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The sermon featured below was preached by the Rev. Clint Poppe at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Lincoln, NE, on Rogate Sunday (Sixth Sunday of Easter), May 14, 2023.
Thank you for your service, Pastor Poppe. The Church needs more men of your caliber — in the pews and in the pulpits.
Grace and peace, love and mercy from God our Father through Jesus Christ our risen Savior and Lord. Amen.
The text for our meditation on this sixth Sunday of Easter, also Mother’s Day, the epistle reading that we heard a few moments ago, 1 Timothy 2:1-6, especially these words:
First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way.
So far our text.
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, it is quite common for Christians to talk about “two kingdoms.” Christians live in two kingdoms. Maybe you’ve heard that before; maybe you haven’t. All throughout this season of Easter our gospel readings have been teaching us that Christians are in the world, but we are not to be of the world. We live in the right-hand kingdom, and we also live in the left-hand kingdom.
What do we mean when we talk about this “left-hand” “right-hand” kingdom stuff? Well, generally speaking, the right-hand kingdom refers to the Church. This is how God rules, works, and serves in the Church. The power and the authority is in the Word of God. The Law, which shows us our sin, and primarily the Gospel which sets us free; the Gospel that delivers the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation. This is how things work in the Church. This is how they’re supposed to work in the Church. God’s Word reigns supreme. That’s the right-hand kingdom.
The left-hand kingdom is pretty much everything else. The left-hand kingdom, the world that we live in, society in general, rulers, governments, laws. This is the left-hand kingdom, and we know we live in this left-hand kingdom. What we fail to realize far too often, that when God uses this kind of talk—left-hand, right-hand kingdom—we are talking not about some hard-core separation of church and state. We are talking about the left-hand and right-hand kingdom of God. We are talking about the left hand and right hand of Jesus Himself. Jesus rules the Church. Jesus rules the world, society, governments. He establishes these rules and governments for us and for our good, so that we can live godly and peaceable lives, so that the Word of God would flourish among us.
Somewhere along the line, Christians, especially Lutheran Christians, were fed the lie that since we are in the right-hand kingdom—we’re Christians, we belong to the Church—that we would have nothing to do or say with things in the left-hand kingdom. Throughout the pages of history, some pastors have taught that it would be a sin to work for the government or to serve in the military. My friends, this is nonsense.
Today, it takes on a little bit different flavor. Christians are to keep quiet. Christians are to stay in their own little domain. They have nothing to say with regard to what goes on in our society, what goes on in our government, what goes on in our world. They are to keep quiet, keep their religion to themselves. After all, “separation of church and state.”
My friends, is this what God’s Word teaches us? I would submit to you today that the epistle reading before us is a beautiful place for us to start with regard to this two kingdom understanding of how we live and who we are as Christians. It lays it out quite beautifully. The right-hand kingdom, the second half of our text; very, very familiar to us. One of the most often quoted passages, not only from 1 Timothy, but in all Scripture. God wants all people to be saved. This is His will. This is His desire. Right here, right here in God’s Word, Who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.
What is this truth? There is one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We have offended this one God. We sin daily. We sin much. We know God’s holy Law and we break it, sometimes willingly, sometimes unknowingly, but we break it nonetheless. Our sinfulness, that we inherited from our parents, our sin that we commit each and every day, puts us at enmity with God. And we can’t save ourselves. We are lost in the trespasses of our sins. And so God, in His love and His mercy, sends us a Savior, a mediator, a go-between. He sends us His Son, the god man, Jesus. True God, begotten of the Father from all eternity. True man, born of the Virgin Mary. This is our Savior. He was under the same holy law that convicts and condemns each one of us. He fulfilled it. He fulfilled it completely. He never sinned, not once. Jesus, who fulfilled all law, takes our sin, our violation of God’s law onto Himself and into Himself all the way to Calvary’s cross. He bleeds and dies for your sin and mine, for the sin of the whole world. This is God’s truth. This is the good news of the gospel.
During this Easter season we have a special focus and a special emphasis on the fact that Christ is risen. He is risen indeed, alleluia amen! Death could not hold the sinless Son of God. Jesus conquers our greatest enemy, our greatest fear: death itself. Jesus, risen from the dead, lives and reigns to all eternity. He reigns. We’re not talking about R-A-I-N rain, but R-E-I-G-N reign. You know, like a king, like they’re celebrating over in England right now.
King of what? Wednesday evening, we’ll celebrate the Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ, where He ascends to the right hand of the Father and He rules over all things. His right-hand kingdom, the Church. His left-hand kingdom, the world, the governments, the nations of the world. Christ reigns. This is the truth and God wants all people to come to a knowledge, a saving knowledge of the gospel of Jesus Christ and to know God for who He is.
The right-hand kingdom, we Lutherans get pretty well. The left-hand kingdom, not so much. It was a few years ago when I first heard the term Christian Nationalism. You’ve probably heard it. If you watch the news or read the newspaper, you’ve heard the term. I have to admit I had never heard the term before. I didn’t know what it meant. I’m not a racist. I’m not a Nazi. I’m not a White supremacist. I’m not a homophobe. So I must not be a Christian Nationalist, right? Because that’s what the world says a Christian Nationalist is.
