This sermon is less than half the length my normal sermon.  It is really more 
of a confessional address set in the context of a specific Confessions of Sins 
service, which is a preparation to receive the holy Sacrament. 

--------------

Intro
About 200 years after Jesus’ ascension into heaven, a man named Montanus 
started his own breakaway-Christian sect.  He claimed that God spoke directly 
to him when he was in a trance.  After such a trance, he said he knew the day 
when Jesus was returning.  So, Montanus and his followers gathered near a town 
called Pepuza, which today is in Turkey, to see, firsthand, the glorious return 
of Christ!

So, the people stood there, staring at the sky, and nothing happened.  And we 
can add even more than that.  For Jesus has yet to return on the day that any 
religious leader has ever predicted that He would do so.  Such false teachers 
must foolishly believe that Jesus’ words don’t apply to them.  Jesus clearly 
says, that “about that day or hour, no one knows, not even the angels in 
heaven, or the Son.  Only the Father knows” (Matthew 24:36). 

Main Body
So, while we wait, we travel between two chasms that threaten to ruin our 
Advent preparations.  We do not become foolish like Montanus, thinking we can 
identify the time when Jesus will return.  But we also refuse to ignore our 
Lord’s promise that He will return, by living unrepentant lives.  We don’t live 
as if we are certain that Jesus won’t return during our lifetimes. 

We live, knowing that our Lord will soon come back.  Then, He will return to 
take us, body and soul, to live with Him in eternity.  And so we wait.  But we 
don’t wait in apathy or complacence.  We wait fervently.  We zealously go about 
our God-given tasks, realizing “the Lord isn’t slow to keep his promise, as 
some understand slowness” (2 Peter 3:9).  Yet, knowing that, we balance our 
fervent expectation.  For we know that “with the Lord, a day is like 1,000 
years, and 1,000 years are like a day” (2 Peter 3:8). 

The Apostle Peter tells us how this fervent expectation shapes our lives.  “You 
should live holy and godly lives,” he says, “waiting for and hastening the day 
of God…  Based on his promise, we wait for a new heaven and a new earth, where 
righteousness is at home” (2 Peter 3:11-13). 

If we are to be that eager for Christ’s return, so we are even “hastening the 
day of God,” then why hasn’t Jesus already returned?  It’s is because He loves 
us.  He has delayed His return because “he is patient with you, not wanting 
anyone to perish, but all to come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9).  And how do we 
hasten the day of God, using St. Peter’s expression?  We do so by faithfully 
turning away from our sins.  We do so by living the life that God has given us 
to live.  

That’s even why we have different seasons of the Church year, like Advent.  
They remind us, ever anew, of our need to repent, and so to hasten the day of 
God.  And if our sins bother us so little, how then can we call others to join 
us in the Christian life of repentance?  For Peter tells us that we are “to be 
found spotless, blameless, and at peace with [Christ]” (2 Peter 3:14). 

So, the season of Advent calls us to repent.  That means we are to turn away 
from our sins.  But we don’t stop there.  We are, even more, to turn to that 
which makes us spotless, blameless, and at peace with Christ.  And what does 
that?  What makes us makes us spotless, blameless, and at peace with Christ?  
It’s the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ.  

Advent calls us to live holy and godly lives.  And our lives are holy, not 
because we’ve made them that way, but because we are in Christ, and He is in 
us.  Our lives are godly because, it is not we who live, but Christ who lives 
in us.  

Conclusion
So, Advent is all about the holy blood of Christ coursing within our veins, 
changing our lives as we wait for the new heaven and the new earth.  Advent 
does not focus on what we do.  No, it’s about being in Christ, who is the 
spotless and holy One, who Himself makes us spotless and holy.  

So, come now and receive the real body and blood of Jesus.  For only the real 
body and blood of Jesus makes you spotless, blameless, and at peace with Him.  
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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