3/23/1997 Palm and Passion Sunday / The Rite of Confirmation
Trinity Lutheran Church - Fieldon Township
Trinity Lutheran Church - Fieldon Township
Zion Lutheran Church - Lewisville
"WHERE'S
THE `POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE'?"
Revelation
2:10 / 2 Peter 3:18
"`Be faithful, even to the point of death,
and I will give you the crown of life.'"
"Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be glory
both now and forever! Amen"
Before
we begin the sermon this morning, I thought it appropriate to give a few
introductory comments. Did you ever
think you'd see this day? There were
times I wasn't sure I would! I told a
couple of people that I was considering going to one of those shops where they
imprint T-shirts to have a shirt made with these words on it: I SURVIVED THE
CLASS OF `97. Then, I would have
them list the names of the five young men who comprised the class between
Trinity and Zion jointly. (I haven't
done that yet!) Yesterday afternoon, as
I was reflecting on what this day means to you, AND TO ME, I remembered that
there were seven boys in the class when we started a few years ago. When I related that possibility to someone,
their response was: "Then, you'd really have gray hair!" To show my appreciation for your
accomplishment ─ the public confession of your Christian faith ─ I will have a special presentation to make to you during Confirmation
class on Wednesday. Just in case you had
any thoughts of skipping, now you'll be so curious that you'll have to
come. On a more serious note, based on
the words of the Scripture texts before us, we consider the theme, "Where's
the `Pomp and Circumstance`?"
Grace
and peace...
During
practice for this service Friday night, someone asked me what "Pomp and
Circumstance" was? I explained that
it was the musical piece often played at graduation commencement ceremonies. As you noticed this morning, we haven't heard
that played, and we won't! This is not a
graduation ceremony marking the completion or the end of your training and
growth as a Christian. Rather, the Rite
of Confirmation is just the beginning.
You have your wholes lives ahead of you ─ however many years God has ordained for your life according to His good
and gracious will ─ and my hope, and the hope of this congregation,
is that you now have the basics of the Christian faith to build upon during the
rest of your lives. If you want to
compare Confirmation with a graduation, you might compare it with graduation
from Kindergarten. In Kindergarten, a
child is taught the basics of counting, learning the letters of the alphabet
and early reading, so that throughout his or her years of formal education, he
or she might continue to build and expand on that foundation. It's the same in Confirmation
instruction. Dr. Martin Luther notes
that the doctrines taught in the Small Catechism are "AS THE HEAD OF THE
HOUSEHOLD SHOULD TEACH THEM IN A SIMPLE WAY TO HIS HOUSEHOLD." That's a good reminder for parents,
especially fathers who serve as the head of their families. It also reminds us that when we have a good
understanding of what's in the Catechism, there's a lot more to learn. So there's no "Pomp and
Circumstance" because you're not done yet!
At our
last Truman circuit winkel conference, one of the pastors suggested that maybe
instead of trying to rush Confirmation in the Lutheran church, we should be
postponing it until perhaps age 16 or 18.
Oh, the moans and groans that such a change would bring. However, we need to take a realistic look at
where we're at in many of our churches.
What happens when young men and women are confirmed? Statistical averages tell us that you and I
will never see a majority of them again ─ at least for ten or twenty years. While I don't believe that is a concern with
this group of confirmands, it is important for us to remember and consider why
that is happening in our church.
Perhaps, it is because we give our confirmands the impression that
Confirmation Sunday is a mini-graduation day.
We celebrate it like graduation ─ receptions, open houses and the like. We neither offer nor require them to
participate in any formal Christian education.
We do not provide them with a high school or young adult Bible
class. When we should be expecting more
from them as maturing Christians, we expect less. Yet, Jesus said, "Be faithful, even to
the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life."
These
young Christians are the future of the church.
They have a lot of good insights into what the church needs to do, and
possibly even change, to meet the spiritual needs of its members. We will do well to listen to them! Today, we welcome them into full communicant
membership of this congregation.
