"Get Out of the Way"
Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost
Commemoration of Augustine of Hippo, Pastor and Theologian
August 28, 2011
Romans 12:9-21

If someone is in your way, you might want to try a polite approach,
like: Excuse me, may I please get by? Telling them to get out of the
way probably won’t endear them to you.

Having said that, I have some advice for you as a Christian: Get out
of the way! I know it’s not exactly polite, but this is no time for
manners. You are in the way and you need to get out of the way.

Jesus told Peter as much when he was in the way. In fact, me telling
you to get out of the way is very polite compared to Jesus telling
Peter to get behind Him, and topping it off with calling him Satan.

If you’re in someone’s way in the grocery store you expect politeness
from the person requesting that you move. But God isn’t going to waste
time with politeness when it comes to you being in His way.

You can know that the reason He does this is because He loves you.
When you are polite to someone it’s not so much out of love for them
as it is common decency and respect. But love is a whole other matter.
Love at times calls for compelling action toward another person. Love
always calls for you doing what is very best for them.

They may not see it that way. They may think you have no respect for
them or you’re not a caring person. In fact, when you truly love
someone you are doing for them what they most need being done.

So Jesus calls Peter Satan. He tells him to get out of the way.

It was the same with the apostle Paul. He too was told by our Lord the
very same thing. Saul, Why are you persecuting Me? Get out of the way.
You’re going against Me. When Peter repented, he saw the truth of
Jesus’ words and was grateful that Jesus didn’t tip-toe around trying
to be nice. He was grateful that Jesus loved him, straight out telling
him to get out of the way. When Paul repented he realized that Jesus
was right, he had been going against Jesus, not serving God as he
thought he had been. Get out of the way, Paul, you do not have your
mind on the things of God but on the things of men.

That’s why Paul says what he does in the Epistle reading. What he’s
saying is, Get out of the way. Don’t be who you naturally are, be who
you are in Christ. Don’t insert yourself into the equation. Get out of
the way.

Another way of saying this is, Don’t take the easy way out. A
challenge is set before you. Take it. Don’t take the easy road, walk
the hard road. It was easy for Peter to react—Jesus, you’re Lord and
Savior! There’s no way you’re going to suffer and die! Jesus said, No,
you’re taking the way of man, not the way of God. It was easy for Paul
to persecute Christians. Jesus said, what you’re really doing is going
against Me.

So in the Epistle reading Paul spells it out. What you do as a
Christian is hard. Don’t just react. Don’t let your emotions control
you.

Go instead on what God tells you. In the case of Peter it was Jesus
standing right before him. In the case of Paul it was Jesus speaking
directly to him while he made his way to Damascus. In our case there’s
a lot poured into these short verses in Romans 12 in our Epistle
reading.

We must be active about this. It’s hard. We can’t take the easy way
out and just do whatever feels right to us. Love must be genuine. When
you love others, love them in humility. Do what is best for them. Do
for them as Christ has done for you.

In our society we’re frequently exhorted to be tolerant of those with
opposing views. Fortunately, you can still find in society and popular
culture the ideal that evil is actually evil. It’s bad, it’s wrong. In
no way should we be tolerant of evil. We need to abhor it. We need to
actively be against it. We can’t just sit by and let be what will be.
This is the hard way of the Christian life.

At the same time we need to hold fast to what is good. In society
you’ll find many who will say that tolerance is a virtue. We’re
impressed upon to hold fast to being tolerant of others, because who
are we to say that they’re wrong? The problem here is that we are so
twisted in what we think is good that we are ready to stand up for
what is in actuality evil.
Peter could not conceive of Jesus being Lord if it meant suffering and
dying at the hands of wicked religious leaders. But in fact, Jesus
couldn’t be Lord unless it meant that. Paul couldn’t stand to watch
Christians overthrowing the true religion of the Old Testament. In
fact, Jesus couldn’t continue the true religion of the Old Testament
without fulfilling it in Himself.

The world and our own sinful flesh will show us the way of the world,
which is actually the way of Satan. But in the written Word of God, we
have the way of God. It is the way of the cross. It is the way of
humility. In this way we hold fast to what is good. What is good is
what comes out of suffering, death, and resurrection. What is good
comes from the cross and the empty tomb. What we hold fast to is what
Jesus accomplished for the world in order to put behind Him and us the
way of Satan, which is the way we try to go that is apart from Jesus’
suffering, death, and resurrection.

This must be actively done, it is not easy. It’s not easy to love one
another with brotherly affection. There are too many idiosyncrasies
our brother and sister Christians have for us to love them in this
way. There are too many things they say that get on our nerves, or
offend us, or frustrate us. It’s much easier just to try to get along
with them. The hard way, the way of the cross, the way of God, is to
get out of the way and actually love them, to actually have brotherly
affection for them.

It’s counterintuitive to go through the church directory and think
about ways you can show honor to them where you actually place them
above yourself. You know good and well that some of them listed in
there are not as worthy as you are. But the hard road is to put
yourself at the back of the list. To place everyone else in front of
you. To consider how each and every one of them should be put to the
top of the list. This is hard. It takes active and willful work on
your part to think of them as Christ thinks of you.

