Pastor Tom Steers
on April 14, 2024
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THE THIRD SUNDAY OF EASTER
April 14, 2024
Pastor Tom Steers
Christ the Saviour Lutheran Church, Toronto
Lutheran Service Book
Divine Service III – Pages 184-202
OPENING HYMNN: 475 “Good Christian Friends, Rejoice and Sing”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AwrOot61ETc
Pastor: Halleluiah, Christ is risen!
Congregation: He is risen indeed. Halleluiah!
The Introit:
Psalm 133
Behold, how good and pleasant it is
when brothers dwell in unity!
2 It is like the precious oil on the head,
running down on the beard,
on the beard of Aaron,
running down on the collar of his robes!
3 It is like the dew of Hermon,
which falls on the mountains of Zion!
For there the LORD has commanded the blessing,
life forevermore.
The Salutation – Pastor: The Lord be with you. Congregation: And also with you.
Collect Prayer:
O God, through the sacrifice of Your Son
You raised up the fallen world.
Through His death and resurrection,
He has earned us eternal life.
Grant that on our walk through this life we bear witness to our Saviour;
through Jesus Christ, our Lord,
who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.
Our Bible Readings:
First Reading – Acts 2:14a, 36-42
Psalm 116, verses 1-14
Epistle Reading – 1st Peter 1:17-25
(This week we use the text from Luke on the Emmaus disciples. The three-year lectionary Gospel passage today is Luke’s account of Jesus’ appearance to the disciples, which we read of last week in John 20:19-31. The one-year lectionary text for today is the three-year lectionary Gospel passage for next Sunday, which we will have as our reading on April 21st.)
Gospel Reading – Luke 24:13-35
THE APOSTLES’ CREED – Page 192
HYMN OF THE DAY: 476 “Who Are You Who Walk in Sorrow”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgRG0Ph0oFA
THE SERMON –
This road we call life is, at times, a difficult one.
We can feel alone, and even be led to despair, over hardship, disappointment, and loss.
The things we face in this world can cloud our vision, especially of the things of God.
We can become blind and forgetful of what God has said to us, and promised.
It was this way with two disciples of Jesus on the afternoon of the first Easter.
They were walking towards a town called Emmaus.
For some Christians, the Easter Gospel could very well begin with the words, “A long time ago in a place far away.”
Or in other words they’ve lost a personal connection to the resurrection.
For them it only has a past and future significance, but no present, every day value.
When life takes a downward turn, as it does from time to time, they don’t feel the presence of their Saviour, but are lost in the griefs of the day.
And they may try to fill this perceived void, what they feel is an absence of God, with a personal ‘works righteousness.’
Not seeing their Lord, not seeing the Gospel, they try to fill the emptiness with the Law of God.
What they say in effect is that while Christ is gone and we’re left to our own devices here’s what you need to do.
And it’s an attempt to fill the empty tomb of Jesus with a false belief that we must be perfect before Christ will reappear to us.
But this is what makes us as a Church, as Biblical Lutheran followers of Christ, different.
Because we not only celebrate a past event – the resurrection.
We don’t just say, ‘Christ is Risen,’ and gone back to heaven, and one day we’ll see Him again.
No, we celebrate the living, triumphant Jesus Christ.
As the Church we celebrate the marriage feast of the Bridegroom who laid down His life for us and in a very real and present way, is with us today: in Spirit, in His Holy Word, and in His Body and Blood in the Lord’s Supper.
Consider the Gospel account in today’s reading.
The two disciples on the road to Emmaus knew the Scriptures.
But they hadn’t really taken them in, they hadn’t truly understood them.
Because they didn’t see Jesus in them from start to finish.
And at first, they don’t see Christ in front of them on that road.
Physical sight alone, is not enough to recognize who Christ is.
Human reason is not sufficient to recognize Jesus as the Risen Saviour.
Christ had directly told the disciples He would die and rise again on the third day.
But until He appeared to them, they didn’t believe.
No, our eyes and ears must be opened by God Himself.
It took God’s only Son, Jesus to reveal His presence.
The hearts of the Emmaus disciples burned with joy as they understood the Scriptures when explained by Christ.
Here is one of many places where Jesus tells us how to interpret the Bible correctly.
Jesus tells us that if you do not see the Bible as God’s Word and see Him throughout it you get lost on the road; you won’t see Christ even when He’s right in front of you.
As Lutherans we believe that from the very first verses of Moses through to the prophets and all Scripture, God’s Holy Word is about Jesus.
He’s there in the Garden of Eden in God’s promise that a Saviour would come.
He’s present throughout the Old Testament, as well as the New.
It’s all about our Saviour, for us.
When Jesus is the key to scripture the Bible is not a tangled dead-end road.
When Jesus is the key to scripture, we understand God’s Law is a mirror that shows us our sin and a guide for us, but not the means of salvation.