Then it was about six months ago, I came across an article, an article by the name of George Gonzalez. And maybe it’s Jorge Gonzalez, I’m not sure. [He is a] famous author. You can Google him and you can Google the article if you like. But the title of the article is “The Christian Nationalist Label is Being Used to Silence People of Faith.” Hear that title again: “The Christian Nationalist Label is Being Used to Silence People of Faith.” People who love God and their country are vilified. They are demonized. They are held up as terrorists. You’ve heard it. You know it. A radical separation of church and state, something that is not found in our founding documents by the way, is used as a hammer to club Christians into submission so that they will not confess their faith, so they will not confess the truth of God’s Word.
My friends, God’s Word is clear, and the text before us today makes it crystal clear: faith and patriotism go together. Now we want to make sure we have the order right. We don’t worship our nation or our leaders and then God down here. It’s the other way around. We worship the one true God; Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. And we give thanks for and pray for the leaders that He has given us. Christians are to know what goes on in the world. They are to speak up concerning what goes on in the world. And when the evils of this world seem to be trumping the truth of God’s Word, Christians have a duty and a responsibility to speak up.
Paul writes to Pastor Timothy and he says, “I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people.” Don’t just pray for yourself. Think outside of yourself. Think outside of your box. Think outside even of your church. And then he gets more specific: “for kings and all who are in high positions.”
We don’t have a king here in America. But we have leaders. We have a president. We have Congress. We have a governor. We have state legislators. We have a mayor. We have city councilmen. These are our leaders. This is our government. God has given us this government. We are to pray for them. We are to offer up supplications, petitions for them. Every Sunday and nearly every Wednesday in the divine service, we do just that. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard over the last twenty-six years complaints from the members of this congregation, “I don’t like our president! I don’t like our governor! I don’t like our mayor! Why in the world are we praying for them?” Because God’s Word directs us to.
I would submit, dear friends, brothers and sisters in Christ, that far too often our prayers and supplications for our political leaders are too generic. We pray that God would bless them, we pray that God would uphold them, we pray that they would do God’s will, and then we stop. My friends, when our leaders, the left hand of Jesus Christ, when our leaders are standing in open opposition to the Word of God, when they are not only turning a blind eye to evil but promoting it, we need to speak up. We need to pray that their evil ways would be thwarted. We need to pray that they would be removed by the ballot box. We need to pray as we are taught in the Lord’s Prayer that God would break and hinder every evil that is contrary to the Word of God.
You don’t have to look very hard to see the evils that are going on in our world. A mother’s womb, which should be the safest place in the world, has now become a place of death. And when a minor setback happens here in our own state with regard to protecting the sanctity of human life, people dance and cheer in our state legislature. This is evil! When our leaders not only turn a blind eye, but actively promote a marriage that is contrary to God’s gift of one man and one woman for life, blurring the lines not only between husband and wife, but between what a man is and what a woman is. This is evil! This is contrary to God’s Word. Christians need to speak out. When our schools, our public schools, our government schools, will hand out birth control or gender-confusing materials without parental knowledge or consent. And then if a brave parent goes to a school board meeting, they’re labeled a domestic terrorist. This is evil! It must stop! And we must speak out.
My friends, there is nothing that is under attack more in our country right now than motherhood. Mother’s Day: send a card, make a phone call, send some flowers. If your mother is in Heaven like mine, rejoice with saints and archangels and all the company of Heaven at the communion rail. These are good and God-pleasing things, but make no doubt about it: motherhood is being attacked, and it has been for quite some time. It’s being attacked under the guise and lie of feminism.
Famous Christian author G. K. Chesterton once said, “Feminism is a muddled idea that women are free when they serve their employers, but slaves when they serve their husbands.” Much truth, much wisdom in that quote. The most despised thing for a woman right now is to be a mother. You’re even more despised if you’re a mother that stays at home. You’re even more despised if you’re a mother who speaks up for the sanctity of human life.
Earlier this week, a gentleman by the name of Eric Conn put out a series of tweets for Mother’s Day. I just want to share two of them with you. The first one, “The Left is perfectly happy to say that women should be able to do whatever they want to do so long as it isn’t devoting herself to to her husband, her household, and her children.” We know it’s true. And the a second one from Eric Conn, “It is moral insanity to think that a woman is free when she is exposing her body to millions of strange men, but oppressed when she is lovingly serving her husband, her household, and her children.”
It's moral insanity to think a woman is free when she's exposing her naked body to millions of strange men, but oppressed when she lovingly serves her household, husband, & children.
My friends, mothers and motherhood is under attack and we have kept quiet far too long. We in the Church have sat idly by and what started out in the sixties as a “sexual revolution” has separated intimacy from marriage. And the results of that demanded that birth control and abortion happen, because marriage and motherhood [were] ripped apart.
We need to stand up and speak not only to society, but we need to speak to our families. We need to speak to our children. When men look lustfully at another woman like a child looks at candy in the candy store, that man is despising his mother and sinning against God. When a woman gives herself to another man without demanding and expecting lifelong faithfulness, she is not only despising her mother, she is despising herself.
My friends, God’s Word is clear. He has given us gift upon gift and upon gift. He’s given us life. For many of us, He’s given us a spouse or family, precious gifts from God. He’s given us a nation, a country that people have fought and died for. It is time for us to stop sitting quietly and idly by while Satan has a field day in our country, in our government, in our schools, in our homes. It’s time for us to be Christian. I can tell you I love my country. I love God even more. I am, by God’s definition, a Christian Nationalist and I would submit to you that all Bible-believing Christians are, as well.
