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Rev. Charles Lehmann + Matthew 16:21-26 + Pentecost 15

     In the Name of + Jesus.  Amen.

     When the Lord says that something is necessary, we should probably stand 
up and take notice.  Today in our Gospel reading Jesus said that it was 
necessary “that he go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the 
elders, chief priests and teachers of the law, and that he  be killed and on 
the third day be raised to life.”  Whenever Jesus predicted his death He used 
this same word: necessary.  It was necessary that the Lord suffer and die.  It 
was necessary that He be killed by the elders, chief priests, and teachers of 
the law.  It was necessary that He be raised on the third day.  It wasn't 
optional.  Jesus wasn't picking between door #1 and door #2.  The cross was the 
only door that would atone for the sins of the whole world, and so Jesus took 
that road.  There was no alternative that would have accomplished our 
salvation.  The cross was necessary... absolutely necessary.

     The cross was necessary because by it the Father was able to pour out His 
wrath on Jesus so that He could have mercy on you.  Nothing brings greater joy 
to our Lord and Saviour than when one of you, his precious ones, looks to Him 
because you desire to receive mercy.  That mercy which Jesus desires to give to 
you, His children, can come only by the cross.  Mercy is what the cross is all 
about.  And the cross, people loved by God, is what Jesus is all about.  There 
is no forgiveness, no Divine love for sinners, and no life for any of the 
Lord's baptized children outside of Jesus' innocent suffering and death for 
them on the cross.

     That is why Jesus' response to Peter's words in today's Gospel lesson is 
so strong.  When Peter suggests that Jesus shouldn't die, our Lord says to him, 
“Get thee behind me, Satan.  You have not in mind the things of God but the 
things of men.”  Our Lord uses these strong words even though what Peter 
desires for His Lord sounds good and right.  He wants Jesus to live.  He does 
not want His Lord to be betrayed into the hands of sinful men.

     But these are not pious or holy words that Peter is speaking.  It's 
amazing how quickly this disciple can move from speaking the Father's words to 
speaking the words of the devil.  Today's reading comes immediately after 
Peter's confession of Christ in Caesarea Galilee.  He has just said that the 
Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God.  He has made the good 
confession that Jesus is God Incarnate, the Lord of the Old Testament come into 
the flesh to redeem His people.

     Peter's confession that Jesus was the Son of the Living God came from God 
the Father.  Peter didn't come up with the words by himself.  But just as 
Peter's good confession came from God, his rebuke of Jesus in today's reading 
came from Satan.

     When we first hear Peter's words to Jesus, it seems unfair to fault him 
for them.  When Peter hears what the elders, chief priests, and teachers of the 
Law are about to do, he doesn't cheer and give shouts of encouragement.  He 
doesn't sharpen the nails that will go through His Lord's hands and feet.  
Peter wants Jesus to live.  He wants Jesus to escape the death that He was born 
to die.  Peter wants Jesus to skip the cross entirely and move on to the good 
stuff like reigning on David's throne forever.

     It is good that the Father didn't give Peter what he prayed for.  Peter 
had literally said, “God have mercy on you, O Lord.”  Peter didn't want Jesus 
to die, and he didn't want the Father to kill Him. Instead, He wanted Jesus to 
get what He deserved:  glory, honor, and immortality.  But if the Father 
wouldn't have sent Jesus to suffer and die on the cross, then Peter would have 
died eternally.  Peter would have gone straight from this life into the pangs 
of eternal death in hell.  He would be suffering there even now.

     It was necessary for Jesus to suffer and die on the cross.  It was even 
necessary that the Father send Him there to die.  Later Jesus would quote the 
prophet Zechariah and say, “It is written, 'I will strike the shepherd and the 
sheep will be scattered.'”  But who struck the shepherd?  If we look in 
Zechariah 13 we find that it was the Lord Himself.  God the Father took up the 
sword and struck the shepherd.  He did this because the sin of the world must 
be punished.  Someone had to suffer the hell that you and I deserve.

     The Lord of Hosts is holy and just.  He cannot tolerate sin.  The Psalmist 
confesses this when he prays these words, “The boastful shall not stand before 
your eyes; you hate all evildoers.”

     Because of the holiness of God it was a terrifying thing for the Old 
Testament saints to be in His presence.  The Old Testament Christians knew well 
that they were sinful.  They knew that the holy and righteous God could justly 
condemn them eternally for their sin.  To put it simply, they knew it was not 
safe for a sinner to be in the presence of a holy and just God.

