Sunday, March 1, 2026

Sermon for the Second Sunday in Lent

LISTEN


Jesu Juva


“Fix Your Eyes on Jesus”

Text: John 3:1-17; Romans 4:1-8, 13-17; Hebrews 12:2 (Gradual)

 

Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.


Seventy-five pounds. That might not sound like a lot to you, or to a carpenter, a stone mason, a farmer, or someone else who works with their hands. But it was for him. For he wasn’t a laborer. Nicodemus was a scholar. He worked inside, with books, with his mind. 


So seventy-five pounds was tough for him. But how could he not? How could he not bring those seventy-five pounds of spices (John 19:39) to bury the man who three years before had set him on this path when they met that night. To understand the Scriptures and faith and God in such a new way. Nicodemus was a teacher of Israel. He thought he knew. He thought he knew the Scriptures. This man showed him how much he did not know. 


Seventy-five pounds. That’s how heavy his heart felt now, and even heavier, as he and Joseph carefully took down the body of Jesus from the cross. It reminded him of the weight he felt that night in talking with Jesus. The words so strange, yet so wise, and so different than anything he had heard before. Words that now he would never get to hear again, he thought. Words that had been silenced - partly, at least, by the efforts of his fellow Pharisees . . .


So many times he had been there and listened as they plotted and planned, as they asked Jesus questions to trap Him, or to get Him to say something to accuse Him with. But every time He knew just what to say. When they asked Him about the Sabbath (Mark 2:23ff), when they asked Him about the traditions of the elders (Mark 7:1ff), when they asked him about paying taxes to Caesar (Matthew 22:15ff) - but every time . . . He did, well, what He did to Nicodemus that night. Spoke words as if directly from God.


And now Nicodemus had done it; exactly what Jesus told Him three years ago. He looked at the Son of Man lifted up on the cross. He didn’t understand what that had meant before, when Jesus spoke that to him. But now he did. He felt like Israel must have felt in the wilderness. Yes, wilderness, that described him now. He was still a Pharisee, but he wasn’t one of them. He didn’t fit anymore. Did he believe? Was he a disciple? Jesus was the one who had died, but he felt like he was dying. It was all so confusing . . .


Like it had been that night. He sat down with Jesus, ready for a good, scholarly session, the kind he so enjoyed. He knew Jesus would be good for that, for they knew that He was a teacher come from God, for no one [could] do [the] signs that [He did] unless God is with him. But instead of a good, scholarly back-and-forth, a meeting of the minds, an interesting tête-à-tête, Jesus had taken over. Put him on his heels right from the get-go. Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God


Born again . . . such an odd phrase! Almost an oxymoron, but not quite. But almost! There is birth and there is death. There is no again! You’re born once, you die once. This was a most unusual way to begin their conversation! But okay, Jesus, I’ll play along, I’ll go with it, Nicodemus remembered thinking. What do you mean, Jesus? How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born? Can’t you hear how absurd you sound, Jesus? He thought it was a pretty good response.


But Jesus, instead of answering his question, doubled down! Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God. Truly, truly. He said it again. He was saying this is the absolute truth that is above and beyond debate. But debate it was exactly what they - Nicodemus and his fellow Pharisees - had done, when John had started baptizing and all the people were going out to him and listening to him and being baptized by him. They objected. Who authorized him? Where did he come from? They had gone out and confronted John with those questions. Now it’s Jesus talking the same way, talking about water and the Spirit . . . Is He saying we should have listened to John? Is He saying we should have been baptized by John? Is that what this new birth by water and the Spirit is?


If so . . . if so, this would turn Nicodemus’ world upside-down! Born again was completely different than born once and then do everything you can to enter the kingdom of God. Learn God’s Word and live by it. Fast and tithe. Follow all the laws and the traditions of the elders. Give alms. Pray. That was the way! And he was good at it! That was the way to the kingdom of God, wasn’t it? He thought he knew . . . 


But Jesus was saying something different. That just as we are born of the flesh, that’s not enough. We must also be born of the Spirit. But how can that be? Really, how can that be? Nicodemus really wanted to know . . .


But now Jesus was dead. Born once, die once, and now they would lay Him in the tomb, once. Would Jesus be there? Was Jesus there? In the kingdom of God He spoke about? If only he’d had more time . . . another chance to sit with Jesus, talk with him, learn from him . . .


