Intro
After 500 years, does the Reformation still matter?  Do we still need a day 
every year to remind us of the Reformation?  After all, a recent poll showed 
that over half of American Protestants didn’t even know that Martin Luther’s 
writings and actions inspired the Reformation.  And this was a multiple-choice 
question with only three choices!  So, most Christians today say, “No, the 
Reformation doesn’t matter.”

If Reformation Day only celebrated Lutheranism, then it shouldn’t matter.  If 
Reformation Day only celebrated the pride we have in being Lutheran, then it 
shouldn’t matter.  But if Reformation Day is about the truth that Martin Luther 
dusted off in all its shining glory, hidden by centuries of faulty doctrines, 
then the Reformation does matter.

Main Body
The Reformation still matters in at least three ways:
   1.  First, the Reformation matters, because confessing the truth matters.
   2.  Second, the Reformation matters because hearing the truth matters.
   3.  Third, the Reformation matters because believing the truth matters.

First, the Reformation still matters, because confessing the truth still 
matters.  The Reformation was about confessing the truth, the truth about your 
sins, and the truth about God’s work to save you.

Many falsehoods were being taught in Luther’s day.  One such teaching was that 
Christians had to spend time in a place called “Purgatory.”  This took place 
after someone died but before he could get in to heaven.  Purgatory was where 
God purged the sins someone still had after he died.  Such a teaching implied 
that what Jesus did on the cross was not enough.

Here is where it got even crazier.  The Pope could shorten someone’s time in 
purgatory if somebody bought something called an “indulgence.”  Luther quipped 
that if the Pope had the authority to shorten someone’s time in purgatory, then 
why wouldn’t he do that for free?

What was most offensive about some practices of the Roman Catholic Church was 
that a person contributed to his salvation.  Those practices implied that 
Jesus’ perfect life, suffering, and dying was not enough to pay for all of our 
sins.

Jesus said to his disciples, “If you remain in my Word, you are truly my 
disciples.  And you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 
8:31-32).  By nature, we are slaves of sin, death, and the power of the devil.  
We can’t do anything to set ourselves eternally free.  That’s why Jesus took on 
human flesh.  That’s why Jesus was born, lived, and died as He did--all because 
we couldn’t save ourselves.

That’s why there was a Reformation.  That’s why we still have Reformation Day.  
That’s why the Reformation still matters.  It matters because confessing the 
truth still matters!

Today, people are still spreading lies, lies that take away from the work of 
Jesus Christ.  You will hear lies like, “It doesn’t matter what you believe, as 
long as you are sincere,” or “All roads lead to heaven.”  Perhaps, you’ve 
heard, “If you’re a good person, you’ll get to heaven.”  Perhaps, you’ve heard, 
“Muslims and Christians pray to the same God.”

Confessing the truth still matters, because only truth can expose lies.  Only 
truth can remove the spiritual darkness of lies.  Only truth can set one free 
from the curse of sin, the fear of death, and the power of the devil.  Indeed, 
confessing truth still matters.

If someone doesn’t know the truth, he won’t know freedom, peace, hope, joy, 
forgiveness, salvation, and eternal life.  Yes, the Reformation still matters 
because confessing the truth as Jesus did, as Paul did, as Martin Luther did, 
still matters.  Unless the truth still rings out today, the devil’s lies will 
continue to hold everyone captive.

Second, the Reformation still matters because hearing the truth still matters.  
When you go to your doctor, you expect to hear the truth about your health.  
When you are willing to hear the truth, then you will be ready to accept what 
the doctor says.  I may not like to hear that I have high-blood pressure and 
that my cholesterol is too high.  I may not like to hear that I have poor 
eyesight, and I need to wear glasses, but hearing the truth matters.

Even if I don’t like it, hearing the truth matters.  It could mean the 
difference between life and death.  To improve my life, to save my life, I need 
to hear the truth about my physical health.

Hearing the truth matters even more when it comes to my spiritual health.  
That’s why Jesus warns His Church to “beware of false prophets” (Matthew 7:15). 
 That’s why the Apostle Paul told the Church to “beware of those who cause 
dissensions and create obstacles contrary to [Apostolic] doctrine” (Romans 
16:17).

I don’t like it when Scripture says, “All have sinned and fall short of the 
glory of God” (Romans 3:23).  I don’t like being called a sinner.  I’d rather 
hear how marvelous I am.  I don’t like hearing that I deserve hell for my sins, 
but hearing the truth matters.

Unless I know the truth about my sins, I won’t be ready to hear that I need to 
be saved from them.  I won’t be ready to hear that by God’s grace I am 
“justified freely through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus” (Romans 
3:24).  It matters that I hear the truth about my sins and my Savior.  Then I 
see my need for a Savior--but even more, I see that Jesus is the Savior I need! 
 Hearing the truth matters.

Yet, how do I know what truth is?  Every church claims to teach the truth.  
Every pastor claims to preach the truth.  Every religion claims to have the 
truth.  How can I know if I am getting the goods of God, getting the truth?  
Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6).  Jesus is 
truth.  Where you hear the truth about Jesus, you hear the truth.  When you 
hear the truth of Jesus, you hear Truth Himself.

Hearing the truth matters.  It can make the difference between life and death, 
hope and despair, joy and sadness, and heaven and hell.  Hearing the truth 
matters.  It matters where you go to church, it matters what you read, and it 
matters what you listen to.  The Reformation still matters because hearing the 
truth still matters.

Third, the Reformation still matters because believing the truth still matters. 
 Merely hearing the truth will not save anyone.  Believing it will.  “Believe 
in the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved” (Acts 16:31).  “For this is how 
God loved the world: He gave His one-and-only Son, that whoever believes in Him 
will not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16).  In our Epistle text, Paul 
says, “But now, apart from the Law, God’s righteousness has been revealed … 
God’s righteousness through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ to all who 
believe” (Romans 3:21-22).

The apostle Paul says, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” 
(Romans 3:23).  Since all have sinned and fall short of God’s glory, who then 
will be welcomed into the arms of Jesus and who won’t?  That’s the question 
that makes the Reformation so essential and why Reformation still matters.

This question bothered Martin Luther more than any other.  “How can I know that 
I am right with God, so I spend eternity in His joyous presence?”  Wishing 
something to be real doesn’t make it real.  Good works won’t bring you into 
heaven.  Just believing in a god or higher power won’t save you.

Only believing the truth that you are a sinner and that Jesus is your Savior 
will save you.  So, the Reformation still matters because believing the truth 
still matters.  The truth is that no salvation exists apart from Jesus.  
Believing the truth about your sins and your Savior, you can be certain that 
when you die, Jesus will receive you into his loving arms.

Conclusion
May God give us the faith to believe the truth.  May God make us eager to hear 
the truth.  May God embolden us to confess the truth.  Indeed, the Reformation 
still matters because confessing the truth still matters, hearing the truth 
still matters, and believing the truth still matters.

May our faith ever stand on the Reformation truth of Christ alone.  For Jesus 
Christ did everything needed for your salvation.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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