     The wrath of God against the sinner had to atoned for.  Sin could not 
remain unpunished.  Someone had to die.  Blood had to be spilt.  There could be 
no safe access to God apart from the shedding of blood.  It had been this way 
ever since the moments just before God expelled Adam and Eve from the Garden of 
Eden.

     In these moments the Lord made clothing of skins for Adam and Eve.  We all 
know that a leather jacket doesn't make itself.  The cow doesn't just shed his 
skin so that we can dress in style.  When God covered Adam and Eve's sin, some 
little critter had to give up its life.  God had warned Adam about the tree of 
the knowledge of good and evil.  “In the day you eat of it you will surely 
die.”  And they did.  In the moment that Adam and Eve ate the fruit they died 
spiritually.  They were seperated from the holy, just, and loving God who had 
created them.

     But God did not kill them outright.  He was the same God to them that He 
is to us.  In mercy God poured out His wrath on an animal instead.  From the 
shed blood of that animal came the clothes of skin that Adam and Eve wore as 
they left the garden.  The Lord covered their iniquity.  They did not die that 
day—even though they deserved it.

     God continued to work in this way throughout the Old Testament.  Every 
year each family sacrificed a lamb.  The Lord offered and received this blood 
sacrifice for the sins of that family.  The Lord's wrath was turned aside by 
the blood.  The family did not die for their sins even though they would have 
deserved it.  But the Lord's wrath was real.  It was every bit as real as the 
blood of the lamb.  If the Lord was not holy and did not justly condemn sinners 
with the eternal condemnation, then the lamb would never have needed to die.

     Today, though, it's not popular to talk about the Lord's wrath.  It's not 
popular to confess a God who, as the Psalmist says, “hates all workers of 
iniquity.”  We want to think of God only as a loving Savior who forgives us, 
loves us, and gives us every good gift.  And certainly that is the God we have. 
 We do have a God who loves us and forgives all our sins.  We have a God who 
loves us so much that He was willing to send His Son.  The Father was willing 
to make Him who had no sin to be sin for us.  The Father was willing to take 
His only begotten Son, whom He had loved from before the foundation of the 
world, and make Him a curse.  The only reason that we can approach the throne 
of God in safety is that we have blood on us.  The blood of Jesus cleanses us 
from all sin.

     Jesus has drunk the full cup of the Father's wrath.  He has suffered and 
died on the cross.  If the Father had not struck our Good Shepherd, Jesus 
Christ, then we would be condemned eternally.  If the Father had not accepted 
the blood of His very own Son, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the 
world, then the world would have continued in its bondage to decay, and hell 
would be filled to overflowing with every sinner who was ever born into this 
world.

     While we were yet sinners, Christ died for the ungodly.  Christ was 
obedient to His Father's will.  He took all the Father's wrath.  Jesus 
committed no sin.  An evil word never came from His mouth.  He was perfectly 
innocent.  He kept all of God's Law in our place.  But the Father, because of 
His great love for you, poured out all His wrath on Jesus.  The Father is holy 
and just.  But more than that, the Father loves all whom He has created.  He 
even loves the sinners who have rebelled against Him.  Because of His love for 
you, He poured out the wrath on His Son.  But He did not leave Jesus in the 
grave.  He raised Him up on the third day.

     Because Jesus is risen, you know that you too will rise.  Death has no 
power over you because it had no power over the Son of God.  Rejoice, people 
loved by God.  The wrath of God has been poured out on the Son.  None is left 
for you.  And because of the forgiveness you have received you are now free to 
walk in the Lord's commandments.  You are free to live the life that God has 
given you.  Your forgiveness is not a license to do what you want.  Your 
transgressions hurt you.  Every little sin can drag you into hell.  Living 
under the cross is living in the Lord's forgiveness, but we are sinners.  We 
run from the shelter of the cross and see if we can make it on our own.

     We can't.  Outside the cross is the Father's wrath, and no one can survive 
that, not even Jesus.  Cling to the cross, dear Christians.  Hold fast to the 
place that your salvation was won.  But even more than that, come here, to the 
Lord's house.  Come to the place where God comes to you not with His wrath but 
with His mercy.  Come and hear His Word.  Come, confess your sins.  Hear the 
Lord's word of forgiveness.  Come, eat the Lord's body.  Drink the Lord's 
blood.  Come, dear Christians.  The Father loves you in this way:  He sent His 
son suffer and die and be your Savior.

     In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

     And the peace of God which surpasses all understanding keep your hearts 
and your minds in faith in Christ Jesus.  Amen.


 Rev. Charles R. Lehmann
Pastor, Saint John's Lutheran Church, Accident, MD
http://chaz-lehmann.livejournal.com

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