Or did Jesus tell him enough? Now, as he stood at the cross, looking up not at a bronze serpent but a dead Rabbi . . . (The Romans and the chief priests called Him a criminal, but Nicodemus would not!) It was as if His words had now come true . . . And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in him may have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.


Whoever believes, not works. Whoever believes, therefore, must be this born again. Whoever believes and is baptized . . . Water and the Spirit . . . spiritual life, life in the Spirit . . .


That’s what was said of Abraham in the Old Testament. That Abraham wasn’t justified by works. Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness. Abraham had been an idolater in Ur of the Chaldeans (Joshua 24:2), but God chose him, called him, and gave him a new life. Abraham hadn’t done anything; he had been born again! It was all God’s work for him. And all the families of the earth would be blessed through him in the same way, it said. By faith. By believing. 


And hadn’t David then later said: Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man against whom the Lord will not count his sin. That’s how Abraham was blessed, and his offspring blessed. A new birth to a new life . . .


That night had been so confusing, but now, somehow, it seemed as if everything was coming together - all the Old Testament prophecies, all the words of Jesus, all the things He had done that they had opposed . . . He knew. He knew better than Nicodemus. He knew better than all of them. It was as if He knew this day was coming. That this is why He came. To die, that Nicodemus might live. That Nicodemus might be born again . . .


Truly, truly, I now say to you, that’s exactly why Jesus came. To be lifted up. So that all the world could see Him there. So all the world could look to Him and believe. For God so loved the world, He did this. He sent His Son to die. He sent his Son to save. He sent His Son to give new birth to you. The new birth of Holy Baptism. The new birth by water and the Spirit. That you who have been bitten by satan, live. That you who are hopeless, have hope. That you who are dying, have the hope, and more than hope - the promise of everlasting life. And a new life to live even now.


Ah! But you know that, right? You’ve been catechized, like those who will be confirmed next Sunday. You’re not confused like Nicodemus, right?


But what do you do when life intrudes? When sickness, trouble, and the fear of death intrudes? Or when the good things God gives you begin to take over your life and so become not so good? What do you do when the burdens you are carrying feel like seventy-five pounds - or more! - on your heart? And feel too heavy to bear? What then?


How often, like Nicodemus, we turn to our own strength, or do things the world’s way, or even think that God is against me, has turned His back on me, is punishing me for my sins and what I have done. So I better clean up my act and do the right things so God will bless me again! Pray more, give more, do more . . . Those aren’t bad things, but can you hear a little Nicodemus in you? The Pharisees weren’t bad guys. They did a lot of good things. But for the wrong reasons. 


That night, Jesus pointed Nicodemus outside himself and what he did, to what only God could do, and did for him. And we need the same. No matter what we know, or how much we know, we constantly need to be taught, to be pointed outside ourselves, for the devil, the world, and our sinful nature keep trying to take our eyes off Jesus and off Him lifted up for us on the cross. And when we do, when we take our eyes off Jesus, that’s when the fear, the confusion, the anxiety, the heaviness, the doubts, come. How can I climb back into my mother and be born again? Nicodemus wondered. How can I do what God has asked ME to do? we wonder. Nicodemus couldn’t, and we can’t.


But Jesus can. And did. For us, yes, by nature we’re born once and we die once and so do everything we can until it’s all over. But by grace there is more. By grace we are born again, born from above, born of water and the Spirit. By grace, Jesus reverses the order, so that first we die, once - here and now, in the waters of Holy Baptism - and then are risen to life - but not just to live once, but to live forever! By grace we are joined to Jesus in His resurrection to a life that cannot end. 


And that changes things. It changes our view of sickness, trouble, and fear of death. It changes how we look at the things of this world - for as good as they may be, they are passing away. But we are not. There’s more for us. More than this. And if all this is taken away from us - and it will be one day - then we will be lifted up. Lifted up from death to life, from sadness to joy, from struggle to rest, from time to eternity. In Jesus. Who took the incalculable weight of sin from each of us, to unburden us and set us free. 


That’s why our Gradual this Lenten season keeps telling us to do what Jesus told Nicodemus to do: to fix our eyes on Jesus, on the Son of God lifted up on the cross. For that is the answer to our sin, our fear, our death. That if God would do that for us, if God would sacrifice His only-begotten Son for me . . . what’s greater than that? So that changes everything.


And it seems to have changed Nicodemus. From the beginning of John’s Gospel, coming to Jesus at night, to the end of John’s Gospel, bringing those seventy-pounds of spices to bury Him . . .


