Intro
The Lutheran Church has several prayer services, mostly meant for us to use 
during the week.  We have a morning-prayer service, Matins, which begins with 
these words from Psalm 51.  The pastor chants, “O Lord, open my lips.”  In 
response, the congregation chants back, “And my mouth will declare Your praise.”

Main Body
With those words, God teaches us that we cannot praise Him unless He first 
opens our lips and gives us such praise to offer back to Him.  God teaches us 
that we cannot worship Him unless He breaks into Satan’s house.  He needs to 
bind the strong man to set us free.  Only then can we give proper glory to God. 
 

Psalm 51 points us to today’s gospel, which announces that God will overthrow 
Satan’s kingdom though His Son, Jesus Christ.  We even learn what our Lord’s 
work is.  He comes to save those under the power of the devil, bringing them 
into God’s kingdom of grace. 

That’s why Jesus commanded the Eleven, the Church’s first pastors, to disciple 
others by baptizing and teaching them all the truths that they had received 
from Him.  Since we’re born in sin and allied with Satan from birth, the first 
act of the Christian Church is to baptize.  That’s why Titus 3 calls baptism a 
“washing of new birth and the renewing of the Holy Spirit” (Titus 3:5). 

In baptism, Jesus arrives and shows Satan the door.  It’s no accident that our 
baptismal liturgy has the pastor first speak these words: “Depart unclean 
spirit and make room for the Holy Spirit!”  For that’s what baptism does: It 
drives out the devil!

And in His Church, Jesus continues to do His work.  Through the preached Word, 
Christ continues to release the captive from sin’s enslaving chains, keeping us 
in His kingdom of grace.  Through His forgiveness, Christ continues to open our 
lips, creating praise from those whom the Gospel brings into His kingdom. 

That’s why those brought into the Church continue to gather around Christ’s 
Word and Sacraments.  For through those channels of grace, Christ continues to 
defend His flock so we may sing His praise eternally. 

The Word and Sacraments are the weapons that Christ gave to His Church.  
Through those, we can fight against the devil and those who work to deceive us, 
robbing us of our comfort in Christ, who loved us and gave Himself up for us to 
be a sacrifice pleasing to God. 

But oh how we often despise such gifts from God!  When we come to hear the Word 
and its preaching, we feel no significant power or persuasion.  And so we 
consider it nothing significant.  We can take it; we can leave it.  We treat it 
like all the other information in our lives--instead of the Word of God coming 
to me here and now.  In fact, we often find the preached Word boring.  

That’s why we want our pastors to spice it up with entertaining stories and 
anecdotes.  For the Word of sin and grace, and the call to repent and be 
brought into the forgiveness of sins, often bores us.  And so our sinful nature 
clamors for something that will satisfy our itching ears.  

And if our faith is but a veneer, but a calling card to get into heaven, we 
then continue to live our lives seeking material goals and happiness.  We can 
even, in the secret places of our heart, consider God to be an obstacle to our 
happiness.  We think He takes up too much of our time.  He asks for too much 
money.  He takes too much fun away from our lives. 

We even resent God.  After all, He commands us to love Him more than anything 
else--even more than ourselves.  He teaches us to pray, “Not my will, Lord, but 
Thy will be done,” when you and I honestly want to pray, “My will be done.” 

So, we must learn how Christ works.  He breaks into Satan’s domain, binds him 
by His power, robs him of his prey, and releases the sinner from his power to 
serve God in freedom and joy. 

When Christ comes in, people react in two different ways.  For Jesus warned 
that Satan does not give up easily; once driven out, he constantly seeks to 
repossess what was taken from him.  It’s torturous for an unclean spirit not to 
be inside a human host.  Jesus spoke of them seeking a place of rest.  

For those like the Pharisees in our Gospel reading, they do not want to be 
released.  They may not realize it, but they want to serve the devil, seeking 
their own choices and selfish interests.  Wearing the devil’s own glasses, they 
see Jesus as the demon.  And so they resist God’s Word and Sacraments, 
continuing in their darkness.  They are the ones Jesus is speaking about when 
He says that once they are set free, seven more demons come to repossess them, 
who make their condition worse than it was at the first.  

