Sermon for the Last Sunday of the Church Year

WORTHY AND WELL PREPARED 

Theme: You prepare for the Last Day in the same way that you prepare for Holy 
Communion and vice versa: through faith in God’s Words.


Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. 
Amen. Speaking about His return in glory on the Last Day, Jesus promises to you 
in today’s Gospel that “He will send out His angels and gather His elect.”

Dear Christian friends:

        Several years ago, when we began eating and drinking God’s gift of Holy 
Communion every Sunday, one of my fellow pastors protested. This pastor did NOT 
misunderstand the faith of the Scriptures or the benefits of Communion. Like 
you, this pastor believed that the Sacrament 

is the true body and blood off our Lord Jesus Christ under the bread and wine, 
instituted by Christ Himself for us Christians to eat and to drink (Small 
Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar, I).

Like you, this pastor also believed that Jesus’ Words, 

“Given and shed for you for the forgiveness of sins,” are the main thing in the 
Sacrament [and he believed that] whoever believes these Words has exactly what 
they say: “forgiveness of sins” (Small Catechism, Sacrament of the Altar, III).

This pastor faithfully preached concerning the Holy Communion, “talking about 
the presence of the living Christ, knowing that ‘death no longer has dominion 
over Him’” (Apology X.4). In short, this pastor taught and believed the same 
things you have been taught and now believe.

        Why did this good and faithful pastor protest our eating and drinking 
God’s gift of Holy Communion every Sunday? He was worried about you, the 
confirmed Christians of Grace Lutheran Church. He worried that, if you had Holy 
Communion available to you every Sunday, you would take this meal for granted; 
that you would fail to prepare yourselves properly for this Holy Meal; that you 
would grow lazy, not examining yourselves, as you ought, in order to determine 
whether you are worthy to receive the Holy Communion. This pastor worried 
because God says to you in His Bible:

Let a person examine himself… For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning 
the body eats and drinks judgment on himself. That is why many of you are weak 
and ill, and some have died (1 Corinthians 11:28-30).

This pastor worried that you will be unprepared if you commune too often.

        I have a mixed reaction to this pastor’s brotherly and pastoral concern:

·       On one hand, I agree that all God’s Christians—you and I alike—should 
soberly and premeditatedly approach the altar of our Lord. We ought to take 
regular inventory of our lives, identifying and sincerely repenting of those 
sins we so regularly commit against one another and against God. We should also 
make a habit of thinking carefully beforehand about the indescribable miracle 
that takes place here when we eat and drink.

o       It would be good for everyone to approach Sunday worship wisely, using 
the prayers in the front cover of the hymnal or the Catechism’s “Christian 
Questions and Their Answers” as a way of thinking things through, especially 
before communing.

o       It would be good and healthy for us each to seek out and make amends 
with those whom we have injured or scandalized, sincerely apologizing and 
asking forgiveness from one another as a prelude to receiving Christ’s body and 
blood for the forgiveness of sins.

o       It would be good for each of us to have an uncluttered mind and a 
focused devotion as we kneel here, not sidetracked by any child or anything, 
alertly following the Word that are spoken here: “Take, eat; this is the true 
body of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, given into death for your sins. Take, 
drink; this is [His] true blood… shed for the forgiveness of your sins.”

o       It might even be beneficial to fast before communion, as many of our 
forefathers once did. If your health will allow it, consider the possibility 
not eating breakfast before worship, but using your Sunday morning hunger as a 
way of focusing yourself upon your true hunger—the “hunger and thirst for 
righteousness” (Matthew 5:6) that Jesus begins to satisfy for you here in Holy 
Communion. 

Because of these things, I can see and sympathize with my fellow pastor’s grave 
concern that you conscientiously prepare yourselves to commune. I also warn 
you, that you not approach this altar flippantly or absent-mindedly, but that 
you come soberly, watchfully, repentantly, trustingly, and with the sincere 
desire to do better than you have previously done.

·       On the other hand, there is something you must always bear in mind when 
you think about Holy Communion. Luther said it well: “That person is truly 
worthy and well prepared who has faith in these Words: ‘Given and shed for you 
for the forgiveness of sins’” (Small Catechism, IV). We might call this 
“passive preparation,” if you will, or “the way God Himself has prepared you to 
receive Holy Communion worthily.” What I mean is this:

o       God your heavenly Father has given you His miraculous gift of faith 
(Ephesians 2:8-9, 2 Peter 1:1). You believe because God’s powerful Words, 
spoken to you, called faith into existence—just as God’s Words previously 
called light out of darkness (Genesis 1:3).

o       Yes, you struggle every day with sin, but all your sins have now been 
forgiven by the blood of Jesus. There is no time that you are not fully and 
completely forgiven, not a single moment of any day that you are not a fully 
purchased and redeemed, baptized Child of God. 

o       You are the Children of God (1 John 3:1) and whenever the children are 
hungry, they should eat—even if they occasionally neglect to say their prayers 
before they dig in.

Maybe it has been a while since you have prayed the “Christian Questions and 
Their Answers.” Maybe there was just a little bit too much chaos in your house 
this morning as your family was getting ready for church. Maybe you have to 
wrestle a small child every time you approach the altar. Come without fear, 
dear saints of Grace! Hear and believe God’s living Words: “Given and shed for 
you for the forgiveness of sins.” Through faith in these Words you ARE worthy 
and you ARE well prepared, no matter what you manage to do or not to do before 
you arrive at the communion rail. You are worthy on account of your Baptism, 
which is nothing other than the sign and seal of God’s gift of faith to you, 
created by the power of His Word. You are worthy, not on account of what you 
might do to prepare yourself to come here, but on account of way your merciful 
God has prepared you. He creates your contrition and He emboldens your desire, 
even while He sustains
 and nourishes your faith. 

        It may surprise you to know that all of this is directly related to 
today’s Gospel. Here Jesus says to you concerning the Last Day, “Be on guard, 
keep awake. For you do not know when the time will come… What I say to you I 
say to all: Stay awake.” Jesus’ coming to you on the Last Day and His coming to 
you in Holy Communion are like twin sisters (The two look alike and it might be 
hard to decide which one you like the best). The main difference between these 
two things is that in Communion, Jesus is hidden in bread and wine, and on the 
Last Day, He will be fully revealed in all His glory. But either way, Jesus 
comes. 

        How you prepare for the coming of your Lord in one event is the same 
way you prepare for His coming in the other event. As it is with Holy Communion 
so it is with the Last Day. There is both an active and a passive way for you 
to prepare for Jesus’ return “to judge the living and the dead.” 

·       Jesus speaks about the active way in today’s Gospel when He says to 
you, “Be on guard” and “Stay awake.” With these Words, Jesus is telling you 
that you must not take God’s gifts or His promises for granted. You must remain 
sober, watchful, and expectant for His coming. You must guard your life and not 
be caught sleeping, as it were, by neglecting His Word and His Worship or by 
living as if you have no god and there was no Last Day.

·       Yet as much as you must prepare yourself and be watchful for Jesus’ 
return in glory, ALSO REST CONTENT THAT YOUR GOD HAS ALREADY FULLY PREPARED YOU 
FOR WHAT IS TO COME! God your heavenly Father looks at you as glowingly and as 
lovingly as any good father would look at His child. Jesus Christ your Elder 
Brother has cleansed you, pure and clean, from every single sin. The Holy 
Spirit continues to nourish and sustain your faith through the eternal gift of 
His Word. On account of these things, it is well said of you and of all God’s 
saints, that person is truly worthy and well prepared who has faith in these 
Words: “He will send out His angels and gather His elect.”
___________________________________________________________________________

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