And it has changed you, too. We may not always live like it, we may sometimes forget, our sin may at times get the better of us. But that does not change this [pointing to crucifix.] The Jesus lifted up for you, the Jesus by whom you are born again and raised to a new life, the Jesus who forgives you, and the Jesus who now feeds you with His Body and Blood. Fix your eyes and your faith on Him, here, and you will fix your eyes on Him there, in that life that has no end.


For that seventy-five pounds that is so heavy on us? Here’s someone to carry it for you.


In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.


The Congregation at Prayer

For the Week of Lent 2 (March 2-7, 2026)


Invocation: In the Name of the Father and of the (+) Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.


Speak the Apostles’ Creed. 


Verse: Romans 5:8 – “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”


Hymn of the Week:  Lutheran Service Book #824 “May God Bestow on Us His Grace”

Hymns for Sunday: 609, 422, 824, 631, 855 (vs. 1, 10, 3 ONLY), 589, 527


Readings for the Week: [The readings for Thursday-Saturday are the Scriptures for this coming Sunday.]


Monday: Psalm 95:1-9

What is the psalmist telling us to do? Why? How do we do this? Why wouldn’t we? How are ways we might “harden our hearts?”


Tuesday: Luke 11:14-28

How does Jesus cast unclean spirits out of us today? What warning does He give us? What do we need in our hearts so that our last state won’t be worse than our first?


Wednesday: 2 Samuel 11:1 – 12:7a

What was David’s real problem? How is this so often our problem as well? What’s the answer? How did God deal with David?


Thursday: Exodus 17:1–7

What physical problem did the people have? What spiritual problem also? How does this sometimes also happen to us?


Friday: Romans 5:1–8

How did God show His love for us? Does this amaze you? Would you do this for your enemy? Would did God? What does this teach us about Him?


Saturday: John 4:5–30, 39–42

What is the “living water” that Jesus gives? How did He make the woman thirst for it? How does He do this for us? How does He give us this water today?


The Catechism - The Ten Commandments: The Fifth Commandment: You shall not murder. What does this mean? We should fear and love God so that we do not hurt or harm our neighbor in his body, but help and support him in every physical need.


Collect for the Week: O God, whose glory it is always to have mercy, be gracious to all who have gone astray from Your ways and bring them again with penitent hearts and steadfast faith to embrace and hold fast the unchangeable truth of Your Word; through Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord. Amen.


The Prayers:  Please pray for . . .

+ yourself and for all in need (remembering especially those on our prayer list).

+ God’s blessing, wisdom, guidance, and strength for Pastor Douthwaite.

+ the India Evangelical Lutheran Church, for God’s wisdom, blessing, guidance, and provision.

+ God’s blessing, guidance, and wisdom for our Circuit Visitor, Ray Malec.

Conclude with the Lord’s Prayer and Luther’s Morning or Evening Prayer from the Catechism.


Now joyfully go about your day (or to bed) in good cheer, child of God!


Collect for the Week © 2018 Concordia Publishing House.

Lutheran Service Book Hymn License: 110019268


Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Sermon for Lent 1 Midweek Vespers

LISTEN


Jesu Juva


“Icons of Repentance: The Tax Collector - No Excuses”

Text: Luke 18:9-14; Genesis 3:1-13; 1 John 1:5-10; Psalm 32

 

In the Name of (+) Jesus. Amen.


Icons of repentance. That’s the theme of our midweek meditations this years. Icons. Images. Pictures. But not static ones, living ones. Pictures that we can see ourselves in, and that we see in us. And repentance. A change of mind. A change of heart. A change of life. That we have the mind and heart and life of Christ and humble ourselves, that we be exalted in due time. Not exalting ourselves, but being exalted by God. That is our goal this Lenten season.


So we’ll start with the tax collector. He is our first icon of repentance. Or maybe better to say, our role model. His prayer is short and to the point. He is standing far off for he feels far off. He’s neither fish nor fowl. He’s not Roman, but he cooperates with them. And while he’s Jewish, he’s rejected by them. A man without a country, perhaps we could say. So he comes to the Temple, the place of sacrifice, the place of mercy, seeking mercy. No excuses, just a hurting, agonized plea: God, be merciful to me, a sinner!


But that’s not actually what he said. I’m not sure why our English versions translate it that way, but what he actually says is much more definite. God, be merciful to me, the sinner! He’s not just a sinner - he’s the sinner the other man in the Temple that day was talking about. The Pharisee.


