Intro
All around us, whether infiltrating the air or intertwining itself into the 
tapestry of our culture, is an assumption.  To be free is to be the boss, under 
no one else’s thumb.  Now, at first, who will disagree?  Oh, how gratifying and 
cathartic, until we realize we turn ourselves into self-made gods.  Only scan 
human history to discover what a dangerous idea this is, for we make horrible 
gods.

Main Body
Assume we are released from all our limits to do as we decide, we still may not 
be liberated.  Not if we make the rules to suit us and set our standards to 
fashion what is right and wrong.  Oh, such a way of life rings out with the 
bells of liberty but lays bare our real taskmaster, who still enslaves us. 

The reality exposes its ugliness when our delinquent nature runs the show.  For 
we offer our minds and bodies as slaves to impurity, and to worsening 
lawlessness.  No, this is not freedom.  For when you do whatever you want, what 
you want becomes your master.  To please yourself, you become a prisoner to 
your pleasure.  

So, who is the independent person with complete freedom?  No one, for everybody 
is under some authority.  The question is who or what, whether a true God or a 
false one. 

Scour the world, and what will you find?  Hidden beneath the inspiring 
monuments of man, you will find self-interest, complacency, and unadorned evil. 
 The underlying problem for the decay, including our noblest deeds, is not 
rooted in the establishment, the organization, or “the man.”  No, the sin flows 
from the person, who transmits his corruption into everything he does. 

The taint of our inherited nature degrades what we do, which is why Scripture 
tells us this hard message: “whatever is not from faith is sin” (Romans 14:23). 
 Listen to Jesus weigh in on this, “Everyone who sins is a slave of sin” (John 
8:34).  The result is people wanting to do what they like.  

The proof is in our laws, which exist to curb our harmful actions toward 
others.  The laws of our nation and state, as messed up as they may be, prove 
the existence of the defect inside us.  

Select a sin.  A person drinks too much and fights, engages in improper sexual 
relations, cheats, steals, and lies.  Why?  To be blunt, people enjoy sinning.  
At least a part of them does.  For if people don’t, only love will flow from 
them, not selfish thoughts and manipulation.  So, we learn this truth—we are a 
conflicting mess of motivations.  The Christian is not immune.  Despite doing 
what he doesn’t desire, a portion of him enjoys the immorality he commits.

Call those transgressions what you want, compulsion or sickness, but God uses 
the word “slavery.”  What’s insidious about this oppression is people think 
they’re free, when they’re not.  No, sin dominates them because their 
disobedient desires enslave them.  Though we might suppose we’re unrestrained 
because our wants and wishes drive the agenda, examine a bit deeper.  No, we 
don’t walk in freedom but in bondage, crippled by a broken nature, sullied by 
sin, which feeds our infected yearnings. 

The Scriptures also describe this as “death.”  So, someone is alive in body and 
mind, but not so in matters spiritual.  Oh, he thinks he’s living, judging 
truth from a corrupted lens, which keeps him from seeing what reality is.  So, 
the Almighty thunders from heaven, “The wages of sin are death.”

In earth’s beginning, God gave Adam a warning, “When you eat [the fruit from 
the forbidden tree], you will die” (Genesis 2:17).  Listen to Prophet Ezekiel.  
“The person who sins is the one who is going to die” (Ezekiel 18:4).  The 
unchanging, irreversible truth echoes later in sacred writing: The earnings of 
our misdeeds are only death.  Nothing and no one can change this. 

The Bible hammers home about our works not earning anything before God.  So 
true, but don’t sprint to the other side of the cliff, assuming what we do is 
also of no value.  No, what we do is beneficial, serving others, testifying to 
what we believe.  Where you don’t go is to claim what you do contributes to the 
salvation awaiting you. 

To presume as much is insulting to our Lord.  “Oh, Jesus, you didn’t do 
everything, for I must do this one minuscule part.”  Think, you are placing 
something you do in the same category of what your sin-slaying Savior can only 
do.  How can your works compare with Christ’s perfect obedience!  The Father’s 
gift is life eternal, which He gives—if not, everything changes.  The grace 
disappears, gone, mutating into the collapse of our attempted works.

So, our achievements don’t help re-establish us with God.  No, you are saved by 
grace through faith in Christ, and this is not from you.  No, such faith is 
God’s gift (Ephesians 2:8).  The Holy Spirit is the Lord and Life-Giver, the 
Author of our faith, not you. 