Jesus used the scriptures to reassure the grieving, despairing Emmaus disciples.
They thought they’d been left alone.
But Christ shows them the crucifixion was not the end of the dreams and hopes of His followers.
The cross was part of the plan of redemption, of real freedom for every nation, every human being.
Christ explained that the cross was the instrument of salvation in paying our sin debt.
If there was no crucifixion, there would be no resurrection, for Jesus, or us.
Perhaps one of the best statements on this comes from the end of last week’s Gospel reading, in John, Chapter 20 (verses 30-31), when the Apostle wrote:
“Now Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, but these things are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in His name.”
But for the Emmaus disciples until Christ took the bread and blessed it, as He did on the night of the Last Supper, that their eyes of faith were opened.
It took Christ Himself to open their eyes and minds, to accept that their living Saviour was there with them.
It’s the same for us.
When He instituted the Lord’s Supper Christ told us, ‘As often as you do this remember me, remember what I’ve said, remember what it means – He gave them the bread and said, “this is my body.”
He gave them the wine and said, “This is my blood shed for You for the remission of sins.”
Remember that in this Sacrament Christ is saying I remain with you, forgiving you.
And so, on this evening of Easter, three days after the crucifixion, the risen Lord
is with His disciples again.
He reveals Himself in the breaking of the bread, then vanished from their sight.
Notice that John doesn’t write Christ was no longer with them, but just that they could no longer see Him.
He was still, truly with them, in Spirit.
He had told them again, how he would remain to be with us.
Brothers and sisters, today, through the eyes of faith, we see Jesus with us again in His Holy Word, and will see Him in His Sacrament as we come to the altar for Communion.
We are not alone.
We have not been left as orphans.
Christ said, ‘lo I am with you always even unto the end of the world.’
This is the joy of Easter.
It’s not only a commemoration, but a true celebration of His resurrection and current presence with us.
In churches that do not honour the Lord’s Supper, they behave as though only moral perfection will earn you a ticket to see Christ again.
In churches that have gone back to the way of the Pharisees in seeing the Law as a way of self-justification they cannot see the risen, and forgiving Saviour with them.
But Christ came to fulfill the Law in a way we can’t, and promises to be with believing Christians, forgiving us, imperfect though we are.
And although the difficulties on the road of life are still there, the end for us isn’t death.
As the Bible says, ‘Death has been swallowed up in victory.’
Jesus is with us not only on Ester Sunday but in every ordinary day, in every pain and sorrow, and whenever we gather together in worship.
Our prayers are not long-distance letters but heard instantly by the ever-present God who loves us and wants to hear from us, wants to reassure, and comfort us.
The Emmaus disciples had been on a long walk when they arrived at their destination and sat down with Jesus.
But when they realized He was with them, they forgot their weariness, they forgot the late hour, and got up and walked back to Jerusalem.
They found the other disciples and told them they’d seen Jesus.
May God grant you the opened eyes and ears of faith to always recognize that Your Saviour is with you.
And may that knowledge, joy, and peace, be with you, now, and forever.
Amen.
THE PRAYERS OF THE CHURCH
THE SERVICE OF THE SACRAMENT
P: Blessed are You O Lord, our God, king of the universe, for you have had mercy on us and given Your only-begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.
C: We give You thanks Father for the redemption You have prepared for us through Jesus Christ. Grant us Your Holy Spirit that we may faithfully take communion and receive the blessings of forgiveness, life, and salvation that come from the body and blood of Christ.
P: Father, hear us as we pray as Jesus taught us.
LORD’S PRAYER
C: Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven; give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For Thine is the Kingdom, and the power and the glory, forever and ever. Amen.
Preface
P: The Lord be with you.
C: And also with you.
P: Lift up your hearts.
C: We lift them to the Lord.
P: Let us give thanks to the Lord our God.
C: It is right to give Him thanks and praise.
P: It is truly meet, right, and salutary, that we should at all times, and in all places, give thanks to you, O Lord, Holy Father, Almighty and Everlasting God.
For in the mystery of the Word made flesh, You have given us a new revelation of Your glory; that seeing You in the Person of Your Son, we may be drawn to the love of those things which are not seen.
THE WORDS OF OUR SAVIOUR
INSTITUTING THE LORD`S SUPPER – Page 197
P: The peace of the Lord be with you always.
C: Amen.
Lamb of God (Agnus Dei)
P: Lamb of God You take away the sin of the world,
C: Have mercy on us.
P: Lamb of God You take away the sin of the world,
C: Have mercy on us.
P: Lamb of God You take away the sin of the world,
C: Grant us peace.
The Distribution
(Our hymn during distribution is 627 “Jesus Christ. Our Blessed Saviour”)
Post Communion Collect (Right-hand column) Page 201 of our Hymnal
Salutation and Benedicamus Page 201
Benediction (stand) Page 202
Our Closing Hymn: 879 “Stay with Us”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eWvrBMI5dg
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