Third Sunday in Lent
March 15, 2009
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“Weak Power and Foolish Wisdom” (1 Corinthians 1:18-31)

A few days ago, the American Religious Identification Survey released the 
results of a huge, nationwide survey they conducted last year, the first one 
since a similar survey in 2001.  They asked people to identify themselves by 
their religion, and they included every religion you could think of--Catholic, 
mainline Protestant, Evangelical, you name it.  Perhaps the most interesting 
result to come out of this survey is the one group they found, the only group 
that increased in every state in the union.  Guess which religious 
identification that was.  Give up?  “None.”  That’s right, “none” was the 
religious identification that increased everywhere, all across the board.  It 
points to a trend of increasing secularization in American life.

There is a religious recession going on, an ecclesiastical downturn.  What’s 
behind it?  Well, it’s obvious that our society is not buying what the church 
has to offer.  But compounding the problem is that the church, then, in order 
to attract more customers, in large part has abandoned what she legitimately 
has to offer and instead has resorted to gimmicks.  The world is rejecting, and 
the church seems to be embarrassed by, the genuine Christian message.  Because 
the world is impressed by things like power and wisdom.  And the genuine 
Christian message--the message of the cross--comes across as “Weak Power and 
Foolish Wisdom.”

But then this is nothing new.  St. Paul faced the same situation back in the 
first century that we face in the twenty-first:  people rejecting the gospel 
because it seems weak and foolish, not very powerful, not very wise.  Paul puts 
it like this:  “For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach 
Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles. . . .”

Signs of power, appeals to human wisdom--those are the things that will impress 
people, back then and still today.  Power and wisdom.  Let’s take power first.  
“Show us a sign, Jesus!”  How often did Jesus’ opponents demand that of him:  a 
sign, a mighty display of power to prove his authority to speak and to act.  
You heard that in the Gospel for today:  “What sign do you show us for doing 
these things?”  Of course, what was really behind this demand for a sign was 
that they didn’t like what Jesus was saying and doing.  Jesus was exposing 
their greed and hypocrisy, overturning money-tables, and calling people to 
repentance.  And his opponents didn’t like that.  Thus the demand for a sign of 
power, in order to put Jesus on the spot, to test him and trap him, and to 
discount and dismiss what he was saying.

People still do that sort of thing today.  They raise all kinds of smokescreens 
and put up all kinds of barriers, in order to keep Jesus at arm’s length and 
under their control.  They don’t want that message of repentance to get too 
close.  It makes them uncomfortable.  So they make all kinds of excuses for not 
coming to church.  “I’m too busy.”  “We need the family time.”  “Sunday is my 
only day to sleep in.”  “Somebody at church said something once to offend me.”  
“Oh, I believe in God, but I don’t need church.”  All kinds of cockamamie 
excuses.  But they all boil down to, in reality, people don’t want Jesus to get 
too close.  They’re afraid of his call to repentance and discipleship.  They 
don’t want to admit that they are poor miserable sinners who cannot save 
themselves.  They don’t want to hear they are in need of the forgiveness that 
only God can give them.  And they don’t think the forgiveness of sins, coming
 through the message of the cross, is that big of a deal.  It doesn’t seem very 
powerful.  It doesn’t put money in my bank or heal my cancer.  It’s not as 
entertaining as football or hunting or video games.  Seems pretty weak.

And then there are people who are looking for wisdom.  Human wisdom, that is.  
Something that appeals to their own ideas and opinions.  Something that makes 
sense.  Something that appeals to me, to my know-how or goals, or how to lead a 
better life.  Something I can do, from the resources that are within me, to 
better my life.  Something to make me happy.  That’s what people are looking 
for.  Give me seven habits I can work on.  Give me ten steps to success and 
prosperity in these tough economic times.  Give me a DVD and a three-ring 
binder.  That’s what I want.  Me in control.  My needs, my desires, my goals.  
Steps I can master to make things better for me.

But the message of the cross doesn’t offer that kind of wisdom, mere human 
wisdom.  It sounds rather foolish, in fact.  “Some guy dying on a cross, a 
criminal’s death, 2000 years ago--sounds pretty dumb, if you ask me.  And 
you’re saying that’s the most important thing you have to tell me?  And that 
cross business--that I can’t add anything to it?  That it’s not how good I am, 
and there’s nothing I can contribute to impress God any more beyond what this 
Jesus guy dying on the cross did for me?”  “Well, yeah.”  “OK, not interested.”

