Ash Wednesday
February 25, 2009
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“Aware of an Idol” (The Ten Commandments)

As we noted, today we begin the season of Lent.  In church history, and 
particularly in our Lutheran tradition, there are several major themes 
associated with Lent, which often form the basis for services within this 
season.  For example, penitence, repentance, is certainly a Lenten theme, and 
especially is that so on this first day of Lent, Ash Wednesday.  Another Lenten 
focus is the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ, drawn from all four gospels or 
from just one gospel.  Tracking the Passion narrative often is done over a 
series of midweek Lenten services--we did that here a couple of years ago.

One other Lenten emphasis, historically, is catechesis, that is, instruction in 
the basics of the Christian faith.  In the early church, the forty days of Lent 
would serve as the final time of instruction before the catechumens were then 
baptized during the Easter Vigil.  And not just for new Christians do Lent and 
catechesis work well together.  The intensity and increased devotion of this 
season can aid us longtime Christians in returning to and being renewed in the 
most basic and always relevant aspects of Christian faith and life.

And so tonight we start a six-part series on “The Six Chief Parts of Lenten 
Catechesis.”  We’ll be following the six chief parts as Luther lays them out in 
the Small Catechism:  The Ten Commandments, the Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, the 
Sacrament of Holy Baptism, Confession, and the Sacrament of the Altar.

We begin tonight with the Ten Commandments, as we just read them.  And today on 
Ash Wednesday, it’s fitting that we hear the Ten Commandments.  For on this 
solemn and somber day of repentance, the Ten Commandments, God’s Law, will show 
us our sins and our need for God’s forgiveness, which we will then find in the 
blessed Gospel that God gives us here in Word and Sacrament.

The Ten Commandments:  Obviously we could do a ten-part series, let alone a 
six-part series, simply on this first chief part of the Catechism, the 
Commandments.  But just in our brief time here tonight, we’re going to zoom in 
on just one of these Ten Commandments to do the job for all the rest.  For if 
we could keep the First Commandment, we would keep all the others as well.  
Conversely, because we do not keep the First Commandment, that shows up then in 
all the ways we break all the other commandments.

That’s why Luther can start his explanations for all the remaining commandments 
with the words, “We should fear and love God so that. . . . .”  That’s 
certainly clear for the Second and Third Commandments--how we use God’s name 
and how gladly and diligently we hear his word are reflections of how we are or 
are not fearing, loving, and trusting in God above all things.  But it’s also 
true for the other commandments, Four through Ten, which deal with our 
neighbor.  How we treat our neighbor--do I love my neighbor so as not to harm 
him or take advantage of him but rather to help him and be kind to him?--how I 
treat my neighbor is a sign of how I am or am not loving God.  The First 
Commandment, then, as Luther says in the Large Catechism, “the First 
Commandment is the chief source and fountainhead that flows into all the rest.”

Tonight we want to get to the root of the problem, why we do not keep the First 
Commandment or any of the other commandments as we ought.  The root problem, 
lying at the base of all sin, is idolatry.  Idolatry is to have another god, a 
false god, any god other than the one true God.  The commandment says, “You 
shall have no other gods,” and the problem is, we do.  And if we have some 
other god, then we are not fearing, loving, and trusting in the God who speaks 
to us in these commandments, the God who created us and made us his people.  
Idolatry, worshiping other gods, lies at the heart of all sin.

But you say, “I do not worship an idol!”  Now it is true, you probably do not 
bow down to an image of stone or wood, like a pagan tribesman out in the 
jungle.  No, your idols no doubt are of a more refined, not so obvious, kind.  
Luther helps us out here, again from the Large Catechism:

“What does it mean to have a god?  Or, what is God?  Answer:  A god means that 
from which we are to expect all good and in which we are to take refuge in all 
distress.  So, to have a God is nothing other than trusting and believing Him 
with the heart. . . . Whatever you set your heart on and put your trust in is 
truly your god.”

