Showing posts with label Mark 6. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark 6. Show all posts

Monday, August 29, 2022

The Martyrdom of St. John the Baptist

 The Decollation (Beheading) of St. John the Baptist – August 29, 2022
Psalm 31; Revelation 6:9-11; Romans 6:1-5
St. Mark 6:14-29

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

The Church does not remember her saints to teach a moral lesson. The lives of the saints, especially those found in Holy Scripture, are not fables. Aesop’s fables are taught to children for the purpose of teaching a moral lesson – what you should do and what you shouldn’t do. The Tortoise and the Hare teaches children not to rush but work slow and steady. The life and death of St. John the Baptist are not given to teach you what to do and what not to do.

The church remembers her saints for three purposes. This ought to sound familiar as I have mentioned these three purposes at the feast of many saints over the last two years. We remember the saints first as an example of God’s mercy shown both in the works God performed on behalf of the saints and in His giving such magnificent teachers to the Church; second, for the strengthening of our own faith as we see how God forgave the sins of these saints and know with certainty that He has forgiven us, too; and third, to imitate first their faith and then their virtues.[1]

We gather tonight first to give thanks to God that He has given such a magnificent teacher as St. John the Baptist to the Church. John was the forerunner of the Christ. He preached repentance in the wilderness that the heart man would be prepared to receive the Blood of Jesus. The Law must precede the Gospel. The Law must uncover our sins before we can see the need for a Savior.

It is true, this Law can take the form of physical suffering. It can take the form of emotional suffering. It can take the form of disease, loss, pain, betrayal, or any other type of non-verbal suffering. But anything communicated non-verbally will always be less specific than something communicated in words. Man was created to communicate through words because we are created in the Image of God. What is that Image of God? In the first place it is original righteousness, but it is also the very literal form which God takes to relate to man. The Second Person of the Holy Trinity is called the Word of God and it is this Word which took on flesh. We are created in His Image and thus were created to communicate in words.

As forerunner, St. John necessarily came preaching and necessarily came preaching the Law. Herod, the son of the Herod who murdered the babies at Jesus’ birth, clearly shows the result of one whose heart is struck by the Law of God but who only hardens against God’s Word rather than begging for forgiveness.

Herod enjoyed the preaching of St. John. He enjoyed it so much that he would not let his adulterous lover murder the prophet. But Herod did not enjoy the preaching so much that he would stake his reputation on reneging a vow made to his stepdaughter. With a measure of regret, Herod gave the order to have St. John executed.

Sometime later, when he heard about the miracles and teachings of Jesus, Herod was terrified in his heart. He believed John had returned from the grave and was going to come for him.

There are bold unbelievers in the world. They are entirely content to deride the True God. These are a law unto themselves. They have no moment’s hesitation regarding their salvation. Then there are those who have heard the Word of God and even though they profess against it, or against some doctrine therein, they cannot escape the pangs of their conscience.

It is here that many Christians find themselves. Sincere Christians do not profess against the Scriptures or God’s doctrines. But we often find ourselves with pangs of conscience. We know what the Word of God says but we don’t like it. Or we know what the Word of God says, and we agree, but are afraid of what might happen if we speak it out loud.

It is a dangerous time for children to be in schools and for adults to be employed. Parents must be prepared to scrutinize everything your children are learning. We cannot take anything for granted. Homosexuality is assumed in almost every subject down to the youngest grades. Transgenderism, equality of outcome, and resistance to binary truths are being taught even by well-meaning teachers. As for adults, one overheard comment can cost you your job, health insurance, and retirement. Woe to you if said comment is in print via social media. You are looking at years of ramifications.

And yet none of this should stop us from proclaiming the truth. St. John knew that telling Herod he was committing incestuous adultery by marrying his sister-in-law would eventually lead to his death. But he did it anyway. Why? Because he loves the Word of God, and he cared enough about Herod to say something.

A sin of omission is failing to do the right thing. It is very easy to convince yourself that by not saying something, you are protecting yourself or your family. But at what cost? By staying silent in the face of your employer, your child’s teacher, the school board, or even your sister, are you condemning him? Are you sinning against yourself as well as that person? The answer is yes.

And then there is the direction of our fiction, news, and all forms of media. Things unimaginable 30 years ago are commonplace on primetime TV. It is so very easy to claim to shut your eyes or mute the TV for a few moments, but you will eventually get too lazy to catch it every time. Then you will figure it isn’t so bad, so long as you remember that it isn’t good. But eventually, you will become hardened to the sexual images, the images of violence, the crude joking, and substance abuse.