My friends, there have been many times when we have kept quiet when we could have spoken out. There are many times when we have put our heads in the sand and pretended that things would take care of themselves. There have been many times when we have failed to pray for our elected officials because we didn’t like them or didn’t vote for them. And there have been times when we though we had a god and a savior in the elected official that we voted for or supported.
My friends, God’s Word today calls us to repent. To repent before our God and Savior, our mediator, the god man Jesus Christ, who has lived and died and risen again for you. Who covers over all our sins, even our sins of quietism, and apathy, and indifference. And pray that God would fill us with a knowledge and a courage. Convictions, not only to believe the truth of God’s Word, but to confess it with our lips and our lives. May God grant it to us, for Jesus’ sake. Amen.
Now may the peace of God, which far surpasses all understanding, keep our hearts, our minds, our nation in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.
The above biblical message, so vehemently denied by thousands of blind “Christian” preachers, teachers and their blind followers, must be distributed throughout the length and breadth of this nation in order that it might experience a new birth under God. Send this tract to all the members of your congregation and to all your loved ones everywhere.
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God give you all much grace and peace through the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Beloved Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus!
God’s church upon earth has from the beginning been a militant church. It has ever been oppressed and persecuted by the mighty ones of the world. Also within the church at all times, men have arisen who have spread false teachings and made factions for themselves, thus disturbing the church and causing divisions and offenses. In Adam’s church there was Cain, the self-righteous; in Noah’s church, Ham, the despiser of his father; in Abraham’s church, Ishmael, the mocker; in the church of the prophets, many false prophets preached though the Lord had not sent them and they gave the people false comfort and led them into the sin of idolatry.
Even in the apostolic church, in nearly all places where the gospel was preached and received, there arose heretics who caused divisions, yes, often disturbed entire flourishing congregations. Among these, St. Paul especially names Alexander the coppersmith, Hymenaeus, and Philetus; and St. John mentions the whole sect of the Nicolaitans. And so also to this day. Wherever and whenever the pure doctrine has been heard, opponents have arisen. Satan has never been able to leave the church in peaceful possession of its heavenly treasures. The church therefore has ever had to use God’s Word, not only as food for the soul, but also as a weapon in unceasing warfare against false teachers. If a church cease to strive, it cannot remain a church for long. Just as the sun in springtime calls forth not only the good seed, but also weeds from winter’s sleep, so also, by the blessed preaching of God’s Word, Satan is awakened, who seeks to get his tares planted among the wheat and thus choke it.
Now we ask, why does God permit His flock which is to be guarded by its shepherds, also to be attacked by wolves, who present themselves as shepherds that they may deceitfully capture the sheep and destroy them? God could prevent this. Why does He not do so? Two reasons especially are given by God’s Word. God permits it partly to prove His children and partly to punish the unthankful hearers. St. Paul says to the Corinthians, “For there must be also heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you.” If no one ever assailed the pure doctrine, it would never truly be manifest who clung to it. But when false teachers and fanatics arise in the church, then also those who sincerely care for the pure word reveal themselves. Then the faith of the righteous is tested and certified. If pure doctrine were never attacked, the Christians would soon become indolent, lazy, and lukewarm. But the more clearly others depart from God’s Word, the more a Christian is driven to search it diligently and to give painstaking attention to each word. The more falsifiers of the word crowd in upon the orthodox teacher, the more closely he must examine all, and the more he will therefore grow in divine knowledge and assurance. Heretics, therefore, are nothing else than the grindstone of the church, whereby it learns to use the Sword of the spirit ever more keenly. Thus by the hand of God can good come from evil.
God often carries out his heaviest judgments through false teachers. God often bestows upon the land or a church true teachers for a time. But then it often happens that they are despised and received ungratefully. Earthly treasures are esteemed more highly than the pure word and sacrament. Men become ashamed before the world because of the pure doctrine. Nothing is done to maintain the orthodox ministry. God’s word is heard with a sleepy mind. Men learn to despise it. Finally God allows such unthankful disciples to lose the heavenly treasures, so that they who have despised the precious bread of the divine word, shall in retribution be fed with the worthless stones of man-made teaching. Thus St. Paul writes concerning the Christians in the last times, “Because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion that they should believe a lie.”
Therefore, my dear hearers, think it not a little thing, that you now can hear the pure word of God every Sunday. I know that I don’t preach for you the thoughts of my heart, but God’s counsel for our salvation, as it is revealed, expounded, and confessed in the confessional writing of the orthodox church. I know that when you take to heart, give heed to, and keep what I preach to you, you shall be saved.
Yet my friends, in accordance with my office, I am to be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers. It behooves me not only to lead you upon the pastures of the gospel, but also to warn you against false teachers. Therefore let me now seize the occasion which our gospel for the day offers.
Matthew 7:15-23: “Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? And in thy name have cast out devils? And in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.”
After Christ had presented the true doctrine, He now, in the text just read, warns against false teachers and says to his hearers, “Beware”. With these words, Christ takes judgment from the teachers and gives it to the pupils. He takes it from the shepherds and gives it to the sheep. I therefore present for your devotion that:
The Sheep Judge Their Shepherds
I show you
That the sheep are the judges;
That therefore they shall know the true doctrine and be steadfast in it;
That they must not let themselves be deceived by a mere good appearance; and finally
That they must above all look for the proper fruits.
