Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

My dear fellow beggars, 

 

Yes, that is what we are, beggars. Like the Canaanite woman of our Gospel 
lesson today, our faith looks, even yearns for a bread crumb from the table of 
our Lord. It is why the Holy Spirit has gathered us here today, isn't it? That 
tiny bit of bread and little sip of wine we will receive today, and every 
Lord's Day, give us a foretaste of the Feast to Come because the words of 
eternal life that accompany it at the command of the One who has promised to 
be, and is indeed here in flesh and blood with every crumb of bread and drop of 
wine, those always powerful words from our ever present Savior make it so.

 

That is what we learn from the Canaanite woman and her faith. 

 

TEXT: 25But she came and knelt before him, saying, "Lord, help me." 26And he 
answered,  "It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the 
dogs." 27She said, "Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from 
their masters' table." 28Then Jesus answered her,  "O woman, great is your 
faith! Be it done for you as you desire." And her daughter was healed 
instantly. Matthew 15:25-28

 

Now the question we must address here is what exactly is the essence of this 
blessed woman's faith? Of what does her faith consist? What is the substance of 
it? From where does it come?

 

And the answer is . . . . 

 

Jesus, the Son of the living God.

 

The Canaanite woman's faith, like the faith of all the patriarchs, like the 
apostles, like Luther, like everybody who truly believes--and I hope and pray 
like your faith-looks to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith,(E) who 
for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising(F) the shame, 
and(G) is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:2

 

Because He is the only begotten Son who sits at the right hand of His 
Father-then, and now, and forever-Jesus is the very essence by which faith 
exists; He is the very substance of which faith consists; the very source from 
whom it is established.

 

Faith is nothing more nor less than looking to God for what you cannot hope to 
do for yourself, for what no other person or thing can do, Faith does not say, 
"I think I can," or "I know I can," or "my believing hard enough will make it 
so." Faith knows that in Christ, and only in Christ "all the promises of God 
find their Yes in him. That is why it is through him that we utter our(B) Amen 
to God for his glory."Let not your hearts be troubled.(B) 2 Corinthians 1:20

 

Jesus did not say believe in yourself. He did not say any old faith will do. He 
said, "Believe in God;[a] believe also in me." John 14:1

 

faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of(A) things not 
seen. 2For by it the people of old received their commendation. 3By faith we 
understand that the universe was created by(B) the word of God, so that what is 
seen was not made out of(C) things that are visible. Hebrews 11:1

 

And that is what we learn from this Canaanite woman in her time of great 
trouble, need, emptiness, helplessness. By these our Lord is testing, 
stretching, exercising, and indeed strengthening her faith and ours rather like 
mighty oak trees become hardened  in response to stormy winds and weight 
training builds muscle by first tearing it down.

 

The first test and exercise for the Canaanite woman is the tribulation of her 
demon oppressed daughter. It is what drives her to Jesus in the first place. 
Without tribulation, who would ever look to God in Christ in the first place?

 

The second test is God's initial silence and postponement of help. This 
Canaanite woman had heard great things about his Jesus and believe He could 
help her. So she came begging, crying, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David; 
my daughter is severely oppressed by a demon." 23But he did not answer her a 
word. Here, in God's initial silence, we begin to find out if it is really 
faith in Him or if it is merely just covering another base to see what will 
work? The Canaanite woman does not move on. What about you?

 

The third test is to see if the promises of God and this Christ who is set 
before us are really for us too, even though they have not been given directly 
to us by revelation or verifiable personal contact. Jesus not even responding 
to the woman, but to the disciples says,  "I was sent only to the lost sheep of 
the house of Israel."  In the same way, Jesus does not speak to us directly, 
but only through the Word and Sacraments He gave to the apostles to pass along 
to us. We are very much like the Canaanite woman, aren't we. If we are to 
believe it is only through the Word of promise first spoken to others and 
handed down to us. But who likes hand me downs? And worse, who likes to beg for 
them. It's bad enough to beg for anything, but to beg for something that has 
already been used and discarded?

 

And yet that is the fourth test we see the Canaanite woman subjected to-the 
test of whether or not we are willing to acknowledge and admit that we are 
indeed are not worthy of God's attention, let alone His blessings. Having not 
even been acknowledged by Jesus, yet she prevails upon Him,  "Lord, help me." 
26And he answered,  "It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it 
to the dogs." 27She said, "Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that 
fall from their masters' table." Every one of us, every believer in Christ, any 
person who has the hope of life everlasting in heaven begins from this point of 
admitting his unworthiness before God and being willing to accept whatever 
little scrap or crumb He condescends to give as better than the most expensive 
and precious earthly possession we may own or covet. 

 

Yes, dear baptized, that is what we are--beggars. And let us give thanks to the 
Lord that He brings, even drives us to realize and rejoice in those trials and 
tribulations without which we would never really call on the Lord at all, or 
come to any kind of meaningful faith, or beg for whatever He deems fit and best 
to give us. Let us pray for that daily bread and receive the heavenly crumbs of 
our Lord often together here. 

 

Like the Canaanite woman, as we pass through this vale of tears and walk 
through the Valley of the Shadow of death, we exist from day to day on the  
crumbs that fall from [our] masters' table. But what crumbs they are! What a 
feast it is! A crumb from our Lord and Master's table is infinitely better than 
any Golden Coral all-you-can eat buffet; two for twenty deal at Chili's; or 
even a thousand five-star, seven course banquets. Because a crumb from our 
Lord, even a little rather tasteless wafer from the table and hand of our Lord 
is a piece of the Bread of the Life that makes you a part of the whole loaf 
Himself, forgives you all of your sins, and gives you a never ending life of 
all-you-can eat banquets with God -- in the name of the Father, and of the + 
Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen
____________________________________________________________
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