Fix your eyes on Jesus
Hebrews 12:1-2
Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us
get rid of every burden and the sin that so easily ensnares us, and let us run
with patient endurance the race that is laid out for us. 2 Let
us keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, who is the author of our faith and the one who
brings it to its goal. In view of the joy set before him, he endured the cross,
disregarding its shame, and has taken his seat at the right hand of God’s
throne.
May these words be
spoken by us as we run the race toward heaven: “I consider my life as of no
great value to me, so that I may finish my race and the ministry I
received from the Lord Jesus—to testify to the gospel of God’s grace.” Amen.
Acts 20:24
My daughters have run cross country in the fall for WLS and
Shoreland. Although they are busy playing soccer in the spring, they have also run
for the track teams at WLS and Shoreland. As they are in training or running
their races, they have heard their track and cross country coaches giving them
advice.
“Look forward, not down.”
“Run with a loose face and loose hands.”
“Positive thoughts.”
“Long strides.”
“On your toes.”
Mr. Patterson tells the runners in training, “Lancers eat
hills for breakfast!”
I gave the same piece of advice to Lucy at the beginning of
our soccer practices and to Caleb before her ran in the Shoreland track meet.
My advice was, “Run like your mom. Not like your dad.”
God’s holy writer gave this piece of running advice to the
Hebrew Christians he was coaching: “Since we are surrounded by such a great
cloud of witnesses, let us get rid of every burden and the sin that so easily
ensnares us, and let us run with patient endurance the race that is laid out
for us. Let us keep our eyes fixed on Jesus, who is the
author of our faith and the one who brings it to its goal. In view of the joy
set before him, he endured the cross, disregarding its shame, and has taken his
seat at the right hand of God’s throne.”
Whether you are graduating from eighth grade and moving on to
high school or graduated high school and moving onto college or the work force
or you are in the work force or a stay-at-home parent or blessed to be retired,
you are running the race to heaven.
The Hebrews coach first piece of advice is, “Get rid of every
burden.” Runners race in light clothing. They don’t want heavy sweatshirts or
pants or shoes. Every ounce will slow them down and hold them back.
“Let us get rid of every burden and the sin that so easily
ensnares us.” Your laziness with your homework, your snotty attitude toward
your teachers, your short temper with your children, your failure to put God
first in your life in all things – these are all sins that weigh you down and so
easily ensnare you. If you keep holding onto these worthless weights, you may
not be able to finish the race.
Lay aside these sins. Repent and remove these burdens.
Anything that stops you from running the Christian race needs to be thrown
away.
The Hebrews coach tells you, “God has surrounded us with a
great cloud of witnesses as we run our race.” I know from experience that it is
much easier to run with others. If I’m by myself, I won’t push myself. I will
run slower. I might walk when I no one can see me. Worst of all, if I don’t
have a running partner, I probably won’t run at all.
Run with a crowd of Christians – both past and present. You
are running with Abraham who trusted God’s promises; Moses who led God’s
people; Ruth who left her heathen people behind to follow her God-fearing
family; Daniel who prayed even when his prayers were outlawed; David who faced
a giant; Mary who accepted an unbelievable blessing. You are running with
countless Christians who have been thrown in jail for their faith, persecuted
for their Christianity, or even killed because they would not deny Jesus as
their Savior.
Find other strong Christians like these to run with. Do you
know where to find other Christians like that? At WLS. At Shoreland. At your
WELS campus ministry in college. At church.
Parents, it isn’t enough to only send your children to a
Christian school 5 days a week for 9 months. You need to surround your children
with Sunday School teachers, older mentors who take an interest in your child’s
race of faith, friends their age at church who they can pray with and ask
questions of, fellow church members to enjoy singing and working alongside of,
and a pastor who they can confide in and trust.