The Sheep are Judges
Christ says in his sermon on the mount, where not only disciples, but also a great multitude were present, “Beware of false prophets … Ye shall know them by their fruits.” This admonition by the Son of God shows us plainly how entirely false the principle is that the preachers should teach and the hearers only listen, that the shepherds should lead and the sheep only follow, that the clergy should resolve and the congregation only acquiesce. No, when Christ calls upon his hearers to beware of false prophets and to know the true and the false by their fruits, Christ thereby seats all hearers upon the seat of judgment, placed the balance scale of truth in their hands, and bids them confidently execute judgment on their teachers.
All that is taught in the church of Christ concerns our soul’s salvation. In these matters no one shall be dependent upon some other person. No one shall establish his faith upon another person. Each one shall live in accordance with his own faith, and only by his faith be saved. No other person can die for us, no other person can appear in our stead before God. No other person can stand before his judgment seat in our place. Everyone shall sometime answer to God for his own faith and his own life. Then he will not be able to refer to another and say, This one or that one taught me thus and I have believed and followed him. No, in matters which concern your soul, you shall not look with the eyes of another person, but with your own eyes. If you permit yourself to be deceived, you have deceived yourself. The responsibility is yours. God says, certainly, that he will demand at the hand of the false teacher, the blood of those he has led astray, but he says also that the deceived one shall die because of his sin. (Cp. Ezekiel 3:17-21; Ezekiel 33:1-9).
In God’s Kingdom we are all equal. Holy Baptism takes the purple from the king, and the rags from the beggar, and clothes them both in the robes of Christ’s righteousness. In divine matters it does not depend upon on learning, or holiness, or cleverness, or prudence. It often happens, rather, that the most learned are the most perverse. Human wisdom is foolishness to God. Human cleverness is to him stupidity. Human righteousness is to Him sin. If a learned man would enter heaven, he must climb down from the heights of his human wisdom and become a child. For God reveals his mysteries only to the babes who humbly acknowledge their natural blindness and darkness. Therefore in divine matters no one is excluded from the judicial office. All Christ’s sheep are judges, both learned and layman, man and wife, bachelor and spinster, young and old, for it concerns each one’s soul, his own life, his own salvation.
Therefore we find that even the holy infallible apostle praised the Bereans because they did not receive the apostles without testing them, but compared the revelation of the New Testament with that of the Old, and daily searched the writings of the prophets to see whether matters were as preached by the apostles. Also St. John advises his hearers: “Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God.” But above all it is noteworthy that St. Paul writes to the Corinthians whom he had several years before brought to the faith, “I speak as to wise men, judge ye what I say.” You see then, my dear ones, God does not desire that you shall, without testing, receive either a human book, or a human lecture, or a human resolution, or instruction. You shall let no man rule over your conscience. “One is our master, even Christ.” Such matters are not to be decided by majorities. At the famous ecumenical church meeting at Nicea, there were three hundred eighteen orthodox bishops gathered from the whole world. Three hundred seventeen wanted to resolve to forbid the marriage of the clergy. One only, and he a bachelor by the name of Paphnutius, arose against all, showed from God’s Word the propriety of the marriage of the clergy, and because of this one voice, all three hundred seventeen bishops withdrew their vote and the one vote prevailed.
Oh, my dear friends, if you at one time had realized that the office of judge belonged to you, you would not have entered upon so many and such dangerous bypaths. Your preachers went on false paths and you followed without testing, in false confidence in man. How sorrowful the consequences have been. Therefore know and protect your right. “Prove all things and hold fast that which is good.” But this leads me to the second part of our consideration, namely this, that if the sheep are to judge the shepherds, then they should also know the true doctrine and be sure of it.
The Sheep Shall Know the True Doctrine and Be Steadfast in It
Even in secular, temporal matters a judge dare not pass sentence arbitrarily; nor may a sworn juryman do that; for there is a lawbook by which men are to judge. He who rules in a state according to his own desires is called a tyrant. There the innocent finds no refuge, the criminal receives no punishment. If it be so in the state, it is even more so in the church, where not secular and temporal matters, but spiritual and divine matters are at stake.
To be sure, it is the holy, inalienable and unassailable right of the whole congregation and of every member to judge doctrine, to prove it, to receive it or reject it. But in the church no one is to rule and control with force – not even the congregation. Christ says, “Ye know that they which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and their great ones exercise authority upon them. But so shall it not be among you: but whosoever will be great among you, shall be your minister: And whosoever of you will be the chiefest, shall be the servant of all.” Neither shall the congregation give orders. It shall not say, this is our will, this we command; thus it shall be, for we are many and we have the power. No, not man, but God, Jesus Christ, his holy Word alone shall rule among us. As it is written in the 82nd Psalm, “God standeth in the congregation of the mighty; he judgeth among the gods.” Or as St. Peter says, “If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God.” In the church no one sits upon the throne but Jesus Christ; He is the head of the church, the Chief Shepherd, the Lord, the Master, the Judge; and all the church sits at His feet and judges as lesser judges in accord with the Lawbook of its heavenly Monarch.
With respect to love, we are one another’s debtors, servants, and slaves; but with respect to faith, no one is another’s slave. They all are slaves only of Christ, subject to His most holy Word, as the only and unchangeable rule and guide. All shall bow before this Word, shepherd and sheep. In accordance with this Word, all, whether teachers or hearers, shall permit themselves to be judged.
Since the sheep are to be the judges of their shepherds, you see that each Christian is hereby seriously admonished to search daily in the Scriptures, so that he can separate the true from the false and gold and silver from hay, straw, and stubble.
