Sunday, April 6, 2025

Judica (Lent 5)

 Judica (Lent 5) – April 6, 2025
Psalm 43; Genesis 22:1-19; Hebrews 9:11-15
St. John 8:46-59

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

The sacrifice of Isaac is a stumbling block for many. It is used as ammunition for the enemies of Christ, and it is often a difficult hurdle for those interested in Christianity. Questions abound, such as “How could God tell Abraham to do this horrible thing?” and “Why would Abraham obey such a command?” Thankfully, both of those questions are answered in the words of Holy Scripture.

First, it is never wise to question God’s motives. His ways are not our ways. But on occasion, He provides us with the reason He does something we don’t initially understand. The sacrifice of Isaac was a test of Abraham’s faith. The language of ‘test’ shouldn’t be understood the way we think of a test in school. It was not a program by which God wanted to see how much faith Abraham had gained since being called out of the land of his fathers. When God tests someone, He is strengthening their faith.[1] He is putting them through a trial so that when they come through the other side, their faith is made stronger. When a bow is carved from wood, the bowyer must repeatedly bend it, putting stress on the wood fibers, so that it will finally achieve the correct shape and elasticity. When the testing is complete, the bow is ready to be strung and fired. Without such testing, the bow would snap under the pressure of the string alone.

Notice also that the test is appropriate to the one being tested. God commanded Abraham to sacrifice his only son, an extreme test by any measure. God did this because of the great faith He had already bestowed on Abraham. The Lord did not command Sarah to sacrifice Isaac. He did not command Moses to sacrifice Aaron. He didn’t even command David, a man after God’s own heart, to sacrifice a child. They each received the tests of faith that were appropriate to their own stations and God-given faith. This fact ought to be comforting in that God provides the very faith by which Abraham will endure the test. So too, He will only test you according to the faith you have been given.

In Abraham’s case, that faith led him to be certain that even if he sacrificed his son, his only son of the promise, God would raise Isaac from the dead. This is confirmed as true in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews, “By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises offered up his only begotten son, of whom it was said, “In Isaac your seed shall be called,” concluding that God was able to raise him up, even from the dead.”[2]

There is also the allegorical reality, two of which can be seen in this text. First, there is a father who goes to offer his only begotten son to death on a solitary mountain. It doesn’t take much imagination to see the crucifixion of Christ being portrayed in the sacrifice of Isaac. The only Begotten Son of God the Father is offered as an all-atoning sacrifice on the lonely hill of Calvary. His blood is the sacrifice offered to God to “cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God.”[3]

Perhaps the better allegory is that of the ram crowned with thorns. Abraham is commanded to offer his son as a sacrifice to God. Death is the wages of sin. The death of Isaac, the son of promise, would be just in the eyes of the Lord because all man deserves death. Our mortality is the consequence of our sin and therefore our death is justified in the court of God’s Law, however that death might occur. Yet just before the death stroke, the Angel of the Lord stays the executioner’s hand. The punishment of sin is abated.

In place of this child, a ram is found, crowned with thorns. The life of the ram will be sacrificed in substitution for the life of Isaac. An adult, male sheep will now be offered to God to make atonement for the life of Isaac. The boy is redeemed by the blood of the ram. Here we see Christ taking our rightful place on the cross. He is crowned with thorns, just like the ram. A ram is an adult sheep, who was born a lamb. Christ is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. He acts as our substitute, taking the punishment that we deserved, that we earned. By His death, we are redeemed, bought back from the jaws of death. “Not with the blood of goats and calves, but with His own blood He entered the Most Holy Place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption.”[4]

Despite the clarity with which Scripture describes the Sacrifice of Isaac as a testament to God’s faithful character, the faith given to Abraham, and a foretaste of the substitutionary atonement of Christ, the fallen mind of man scoffs at the account. Our Post-Enlightenment views of equality and justice would condemn both God and Abraham for their actions. We have built our own standards of “right and wrong,” “fair and unfair,” “good and evil,” and expect God to act according to the sensibilities that we have progressed into. Where once Christians did not count equality with God something to be grasped, we now demand justice on our terms.

So too, with the Jews and chief priests of Christ’s day. They refused to hear the Word of God. They refused to see the works of Christ. And because they do not hear or see, it is clear they are not of God. They would set their own standards above God, effectively making themselves like God, the very first temptation of satan. That is why Christ tells them they are of their father, the devil. They are liars and murderers, just like their father. Christ threatens not only their wealth and status before men, but He dares to challenge their convictions about God. Their lack of faith in Him reveals their lack of faith in the Father. Their god is one of their own making, in which some are more equal than others.

Today is Judica, so called for the antiphon to the Introit. Sadly, our translation of the Introit might make this difficult to understand. It could be translated, “Judge me, O God, and plead my cause against an ungodly nation: O deliver me from the deceitful and unjust man.”[5] It is a bold plea to ask God to judge you. He sees all and knows all. He knows that you are in fact unworthy of salvation. He knows your secret sins. Just one sin is enough for your damnation, and He knows them all.

In a sense, crying out, “Judge me, O God,” is asking to be tested as Abraham was tested. It is asking that God would review our sins and purge them away. It is also a bold cry of faith. “Judge me God because Christ has died for me. I do not deserve salvation. I do not deserve the death of Your Only-Begotten Son. I do not deserve that my Lord should take frail flesh and die.

“And yet by Your grace and mercy, You have poured out Your wrath on Him and not on me. Jesus Christ is now my advocate, pleading on my behalf. For His sake, Judge me as righteous O God, and do not be silent before me. I have been reborn in the water of Holy Baptism, now finding my origin in the flesh of Jesus and claiming the Name of God as the seal of my salvation.

“Speak your Word into my ears that I would repent of my sins and receive forgiveness. Speak your Word into my ears that I would be cleansed from my secret faults and receive the white robe of righteousness. Speak your Word into my ears that I would hear the sweet song of the angels and the glorious Name of God sung among Your people.”

The crosses are veiled to remind us that we are not worthy of the death of Christ, let alone to gaze upon our salvation. Moses sinned against a direct command of the Lord and was thus barred from entering the Promised Land. So too, if we honestly examine our souls, we will find that there is nothing within us that is worthy of salvation.

Moses, however, did get to peer into the Promised Land. He was given a foretaste of the inheritance promised by God to His dear children. So too, we can still see the shape of the cross. We can still see the shadow of the figure nailed to this cross. The crosses are not removed but they are veiled because despite our unworthiness; despite the veil of sin which clouds our vision; Christ is still raised from the dead and will bring us to His side in eternity.

As for the Gloria Patri, at the beginning of our preparations, we silenced the Greater Gloria, the Gloria in Excelsis. Now, we silence the Lesser Gloria. The song of the angels is silent and now our proclamation of the full Name of God falls silent. This again reminds us that we are not worthy to speak the Name of God, let alone call upon Him in every time of need.

And yet we invoke the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit at the beginning of the service. We still cross ourselves to remember our Baptism into that Name. We still have this Name of God sealed upon our foreheads and our hearts, marking us as children of the Heavenly Father, Temples of the Holy Spirit, and siblings of our Redeemer.

In + Jesus’ name. Amen.



[1] Hebrews 12:6; Proverbs 27:17; 1 Thessalonians 2:4; 1 Corinthians 3:13.

[2] Hebrews 11:17-19.

[3] Hebrews 9:14.

[4] Hebrews 9:12.

[5] Psalm 43:1 in the King James Version.

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