Intro
The high and mighty of this world see no need for angels.  After all, they have 
the money they need to hire their own protective services.  They can rely on 
their own, and what they can buy, to save and protect them.  Why rely on what 
they aren’t sure of or what you can’t see or confirm?  Walking by faith only 
makes sense if you have no other choice. 

The high and mighty of this world can also create their own opportunities.  
They have the wherewithal to turn events to their advantage.  They don’t need 
divine intervention, someone or some being who will swoop down and make the 
impossible happen, or even the odds.  They’re not the little guy--and angels 
are just for little guys, the weak people who need them. 

Main Body
At least, that’s many how misunderstand today’s Gospel reading.  Angels are for 
children, if not real children than those who are children in intellect, 
vulnerability, or spiritual development.  Angels are for those who childishly 
believe that some greater force exists, some higher being that benignly or 
lovingly designs our destinies, or keeps them from going too badly awry.  

Assuming angels are only for those who are too weak to stand on their own 
grounds itself in a faulty understanding of angels.  Seeing angels in such a 
way even misunderstands what the word “angel” means.  Angel means “messenger.”  
Angels aren’t heavenly ninjas dressed in black to slice and dice our enemies.  
Most of the time, God gives His angels no weapons.  Angels have no powers or 
elaborate tactics.  They have their mouths to be the messengers that God gave 
them to be.  

For that is what angels are: They are messengers, mouthpieces, beings who 
repeat what the Lord says both back to Him in prayer, praise, and thanks.  They 
also speak against the devil in defiance, for the defense and protection of the 
children of God.  That’s what angels do.  They speak the Word of God.  The Word 
is their weapon. 

Consider the tumultuous scene you heard in today’s reading from Revelation.  
War breaks out in heaven.  Michael and his angels fight with Satan, the dragon. 
 The dragon and his angels fight, as well, but they don’t prevail.  And what 
are the weapons of this cosmic war in the heavens?  They are words.  Satan and 
his demons fight by using words of deception, lies, and untruths.   Michael 
fights by speaking the Truth.  

But Michael doesn’t just happen to speak what is true: He also speaks the Truth 
who is also the Way and the Life.  By this Word, the angels overcome the false, 
misleading, and doubt-filled words of the devil.  This Truth that Michael 
speaks is inextricably united to the One who is the Truth, Jesus Christ.  And 
so that Truth, which is joined to the One who is the Truth, undoes the lies and 
the father of lies, the Devil.  By this Word, who is Truth in the flesh, soaked 
in His own Truth-bestowing blood, the accuser of old is overcome. 

Its words versus the Word united to the One who is the Word, Jesus Christ.  
Lies and deceptions against the Truth united to the One who is Truth.  They’re 
words that give birth to doubt fighting the Word that gives birth to faith.  
They’re statements designed to deceive, divide, and create chaos battling the 
Word who unites, gives peace, and creates communion.  They’re sayings that 
deliver and plant home death and hell versus the Word who has Life in Himself, 
since He is Life. 

And so today brings us to the mystery of why we have a day in Christ’s Church 
that remembers angels, yet calls them “saints.”  Today is “St. Michael and all 
angels.”  How can an angel be a saint?  It’s simple.  Saint means “holy one.”  
Someone who is holy is someone whom God has made sinless.  This can be by God 
creating someone who is sinless or by forgiving sins.  

For us, we become holy by God forgiving us by the blood of Christ.  That’s 
because Jesus’ blood makes us holy and cleanses us from all sin.  This forgiven 
state of being becomes ours as the Holy Spirit, through Word and Sacrament, 
gives us faith to trust in Jesus and what He did and does to save us.  That’s 
how the Holy Spirit applies Jesus’ blood to forgive us.  But, of course, the 
most-intimate way of being made holy is when we, in faith, drink His true blood 
and receive Jesus in His Supper. 

Yet, angels are holy because God created them that way.  Now, some angels fell, 
and they became the devil and his evil brood.  But the angels who remained 
sinless are still holy.  They are still doing what God has given them to do in 
their sinless state of being.  And so, because such angels are sinless, we 
recognize that they also are saints who serve God. 

