Intro
“Familiarity breeds contempt,” so the saying goes.  It means that we can become 
so familiar with something that we begin to consider it of little value.  This 
can even happen in our faith-life, where God becomes routine for us, and we 
begin to consider Him of little value.  Of course, the problem is not with God 
and His gifts, but with us.

Main Body
We can say that’s what happened to the Israelites of long ago.  God Himself had 
chosen them as His people.  Out of all the civilizations on the earth, He chose 
them as His beloved, through whom the Savior of the human race would come.  
That promise ignited the hearts of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

God even provided a nation for His people to live.  He wiped out their 
enemies--even in the most extreme of circumstances!  He provided them a place 
to worship.  God even named a specific tribe to oversee His house of worship.  
But God did ask for something in return.  He asked them to have a childlike 
trust in Him.  He asked them to believe His promise of a coming redemption from 
the worst enemies of all: sin, death, and the devil.

But you’ve probably read enough of the Old Testament to know how they responded 
to God’s care and providence.  God’s own people no longer delighted in being 
His distinctive people.  For them, He became routine.  They began to consider 
Him of little value.  They allowed their hearts to grow hard, over and over, 
again and again.

So God would take them to the woodshed.  After all, this was the first covenant 
to which they had agreed.  God would reward them here if they followed Him 
faithfully.  And He would punish them here if they became unfaithful.  So they 
would suffer stinging battlefield defeats.  Then, they would repent, and God 
would let them bask again in His forgiveness.

God sent them wise men to serve as judges.  But that wasn’t enough for them.  
They wanted to be like the other nations.  They wanted the ways of others to 
shape their lives--not God.  So they demanded a king--and God reluctantly gave 
them one.

You could say that was the beginning of the end for the Jews.  For soon after 
that, they divided into two bickering kingdoms, one in the north and one in the 
south.  They intermarried with foreigners, ignoring God’s directive to be a 
separate and holy people through whom the Messiah would come.  So what happened?

The 10 northern tribes were defeated, forced to move, and would disappear as a 
people from the face of the earth.  In the two southern tribes, the Temple 
would be destroyed, and the people would live in exile.  But the Jews would 
rebuild Jerusalem and the Temple.  And God would send His people a continual 
line of prophets, some of whom they would listen to, and others they would 
ignore.

Then, the long-promised Messiah came, the One whom God the Father had sent.  
But most of the Jews had grown stubborn and complacent in their ways.  They had 
no room for One who came to fulfill the Law and the Prophets.  For the 
Israelites had made a science of climbing their way to heaven and even making a 
handsome profit along the way.  This Rabbi Jesus was ruining it for everyone!

Sure, some Jews had ears to hear the Word of the Lord from God’s own Son.  Some 
saw and heard Jesus and believed.  But many more were ready to nail Him to a 
cross to shut Him out forever.  After all, Jesus said He was the King of the 
Jews.  And the Jews said they had no king but Caesar.  They didn’t want someone 
to mess up such a fragile affiliation with the Roman overlords of their nation.

The week of His betrayal leading to His death, Jesus wept over Jerusalem, the 
“city of peace.”  He knew that 40 years later the Romans would lay waste to the 
city with nearly all its residents.

The Roman historian, Josephus, wrote:
All hope of escape and all food supplies were cut off from the Jews.  Famine 
devoured thousands upon thousands.  The alleys were choked with bodies.  The 
survivors were too weak to bury the dead.  Some fell into graves with them.  No 
mourning was heard in Jerusalem, for famine stifled all emotions, and an awful 
silence shrouded the city.

One refugee, who had been in charge of a single gate, told [the Roman General] 
that [nearly 16,000] corpses had been carried out in an 11-week period.  Other 
leaders reported 600,000 bodies of the lower classes had been thrown out, and 
it was impossible to number the rest.

Jerusalem’s destruction is no mere history lesson.  It shows us--in 
history--what spiritually happens to those who reject Jesus.  The Jewish claim 
for the land that God had once promised them had ended.  God--in His divine 
patience--finally closed the book on His first covenant.  The Jews did not 
recognize the time of their gracious visit from God.