So what the Pharisee said he said loudly and proudly. For the Pharisee was standing by himself and the tax collector was standing far off, yet he heard him. He heard the accusation, he heard the disdain, and he knew he was right. The Pharisee wasn’t like him. He fasted twice a week. He tithed. And he was thanking God for the good life he had. The tax collector knew he didn’t deserve to be there. The Pharisee obviously did. Mercy is what the tax collector needed. Just a crumb.


Which is why he had come to the Temple. It was the place of sacrifice, the place of mercy. You can thank God in prayer anywhere, but for mercy you go to the Temple. It’s a bit like going to the doctor when you’re sick. But take note, then, of what the Pharisee did. What he did was like going to the doctor to tell him how well you are! That he wasn’t like everyone else in the waiting room, sick and in need! He exercised everyday and ate healthy food and was feeling really good. Thanks for your time, doc! To do that is to misunderstand who a doctor is and what he is for. To do what the Pharisee did is to misunderstand what the Temple is and what it is for. 


But the tax collector knew. And we can tell this because in asking God for mercy, he doesn’t use the normal word for mercy that we so often read in the Bible. The mercy that anyone can give. He uses a far more specific word - the word that is used for the mercy seat on the ark. So what he is asking for here is far more than just a kindness kind of mercy. He is saying: God, be the mercy seat for me! Be the atoning sacrifice for me, the sinner. Be my Saviour


So here is Jesus in this story. For Jesus is the mercy seat, the place of mercy, and the atoning sacrifice for us. The blood that must be shed for the forgiveness of sins is His blood, and He becomes the sinner on the cross. The sinner of all sinners. For He bears the sins of all, that He might have mercy on all. That all who call to Him for forgiveness, receive forgiveness. 


Which leads us, then, to this truth: no excuses repentance receives no excuses forgiveness


So why would you temper, or lessen, your repentance with excuses or explanations? There’s really only one answer, one reason: hope. To hope that somehow it will make a difference. This is what Adam and Eve did in the Garden. Adam blamed God and blamed the woman God had given him. It wasn’t all his fault. And the woman blamed the serpent God had made and put in the Garden. It wasn’t all her fault. They were grasping for hope with their dying breaths.


You see, excuses are the voice of hopelessness. Caught red-handed, excuses are our only way out. There’s an explanation. An if, an and, or a but. I had no choice. It’s not all my fault. Excuses are grasping and gasping for hope. 


Which is why Christians don’t do excuses. Because we have hope. Because we have the words and promises of God that give us hope. A confident hope. A sure and certain hope. Like the Word we heard tonight from John: If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. That promise sets us free to repent without excuse. To come to the flesh and blood Temple that is Jesus and say: Lord, be merciful to me, the sinner. It is my fault, my own fault, my own most grievous fault. No excuses. No extenuating circumstances. Be the mercy seat, the atoning sacrifice for my sin. Wash me clean with the blood you shed on the cross for me. And He does. 


I tell you, this man went down to his house justified, rather than the other. For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but the one who humbles himself will be exalted.


And you go to your house justified as well. For no excuses repentance receives no excuses forgiveness. Forgiveness with no conditions or strings attached. Just mercy, from your mercy seat - your merciful Saviour.


Which we need, for as we sang in the psalm tonight, when we keep silent, when we do not repent, when we keep sin in and try to deal with it ourselves; when we say we have no sin, or not too much sin, or not as much sin as the next guy, it eats us up. We waste away. To do so is not harmless. It is corrosive to body and soul, to life and faith. 


So David goes on: I acknowledged my sin to you . . . and you forgave the iniquity of my sin. You cleansed me, O Lord, and set me free. 


And then he says: Many are the sorrows of the wicked, but steadfast love surrounds the one who trusts in the Lord. And this is not just a generic trust in the Lord, but trust that my sin has been atoned for by Jesus. And not just my sin in general, though certainly that is true. But THIS sin, THIS guilt, THIS shame that I repent of and lay before the mercy seat of God. We say: Yes, I am the sinner. And then Jesus says: No! I AM the sinner. I took your sin, your guilt, your shame. It is no longer on you. It’s mine. And you? I forgive you all your sins. Go, you are free. And you go down to your house justified. Mercy accomplished.


And so our first icon of repentance: the tax collector. No excuses repentance. It’s really the only kind there is. 


In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.