So repent. Repent of not loving others the way you have been loved by God. Repent of thinking you are stronger than everyone else so as not to be tempted by sex, drugs, and violent images. God loved the world so that He gave His only Son, the lost to save. But God also sent the forerunner. He sent John, preaching the Law to prepare the way for the Gospel.

St. John was clearly blessed with extreme humility and fortitude. These are virtues, beneficial characteristics of Godly men, we are called to imitate. John clearly confessed God’s Word, both Law and Gospel, to Herod just as he confessed to the multitudes gathered at the Jordan. He saw no difference between the beggar and the Tetrarch. Both needed to be called to repentance and both needed to receive the blood of Jesus.

Yet our imitation of these virtues is not the most important thing to gain this evening. St. John died in imitation of His Lord. He did not raise an army to fight back against Herod but humbly submitted to unjust imprisonment. From the stony garden of his cell, John prayed to his Lord, “Are you the coming One, or do we look for another?” It is true, when Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane, He was not experiencing a crisis of faith. St. John did experience such a dark night of the soul. Yet when faced with imminent death, both trusted that the Father in Heaven would guide them into eternal life.

Good Friday must come before Easter morning. St. John, the forerunner of Christ, prepared the hearts of man to receive their Lord but he also prepared the grave to receive God. He was a forerunner in life just as he was a forerunner in death. We, too, must imitate Christ by imitating St. John in this way. Unless Christ returns in glory to gather His saints to His bosom, we shall all experience death. Our friends and children will collect our bodies to prepare them for burial. This is the way of all flesh.

We give thanks to Almighty God that He has shown us His mercy in upholding the faith of St. John, who endured a terrible death, but who is now singing with the angels and archangels in heaven. If John could be imprisoned, beaten, and executed because of his preaching, yet retain his faith by the strength of the Holy Spirit, so too can you be assured that the Holy Spirit will uphold you through suffering and even death.

And if John had a moment of doubt before his death, yet is counted among the glorious saints in heaven, then you too can be assured that while doubt is a result of your sinful flesh, it also cannot be present without faith. You cannot doubt something you do not believe in. Doubt will come when you endure suffering of any kind.

St. John handled his doubt with much more grace than many of us are capable of. First, pray a psalm, like Psalm 13 which begins, “How long, O Lord? Will You forget me forever? How long will You hide Your face from me?”[2] But remember the mercy of God, just as David does at the end of Psalm 13, “But I have trusted in Your mercy; My heart shall rejoice in Your salvation. I will sing to the Lord, Because He has dealt bountifully with me.”[3]

While this seems like a stark change, it is the experience of Christian doubt. Christians do not doubt if God exists; we doubt if He is on our side. We doubt whether He cares about what we are going through.

Our Father absolutely cares. He cares for you such that He sacrificed His Only-Begotten Son that you might have eternal life with Him. The deliverance of St. John from the torment of Herod was his deliverance from this side of glory. Your deliverance might be more temporal or it might wait until you too are delivered unto heaven. Either way, the Word of God, which was placed upon your head in Holy Baptism, delivered into your mouth in the Holy Supper, and proclaimed into your ears this night, though it is undeserved, is true for you. God has never forsaken the soul that trusted in Him. Just as Christ died for John, He died for you.

In + Jesus’ name. Amen.



[1] Ap. XXI 4-7.

[2] Psalm 13:1.

[3] Psalm 13:5-6.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

The Martyrdom of St. John the Baptist

Psalm 31; Revelation 6:9-11; Romans 6:1-6

St. Mark 6:14-29

In the name of the Father, and of the T Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

“There are two ways, one of life and one of death, and there is a great difference between these two ways.”[1] These are the opening words of perhaps the oldest Christian writing outside of the New Testament called The Didache or “The Teaching.” The author of The Didache is likely referencing Psalm 1, “For the LORD knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the ungodly shall perish.”[2] These two ways, the way of life and the way of death; the way of the righteous and the way of the ungodly, are on clear display this morning.

King Herod was not in fact a king. He was a tetrarch, one of four men set in authority in the territory of Israel but subservient to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate. So long as he kept the peace and served Rome, Herod was allowed to live as he pleased. He was rich beyond necessity and bore no real responsibility aside from pleasing the Romans. Herod associated with the rich and powerful, feasted sumptuously, wore fine clothing, and enjoyed the company of young women.

John the Baptist was an exile from birth. The father of this Herod – confusingly also named “Herod” – ordered all boys under two be murdered so that the coming Son of David would not assume the throne. Joseph, Mary, and Jesus fled to Egypt. Zacharias, Elizabeth, and John, only six months old, fled into the wilderness. Donning the garb of a prophet, John ate locusts and wild honey, wrapped a leather belt around his camel hair shirt, and preached the Word of God, preparing the way for the Christ.

