Stories about Jesus
Ezekiel 37:1-14 The hand of the Lord was upon
me. He brought me out by the Spirit of the Lord
and set me down in the middle of a valley, which was full of bones. 2He
had me pass through them and go all over among them. There were very many on
the valley floor, and they were very dry. 3He said to me, “Son of
man, can these dry bones live?” I answered, “Lord
God, you know.” 4Then he said to me, “Prophesy to these bones and
say to them, ‘Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord.’”
5This is what the Lord
God says to these bones. I am about to make breath enter you so that you will
live. 6I will attach tendons to you. I will put flesh back on you. I
will cover you with skin and put breath in you, and you will live. Then you
will know that I am the Lord.
7So I prophesied as I had been commanded, and as I was
prophesying there was a noise, a rattling, as the bones came together, one bone
connecting to another. 8As I watched, tendons were attached to them,
then flesh grew over them, and skin covered them. But there was no breath in
them.
9Then he said to me, “Prophesy to the wind. Prophesy, son
of man, and say to the wind that this is what the Lord God says. From the four winds, come, O wind, and
breathe into these slain so that they may live.”
10So I prophesied as he commanded me. Breath entered them,
and they came back to life. They stood on their feet, a very, very large army.
11Then he said to me, “Son of man, these bones are the
whole house of Israel. They are saying, ‘Our bones are dried up. Our hope is
lost. We have been completely cut off.’ 12Therefore, prophesy and
say to them that this is what the Lord
God says. My people, I am going to open your graves and raise you up from your
graves and bring you back to the soil of Israel. 13Then you will
know that I am the Lord, when I
open your graves and raise you up from your graves, O my people. 14I
will put my Spirit in you, and you will live. I will settle you on your own
land, and you will know that I, the Lord,
have spoken, and I have done it, declares the Lord.”
“Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the
knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.” (2 Peter 1:2, EHV)
The Lord of life and death called my grandmother
home to heaven four years ago. I’ll admit that I was not very pleased with the
Catholic priest’s homily at my grandmother’s funeral. He said lots of pleasant
things about my grandmother in his homily – how she was the mother of seven
children and married to a World War II hero. He told nice stories and then one
of my relatives read a sappy poem.
The one thing that was missing in the
priest’s homily was Jesus. He did not mention Jesus at all in his homily. Not
once.
The reason I was so upset was because
I am the oldest of eighteen grandchildren. We were all raised Lutheran or
Catholic. But very few of my cousins have continued in their Christian faith
now as adults. My relatives needed to hear sin and grace; Law and Gospel; that
they are sinners who are deserving of hell, but through faith in Jesus as their
Savior, they are given heaven. But, they didn’t hear any of that.
Being the pastor in the family, I was
asked to say the meal prayer following the funeral. Except, I didn’t ask for
God’s blessing on the food we were about to eat. Instead, I prayed a two-minute
sermon. I prayed, “Heavenly Father, we are grateful that you have taken Grandma
home to heaven. Being her grandchildren, we did not see her sins, but Grandpa
did, and you did, too. We thank you for sending your Son, Jesus, to die on the
cross for Grandma’s sins and rise from the grave to give her the eternal life
she is enjoying right now …” Then, I continued for another minute and a half.
My father came up to me after the prayer
and said, “My friend, Eric, and I had noticed that the priest didn’t mention
Jesus in his sermon. We were pretty upset by that. I guess you were upset by
that, too. At least everyone heard Jesus now.” I told him I was glad that
someone noticed.
Over my twenty years in the ministry,
I have preached over a hundred funeral sermons. Whenever I meet with a family
to plan a Christian funeral, I communicate to them that I’m not going to tell
lots of stories about the departed saint or read the obituary or have people
giving eulogies. I let them know that whether it is a private baptism, a chapel
devotion, a wedding, or a funeral, it is a worship service. That means the
prayers, hymns, Scripture readings and sermon focus on Jesus. It’s His story
I’m telling.
Years ago, I met with a family of one
of our members to plan their mother’s Christian funeral at our church. After
writing down their stories about mom for an hour, I was getting up to leave
when one of the daughters stopped me. She said, “Pastor, I know you have to
talk about Jesus and all that stuff. But, can you focus on these stories
instead.”
After I picked my jaw up off the floor
I replied, “No.”
A Christian funeral sermon is about
telling the story about how Jesus was in the life of the departed saint.
But, why is preaching God’s Word about
Jesus so important?
The Lord gives us a very clear answer
when He sets His prophet Ezekiel down in a valley littered with dry bones in
Ezekiel 37. This valley of bones was an illustration of the nation of Israel.
Israel was God’s special people; a people of His creation. Israel went to Egypt
as a family; they came out as a nation. God then filled the Promised Land of
Canaan with His chosen children.
But, over the centuries, the children
of Israel turned away from their heavenly Father, their life-giver. They
refused to listen to God’s Word. They disobeyed God’s commands. They turned to false
gods. The heavenly Father then disciplined His children by having them carried
into captivity into Babylon. This valley of bones visualized how Israel was dry
and dead. The Lord told Ezekiel, “Son of man, these bones are the whole house
of Israel. They are saying, ‘Our bones are dried up. Our hope is lost. We have
been completely cut off’ (Ezekiel 37:11)
Spanish painter, Francisco Collantes,
(1599-1656) painted “The Vision of Ezekiel.” It is a visual representation of
Ezekiel 37. The artwork appears to be a haunting painting of destruction.
Rather, it is a beautiful painting of resurrection.