Give earnest consideration then, my friends, to the fact that you are called to the office of judge in the congregation. Become ever better acquainted with the Lawbook in accordance with which you shall judge. Use daily diligence that you may be ever better acquainted with the pure doctrine in order that you may be ever more capable of using the divine scale, the divine rule, and touchstone. Do not despise diligent searching in the Holy Scriptures, in the books of orthodox teachers, and especially in the public confessional writings of the orthodox Lutheran church. Don’t think that you lack time, that you must look out for your earthly calling. The salvation of your soul is concerned. Should you not have time for that? If you would be true judges in the church, you must not only regard the pure doctrine of God’s Word as more dear and more precious than anything else in the world, you must also be so firm in your doctrine that you would rather die than depart from it by so much as a letter. You must be so faithful that you do not ask if the learned ones, the wise ones, the esteemed ones are on your side; for your faith shall not rest upon the authority of men, though they be ever so holy and wise, but alone upon the infallible Word of God. From the heart you must be able to say with the disciples, “Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou has the words of eternal life, and we believe and are sure that thou art that Christ, the Son of the living God.”
Why is it that so many Lutherans now turn to the sects? It is because they have not known the teaching of their church, or if they have known it, because they have accepted it, not on the basis of God’s Word, but only on the recommendation of others. Such people let themselves be “tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine.”
But here many will perhaps say, I am so weak in knowledge, how shall I test the teachings? You also, my dear Christian, have been cared for. You have Luther’s Small Catechism. There you have a glorious summary of the whole Christian faith and its chief articles. What is not in accord with that you can boldly throw out, you make no mistake. All that is necessary for you to know for your salvation and for the testing of the pure doctrine is found briefly and simply in your Catechism. In the first part you learn of true God-pleasing works. In the second part of saving faith, in the third of proper acceptable prayer, and in the fourth, fifth, and sixth of the true sacraments and the Office of the Keys. In the table of duties you learn the true Christian attitude toward your calling and condition.
Yet, my friends, Christ cautions His hearers that they should not let themselves be deceived by a mere good appearance, and that is the third thing of which I now speak to you.
The Sheep Must Not Let Themselves Be Deceived by a Mere Good Appearance
Christ says, “Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly the are ravening wolves.” There are, my hearer, especially in this last age of apostasy, persons, who though baptized to Christ, deny his deity and atonement. They mock the Triune God and declare the most holy Bible to be a book of fables. These are wolves in wolves’ clothing. If a person be led astray in his faith by their mockery of the Most High, then he must certainly have previously lost the true faith from his heart and have willfully turned away from God. A Christian can surely guard himself from such prophets of Satan.
Christ does not properly speak of such false prophets in our Gospel. They are not the only ones against whom a Christian must be on guard. No, dear Christians, if you would be safe against deception, then realize that the most dangerous false prophets are those who have a good appearance. When Satan would lead astray the children of God, he clothes himself like an angel of light. When the wolf would enter the sheepfold, he puts on sheep’s clothing.
Christ would say this: True prophets in all their teaching appeal to the Word of God. If then you meet a man who appeals to God’s Word, who also in many cases teaches the divine truth, who asserts that he proclaims nothing but the pure doctrine of Scripture, then do not trust him immediately, but take care lest this be only sheep’s clothing. All heretics in the church without exception have appealed to the Scriptures. Even the prince of darkness, when he would tempt the Son of God, said, “It is written,” but the Lord answered, “It is written again.” If then the Scriptures be appealed to, take care. Compare Scripture with Scripture and you will soon discover the enemy.
True prophets do not propose themselves as teachers, or force themselves on people, but they are regularly called by the Christian congregation. Now if you hear a preacher appeal to his office, which God has commanded him to administer, you shall of course not reject his office, for that remains powerful and valid, even if a Pharisee or Sadducee administer it. But do not let yourself be deceived by it. Take care that the office of the preacher be not sheep’s clothing. The call can be right and yet the teaching can be wrong. If those who are rightfully called become wolves, Christ bids us flee from them.
True prophets shall lead a godly life. They shall be examples to the flock. If you see a preacher, who is friendly to all, pleasant to those who offend him, charitable to the poor, helpful to the unfortunate, zealous in his office and calling, honorable in his life, unselfish in his endeavors, then certainly you should not reject all this. But take care, that this be not merely sheep’s clothing. A teacher’s life can be blameless before men, the while his teaching is ruinous. But what good will his hypocritical life do, if his preaching lead you away from the simplicity in Christ? Alas, innumerable inexperienced persons, beholding an appearance of holiness, zeal, love and humility, are at once thoroughly convinced that there the doctrine must also be true and Christian. They behold the beautiful sheep’s clothing, deliver themselves to the world hidden under it, and thus permit their souls to be torn asunder and destroyed.
True prophets, finally, are often equipped by God with great spiritual gifts. You may hear a preacher who has great glittering gifts. His discourse moves the hardest hearts. He enthuses the most sluggish dispositions and moves them to great zeal in pious practices. With fascinating oratory he can move souls to tears, or he shows a deep insight in the system of Christian doctrine. He can lift up the depressed, comfort the sorrowful, and with striking arguments meet the unbeliever. If you see this you must not let yourself be deceived by it. Also false prophets are often in possession of great natural gifts. Take care that this be not sheep’s clothing to deceive you.