Now, our deeds don’t earn eternal life, but this doesn’t mean they are without 
teeth, unable to harm us.  Sin attacks and seeks to destroy our trust in God.  
Let’s stop living in a delusion.  For when you choose wrong over right and 
refuse to repent, you are committing spiritual suicide.  How?  In deliberate 
and willful sinning, you are pushing God off His throne, turning yourself into 
a false idol you value more than God.

The contaminated wage we earn is death, which is why you and I will, one day, 
breathe our last.  Now, if a corrupted nature did not defile us with the defect 
of sin, our hearts would not, one day, stop pulsing with life.  Only sinners 
perish, not the righteous—and implanted within a sinner’s take-home pay is his 
decay and ruin.

The heavenly Father sent His only Son, Jesus, to become sin for us (2 
Corinthians 5:21).  So, when Jesus took our place, He became our sin, which is 
why He went to the cross of death.  Yes, Christ paid the wages of all sin, in 
full.  Only Jesus bought and brought us life, paying the toll of our enduring 
crimes, earning for us eternal bliss when He conquered death.

Didn’t someone need to bear the cost?  Yes, and as both divine and human, Jesus 
did.  Today, He parcels to us, through Word and Sacrament, what He earned in 
His dying and rising.  For every sin-polluted person of every time and place, 
our Redeemer went, which is why God only grants life to us in Jesus. 

Only Christ covered the expenses of our failures, choosing to die for us rogues 
and offenders.  To the killing wood, He lumbered, taking in our every downfall, 
becoming every sinner, dying our death.  Without His blessed sacrifice, the 
life from all eternity evaporates like water in the desert of our fallen 
desires.  The payment for our tainted deeds remains unchanged to this 
day—death, which is why Christ died for us. 

On Calvary’s cross, Jesus suffered damnation in the place of the whole human 
race.  In a singular moment, death and life faced each other down, Life 
emerging as the Victor.  By signing His signature on sin’s bitter paycheck, God 
secured life in eternal glory for a sinful humanity.  Though the gift is free, 
the price is not. 

Don’t try to buy what comes as a gift.  For only someone who never sinned can 
pay for this life.  So, our offenses against the Almighty exclude you and me.  
In Jesus is life, and He alone gives us life beyond all death.  The Savior does 
not sell, make you negotiate, or command you to use some layaway plan while you 
pay.  No, He presents you with life unending.  The only way to receive such 
life is from Jesus. 

The Apostle Peter wrote, “Baptism saves you.”  A mysterious shroud now lifts, 
revealing how.  “Not by removing dirt from the flesh, but as the appeal of a 
clean conscience toward God through the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 
3:21).  In death’s descent and rise from the tomb, Jesus earned life undying, 
which He pours down on you in the water and Word. 

So, your baptismal waters are your sparkling-clean conscience before the 
all-knowing Judge.  For the Spirit’s cleansing connects you to Jesus’ forgiving 
cross and His defeat of the grave.  The Spirit lights the flame of faith to 
rely on Jesus and what He promises to you in the purifying waters.  

In a conversation with a man, named Nicodemus, Jesus spoke of being born from 
above by water and Spirit and believing in Him for everlasting life (John 3:3, 
5, 16).  The discussion testifies to both baptism and belief, without one 
opposing the other.

The promised Messiah gives life, but sin’s reward, if you want to apply such a 
word, is only never-ending death.  So, we thrive in our baptism, dying to sin 
and rising in our life-giving Lord.  Filled with Adam’s spore of ruin, the 
sinner in us becomes a robust swimmer, which is why he needs to drown in 
repentance every day.  Otherwise, we’ll be washed away in the sea of death, not 
cleansed anew in God’s life-affirming ways.

Now, walking away from sin can be challenging.  For we deal with the old evil, 
all-too familiar temptations, and repeating the same confessions for our 
recurring wrongs.  Tell me, is God not yet bored with us?  

Sin will line us up on death row to dump on us our sin-filled earnings, leaving 
us without rest or respite.  Are you not tired of working to death, toiling for 
wages, which only dig you deeper into debt?  Despite the struggles against our 
defiant flesh and our disappointments at rejecting sin, God brings us into His 
life of joy.  

Conclusion
Yes, the old failings may beset us in our dismal weaknesses and frequent 
failures.  In grace, God still upholds us because He loves us, and we are 
powerless to rescue ourselves.  So, do not be daunted, for Jesus still comes to 
us with eternity within Him.  In Him, we find peace and rest, flowing from the 
certainty of eternal life.  Amen.
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