"What If You Were…"
Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost
August 8, 2010
Luke 12:22-40

What if you were to not be anxious about your life? What if you were
not so consumed with what you will eat, or if you’ll have enough money
to take care of yourself? What if you were to live as if life is more
than food, and the body more than clothing? What if you were to
consider the ravens, that they neither sow nor reap, they have neither
storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them? What if you were to
believe wholeheartedly that you are much more valuable than the birds?
What if you were to live without undue care for the things you need in
this life? If you were to believe and actually live as knowing that
worry cannot add a single hour to your life? What if you were to
actually live with the conviction that if you are not able to do as
small a thing as that, then there is no reason to be anxious about the
rest? What if you were to consider the flowers of the field, how they
grow; that they neither toil nor spin, and yet are more spectacular
than even the glory of Solomon? And what if you were to realize and
actually give no thought otherwise that if God so clothes the grass,
which is alive in the field today, and tomorrow is thrown into the
oven, how much more will He clothe you?

What if you were to hear Jesus’ words to the disciples, “O you of
little faith!” and take them to heart, acknowledging that you, too,
are of little faith? What if you were to admit that it’s true, that
you are more concerned than you should be about having enough to eat
and that you worry that you might not have enough if things get worse?
What if you were to simply realize that these are the things the
nations of the world seek after but that your Heavenly Father knows
that you need them? What if, instead, you were to seek His kingdom?
What if, instead, you were to live in the simple comfort and trust
that the things you need will be added to you?

What if you were to actually have no fear. Not like those bumper
stickers and T-shirts you see that say No Fear. What if you were
literally to have no fear for your life. That no matter what happened
to you you would rest secure in knowing that you are in God’s care.
That He is your Shepherd. That it is your Father’s good pleasure to
give you the Kingdom. That when all is said and done you are the
recipient of the eternal Kingdom of God Himself. That whether you have
a lot or a little, you have all things in the eternal God who has
given you His Son.

What if you were to actually sell your possessions, as Jesus says, and
give to the needy? What if you were to actually live in such a way
where it doesn’t matter what you want or need or have? Where your
concern was with others and not yourself? What if you were to provide
yourself not with the things you need in this life but with a treasure
in heaven that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth
destroys? What if you were to wake up to the reality that where your
treasure is, there will your heart be also?

What if, instead of being so focused on what you need and want you
were to dress for action and keep your lamps burning, and be like men
who are waiting for their master to come home from the wedding feast,
so that they may open the door to him at once when he comes and
knocks? If you were so blessed as a servant whom the master finds
awake when he comes? What if in those times where it doesn’t seem you
have enough or there’s more that you’d like and you’re not content,
that you were to ponder the reality, the truth, that your Lord will
dress Himself for service and invite you to recline at table, and will
come and serve you?

What if these things were really true? What if you lived this way?
Thought this way? Acted this way? Really believed it? What if nothing
were so important to you as what your Lord gives you? What if you
really did live as if He will come back at any moment? That you lived
at the ready, knowing you are blessed simply because He has called you
to stay on the watch for His return in glory?

Now, what if you were to take all these questions and ask one more?
What if you were to take it on faith that these are not what ifs, but
rather that this is who you really are? You would think, well, it
can’t be, because I don’t live this way all the time. I am anxious
about the things in my life. I’m battling illness, difficult
relatives, addictions, depression, a hectic schedule. I’m barely
making it through each day, and you want me to think about eternity?
God may think more of me, but I see myself for who I really am. I fall
short of what He has called me to. I don’t deserve the Kingdom He has
promised me. I’m not worthy of being in His eternal Kingdom now.

And this proves that it’s true. That you are exactly what Christ has
called you to be. Because he doesn’t hold out a carrot and motivate
you to run after it. He gives you all that is His. He welcomes you
into His palatial estate of grace. He rains down in your life favor
that washes away despair and fear and hopelessness.

So why do you still feel those things at times? Or even a lot of the
time? Because His perfect peace and grace doesn’t empty your life of
difficulty and sin. It is through those challenges, and trials, and
temptations that your Lord tears you down so that He may lift you up.
If you are content because you have everything you need in this life
then why would you look to God for help? It is when we are without
those things we need and want that we look to God for what we truly
need.

That you are able to see that you fall short of God’s call to you to
rely solely on Him shows you that His grace is sufficient for you.
Otherwise you would not see your need for God and His grace and
forgiveness and salvation. Instead of being anxious, rejoice. Instead
of worrying, give thanks. Instead of being afraid, take heart, your
Lord has given you the Kingdom. He dresses Himself for service and
invites you to dine at His Table. Instead of wondering where you’ll
find the strength to carry on, rest in the gift He gives you at this
Table often, His very Body and Blood. In other words, He gives you
Himself.

You know how it pleased your Heavenly Father to give you the Kingdom?
He gave His Son. There on the cross you see God giving His Kingdom to
the world. You know how the Holy Spirit actually delivers this Kingdom
to you, personally? Here at the Table of your Lord. Here at the font,
in Holy Baptism. When you were washed with the waters of Baptism you
were given the Kingdom. Your Lord dressed Himself for service and gave
you all His grace, mercy, and peace He secured in His suffering,
death, and resurrection.

Next weekend, some of us in our congregation are going to be at our
annual congregational retreat. The theme is “Be Who You Are.” The
theme verse is “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new
creation,” from 2 Corinthians 5:17 (ESV). A retreat is a good
opportunity to get away from it all. To be in a different setting, to
have some time to ponder the blessings of God in your life where
you’re away from the daily pressures of life. But what your Lord calls
you to in today’s Gospel reading is a daily renewal. A daily walking
in faith. A daily living out of the new creation He has given you in
Baptism. When anxiety runs high, when worry overwhelms you, remember
who you are. Be who you are. You are a new creation in Christ. It has
pleased your Heavenly Father to give you the Kingdom. Your Lord has
dressed Himself for service and serves you daily with all His grace
and blessing. Seek His Kingdom. Everything else you need will be added
unto you.
What if it were true that you could be as your Lord has called you to
be? What if you were to be as your Lord describes? What if you were to
not ask the question but rather rest in faith in Him? In the promise
He has declared to you: it is true. You are a new creation. It is no
longer you who live but Christ who lives in you.

Imagine a conversation among God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—going
something like this: What if We were to deliver fallen man by doing it
Ourselves? Not calling on them to make it happen. But delivering to
them forgiveness, life, and salvation. What if it pleased Us to simply
give them the Kingdom? What if we simply served them rather than
expecting them to accomplish salvation?

Well, we know no conversation ever took place, because we know the
heart of God: it is with us. It is with being gracious and merciful
and loving. No conversation was necessary, just simply God being God.
God being who He is. And that is how it is all true. That we are who
we are as God has called us to be. Because He has made it happen. He
has made it happen in what He has done: giving us His Kingdom in our
Baptism; blessing us eternally in Holy Communion; forgiving us in the
Gospel. As we go through life we at times have questions. Not God. He
has only answers. His answers are His promises. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
San Diego, California
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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