"Jesus: God and Son of God"
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost
July 10, 2011
Romans 8:12-17

So here’s the deal. You are under obligation. You are a debtor to God.
Paul says in the Epistle reading today that you are a debtor. But the
thing is he kind of forgets to follow through with that point. He
doesn’t really mean to. He just can’t help it. Because when it comes
to obligation, to owing God, to being a debtor to Him, Paul can’t
continue with the point without explaining that the debt has already
been paid. The obligation has been fulfilled. You might even say that
he is contradicting himself. Because no sooner does he say that you
are debtor than he says that you are a son of God, meaning that you
are in line to inherit all that God has. Paul cannot continue on with
the notion that you are under obligation to God when God Himself is
your Father and calls you His children.

But you would still miss the point if you were to think that he’s
saying that you’re not a debtor. You would not be able to see what God
really does for you if you heard Paul as saying that you’re not under
obligation. That’s why he says you are. But when you’re listening to
that and then you listen to what he then goes onto you see what it
really means that you are under obligation to God. It’s not something
like owing Him money. It’s not something like spending some time, even
if it’s a long time, in purgatory. It’s a debt you cannot pay. You are
under an obligation to God you cannot fulfill.

What you must do for God can only be done by God. You are not just
under obligation, you are done for. The reason Paul doesn’t tell you
how to get out of it is because you can’t. He doesn’t tell you to get
it in gear and appease God because that won’t eliminate your debt. You
will still be under obligation to Him and you will remain under it.

The reason Paul doesn’t tell you to pay off your debt is because he
must tell you how it is that your debt is paid. Only God can do it and
only He has. That’s why Paul does what he can’t help but doing,
telling us about Christ. He tells us about the Son of God.

What does it mean that Jesus is the Son of God? Jesus is God. Jesus is
the Son of God. God the Father is God and Jesus is the Son of God.
Does this mean that Jesus is less of God than God the Father? No,
Jesus is fully God. Jesus is also the Son of God. It’s vital that we
understand that to say that Jesus is the Son of God is to say that He
is God. But He is at the same time not God the Father and is in fact
the Son of God.

The Epistle reading today doesn’t refer to Jesus as the Son of God.
But it says that we are co-heirs with Christ. This is an amazing
statement. Even though Jesus is God He is an heir of God the Father.
This is how our debt has been paid. By God doing it. By God becoming
flesh. By Jesus being forever God and the Son of God. He possesses all
things and yet is the heir of all things of God the Father.

It goes without saying that you and I are not God. We’ve already
established that we owe an insurmountable debt to God. But look what
happens! We are co-heirs with Christ! Jesus is God—we are co-heirs
with God! What really is happening is not us going up to God but Him
coming down to us. It’s not that we are getting right with God but
that He is paying the debt we owe Him so that we are right with Him.
It’s not that we must obey Him as His children but that He has adopted
us; He has made us His children so that we may call out to Him as our
dear Father.

Children never realize fully how good they have it. They never
understand completely all that their parents do for them. That’s
probably why they complain when there’s work involved around the house
or discipline handed down. When we hear the message that we are saved
by grace and that we are the recipients of all of God’s blessings we
may grudgingly hear the words that Paul says that “we are children of
God, and if children, then heirs—heirs of God and fellow heirs with
Christ, *provided we suffer with Him* in order that we may also be
glorified with Him.” Has this replaced the debt? Has God taken care of
our sin only to lay down for us a path of suffering?

Actually what Paul is saying is what he has been saying all along:
that we are joined with Christ in order that we may be united with Him
in His glory. Only a little before what he says here he reminds us
that in Baptism we are united with Christ. But it’s specific. We are
united with Him in His death, in Baptism. In the same way, we are
united with Him in His resurrection, in Baptism. It’s amazing that
this happens. Only Christ suffered for the sins of the world, but we
are actually united with Him in that suffering. Christ alone rose from
the grave sealing the salvation He accomplished in His suffering and
death, but we are in fact united with Him in that resurrection.

That’s what Baptism has done for you. It’s not just that you look far
off into the distance, and into the past for that matter, to the Son
of God suffering and dying on that cross and see there that
forgiveness has been won for you. It’s also that he unites you to
Himself, and specifically His death and resurrection, in your Baptism.
That’s how you are a child of God and an heir with Christ.

It’s why also you will have times where you wonder why being a child
of God seems to entail more suffering than glory. But isn’t that why
we cry out to our dear Father? Isn’t that why we hold tenaciously to
His Word, which goes forth from His mouth and accomplishes the purpose
for which He sent it? Isn’t that why we cling against all odds to that
Word which He indiscriminately scatters about, and takes root despite
many people rejecting it, and bears fruit and yields a crop beyond
what we can imagine?

We’ll drive ourselves nuts if we try to figure out when and where and
in whom the Holy Spirit has created faith. What we do is simply do
what our Lord has called us to do. We are heirs with Christ. He is God
and the Son of God. When we are the children of God then we are not on
our own. As children of God we are not just kids who complain to Dad,
eternal Father that He is, we are actually brought into His eternal
glory. That it doesn’t always seem glorious on this side of heaven is
part of the brilliance of it. We need God the Father, we need God the
Son, we need God the Holy Spirit. With smooth sailing we would see no
need for God, the one in whose name we were Baptized. With suffering,
we see our need for Him and that He actually takes care of us, a fact
we know because He has Baptized us and has made us co-heirs with
Christ.

With suffering, we are drawn closer to Christ. We see our need and
that draws us to look to Christ and His suffering. So often when we
suffer we act like spoiled little children who think that everything
should go their way. We have little time to consider the suffering of
others. We have little care for the needs of others. Why should we
think about them and help them when we are going through the suffering
that we are enduring?

This isn’t the path of glory but of self-absorption. This isn’t the
way of the children of God, of co-heirs with Christ, but of whining
little children who want their way.

Suffering with Christ is the way of glory. Suffering with Him is the
way of receiving the blessings of God because we can only be children
of God, co-heirs with Christ, because of God—that is, Jesus: God
Himself and the Son of God.

Consider who you are. A child of God. Consider why that is. It is
because of Jesus. He is God and He is the Son of God. Consider that
your life is bound up in His. You are Baptized into Christ Jesus. You
are not your own. You are a child of the Most High. You are fed at the
Table of Your Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, the Son of God.

Consider what this means for you. That you are a child of God, a
co-heir with Christ, means you live not for yourself but for your
Lord. It means that it’s simply who you are that you serve others and
reach out to them in their need. It means that it’s not a grudging
stipulation laid upon you but a marvelous opportunity to be Christ to
others. It means that it is a joy to live in the new and eternal life
your Lord, the Son of God, has given you and in whom you are united.
It most certainly means you will enter into the eternal joy and glory
of the Heavenly Father even as it means that here and now and daily as
you live, you, by the grace of God the Son are a child of God. 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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