Intro
If the first man, Adam, brought sin, chaos, and death into the world and passed 
it on to all his descendants, then why isn’t the world in complete chaos all 
the time?  Why are their respites of grace, where people show kindness, where 
deer calmly drink water from the brook, and where cats and dogs can even become 
friends?  It’s because God did not abandon us.  

Yet, we cannot deny this truth: We must all face death.  We may be able to hide 
from the taxman, but we cannot escape death.  No human ever does.  For, since 
our first parents, death has been a constant in the fallen creation that Adam 
wrought.  Death always claims its victim. 

Main Body
So, yes, death is a cruel master and no one may escape its unforgiving grip.  
But know this: Death doesn’t have the final word.  The lilies of which Jesus 
speaks prove it, for they testify that God has not abandoned us.  Although Adam 
and Eve had betrayed Him at the dawn of time, God still loved them.  Even after 
their sin, even after their betrayal, He walked to meet them in the garden in 
the cool of the day.  

In the Garden of Eden, God came to Adam and Eve in a pre-incarnate, human form, 
walking in that newly fallen paradise, calling out to them in love.  Even 
before God gave any formal prophecies, He shielded them from His glory, 
foreshadowing a time when He would take our form to make right what we had made 
wrong.  God then clothed Adam and Eve with animal skins, showing that death and 
shed blood was needed to cover sin.  Immediately, after our fall into sin, God 
testified to life being born from the throes of death. 

And so consider the lilies of which Jesus speaks.  They also have a tale to 
tell.  They are beautiful and delicate in form--something unsuited to a broken, 
chaotic world.  And, yet, there they are--not in paradise, in the Garden of 
Eden--but in our fallen, sin-infested world.  They live alongside the thorns 
and thistles, which seeks to choke them.  Yet, somehow, they survive despite 
the disease and insects.  People trample them, dogs pee on them, and insects 
eat them for nourishment.  Yet, they are still there. 

And so the lilies testify that even in the valley of the shadow of death, Satan 
does not have the last word.  God does, for God can bring life out of 
death--and He does.  This is the truth to which the lilies testify--if you have 
Jesus’ ears and eyes, that is, the ears and eyes of faith. 

Consider the places and times where grace can break through the chaos of claw 
and thorn.  The entire world is not Egypt in chaos or Syria writhing from 
poison gas and chemical attack.  There is also beauty, laughter, feast days, 
and merriment. 

Death doesn’t have the final word--God does.  God walked in the garden of 
paradise with Adam and Eve.  He even came later, in the form of His Son, Jesus, 
to walk in another garden.  And there again, we betrayed Him once more.  In 
that Garden of Gethsemane, where we came with armed guards and unsheathed 
swords, Jesus walked.  We even had our way with Him outside the city, at the 
place of death, called the place the skull.  Jesus gave Himself over to our 
evil wishes and let us do Him harm.  

Then it was finished, and He was laid to rest.  We did our worst to Him.  And 
then in His dying breath, Jesus became like a kernel of wheat, a sleeping lily, 
in the garden of the dead.  He rose on Easter morning, the conqueror over 
death, undoing what sin had done.  Indeed, death doesn’t have the final 
word--God does. 

Death does not rule, not fully, not in the end.  Oh, death will have its way 
with us.  We must all pass through its gates.  Yet, Jesus has defanged death of 
its venom, for He has passed through death, living once more.  In baptism, God 
the Holy Spirit has united you to Jesus’ death and resurrection, where you will 
follow.  Where Jesus has gone, you, too, will go.  

What does that mean for you?  It means that death has died and lost it power.  
Death can only claim you for a moment, but Jesus lives, even into eternity.  In 
glory, amid the death and chaos of this world, the lilies bloom each spring to 
testify to that truth. 

So then, what do the lilies teach us?  In their own quiet way, they teach us 
not to be anxious.  Why?  Because Jesus lives, that’s why.  Jesus loves you.  
You are in the storm and tempest of this fallen world.  Suffering is part of 
life on this side of heaven.  There’s no escaping it.  And yet, there are the 
lilies; they testify to a reality beyond what we now experience.  