You see that though the appearance of God’s Word, the office and call, the holiness of life, and finally the fruits of the Spirit be ever so impressive, yet Christians are not to let themselves be deceived thereby. “Beware,” Christ says, “of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.” But he adds, “Ye shall know them by their fruits.” This suggests the fourth matter which we should take up in considering the judgment of the sheep over the shepherd, namely that they must above all look for the proper fruits.
The Sheep Must Above All Look for The Proper Fruits
With these words Christ would certainly seem to teach that the true prophets are to be recognized by their good deeds, but this only seems to be so. When Christ in our Gospel speaks of fruits which a teacher shall bear, then these are not first and foremost the fruits of life, but the fruits of doctrine. If a teacher does not bear the fruit of pure teaching, he is a false prophet, though he be a Paul or an angel from heaven. No one is sent by God except he who proclaims his dear son, Jesus Christ, as the only way of salvation for poor sinners. For it is the heavenly Father’s will “that everyone which seeth the Son and believeth on him, may have everlasting life.” And St. John says, “Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God; and every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God.” He is a true prophet, who as a called teacher obeys this command of God to proclaim his dear Son plainly before the world and lay this foundation correctly, for “To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins.” But where souls are not helped by the plain preaching of Christ, there are false prophets, though they be ever so wise, and ever so gifted and ever so holy. For Christ says, “Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast our devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.” Where false prophets have arisen, there has always been this deficiency. They have not proclaimed Christ alone, who of God is made our wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. But where this article has been kept pure, there all soul destroying errors have had to depart as the mists before the sun. When you learn from a teacher’s sermons how you can come to Christ, how you can abide with Christ, suffer with Him and die a blessed death through Him, then you have a true prophet. For if you find Christ, you find enough. If you have Him, you have everything.
A pious life without pure teaching does not make of a preacher a true prophet. But on the other hand, the godly life of an orthodox preacher is a most glorious confirmation and adornment of the pure doctrine. The good works of a false preacher are like the short-lived blossoms on thorn bushes. But the good works of an orthodox teacher are the good fruits of a good tree. For, “A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit.”
Where the pure doctrine is preached, there certainly most hearers do not take it to heart. But at least some few will become fruitful trees of righteousness and bear the fruits of the Spirit, which are “love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance.” Where false prophets rule, there they certainly also often show one another much love, but is a sectarian love. They love only those who belong to their party. But where God’s love is shed abroad in men’s hearts by the true gospel, there men love as their brethren all those who love Jesus Christ, and they love as their fellow-redeemed all men, including the wayward and the fallen.
Now then, my precious brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, “Beware of false prophets which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their fruits.”
Amen.
The author of this message, Dr. C. F. W. Walther, was the first president of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod and of the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America. He was a towering theologian and for many years professor and president of Concordia Seminary, St. Louis. Concordia Cyclopedia refers to him as the “most commanding figure in the Lutheran Church of America during the nineteenth century” and as being the author of numerous theological books and articles, “enough to make a full sized ‘five foot bookshelf.’”
The above biblical message, so vehemently denied by thousands of blind “Christian” preachers, teachers and their blind followers, must be distributed throughout the length and breadth of this nation in order that it might experience a new birth under God. Send this tract to all the members of your congregation and to all your loved ones everywhere.
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Antinomianism is poison to the soul. It turns the truth of God, the precious Holy Gospel, into a lie and leads inexorably to the death of faith and the loss of salvation.
We offer to you, dear reader, a javelin in the fight against this monstrous error. The following sermon of the sainted doctor Paul Edward Kretzmann for Rogate Sunday, was published in his 1956 collection of Lenten and Post-Easter sermons, Jesus Only. (View available copies on Bookfinder here.) Read, mark, learn and inwardly digest it, and ask yourself whether it accords with the Word of God.
I thirsted for such teaching when I was a young man. Thanks be to God, I eventually learned that men like Kretzmann were the true torchbearers of Lutheran doctrine, and that the horrendous caricatures of the Gospel in the name of Lutheranism—yes, in the name of “Confessional Lutheranism”—that I had previously encountered were not, in fact, true Christianity.
God’s people—especially His young people—are destroyed for lack of such knowledge. Pray for reformation and revival. If the lamp-stand of a major American Lutheran synod is removed, that does not spell the end of Lutheranism in our land; no, it means that the faithful men and congregations which remain must hold their candles higher aloft that they might the more easily find one another and rejoice in the godly concord that the Holy Spirit has given.
n.b. — Dr. Kretzmann quotes several wonderful hymns. We have included in-line citations to where they may be found in TLH as well as links to MIDI/MP3 melodies (hosted on the site of Ascension Lutheran Church (CLC), Tacoma, WA) for those who might wish to learn them.
Dr. Paul Edward Kretzmann (1883-1965)
(Introit, Is. 48:20b)
Rom. 6:3-9: “Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection: knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed from sin. Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him: knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him.”
Those who watch the liturgical side of the Sunday service carefully, may have some reason to ask questions regarding the name and the lessons of this Sunday. In the first place, the common name for this Sunday, namely Rogate, is not taken from the Psalter or from one of the Prophets, but from the ancient Gospel lesson of the day, as we find it in John 16:23-30. On the strength of the admonition there presented by the Savior: “Ask, and ye shall receive,” the Sunday also bears the name Prayer Sunday, and the emphasis on prayer was ever an important feature of the day.
But this fifth Sunday after Easter bears also another name, one taken from the Introit of the day, found in Is. 48:20b, where we read: “With a voice of singing declare ye, tell this, utter it even to the end of the earth” In the Latin language, as formerly used in the services of the Church, we have the words Vocem jucunditatis, and therefore these words are the second name for the present Sunday.
