they do day in and day out, especially
when they don’t feel like it and everything is hard, yet they do it anyway.
Our text shows us what God is building through this kind of
Christian service. We read: “The city was laid out like a square, as long
as it was wide. He measured the city with the rod and found it to be 12,000
stadia[a]in
length, and as wide and high as it is long. 18The wall was made of
jasper, and the city of pure gold, as pure as glass. 19The
foundations of the city walls were decorated with every kind of precious stone.
21The twelve gates were twelve pearls, each gate made of a single
pearl. The great street of the city was of pure gold, like transparent glass.”
Well, now you know where the term the pearly gates came
from. Again, this is all picture language. Anyway the sum total of all
believers in both the Old and New Testaments are described as a giant cube.
There are several reasons for this. One is the Holy of holies in the Old
Testament temple, which symbolized God’s presence with His people was a cube –
10 x 10 x10. That the eternal Church is 10 x 10 x 10 x 12 for the twelve tribes
of Israel or for the 12 apostles is saying that in heaven we will all be as holy
as God is; and that is going to feel really good and not only that we’re also
going to feel really great about everything we do. May this hope comfort you
for today!
Another reason it’s comforting that the eternal Church is
described as a cube is in a cube, nothing is missing, nor is there room for any
part that doesn’t belong. So, are you a part of this eternal Church? Yes –
through the merits of Christ, for God so loved the world… But do you have loved
ones you fear might be missing from this cube, because of the way they’re
living?
St. Paul feared that, which is why some nights instead of
sleeping he would be praying for them with tears and then during the day looking
for opportunities to share the Word with them. For example, we earlier read
what some of his members were up to and his warning that if they kept continued,
they wouldn’t have eternal life. However, he not only warned them, he built
them up. He told them, “You are all sons of God through faith in Christ
Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with
Christ – Galatians 3:26-27.”
Just as God worked through Paul to complete the cube, He
will also work through us. And so, let’s never be discouraged by how inglorious
the Church appears or by how weak its members seem. Rather through prayer and
through the Word, let’s take on the world, that God may use us to make His
Church glorious!
There’s one other point worth noting in this description of
the eternal church and that’s how big it. A stadia was about 600 feet. It was
12,000 stadia. Do the math. This cube would reach about 1400 miles into outer
space. The space station is at what, 200 some miles up? Anyway the size of the
eternal Church reminds us there are true believers from every nation, language,
time and denomination. Also, believers in heaven will not be divided by the
various traditions they may have in this life. However, does this mean we
should be ignoring those difference now and join the ecumenical movement to make
one giant glorious church? No way!
Our text reads, “The wall of the city had twelve
foundations, and on them were the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.”
The foundation of the eternal Church is the Bible alone. Trying to build the
Church on any teachings outside the Bible isn’t going to work, because it’ll be
outside the perfect cube and will not stand when Jesus comes again. So, am I
saying that only those who have a perfect understanding of Scripture are going
to make it? If that were true only Jesus would be in heaven some day. What I
am saying is we need to keep comparing our beliefs with the Word, and whenever
we find thoughts or attitudes that aren’t consistent with the Word, those
thoughts and attitudes need to go. Otherwise gradually our faith will be
founded more and more on that which isn’t true, until we find ourselves outside
the cube altogether.
Now, this danger is real. In fact Revelation chapters
12-15, which is the vision of the 7 vision warns us that the greatest threat to
the Gospel near the end is going to come from Christian churches. That may
sound weird. But as we get closer, churches will be putting human rules and
human reason above the Word. Furthermore they will refuse to be corrected by
the Word, because that would mean giving up some kind of earthly glory.
Whenever we see that happen, Jesus says in Revelation 18, “Come out from her!”
Get away as you would from a burning building. But what about family and
friends who insist on staying behind? Well, pray, warn, lead by your example,
but don’t stay in the fire with them!
But how far are we to take this getting away? Paul writes
in Thessalonians. “If anyone does not obey our instruction in this letter,
take special note of him. Do not associate with him, in order that he may feel
ashamed. Yet do not regard him as an enemy, but warn him as a brother.” No
one is perfect. We’re all growing. We’re all to keep encouraging one another.
But if a person becomes hostile toward any part of God’s Word, that hostility
can keep leading him away from the foundation, until he completely squashes the
mustard seed of faith in him. This is why God wants us to be careful that we
not give the appearance with our actions that we’re okay with what the person is
doing. Now, granted sometimes it takes a lot of prayer to know how to apply
this. And sometimes trying to say anything at all can be very frustrating and
discouraging. But that doesn’t change the need; and our text gives us the
strength.
We read in our text, “I did not see a temple in the
city, because the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are its temple. The city does
not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it
light, and the Lamb is its lamp.” This is picture language to remind us that
in the life to come we will have perfect joy in every way that we serve God,
because everything we do will do in heaven will be an act of joyful worship.
That’s our goal. It’s also our goal that others have this goal. And so
whatever we have to do between now and then, or whatever we might have to
suffer between now and then, it doesn’t really matter. What matters is the
goal, and also that because Jesus lives, He IS using us to accomplish great
things. So, then, let’s not give up. Let’s not put our head in the sand,
because of all the bad news in the world. But let’s take on the world with His
Word and for His Church. Amen.
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