"Today Salvation Has Come to This House"
Reformation Day
Twenty-Third Sunday after Pentecost
October 31, 2010
Luke 19:1-10

Today is a great day. Going on 500 years after Martin Luther posted
the Ninety-Five Theses on the Castle Church door in Wittenberg on
October 31 Lutherans continue celebrate the Reformation. This sparked
what people have called the ‘re-discovery’ of the Gospel. So of course
it’s a great day, an important celebration.

But that’s not primarily why it’s a great day. You could pick any day
of the calendar year and celebrate it as a great day for the same
reason today is. The reason it’s a great day is that today salvation
has come to this house. We may be Lutherans but we don’t follow
Luther. We may attach special significance to Reformation Day but our
reason for celebration is not in what a man named Luther did.

What we celebrate today and every day is that salvation has come to
this house. In a sense there was a re-discovery of the Gospel in the
Sixteenth Century. For too many years peoples’ consciences were being
burdened with the Law rather than their consciences being convicted by
the Law to drive them to the Gospel. But the Gospel, through the
providence of God, has always been made known. So any re-discovery has
more to do with us than it does with Jesus. It’s not like He has
refrained from making Himself known during certain times in history.
We are so much like Zacchaeus, needing Jesus to come to our house to
discover us. Jesus is always present. The Gospel always remains. We’re
the ones who are in need of reform, and thus the name Reformation.

We can seek Jesus all we want but it’s not until He comes into our
life that salvation comes to us. We can seek Jesus apart from the way
He comes to us but it’s not until we seek Him in repentance that we
can be reformed.

It would be easy to celebrate this day and go away grateful for the
action of a young monk. It would be gratifying to go away from the
Lord’s House today satisfied with our great churchly and theological
heritage. But that is not what this day is about. That’s the same with
what every day is about. Every time we enter into this, our Lord’s
House, it’s about salvation coming to this house. Jesus said to
Zacchaeus that He must stay at his house today. By entering it He made
it a holy place. And He did something else. He brought righteousness
to Zacchaeus, a man who, in the words of the religious leaders, was a
sinner. That’s what that day was about. Jesus said it: Today salvation
has come to this house. It came to that house because Jesus came to
that house. Where Jesus is, there is salvation.

And that’s why we come here. Jesus comes to us with His salvation. He
walked into Zacchaeus’ house, He comes to us here through words that
are proclaimed and bread and wine that is given to us to eat and
drink.

Even though it’s great that there are a lot of people and a lot of
churches that celebrate the Reformation, there’s often a
misunderstanding of it. Too many think of it as the festival of the
Protestant Church. But the Reformation was not about protesting
anything. It was and always is about declaration. The Church through
the ages has always declared the Gospel so that all may hear it.
There’s nothing to protest, but everything to declare. That is what
Jesus did when He saw Zacchaeus. Sure, you could think of His
declaration of Zacchaeus and many others’ sin as protesting against
sin. But it’s really not protesting. It’s calling sinners to
repentance. It’s the declaration of the Law that paves the way for the
Gospel. Without the Law there is no Gospel. Without repentance there
is no forgiveness.

There is no true celebration of the Reformation if it’s a celebration
of a monk who made a declaration of the Gospel. There is a celebration
of the Reformation every day if it is a celebration that today
salvation has come to this house. That, as Jesus said, “the Son of Man
came to seek and to save the lost.” That’s really why we come here.
Zacchaeus wanted to see Jesus but Jesus said, I’m going to come to
you. That’s what continues to happen today. Salvation comes to this
house when our Lord comes to us in His Word proclaimed and His Body
and Blood given in His Holy Supper.

There is no celebration of the Reformation if all we’re doing is
celebrating some sort of protest. We don’t protest, we repent. We
confess our sins as ones who are not worthy to enter the holy ground
of our Lord’s righteousness. But we repent as Zacchaeus did, seeing
that new life—reformed life, renewed life—comes out of the salvation
that comes to this house. We see as he did that our Lord gives us an
opportunity to live in the freedom of being forgiven by making
restitution with those we’ve sinned against. If we are unwilling to
forgive others we are bound in our sin. But if we look to Christ who
was raised up on the cross for the salvation of the world we will see
the world in a different light. We will see that others are just as we
are, sinners who fall short of the glory of God. We will see that
Christ suffered on the cross so that we may be free: free from sin,
free to live in selfless, generous, merciful, forgiving love.

If we were to raise up Luther on this day as our reason for
celebrating we would miss the point of his posting of the Ninety-Five
Theses. We raise up Christ alone. We look to Him alone, just as
Zacchaeus did. Just as Luther did, for that matter. If we were to
celebrate some sort of protest, we would miss the point of the
Reformation. If anything, our protest should be against our own
wretchedness, our utter sinfulness. That’s what Zacchaeus saw in
himself. For that matter, it’s what Luther saw in himself. That’s why
Christ comes to us with His declaration of the Law which brings us to
repentance. That’s why He then declares the Good News: Today salvation
has come to this house.

He comes to us in this way, granting sinners salvation. Proclaiming
His Gospel through his called and ordained servants. Giving often His
body and blood for the forgiveness of sins in His Holy Supper. If you
ever wonder what the big deal about the Reformation is, just take a
look at today and what is going on here, what we’re celebrating.
What’s going on is Christ coming to us for salvation. What we’re
celebrating is that. Our constant need for reform, for repentance. And
our unworthy prayer of thanks to a Lord who comes to us with His
forgiveness, life, and salvation. Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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