And surely, this Introit has special significance and value in connection with the time of the church year and with the general theme of the series of meditations which have engaged our attention. In view of the coming third great festival of the Church, Pentecost, it is necessary for us to cultivate prayer and to be engaged in prayer without ceasing, for, as Jesus assures us, the heavenly Father will give the Holy Ghost to them that ask Him. — And if we turn to the Introit as now contained in our hymnal, we remember all the miracles of God as performed for our salvation, and we look back once more to the miracle of the resurrection of our blessed Savior. With a heart full of unspeakable joy every Christian will give heed to the call: “With a voice of singing declare ye, tell this.” It was ever thus in the Church, in both the Old and the New Testament, that it was the message of salvation, not only in the spoken language of men, but also in the voice of singing which made known to others what great things God has done in preparing redemption for all mankind. That is why the Prophet admonishes us to utter the good news even to the end of the earth. Even in the Old Testament the message of redemption was not confined to the believers of Jewish descent, for we have evidence that the story of the one true God was known in many parts of the ancient civilized world, even before the great Dispersion of the Jews as the result of the exile. And if we turn to the New Testament, we have that overpowering text of the Great Commission, in which our Lord bids us: “Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you.” Or, as the Evangelist Mark reports, Jesus told His disciples: “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.”
And what is the content of that Gospel which we are to proclaim? It is well summarized in one line: “The Lord hath redeemed his servant Jacob,” the name here representing all those who are the spiritual children of the patriarch, as he waited for the salvation of the Lord. And so we gladly receive the Lord’s exhortation: “Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands: sing forth the honor of his name: make his praise glorious.”
We ask: How could we employ our time to better advantage than in learning more about the great Shepherd of our souls, our Savior Jesus Christ, and in telling others about Him? For this is surely the motto of our lives, that we see no man but Jesus only. And another phase of this motto is brought out in the text which we have before us, since it suggests the wonderful topic to us:
JOINED WITH CHRIST IN THE LIKENESS OF HIS DEATH AND HIS RESURRECTION.
Let us, with the gracious assistance of the Holy Spirit, learn what the inspired Apostle presents to us under this heading. The chief thoughts of our text may well be presented in three statements:
Our baptism in its relation to the death of Christ:
Our baptism in its relation to the resurrection of Christ;
Our baptism and our life in Christ.
1.
Our text presents a thought which is probably foreign to our daily thinking. How many of us have this day given thought to the Sacrament of Holy Baptism and its significance in our lives? How many of us make it a practice daily to renew the baptismal vow? How many of us connect the baptismal blessings with our conduct throughout the day?
And yet, by our Baptism we are joined with Christ. The Apostle asks a very searching question: “Know ye not, that so many of us were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?” The tone of the question implies: You should know this fact; you should keep it in mind always, since it is so fundamental in our spiritual life. We are bound to note at once that the Apostle in this instance does not say, “baptized in the name of Jesus,” but “baptized into Jesus Christ.” The expression, as used by the Greeks, indicated that a person, by some ceremony — in this case, by the Sacrament of Holy Baptism — became the property of the one in whose name he was baptized, that is, he dedicated himself to the service of Jesus. The Apostle, at the same time, says that being baptized into Jesus means being baptized into His death, That means: In Holy Baptism we become partakers of all that He gained for us by His death, when He died on the cross as the Substitute for men.
This thought is further developed by the Apostle, when he writes: “We are buried with him by baptism into death.” He uses almost the same words in Col. 2:12: “Buried with him in baptism.” We know that, after Christ had died on the cross, He received an honorable burial at the hands of two disciples who had, till then, remained in the background. But the burial of the Savior had a figurative, spiritual significance, since He thereby buried our sins, with all their dire consequences. And to this we must add the statement of the Apostle: “We have been planted together in the likeness of his death.” Note that he uses the verb “planted,” not merely, placed into the grave. For he pictures the entire process like that involved in the sowing of seed or planting a small flower: he looks forward, even here, to a new life springing up out of death.
This thought is presented by the Apostle in still another picture when he writes: “Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.” To understand this we must remember that the purpose of crucifixion was to destroy life, to cause life to be replaced by death. This was true even in the case of the Savior, when He laid down His life. In applying this picture to us the Apostle states that our old man, our natural sinful self, is crucified with Christ, nailed to the cross in order to effect its death. In this way the body of sin, that is, sin as it lives, as it is active in us, should be destroyed, made ineffective, removed entirely. As a result of this removal we should henceforth not serve sin, not be subject to it. In other words, the Apostle declares that we should and can overcome sin.
Just how much headway have we respect? How is our struggle against sin The Apostle John goes so far as to state: “Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him; and he cannot sin, because he is born of God” (1 John 3:9). Is this expecting too much of the Christian? Is the Apostle presenting an impossibility? Not if we keep the proper balance in our thinking and follow what the Apostle Paul describes in Romans 7, where he closes his argument with the words: “So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin.” The Lord rightly expects us to fight every inclination to sin, so that, according to the new man, we serve only that which is good. Surely no Christian will knowingly, willingly, commit sin. And if he out of ignorance or weakness does stumble and fall, he immediately turns to the Lord in true repentance, for he cannot have his relationship with his Savior severed.
2.