The easy way out is to do this like most people do their New Year’s
resolutions. They go strong the first couple of weeks in January and
gradually they fade out. Don’t let your zeal for God’s way, the way of
the cross, flag. Each day is a new day. Each day is a new challenge.
Each day you are presented with the easy road and the hard road. Take
the hard road. Take the road that goes the way of the cross, the road
that Jesus walked, that led to suffering and death. The road that
passed through resurrection and walking away from the grave. Hold fast
to what is good, don’t get weary in it. Honor others as if you were
deserving only of doing that, and don’t slip into thinking that you
really know who is more worthy of honor.

Humility is the order of the day. It’s not just that you need to be
humble. It’s that Christ, the Lord of all, is humble. The way of God
is His way, the way of Christ. You must get out of the way. Be fervent
in spirit. Peter rebuked Jesus. He was fervent all right. But he was
fervent in the things of man. Be fervent in the things of God, the
things the Holy Spirit gives you in the written Word.

Serving the Lord flows out of this. Not that that makes it easy. So
many times in life the way our Lord calls us to serve is in ways in
which we’re set to serve God in some spectacular way and He thrusts us
into a setting where we quietly or humbly are called to serve. It’s
hard. It’s the way of the cross. You must get out of the way.

Have you ever been going along, and things were actually going along
pretty well, and then God threw you a curve? You’re now wondering
what’s going on. What’s He doing to you? What is He trying to tell
you? Well, He’s not throwing you a curve at all. It’s just that you
have your mind on the things of man, not of God. You need to get out
of the way and rejoice in hope. In hope you have what you really need.
In hope you see what God sees. It’s the way of the cross, the way that
is hard, the way that doesn’t seem very appealing when the world is
going along enjoying things, giving no thought to the more important
matters of salvation and forgiveness.

This is especially true in tribulation. Be patient. This is such a
hard thing that it probably bears repeating; be patient in
tribulation. This is one of those things that is so against our nature
that it’s really what Paul says next that is our only hope for being
patient in tribulation: be constant in prayer. Now you’re probably
thinking: How does that help? That actually makes it worse! How are
you possibly able to be constant in prayer?

This is actually an excellent way to show us that all of this is the
work of God. What He calls us to He accomplishes. He doesn’t go around
telling us what to do and send us on our way. He brings it about.
Jesus walked the way of the cross, He continues to walk that way of
the cross through us. It’s hard. It was for Him too. Suffering and
dying on the cross for the sin of the world wasn’t easy. But it was
the way of God and the way of love toward us.

Our lives are lives of prayer. When we are hammered by temptation,
beaten by troubles, weary of the way of the cross, God is calling us
to repentance, telling us to get out of the way. It’s much easier to
give in to our feelings when we’re suffering and feel sorry for
ourselves. In the same way that Peter said, This can’t happen to You
Lord!, we say to the very same Lord, this can’t happen to me! It’s
hard to get out of the way and walk the way of the cross, the way of
God, the way of Christ; which so often is the way of trials, molding
us into humble children of God who trust solely in Christ.

But it’s not just that we’re supposed to suffer. It’s not that God
wants our walk in His way to be a drag. No sooner does Paul counsel us
to endure suffering and continue in prayer than he exhorts us to
contribute to the needs of the saints and seek to show hospitality. If
you’re still stuck on yourself, not able to see beyond your own
situation, take a look outside your own little world. Your fellow
saints in Christ are in your same boat. They’re in need also. They
struggle too. They may be treading water also. They’re walking the
same path you are, the way of the cross. This life is hard for them
too.

But they have you. You are there for them. There’s no excuse here for
you. You can’t say that you have your own problems. One of the ways
God helps you deal with your own struggles is by giving you the
opportunity to serve others. To help them in their needs. By now you
probably know how this works—it’s not easy. It’s hard. It’s tough to
get your mind off yourself, get out of the way, and start serving
others. Especially when you’re inundated with your own problems. But
it’s the way of God, the way of Christ.

This way of looking at your life, your trials, your struggles with God
calling you to this way of life, is embodied in Christ. There’s no
other way to get out of the way than to fall before Him in repentance
and see in Him alone the only way. Bless those who persecute you;
bless and do not curse them. This can only be done through Christ. It
is what He did in going the way of the cross, suffering at the hands
of His enemies. It is now our way, seeing now in those who persecute
us, people who are in need of forgiveness just as we are.

Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. This is what
Christ has done. God has become flesh. He has gone through what we go
through. He knows. He knows what you’re going through. He’s been
there. We can be there for others as well. So much of this comes about
naturally when you look at others as if they’re Christ. In humility
you see that in the same way that He humbled Himself for the world,
you may humble yourself for others. This is especially important when
you have been wronged. Those who have wronged you are most in need of
your loving them in humility.

All of this takes active work. To succumb to your reactive feelings is
the easy way and ultimately the way of Satan. Get out of the way. God
is coming through and He’s intent on bringing you along on His way.
It’s the way that proceeds from His having gone to the cross and
stepping out of the tomb. It’s the way in which you now take up your
cross and follow Him. It’s the way in which He never ceases to love
you and help you and sustain you.

Get out of the way. Look not to what your circumstances tell you or
your feelings or the world. Look to the font, the place where God
tells you who you are: a sinner who was drowned and now lives in new
and eternal life. Look to this altar where Jesus continues His
journey, His way; where His body and blood that was given and shed on
the cross is given and shed for you for your forgiveness. This is His
way and He has made it your way. 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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