One of the great blessings of being a team athlete in high
school is team meals before a game or meet. The team, coaches and host parents
bond as they talk and eat. As Christians, we bond as we talk, listen and eat
together in worship. No matter our age, we need to be surrounded by this great
cloud of witnesses in worship. Together we tell God our sins that ensnare us
and ask him to remove everything that burdens us. We listen as the pastor announces
that we are forgiven, freed and unburdened through Jesus. We share together the
meal of the Bread of life and the Water of life which is the Word of God
applied directly to our lives – like we are doing right now.
We have a long and difficult journey ahead of us until we
finally reach heaven. Our Hebrew coach encourages us, “Let us run with patient
endurance the race that is laid out for us.”
Watching the Lutheran grade school track meet two weeks ago,
I saw a number of runners in the long-distance races start out fast but peter
out in the middle. It isn’t how you start the race that’s important. Rather, it
is important how you finish the race.
Do you know people who have dropped out of the race?
People with whom you were confirmed, but you don’t see in
church anymore. Dads who stayed home while mom took you to church as kids.
College students who tasted freedom for the first time and gave up the freedom
from sin and the devil Jesus had won for them. WLS or Shoreland students who
think that passively sitting to hear God’s Word in school is the same as going
to actively worship God in church.
How many of you have dropped out of the race? You are sending
your child to WLS for some Christian morality, but God’s Word has no influence
on your life. You encourage your children to baptize your grandbabies, but you
don’t cherish your own baptismal grace. You are protective, making sure your
children come home safely, but you don’t have that same protective care in
making sure your children get safely home to heaven.
We get tired. We get worn out. We are busy. The race is long.
It is hard. It is demanding.
WLS students, eighth graders, high school and college
students, adults of all ages – don’t be dropouts. God, through his Son Jesus,
gives you the strength to keep running.
Jesus is with you. He is running stride for stride with you.
He is there to lift you up when you fall. He carries your burdens. He removes
your sins. He speaks words of encouragement to your ears. He washes you clean
in his baptismal waters. He feeds you with his body and blood. He ushers you
toward the finish line of heaven.
Your Hebrew coach gives one final piece of running advice,
which also happens to be the theme for WLS this year, is, “Fix your eyes on
Jesus.” This is why you fix your eyes on Jesus. “He endured the cross,
disregarding its shame, and has taken his seat at the right hand of God’s
throne.”
As you run the Christian race, don’t look down; don’t look
back; don’t be tempted by what is around you; fix your eyes on Jesus. Instead
of looking around at the damage your sins caused, fix your eyes on Jesus who endured
the shame of the cross to pay for those sins and make you right with God.
Instead of looking around at the temporary joys and sorrows this world offers,
fix your eyes on Jesus who rose from the dead to give you the promise of
eternal life. Don’t look back at your past failings or be afraid of what the
future has in store for you. Instead, fix your eyes on what Jesus has
accomplished in the past through his birth, life, death, resurrection and
ascension. Fix your eyes on Jesus knowing that what he accomplished in the past
has secured your eternal future. Instead of worrying about the future and
things out of your control, fix your eyes on Jesus who rules all things and has
everything under his control. Jesus ascended into heaven forty days after his
resurrection. He sits at God’s right hand in a position of power and authority.
He rules over the events of this world for the sake of his followers.
It is so easy to become fixated on the things of this life. Winning
or not winning a championship. Getting or not getting good grades. Getting or
not getting a promotion. Getting or being cured of cancer. Graduating today and
then realizing that you still have eight more years before you graduate from
college. It is so easy to become fixated on the things and events of this
world.
These things, whether good or bad, can cause us to lose our
focus, stumble and drop out of the race.
Listen to the advice of the Hebrews coach. 1) Get rid of
every burden. 2) Run with the Christian crowd. 3) Run with patient endurance.
4) And most importantly, do all of this while you keep your eyes fixed on
Jesus. Amen.
May these words be
spoken by us as we finish the race: “I have fought the good fight; I have finished
the race; I have kept the faith.” Amen. 2 Timothy 4:7
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