This entire series of arguments is now further strengthened by the Apostle’s reference to our Baptism in its relation to the resurrection of Jesus Christ,
We here remind ourselves once more that the fact of our being baptized into Christ has made us, in a most unique way, the spiritual property of the Savior, that we have thereby been dedicated to His service. The words found in the explanation of the Second Article may well be applied here:
“That I may be His own, and live under Him in His kingdom, and serve Him in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness.”
It is this point which the Apostle brings out so beautifully in our text: “Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.” We have here a number of important points for our faith and life. When Scripture wants to emphasize the divine nature of the Redeemer in connection with the Easter miracle we usually find the expression “Christ rose from the dead.” If, on the other hand, Holy Writ wants to point to the human nature of Christ in connection with His resurrection from the dead, it usually speaks of His being raised from the dead. We are at once reminded of passages like these: “Who (that is, Christ) was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification” (Rom. 4:25). And Peter, in his great Pentecost sermon, tells the assembled multitude: “This Jesus hath God raised up, whereof we all are witnesses” (Acts 2:32). Truly, Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father. God’s almighty majesty was displayed in the Easter miracle, because God wanted to testify before the whole world that He had accepted the sacrifice of His Son and was now fully reconciled to the world. It is now true, eternally true, as our text says, in verse 9, that death hath no more dominion over Christ. Death, to which He had surrendered Himself of His own free will, could not hold Him who had declared: “I have power to lay it (my life) down, and I have power to take it again” (John 10:18).
And now we have an amazing fact before us, namely this: that we are not dealing with a mere historical account, but with a fact which has the most definite relationship to our Baptism, since it means being united with Him, It is a fact that we, all believers, share with Christ in His resurrection and its glorious fruits and consequences. Our text says: “If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection.” As we were, in a spiritual sense, but nevertheless in a very real manner, buried with Christ, we placed our old sinful flesh in the grave with Him. And as Jesus arose from the grave as the Victor over death and the grave, so we should share in this victory. We have left our sinful flesh in the grave, and therefore it can no longer rule over us. The beautiful Easter hymn by Paul Gerhardt brings out this truth in a most impressive manner.
Now hell, its prince, the devil, Of all their pow’r are shorn; Now I am safe from evil, And sin I laugh to scorn. Grim death with all his might Cannot my soul affright; He is a pow’rless form, Howe’er he rave and storm.
And a hymn by Gellert offers some of the same thoughts:
Jesus lives! I know full well Naught from me His love shall sever; Life nor death nor powers of hell Part me now from Christ forever: God will be a sure Defense; This shall be my confidence.
And all this glorious assurance is ours because we were baptized into His resurrection, because He, by faith, has made us partakers of all the blessings which were assured to the world on Easter morning. The cheering word of the angel comes to us whenever we think of our Baptism in connection with Christ’s resurrection: “Fear not ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus, which was crucified. He is not here: for he is risen” (Matt. 28:5-6). We also should cast aside all fear, as we sing with the great hymn-writer of the 17th century:
Jesus Christ, my sure Defense And my Savior, ever liveth; Knowing this, my confidence Rests upon the hope it giveth Though the night of death be fraught Still with many an anxious thought.
But there is still another thought that is connected with the fact of our being joined with Christ by virtue of our Baptism. It is a very practical thought, for it is connected with our every-day life. The Apostle has already taught us that we are partakers of all the blessings which He earned by His death and resurrection. These truths, however, are not to be mere head-knowledge; they are, rather, to become part and parcel of our daily life.
We are no longer in bondage to sin, since we are joined with Christ in His glorious victory. We should, and we can, overcome all deliberate sinning; we should, and we can, withstand the attempts of Satan to lead us astray. In fact, the only sins which may be found in a Christian are sins of weakness and of ignorance, of which we daily repent, as did the Apostle Paul. The argument of our text runs along these lines: “Now if we be dead with Christ,” in His death, and its results, “we believe that we shall also live with him;” and “he that is dead is freed from sin.” Sharing in the death of Christ and its marvelous consequences, we not only rest our trust in the forgiveness of our sins, which is a glorious truth in itself, but we also share in His gracious power to overcome sin. “Christ, being raised from death dieth no more: death hath no more dominion over him.” Now here is the comforting argument and thought. We share in the fruit of Christ’s death. But the sting of death is sin, and Christ has taken sin with its curse upon Himself, and likewise Christ, by His death, has overcome death and brought life and immortality to light. Death and sin have no more dominion over Him, and death and sin should have no dominion over us, who share in the fruits of His redemption. Every Christian, in repeating his baptismal vow every morning, should tell himself: With the help of my risen Savior I can and I will make progress in sanctification today, just as the Apostle states: “Likewise reckon ye ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body!” A very fine stanza for the opening of the day is that by Albert:
Let the night of my transgression With night’s darkness pass away: Jesus, into Thy possession I resign myself today; In Thy wounds I find relief From all sorrow, sin, and grief.
I am joined with Christ, my Savior, By the bonds of faith and love And His mercy daily draws me To the throne of grace above; He with me His mercy shares And I cast on Him my cares.
I was buried with my Savior By Baptism into death When He, on the cross suspended, Gave for me His final breath: Then my sins were laid away In the Savior’s tomb to stay.
As my Savior was delivered From the power of the grave, As His resurrection witnessed: He has grace and might to save; I may in this glory share Since His robe of love I wear.
By the death of Christ, my Savior, I am freed from death and sin; Sin no longer has dominion Nor can rule my soul within: In my heart my Savior lives And to me His strength He gives.