The contrast between the stations of Herod and John could not be wider. St. Mark is emphasizing that outward signs of blessing in this world do not correlate to the salvation of God. Christ came for the blind, the weak, the poor, and the lowly. The mighty he has cast down and the proud are made weak.

But before we condemn Herod for being a ruler, who showed all manner of outward blessing (in food, clothing, company, and wealth), God does not offer salvation based on outward lowliness either. The poor man is not saved by being poor nor is the rich man saved by being rich. Nor is either forgiven on account of changing his station – the poor pulling himself out of poverty through hard work or the rich man giving away his wealth to the needy. Our station in this life is given to us by God so that we would be stewards of what we’ve been given.

The contrast between Herod and John which is far more important are the words they speak. Because John was called to be the prophet who prepared the way of the Lord, his preaching was primarily that of repentance. He was to prepare the hearts of Israel so that they might receive the Christ. We are prepared for absolution through repentance. We are prepared to receive the Gospel through the condemning action of the Law.

Herod enjoyed this preaching of John. Herod, who murdered his brother so that he could marry his sister-in-law; Herod, whose hormones rages so uncontrollably that he was titillated by the dancing of his 14 year-old step daughter; Herod, who lived in excess and bowed the knee to the Romans, enjoyed hearing John preach the Law.

When John condemned the marriage of Herod and Herodias, the spiteful woman wanted to kill him, but Herod protected John. He would not allow the prophet to be murdered but he would allow him to be imprisoned – likely so he could please his now “wife” and hear John preach all the more. The sick and depraved Herod was intrigued by the Word of God spoken by the prophet. The Holy Ghost was working in the heart of Herod, seeking to destroy his stony heart with the hammer of God’s Law so that a heart of flesh might fill its place.

Then comes the fateful night of the birthday feast. Herod loses his mind to lust over the dancing of his stepdaughter, a young maiden, barely old enough to be betrothed, and offers her anything her heart desires. The girl is at a loss, so asks her mother, who demands the head of John the Baptist. Though he is exceedingly sorrowful, because of his oath and the presence of his noble guests, Herod gives the execution order. In that moment, all the preaching of John the Baptist has been rejected by Herod. Whatever Word of God had begun to work on his heart, Herod’s own lust, his pride, and his reputation were stronger.

Do not scoff at Herod. Perhaps he never had faith and perhaps he was only entertained by John, but do not scoff. For you too are like Herod. The time comes to tell your cousin it is a sin to sleep with her boyfriend and you don’t have the nerve. Especially when getting married would cause her to lose her deceased husband’s benefits. Your reputation before others if very important to you but notice that the 8th commandment requires you to protect the reputation of your neighbor – not your own. Even then, if confessing the truth harms your reputation among your friends, they are not your friends or at least they are sorely confused about who you are.

Then there are the parts of Scripture you may not like. You do your daily bible readings and you come to church and listen to the sermons, but every time Christ says, “Rid yourself of crude jokes,”[3] your ears bristle and you think, ‘That can’t mean a dirty joke here and there…’

‘Submit to the government, not only the good but also the harsh.’[4] “I like when Jesus says, “Obey God rather than men, but submit to harsh rulers? No thank you.”

‘Wives, submit to your husbands.’[5] “That just means women can’t be pastors, it doesn’t mean anything at home.”

‘Let women be silent in the churches, not exercising authority over men.’[6] “Well, I just don’t like any version of that.” 

The point is Christ came to save the humble – those who humble themselves before God and his Word. You may not like the Word of God, you may not like the judgement of the Lord, but you are called to humble yourself before it and pray that he would reveal the joy of His Word to you. Humble yourself in repentance. We all need to repent. God already knows what you’ve done. He knows all and sees all. Repent of your sins because if you don’t, if you harbor them because of shame, they will be revealed on the Last Day, but they will be revealed to your judgement, like the sins of Herod.

Then there is John. John lived a life of humility, faithfully submitting himself to Christ. Even when Christ came to him to be baptized, John did not count himself worthy to Baptize the Son of God. Yet the Father had appointed John to be His prophet and to anoint the Savior of the World. Together, John and Jesus would fulfill all righteousness by fulfilling the Word of God and setting in motion of the ministry of Jesus – the Salvation of Man.

John continued to be faithful, to point to the Lamb of God, now anointed to be the sacrifice for the sin of the world. He preached repentance to everyone who would hear – the lowly and the great. He preached the Word of God to Herod who heard him. Then Herod betrayed him by following the way of death. Ironically, Herod’s way of death was the portal to John’s final steps on the way of life. What Herod meant for evil, God turned to the good of John. His labor was complete and now his only duty is to enjoy eternal bliss in glory.