Therefore, I will challenge the members of this church with this
question: "How much do you really care about their spiritual growth and
life?" It is the Christian
responsibility of every member of the Body of Christ to assist and support them
as they strive to serve God and be faithful to Christ and His Church until the
time of their death.
That
brings us to the second Scripture passage which serves as a text for this
sermon. St. Peter writes, "Grow in
the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." Faithfulness to Christ until death means that
you and I will have to continue to grow in our spiritual lives throughout our
earthly lives. As babies, we crave
milk. By it, we grow during those early
months and years of our lives. Even
though, it may be an old-fashioned way to raise livestock, it doesn't work for
humans to try to live your whole lives on milk alone. It would cause all kinds of health
problems. So it is in our spiritual
lives as well. Elsewhere, Peter tells us
to "crave the pure spiritual milk of the Word," so that by it we may
grow up in our salvation. The pure
spiritual milk of the Word is presented in the Small Catechism and during
Confirmation instruction. However, as
babies begin to grow, they need more solid food ─ which helps them to grow into strong, healthy individuals. So it is in our spiritual lives that we need
to move beyond the milk to the meat of God's Word. Always reading, always hearing, always
learning! That would be a good motto for
us Christians to live by. Keep on
growing. Otherwise, as one who deprives
himself or is deprived from receiving nourishment for the body eventually
shrivels up and dies, when we are deprived of nourishment for our spiritual
lives, our faith will eventually shrivel up, and our souls will die.
Remember
your Confirmation vows which you will speak today, and your lifetime Scripture
verse. Let them serve as the foundation
on which to build throughout your lives as Christians. "Be strong and courageous," because
the Lord will be with you wherever you go.
Never be ashamed of the Gospel, which "is the power of God for the
salvation of everyone who believes."
"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith ─ and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God ─ not by works, so that no one can boast." Jesus is "the Vine; you are the
branches....Apart from [Him], you can do nothing." By grace, through faith, you can "`be
faithful, even to the point of death, and [He] will give you the crown of
life.'"
Having
said all this, we still haven't heard any "Pomp and
Circumstance." And you won't! On this Palm and Passion Sunday, we heard how
Jesus rode into Jerusalem, not on a big white stallion ─ the mark of a true Champion or King ─ but on a lowly donkey colt.
Instead of a big fanfare and a red carpet, there were coats and palm
branches lying on the road. Instead of
"Hail to the Chief" there were shouts and cries of "Hosanna,
Lord save us!" Then, things went
downhill from there, or should we say uphill.
Later on that week, the same people who shouted cries of
"Hosanna" cried out for His death.
Jesus went up Calvary's hill, where He suffered and died for the sins of
the world, including your sins and mine, all because "God so loved the
world that He gave His One and Only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not
perish but have eternal life." The
joy for us as Christians comes next Sunday when the mournful cries of Holy Week
turn to the victory songs of Easter as we celebrate the resurrection of our
Lord from the grave. That resurrection
gives us hope of a resurrection of our own and eternal life with Him forever. Our sins are forgiven and forgotten, removed
from us as "far as the east is from the west."
Therefore,
each day you and I can arise anew in the grace and promises of our Baptism,
which you will reaffirm in just a few minutes.
We can, as Luther suggests, make the sign of the cross to remind us that
we are marked as ones chosen by the Triune God ─ Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Furthermore, in our lives as Christians, we will surely want to avail
ourselves of every opportunity to receive God's means of grace through Word and
Sacrament. Then, and only then, will you
and I "grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ." Then, and only then, will
we "remain faithful, even to the point of death." The closest thing to "Pomp and Circumstance"
that you and I will ever likely have played for us in the church will be the
music at our funeral services. May it be
said of us then that we have been faithful, and we will receive "the crown
of life." That is Jesus’ promise to
you and me, and Jesus keeps His promises.
"To Him be the glory both now and forever! Amen."
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