That’s also the warning for you and me.  Don’t reject Jesus in the times He 
comes to visit you with His salvation and grace.  For the story of the 
Israelites in their unbelief can also become your story.  For you, God also can 
become routine, where you begin to consider Him of little value.

When your value of God begins to dwindle, you begin to see Him only as a god to 
do your bidding.  He becomes your pet to do what you desire in the way you want 
it.  And if you don’t get what you want, you throw a tantrum like a petulant 
child.  Yes, the story of Israel’s hard-heartedness can all too easily become 
your story, my story.

Perhaps, you feel as if the heavenly Father let you twist in the wind one too 
many times.  So, in your unrighteous anger toward Him, your faith becomes dim.  
Before you realize it, you have no room left in your life for Jesus.  You plug 
your ears as He calls out to you in His mercy and grace.  You become stubborn.  
You refuse to come and drink of His grace in His own house, the Church.  You 
forget about the times of God’s gracious coming to you.  You become the Jew for 
whom Jesus wept, who would die in the fall of Jerusalem, in hardhearted 
unbelief.

Dear child loved by God, now is the time He comes to you, now is the day of 
salvation.  Now is the time!  Let God’s Word clean your temple of false idols, 
misdirected love, and unrepented sin!

Christ’s death for your sins ushers in a glorious time of grace.  After our 
Lord’s resurrection from the dead, He promised to send the Holy Spirit to His 
apostles.  His Spirit would go with them when they would preach Jesus into the 
hearts of men and give out God’s means of grace.  These Apostles would bring 
God’s life-changing Word of salvation to the world.

Yet, even now, the Lord God continues to visit His people.  It wasn’t just 
2,000 years ago.  He visits us every Lord’s Day to deliver His forgiveness.  
His Word declares that His blood covers your transgressions.  His blood washes 
every stain of sin, until you are spotless.  It was blood that once delivered 
the Jews from the hands of the Egyptians.  And it is blood that delivers you 
from a slavery to fear and despair into God’s freedom and forgiveness.

Jesus visits you every Lord’s Day to deliver life.  And where Jesus is, there 
is Life.  The preached Word brings you into the Life of Jesus.  The absolution 
brings you His cross-won forgiveness.  But even more, Jesus gives you more than 
words.  He gives you Himself.  “Take, drink, this cup is the New Covenant in my 
blood, shed for you for the forgiveness of sins.”  His Body and Blood feed your 
body and soul with His highest good.  Jesus visits you every Lord’s Day to 
deliver His salvation.

Do you remember the many rescues our heavenly Father provided for His chosen 
people?  He rescued Noah and his family through the flood.  He rescued Abraham 
from a pagan, idolatrous family.  He rescued Joseph from prison.  These 
rescues--and many others--point forward to the last and greatest rescue: Jesus 
Christ rescuing fallen man from eternal death to eternal life.

Jesus’ rescue mission began before the foundations of the world.  Then, God 
claimed you as His own (Jeremiah 1:5).  Jesus’ rescue mission continued for you 
on the cross.  There, Jesus took your sin into Himself.  His rescue mission 
continued for you at your baptism.  That’s when He applied His forgiveness to 
you, giving you a clean conscience (1 Peter 3:20-21).

Yet, God isn’t finished with you.  He continues to save you and keep you in the 
true faith through doses of preaching, absolution, and the Lord’s Supper.  He 
will continue to save, feed, and lead you through this life into the life of 
the world to come.  And on the Last Day, Jesus will bring you to salvation in 
all its fullness, when He will say to you, “Well done, good and faithful 
servant” (Matthew 25:23).  This, Jesus is doing when He visits you each week in 
His house.

Conclusion
Don’t have Jesus weep over you because you, like the Jews of yesteryear, follow 
a god of your own making.  Instead, let Jesus delight in His salvation for you. 
 When Jesus comes to visit you in His house, run to meet him like a beloved 
disciple!

For Jesus still visits you, just as He said He would, with forgiveness, life, 
and salvation.  And He will come again on the Last Day to take you into His 
eternal presence.  Then, you will fully live life as it was meant to be, with 
other believers who also relished every moment God came to them in Word and 
Sacrament.  Believe this and live this because of Jesus, your Savior.  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

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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