And angels serve God by being His messengers.  Remember, that’s what the word 
angel means; it means “messenger.”  Angels speak God’s words.  And that what’s 
flying back and forth in today’s reading from Revelation, in that war between 
good and evil, between demonic and angelic forces, between Satan and the angel 
Michael.  It’s nothing more than words.  How seemingly commonplace, 
unspectacular, and deflating that is to our expectations of the supernatural!

After all, we see words as weak.  “Stick and stones may break my bones, but 
words will never hurt me.”  Words have no mass or substance to shield you from 
the weapons of war.  They have no force that can disembowel or eviscerate an 
enemy.  How can such sound vibrations carried by the wind, one’s breath, or 
even the Spirit of God, do anything?

It’s because of Whom the Holy Spirit connects to such words.  That’s why.  
Words in themselves can do nothing, unless such words are connected to someone 
or something powerful.  And the words that angels speak are given to them by 
God, the all-powerful Creator.  And so words can do what God wants them to do. 

But words are weak!  It’s then that you are to remember the Son of God, Jesus 
Christ, the One who is the Word, on the cross.  In Jesus Christ, God masks His 
power in weakness.  In the flesh, the same God through whom everything was 
made, allowed sinful man to despise, revile, torture, and kill Him.  Jesus hid 
His power so, in death, He could destroy the power of death.  That’s the 
picture of strength hidden in weakness.  And it’s in that weakness that Jesus 
won the victory. 

We see that reality in the power of words.  Words are weak, but hidden within 
them is the power of God.  Like Christ on the cross, God uses words to win the 
victory.  Words are the weapons in the battle between heaven and hell, between 
life and death.  Spiritually speaking, words are what God uses to create life 
in this valley of death in which we live.  

These are the words of life.  “I am the Lord your God; I am with you always; I 
am gracious and compassionate.”  Here are some more: “I forgive you; I am the 
Alpha and the Omega; I am coming quickly.”  Such divine words from the Word 
Himself don’t merely inspire faith or encourage living; no, they are words of 
Life itself.  

But there are also words of death, those satanically inspired words: “Did God 
really say?” “If you are the Son of God?”  Such words not only deflate hope, 
they also sow the seeds of doubt and unbelief.  Such demonic words seek to 
bring death to the Life that our Lord gives and is. 

And so the angels speak as God has given them to do.  They are God’s 
messengers, God’s preachers, speaking what He gives them to say, repeating His 
Word day and night before Him, defending, protecting, and delivering us simply 
on the strength of God’s Word.  And Michael the angel, with the other angels, 
leads the charge.  And by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their 
testimony, they overcome our enemies for our well-being. 

But those who rely on themselves don’t need to hear such satanic-defeating, 
death-defying words.  After all, they have themselves.  Such self-reliant 
people don’t even see the need for listening to the same Word preached by 
visible angels, messengers of God, as they speak from the pulpit or stand at 
the altar, proclaiming the Word who is Truth.  

Such people rely on the strength of their own word.  That’s what Eve did when 
she tried to strengthen the Lord’s Word with her own words.  That’s what Peter 
did when he tried to strengthen his speech by misusing the Lord’s Name.  That’s 
what Judas did when he relied on the word of the lying priests instead of the 
word from the One who is the Word, Jesus Christ. 

But those whom the Word converts become as little children.  They are humbled, 
and, in turn, humble themselves as children.  Not to do so is to keep yourself 
out of God’s kingdom.  Everyone in God’s kingdom needs, relies on, and takes to 
heart that angelic Word, whether it is spoken by invisible preachers named 
Michael and Gabriel, or by visible preachers named Matthew and Mark.  

For the Word of Life, that Word of Truth, the Word that saves and delivers 
doesn’t depend on who speaks it or what the speaker is in himself.  Whether a 
heavenly being or not, God’s messengers don’t represent themselves but the 
person of Christ.  And so the Word that God also gives the pastor to speak is 
the Word that gives eternal life, whom the Father through the Holy Spirit has 
made known to us.  

Conclusion
That Word Jesus is declared to you, so you may be in communion with Him.  And 
it is that Word, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit connecting words to the Word, who 
gives and keeps you in eternal life.  Such a Word even strengthens and delivers 
you from every eternal evil: Past, present, and that which is to come.  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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