But there are also those who hear the word of God and keep it.  They marvel at 
Christ’s work that frees the sinner, opening their lips to sing praise to God. 

For Jesus gave the Church more than baptism to drive out Satan.  He also gave 
absolution, the preached Word, and His Supper.  The Church has no other weapons 
against Satan than those means of grace.  Through those, Jesus continues, even 
to this day, the work that He began when He walked the earth.  He frees our 
hearts from Satan’s slavery, returning them for their intended purpose--to be a 
home for the Triune God. 

In our Gospel for today, a woman cried out after hearing Jesus teach.  She 
said, “Blessed is the mother who gave you birth and the breasts that nursed 
you!”  Jesus corrected her: “Even more, blessed are those who hear the word of 
God and keep it.”  Jesus wasn’t putting His mother down.  For Scripture tells 
us that all generations are to call Mary “blessed.”  So, this wasn’t a put down 
of His mother.  Instead, Jesus is letting us know the value of His Word.  

When Jesus says, “Blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it,” He 
isn’t giving you more instructions.  Jesus isn’t telling you what to do, 
turning His Gospel into another Law.  

We often naturally do that, don’t we?  We turn the Gospel into Law.  We’ll say, 
“Jesus died on the cross to save you.  Now all you have to do is…”  And with 
words like that, we’ve just yanked the guts out of the Gospel and turned it 
back into Law, into something you have to do.  

So then, what is Jesus doing when He said, “Blessed are those who hear the word 
of God and keep it”?  It’s this: He’s pointing you to the source of eternal 
safety, protection, and salvation.  For in hearing the Word of God, God keeps 
you safely in His kingdom.  In hearing the Gospel that God forgives you because 
of Jesus, God keeps you safely in His kingdom.  

What keeps you safe against the devil and his minions is the life-creating and 
sustaining Word of the Gospel.  His Word is the truth about who you are.  His 
Word lets you know why you face these battles.  But even more, His Word 
protects you in those battles against Satan, even letting you know what awaits 
you as you trust in God’s mercy because of Christ Jesus. 

Indeed, “Blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it!”  Indeed, they 
are blessed!  They are blessed because that Word of God that Christ speaks is a 
word, not about what you are to do or not to do, but who you are in Christ!

That’s why we aren’t to despise the Word of God and its preaching, or the 
Sacraments, which are but God’s Word coming to us through material means that 
Christ has chosen to use.  Those who do not despise the Word are those whom 
Jesus calls “blessed.”  If they don’t abandon the grace that God gives to us in 
His Word and Sacraments, they will indeed inherit the kingdom of His glory.  
That’s what keeping the Word of God means.  His Word is such a treasure that we 
hold on to it as the most precious gift in life, which is what it is. 

So, dear Christians, rejoice!  Although you are weak, rejoice!  For One fights 
for you who is stronger than the one who seeks your destruction.  Rejoice in 
your assurance of eternal life, for it is not some deception.  God assures you 
that His Kingdom has come to you in Christ Jesus, who gave His life for your 
sins and rose again in victory for your salvation. 

Rejoice that He comes here, today, to open your lips, so your mouth may also 
declare His praise.  He comes to forgive your sins, so you may go in peace to 
serve God and live in His love.  He comes to feed you His body and blood, so 
you may be one with Him, overcoming sin, death, and the devil. 

Conclusion
On the cross, Jesus destroyed Satan’s power to harm you.  There, Jesus freed 
you, although you were a lost and condemned creature.  There, He rescued you 
from all sins, from death, and from the power of the devil--not with silver or 
gold, but with His holy and precious blood, and with His innocent suffering and 
death.  

Why would Jesus do that?  All so you may be His own, live under Him in His 
kingdom, and serve Him in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and 
blessedness, just as He is risen from the dead and lives and reigns to all 
eternity.  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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