Power and wisdom.  Give us that or else we’re not interested, that’s what our 
society is saying.  So what has the church said in response?  “Fine.  We’ll 
junk that old sin-and-grace business, that forgiveness-of-sins stuff, or maybe 
we’ll put it on the back burner and pay lip-service to it just a little bit.”  
Take the cross down, whether literally or figuratively.  Eliminate the blood 
talk, the poor miserable sinner talk--all that old, boring, irrelevant stuff.  
That’s so last millennium.

Razzle-dazzle, church in the fast lane--that’s what we’ll give ’em!  Felt 
needs, pep bands, and lots of programs.  Lots and lots of programs.  Keep the 
customers satisfied.  Keep them entertained.  Hey, at least it will keep the 
doors open and we won’t go out of business.  The cross?  The cross . . . well, 
yeah, it’s back there . . . somewhere.  I forget.

Pop Christianity, Christianity Lite, has pushed the cross so far into the 
background--in its songs, in its worship style, in its message, in what it says 
and what it doesn’t say--that it hardly resembles historic, biblical 
Christianity any longer.

Poor Jesus.  How can he handle all this rejection?  You can expect it from the 
world, but when the church turns Jesus from a bloody crucified Savior into a 
blow-dried life coach, something has gone terribly amiss.  The message of the 
cross has gotten lost in the process.

But now I want to tell you why this church will continue to preach Christ and 
him crucified, every sermon, every service:  Because this message of the cross 
is the one thing you need more than anything else, and you will not get it 
anywhere else.  Listen to what St. Paul says:  “For the word of the cross is 
folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power 
of God.”  Again, “it pleased God through the folly of what we preach to save 
those who believe.”  And again, “we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block 
to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both Jews and 
Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.”

There it is.  That’s the truth of the matter.  The word of the cross, preaching 
Christ crucified--this is God’s way of saving people.  This is real wisdom, 
this is real power.  It may not put any money in your checkbook, but it will 
give you riches in heaven.  It may not heal your cancer, at least not right 
now, but it will raise your body from the dead.  It may not put hair on your 
head and make you popular with the girls, it may not trim your waistline and 
put you into bikini shape for the summer--no, it may not do any of those 
things, but it will put you right with God, now and for eternity.

If that’s not a big deal for you, then go ahead and claim your religion as 
“none.”  Or be more honest and identify your religion as “Me, Myself, and I,” 
for that’s what it really is  But, my friend, if you know you are indeed a poor 
miserable sinner--that you have sinned against God in thought, word, and deed, 
by what you have done and what you have failed to do--if you are troubled in 
conscience and want relief from your burden of guilt, then I have good news for 
you today:  This word of the cross is a word for you!  This message I preach to 
you today, Christ crucified--this is God coming to save you!  This is real, 
true wisdom and power.  It may look weak, it may sound foolish, but this is God 
acting to rescue you from your sins in the only way possible:  The Son of God, 
Jesus Christ, died on that cross for you.

You could not save yourself.  You could not pull yourself out of the pit you 
dug for yourself.  Your goodness is not good enough.  Your works won’t work.  
There is nothing you could do, or could add to what Christ has already done, to 
suffice.  But, thank God, Christ did it all for you!  When the holy Son of God 
is the one dying on that cross, shedding his infinitely precious blood, to 
cover your sin and guilt, and the sin of the whole world--that suffices 
big-time, and more!  Sin is forgiven, all of it.  Death is defeated, forever, 
as surely as Christ’s own rising from the dead.

And it is this message of the cross that brings it home to you.  The word of 
the cross delivers the goods.  All that Jesus won for you on the cross is 
brought to your address, with your name on it, every time this word is preached 
at this pulpit and sacramented at this altar and font.

And so we say with St. Paul, Christ Jesus has became to us “wisdom from God, 
righteousness and sanctification and redemption”--all those big-sounding words 
that simply mean that things are all right between you and God for eternity 
now, because God has made it so.  Christ crucified did it, and the word of the 
cross delivers it.

So we will go on preaching and believing Christ crucified, the word of the 
cross.  For God’s “Weak Power and Foolish Wisdom” is more than strong enough 
and wise enough to save sinners like you and me.


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

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