Yes, you are as sinful as Herod. You are tempted by reputation, by threats of losing your job, by threats of losing family members to anger, by threats of losing your life or the life of your loved ones. These temptations are real, and you fail to deny them all. But right now, you are Herod listening to the preaching of God’s prophet. You are also called to be the prophet John the Baptist. You are called to believe, teach, and confess the truth of God’s Word. It is not given to every Christian to stand behind a pulpit nor distribute the Holy Sacraments, but it is given to every Christian to confess.

John never wavered in confessing the Law of God to Herod, his ruler. He also submitted himself to the authority of a very wicked man, accepting the consequences of living in a sinful world. You are called to no less. You are called to confess Christ before Kings and princes, employers and journalists, siblings, children, and friends.

The closest parallel to Herod in our day are the politicians who speak constantly against abortion. They claim to be champions of the unborn, standing for the rights of the defenseless children. But time and time again, they reveal themselves to be Herod. “It wasn’t the right time.” “We must move incrementally.” “We need to compromise.” They do this so that you will continue to vote for them. Where would Batman be without the Joker? Thus, he can never kill his archenemy. So too with the anti-abortion politicians, or at least most of them.

Far more timely are the ethics surrounding COVID-19 and vaccinations. No matter what you think or what you think you know about vaccination; whether vaccines will save the world or cause autism, assuming Christians who disagree with you desire the murder of others is sinful. Assuming that disagreement means you as a person are superior to others is sinful. Authorities at any level – federal, state, local, employers – authorities demanding vaccination while forbidding conversation about alternative treatments is sinful. They are no longer being harsh leaders but monstrous ones.

Forcing a Christian, whose conscience is plagued by the idea of participating in a drug created using tissues derived from abortion, to take said drug is a sin. So is claiming the burdened Christian is murdering those around them. Repent of these sins and treat one another with the eyes of Christ.

At the same time, do not be surprised when monstrous leaders take your job, your livelihood, your children, or throw you in prison. Do not be surprised when you cannot enter a store without proof of vaccination. Throwing a fit because you are not free to go where you please is also a sin. Deriding Christians for being afraid is a sin. Bear one another’s burdens. Encourage the faithful in the Word of God. Listen, respond, and communicate because we are all members of one body. The tongue is a poisonous member and no matter your stance is prone to vile sins against your brothers and sisters in Christ.

Hear again the words of today’s hymn, the first and final stanzas: 

“If thou but trust in God to guide thee

      And hope in Him through all thy ways,

He’ll give thee strength, whate’re betide thee,

      and bear thee through the evil days.

Who trusts in God’s unchanging love

      Builds on the rock that naught can move.”

“Sing, pray, and keep His ways unswerving,

            Perform thy duties faithfully,

And trust His Word; though undeserving,

            Thou yet shalt find it true for thee.

God never yet forsook in need

            The soul that trusted Him indeed.”[7] 

St. John the Baptist knew these words. He proclaimed the truth of Christ because he knew God would be faithful to him. What did he get in return? The Scorn of man, a stay in prison, and his head on a platter.

God has promised to bear you through these evil days, but his unchanging love may not look how you want it to look. It may look like the inside of a prison, poverty, the funeral of your loved ones, or even your own funeral. God’s unchanging love definitely looks like the Son of Man nailed to a cross. God’s unchanging love definitely looks like an empty tomb and folded burial clothes. God’s unchanging love definitely looks like water poured upon your head and the Triune Name placed upon you. God’s unchanging love definitely looks like wine and bread, and with the eyes of faith, the same Body and Blood which hung upon the cross.

God’s unchanging love will be revealed in the fulness of glory on the last day, when our eyes will be perfected and open upon the glorious face of Christ, to whom John pointed. We are one in Christ, you, me, all of us together, with angels and archangels, with John and Peter. Do not allow Satan, and his minions, Herod and Herodias tempt you away from Christ in the name of taking away bodily needs. God has and will provide for your body. God has and will provide for your soul. Do not turn away and seek good from the world.

In T Jesus’ name.  Amen.


[1] The Apostolic Fathers, “Didache 1:1,” 3rd edition, translated and edited by Michael W. Holmes (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Academic, 2007), 345.

[2] Psalm 1:6.

[3] Ephesians 5:3-4.

[4] 1 Peter 2:18

[5] Ephesians 5:22

[6] 1 Corinthians 14:34; 1 Timothy 2:8-15.

[7] “If Thou But Trust in God to Guide Thee,” stanzas 1 and 7.

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