The devil tempts you to waste your energy and effort, to compound your sorrow, 
with worry about what may be here today, only to be gone tomorrow.  The devil 
would have you worry about money.  He would turn you to inward thoughts of how 
you will pay your bills, how you can get what you want, or how you can be 
successful or even just survive.  And if the devil can’t get you to fret over 
your own yearnings and imagined needs, he will turn you to fear what is beyond 
your control.  Remember the lilies. 

The devil will tempt you to fret for your children, your country, or the 
disaster that looms around the corner.  He will try to wear you down, 
bedeviling your fallen minds, pushing you over the precipice, so the gloom of 
sadness can suffocate you with the impossibility of it all.  Do not be anxious. 
 It is useless.  You only hurt yourself and those you love.  Remember the lilies

Jesus lives.  He will provide.  The lilies do not toil or spin.  The birds do 
not sow, reap, or gather.  Your Father takes care of them.  Your Father takes 
care of you.  He has always taken care of you.  He always will--whether you are 
good or bad, content or anxious.  For God is faithful. 

Today has its troubles, of which there is no doubt or debate.  Look at your 
life and the lives of others and you know it to be true.  Yet, even amid the 
darkness of death, Jesus calls you not to be anxious.  

Oh, the troubles around you still need your attention.  Your neighbor still 
needs a dose of God’s love.  Your mother needs a phone call.  Your husband 
needs an encouraging word.  And your dog needs his morning meal.  Even your 
country needs you.  Your country needs you as you pray for those in authority, 
vote in elections, and pay your taxes.  But those needs are nothing over which 
to be anxious.  Remember the lilies. 

The Lord has brought you here to this time and place.  He has made you who you 
are.  He has placed you here to serve Him through serving your neighbor.  And 
you do so despite the troubles of the day.  They are enough.  You gain nothing 
by adding to your anxieties, which can eat away at your mind or tie your 
stomach into knots.  You add nothing to your troubles but sorrow.  Remember the 
lilies. 

You are whom God has made you to be, where He has placed you, like a lily in a 
field.  As you can, you respond in your place to your community, family, and 
friends.  Yet, don’t be anxious about today’s troubles, whether the president 
is doing a good job, whether your children are meeting all your dreams, or 
whether the climate is growing warmer or colder.  Do what God has given you to 
do.  Then be at peace.  And where you have failed and faltered, ask for 
forgiveness.  The Lord will provide.  Remember the lilies. 

God has put you here in this place for a purpose, even if you feel unworthy to 
the task or cannot understand all of what He has called you to do.  Focus on 
today.  Rest in the certainty that Jesus lives, that Jesus is providing, and 
will always provide.  The lilies don’t know what they are doing either.  They 
are just being lilies.  And that is enough. 

Death doesn’t have the final word--God does.  The lilies testify to that truth. 
 War, famine, and plague do not.  Remember the lilies.  They pop up in 
unexpected places, adorning the world with their beauty, despite crime sprees, 
negligent governments, bungling bosses, or cheating spouses.  They belong to 
the Lord.  He provides for them and cares of them.  

Yet, you are worth more far to Him than the lilies of the field.  And if the 
Lord takes care of them, what does that say about you?  He will take care of 
you.  Rest in that truth.  Let go of your anxiety.  

God has sent His Son to die for you. The Lord has claimed you in the waters of 
holy baptism.  He speaks His word of forgiveness through other Christians whom 
God has placed into your life, or when you go to see the pastor in private 
confession.  He feeds you with His body and blood, bringing you into a divine 
union with Himself on this side of heaven, reminding you of what awaits you on 
the other side of death.  

Death doesn’t have the final word--God does.  After all, Jesus lives.  Your 
Father loves you.  He will take care of you as surely as He takes care of the 
lilies.  Yes, remember the lilies. 

Out of the oven after being refined by fire, after the violence of reaping and 
thrashing, after the mixing, kneading, and resting, out of the oven comes bread 
for the day and food for the eater.  The Lord provides.  He walked in the 
garden--in Eden and Gethsemane.  He went where He was needed.  He looked death 
in the face and let it do its worst.  And from the jaws of death came the 
eternal victory.  

Conclusion 
Remember the lilies.  Remember what Jesus wants you to learn from their silent 
and beautiful witness.  Death doesn’t have the final word--God does.  And it’s 
yours in Christ Jesus.  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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