Sermon for the Twenty-Sixth Sunday After Pentecost


The LORD My God Lightens My Darkness



Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ! Amen. As we draw near to the end of the Church year, which will close in less than one month, each of the Gospels for these last few Sundays of the year will focus our attention on the end of all time. Today's Gospel is your Lord's parable of the Ten Virgins or the Ten Bridesmaids who await the arrival of the Bridegroom. Some bridesmaids are ready and some are not. All of these lovelies are looking directly at you. They want to know from you: Are you wise or are you foolish? Are you prepared or are you unprepared? Will you enter into the wedding feast of eternal life with Jesus, or will you be locked out?



All of these questions boil down to one question, and sooner or later you will be required personally to answer this one question-whether you wish to answer it or not. Wise or foolish, prepared or unprepared, it all comes down to this: do you have oil in your lamp or do you not?



The bare reading of this Gospel has already alerted you to how serious this question is for you:



When the foolish [bridesmaids] took their lamps, they took no oil with them, but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. And while they [the foolish ones] were going to buy [more oil], the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the marriage feast and the door was shut.



Your Word is a Lamp to My Feet (Psalm 119:105)


God your heavenly Father gave your oil-filled lamp to you on the day He baptized you, adopting you to be His own dear child. The lamp God gave to you is His life-giving and miracle-producing Word FOR YOU, complete with His promise to forgive all your sins and give you life everlasting through Christ Jesus. The oil-filled lamps in this Gospel may be compared to God's living Word because it is written in the Psalms, "Your Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path" (Psalm 119:105). The oil-filled lamps compare God's Word because your Lord Jesus is the Word (John 1:1) and it has been written concerning your Lord Jesus:

a.. "You are my lamp, O LORD, and my God lightens my darkness" (2 Samuel 22:29).


a.. He is "a light of revelation to the Gentiles" (Luke 2:32); "light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death" (Luke 1:79); "the light of the world" (John 8:12).


a.. "This is the message we have heard from Him and proclaim to you, that God is light and in Him is no darkness at all" (1 John 1:6).


God your heavenly Father gave you His Word-that is, He gave you your oil-filled lamp-on the day He baptized you. Stated another way, when you were baptized, your heavenly Father applied individually to you all the promises He has spoken in His Bible. On the day you were baptized, God's Word became God's Word TO YOU and FOR YOU. On the day you were baptized, God's promises became His promises TO YOU: forgiveness of sins became forgiveness of YOUR sins; rescue from death became YOUR rescue from death; life without end became YOUR life without end. At your Baptism God's Light became YOUR Light.



So here you are in the company of the ten bridesmaids. You hold your oil-filled lamps as you wait for the arrival of your Bridegroom, your Lord Jesus, on the Last Day. It is vitally important that you were given a lamp to hold while you wait. You were NOT given a stick, or a cinderblock, or something else that you can throw off to the side and forget about. At your Baptism you were given a lamp. Unlike a cinderblock, your lamp requires your ongoing attention. The wick must be trimmed, the oil replenished, and the flame shielded against the wind.



The Unfolding of Your Words Gives Light (Psalm 119:130)



Some people will object to my comparison of God's Word and promises FOR YOU to an oil-filled lamp that He gave to you at your Baptism. Some will argue that God's Word is eternal (Psalm 119:160, Revelation 14:6) and therefore it cannot to lose its power in the way that an oil-filled lamp can burn dry and go out. I will not protest or argue one bit that God's Word is eternal. Yet I will declare that the personal benefits you individually receive from God's eternal Word and unshakable promises can most certainly run dry and burn up. Stated another way:



· Unless you continually hear God tell you that all your sins are forgiven, you will begin to doubt whether you truly are forgiven. Then your lamp will begin to flicker in the wind of your ongoing struggle against your sin.

· Unless you continually hear your God assure you that He will always be with you (Matthew 28:20) and never forsake you (Hebrews 13:5), you will begin to wonder whether He truly is with you always. (Either that, or you will stop being concerned that He remain with you always.) The untrimmed wick of your lamp will grow crusty and ashen, impeding the flame.



· Unless you continually replenish the oil in your lamp of God's Word and promises TO YOU-that is, unless you continually return for more of God's nourishing Word and strengthening promises-you will quite possibly run out of you life-giving oil. But you will not even know (or possibly not care) that you have run out until it is too late. Then where will you be?



When the foolish [bridesmaids] took their lamps, they took no oil with them, but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. And while they [the foolish ones] were going to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the marriage feast and the door was shut.



God your heavenly Father wants you never to run out of oil as you await the arrival of your Bridegroom, your Lord Jesus, on the Last Day. It is for this reason that He has commanded you, "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy" (Exodus 20:8). The holy apostles of our Lord do not want you to be found empty at the coming of the great feast, and for this reason they implore you:



. hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful. .consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near (Hebrew 10:23-25).



The ancient saints of the Book of Acts do not wish for you to be separated from them on that Great Day. They call you to follow where they first have walked, joining them in devoting yourselves "to the apostles' teaching [that is, the New Testament], and fellowship [that is, the worship of the Church], to the breaking of bread [that is, the Holy Communion of our Lord] and to the prayers" (Acts 2:42).



I Hope in Your Word (Psalm 119:114)



It always feels kind of strange for me to preach about the importance of worship to those who have gathered for worship. But there is much more to preaching than correction and rebuke (2 Timothy 4:2). I am not telling you these things because I want you to make a change. I am speaking to you for your comfort, in order that you will not change your habits with regard to worship. Dear saints of God-lovely bridesmaids, every one of you-think of Sunday morning worship as nothing other than your heaven-sent flask of oil. "When the foolish [bridesmaids] took their lamps, they took no oil with them, but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps." With the lamp oil that your God gives to you in this place-that is, with the forgiveness of your sins and the promise of life that are declared to you here-the oil-lamp of your Baptism into God's holy family shall not run dry. The door shall not be closed to you and you shall "always be with [your] Lord" (1 Thessalonians 4:18). With your ever-replenished flask of oil and with your brightly burning lamp, those well-loved words from Psalm 23 will remain your words, and you can continue to pray without doubt, "I shall dwell in the house of the LORD forever" (Psalm 23:6).



Today's Gospel is your Lord's parable of the Ten Virgins or the Ten Bridesmaids who await the arrival of the Bridegroom. Some bridesmaids are ready and some are not. All of these lovelies are still looking directly at you. They still want to know from you: Are you wise or are you foolish? Are you prepared or are you unprepared? Will you enter into the wedding feast of eternal life with Jesus, or will you be locked out?



Don't answer these questions by looking into your heart or mind. Don't base your answer on how you feel at any given moment. Answer these Bridesmaids by looking ONLY at the oil-filled lamp that God your heavenly Father gave to you on the day He baptized you, adopting you to be His own dear child. Answer the pretty girls by looking at your own flask of oil, which your God miraculously replenishes for you with each liturgy, each absolution, each sermon, and each Holy Communion. Answer them without blushing: "Yes, I am wise; my God has made me 'wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus' (2 Timothy 3:15). Yes, I am prepared; "everything is ready [for me to] come to the feast" (Matthew 22:4). Yes, I will enter the wedding feast of my Lord; I shall without doubt 'dwell in the house of the LORD forever' (Psalm 23:6)."



The peace of God which passes all understanding guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. Amen.


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