The Lord said to Ezekiel: “Say this to [the nation of Israel], ‘This is what the
Sovereign Lord says: As surely as
I live, those who are left in the ruins will fall by the sword, those out in
the country I will give to the wild animals to be devoured, and those in
strongholds and caves will die of a plague. I will make the land a desolate waste, and her proud strength will
come to an end, and the mountains of Israel will become desolate so that
no one will cross them’” (Ezekiel 33:27-28).
Collantes showed the desolation of the
ruins in his painting. He showed the remains of imposing buildings that had
long fallen into disrepair. Columns of glory and strong walls had collapsed.
The Lord had reduced Israel to rubble. The sky is dark, dreary, and even
menacing over the ruins.
Everything appears ashen and gray. The
only real color in the painting is the prophet Ezekiel, in his blue robe and
brown cloak.
The Lord also told Ezekiel, “Prophesy
to these bones and say to them, ‘Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord’” (Ezekiel 37:4). Ezekiel preached
to the bones. The bones came rattling together. The bones were covered by
tendons, flesh, and skin (Ezekiel 37:7-8). Then the Lord told Ezekiel, “Prophesy
to the wind. Prophesy, son of man, and say to the wind that this is what the Lord God says. From the four winds,
come, O wind, and breathe into these slain so that they may live” (Ezekiel
37:9).
The breath of the Holy Spirit then
filled the bones with life. They stood on their feet, becoming a vast army of
the Lord (Ezekiel 37:10).
Francisco Collantes painted the Lord’s
prophet calling the dead to life. Collantes showed the bones assembling to
skeletons, flesh growing upon the bones, and forming people. The dead are
crawling out of their graves, protecting their eyes from the meager light in
the valley. Slowly, the army of the Lord rises to their feet.
This
is what happens when the word of the Lord is preached. It can be in a chapel
devotion, a hospital visit, a shut-in call, a Sunday worship service or a
wedding or funeral sermon. The people who are hearing God’s Word are dry, dusty
bones. We are born dead in sin. We just try to cover up our skeletons with
makeup, wavy hair, long beards, and nice clothing. But, underneath, we are
still skeletons. There is nothing deader than bleached white bones.
We
are in this dark valley all the time. We may think we are alive. We may live in
denial of Death. We may try to convince ourselves that we can have a life apart
of the Word and the Spirit. But, in the end, we are dead. Dead in our sin. Dead
in our unbelief. Dead in our greed, lust, and idolatry. The curse spoken to
Adam and Eve is spoken over us, as well: “For dust you are and to dust you will
return” (Genesis 3:19).
We
feel so dried up in our lives because we are not constantly and consistently
hearing the Word of the Lord and being filled with the Holy Spirit. Our worship
becomes irregular. Our Bible reading becomes infrequent. Our prayer life
becomes sporadic. Our attendance at the Lord’s Supper becomes routine. Our
excitement at receiving absolution becomes paltry. Our remembrance of our
Baptism becomes non-existent.
Without
God’s Word and the breath of the Holy Spirit, we return to our inborn nature of
death and unbelief. Sin makes us dry bones.
The
only thing that can make us alive is the Word of God and the breath of the Holy
Spirit.
We
call the Holy Spirit “The Lord and Giver of Life” in the Nicene Creed.
The
Lord spoke and dug His hands in the dirt. The Holy Spirit breathed life into a
lump of clay and Adam was alive!
The
Lord spoke in the valley of dry bones. The Holy Spirit breathed life into dry
bones and turned them into a vast army for the Lord!
The
Lord spoke at Pentecost. The Holy Spirit breathed life into three thousand
unbelievers who were baptized and converted into Christians!
The
words of God are spirit and they are life. The bones hear and obey. They come
together. Bone to bone. Flesh and tendons and skin. And then the breath, the
wind, the Spirit of God, blows and they stand up and live. Bones come to life!
The bones of Israel. The bones of the baby baptized at the font. The bones of
the teenager wracked with guilt and depression. The bones of the husband who
has cheated on his wife. The bones of the convict in prison. The bones of the
grandmother in the nursing home.
All
of them can be brought from death, dryness, and unbelief to live, vibrancy and
faith. This only happens through the Word of the Lord. That’s because the Word
of the Lord is always and only about Jesus. That Word creates what it commands.
It does what it says. It produces what it proclaims.
One
of my big pet peeves is when I finish preaching for a Christian funeral, the
funeral director says to the congregation, “Thank you for coming today to celebrate
so-an-so’s life.”
No!
This is not a celebration of the saint’s life! This is a celebration of Jesus
Christ in that saint’s life!
Jesus
is the One who brought her from death to life and unbelief to faith in her
Baptism. Jesus is the One kept her faith alive and growing through Word and
Sacrament. Jesus is the One who paid for her sins and grants her forgiveness in
absolution. Jesus is the One who died on the cross to rescue her from life in
hell. Jesus is the One who rose from the dead to grant her eternal life in His
heaven. Jesus is the One whom this saint is now worshiping for eternity around
His throne.
Stories
about a departed saint are good. Those stories can be told at the meal after
the Christian funeral. Anybody can tell those stories. But, the Christian
Church and her pastors are uniquely called and qualified to be the ones who
tell the story about Jesus in the life of the departed saint. That happens in
the funeral sermon.
Jesus
is the One who took my grandmother’s dry bones and brought her to life and
faith. Jesus is the One who breathes His Holy Spirit on you in absolution, Word
and Sacrament, to keep you alive in the faith. Jesus is the One who has turned
your dry, bleached bones into a vast and living army for the Lord.
That
happens only when the stories are all about Jesus. Amen.
“Now to the King eternal, to the immortal,
invisible, only God, be honor and glory forever and ever. Amen.” (1
Timothy 1:17, EHV)
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