So things like money, success, popularity, pleasure--these are common everyday 
idols, false gods that people worship.  They look to these things for their 
peace and happiness and satisfaction in life.  Even people without these things 
can still worship these false gods.  The man without money who can only think 
of how to get it and who envies the rich and is never content or 
satisfied--that man, too, is worshiping the god of Mammon.  And do you see how 
even good gifts from God can take the place of God, so that people are 
worshiping the gifts rather than the Giver?  Family, for example--a good gift 
from God--family can become an idol, when a person loves father or mother or 
wife or children more than he loves God.  Idolatry is very common, and it can 
be very subtle.  Whenever you are loving and trusting in 
something--anything--more than God, you have created an idol and are worshiping 
it.

So be honest and ask yourself questions like these:  In what or whom do I trust 
above all else?  In what or whom do I trust most for financial security, 
physical safety, or emotional support?  Do I fear God’s wrath, avoiding every 
sin?  Is my love for and trust in God evident in my daily living?  Do I expect 
only good from God in every situation, or do I worry, doubt, complain, or feel 
unfairly treated when things go wrong?  Do I withhold from God what is 
rightfully his?

Now beneath the familiar idols of money, power, pleasure and so on, which can 
vary from person to person, there is one idol that is common to us all.  
Tonight, as we’re getting to the root of the problem, I want you to become 
aware of an idol.  An idol that is living in your house.  An idol that is 
living in your heart.  It is an idol that is common to every one of us and 
yet--and therefore--is different for each person.  It is the idol called “I,” 
“me,” “myself.”  This is the god everybody worships, and thus there are as many 
gods as there are people.  Each one of us loves himself above all things, above 
other people, above God.  That’s what it is to be a sinner, to be your own God, 
to serve yourself, to make your own decisions about right and wrong.  “I will 
do what’s right for me!”  That’s the nature of all sin.  It started with our 
first parents in the Garden, and it’s been passed along to all of us, their 
children.  This is
 the original sin, the root sin:  to be your own God, to tune out the true God 
and his word.  The result of that, the curse placed upon sin, we heard tonight: 
 “Dust you are, and to dust you shall return.”  The wages of sin is death.

Oh, who shall rescue us from this body of sin and death?  Who will save us from 
our idolatry?  Answer:  The very God against whom we have sinned.  For God is 
so rich in his mercy and grace that he provided the Answer, the answer to all 
our ills, the answer and remedy for sin and death, the answer to our rebellion 
and commandment-breaking.  The Answer is Jesus.  “For the Son of God, Jesus 
Christ,” Paul writes to the Corinthians--“all the promises of God find their 
Yes in him.”  Whatever your question is, Jesus is the Answer.

What does this mean?  It means that God sent his Son, Jesus Christ our Savior, 
to keep these commandments perfectly in our place.  Jesus alone loved God and 
loved his neighbor the way we all ought but don’t.  It means that Jesus, the 
sinless one, then went to the cross to take our place also there, bearing the 
punishment prescribed for all who break the Commandments:  judgment under God’s 
wrath.  It means that Jesus, by fulfilling the Commandments, both their keeping 
and their punishment, has fulfilled all righteousness and taken away the 
judgment and the death.  And now he gives us forgiveness and life in their 
place:  the forgiveness put in your ears in the gospel and put in your mouth in 
this Sacrament; the life he will show forth once again at Easter, life that 
rises from the dead.

And now, what’s more, he gives you a new life even now, life in the Spirit, so 
that now you can even begin to keep and to do the Commandments yourself.  A new 
life of love, love for God and love for your neighbor.  To be sure, you will 
never do the Commandments well enough to earn your salvation.  You still have 
that old idol, the idol of self, hanging around in your heart.  You will always 
need God’s forgiveness every day, for as many days as you live as both sinner 
and saint.  But one day that idol will finally be cast from its throne, and you 
and I will forevermore worship and serve only the one true God with all our 
heart and soul and mind and strength, together with all the saints in the joys 
of heaven.


Charles Henrickson
4749 Melissa Jo Ln
St. Louis, MO 63128
(314) 845-8811 (home)
(314) 779-8108 (cell)
[email protected]

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