Intro
Today, we hear about a Jesus who doesn’t match what we usually think of Him.  
We see Jesus as our friend, even our buddy.  We see him as a pleasant, smiling 
person who never confronts anyone but is always there to confirm whatever you 
may be doing.  That’s the Jesus we want.  That’s also the Jesus of our popular 
culture. 

Today, we see--not the ever-smiling, non-offensive Jesus--but the muscular, 
testosterone-fueled Jesus burning with anger.  His neck veins are bulging, and 
His face is a burning red.  He has a whip of cords in His hand, throwing over 
tables, and dumping money boxes on the floor.  For a righteous zeal burns 
within Jesus, a zeal for the temple, His Father’s house. 

Main Body
This took place during Passover, a few days before Jesus’ death.  During 
Passover week, people would come to celebrate the Passover meal and make 
sacrifices.  Yet, the Law of God made allowances.  It said that if you had to 
travel a long way, you could buy your sacrificial animal in Jerusalem instead 
of bringing it with you. 

That’s what the animal sellers were doing in the Temple.  They were providing a 
service for out-of-town pilgrims.  The money changers were there to exchange 
secular currency for Temple currency.  They were both providing a service the 
people wanted. 

But Jesus saw more than that.  He saw God’s Old-Covenant believers turning His 
Father’s house into a marketplace.  They were turning the Temple, a place of 
worship, into a shopping mall.  Who knows; next they might even put in a coffee 
shop.  Even the pigeon sellers displeased Jesus.  For a pigeon was the 
sacrificial animal for the poor, those who could not afford a lamb.  Those 
merchants were preying on the poor for profit. 

Nothing irritates Jesus more than a faithless religion, a religion of 
bargaining, dealing, and making transactions in the name of God.  But don’t 
think the sacrifice sellers and the money changers only lived long ago.  
They’ve just changed their bill of goods to adapt to our modern, religious 
tastes.  Now, in the name of God, they sell motivation, purpose, 
self-improvement, and self-esteem.  

Behind it all, is the business of transaction, cutting deals with God.  It’s at 
the heart of all our human-created religions, the idea that we need to do 
something to get God to smile on us.  It’s the idea that God has done His part, 
but now He’s waiting for you to do yours.  

And so we invent our own self-made religions instead of following the religion 
of Jesus.  We invent little ways to bribe and butter-up to God, so He’ll 
overlook this mess we’ve made of our lives.  Old Testament Israel even did that 
with the sacrifices that God had given them.  They had disfigured God’s 
Old-Covenant religion with their own twist on it.  They turned those sacrifices 
into religious duties that they had to do to earn God’s favor.  

Did God start those sacrifices for that reason?  No, those sacrifices weren’t 
bribes.  Do you think you can bribe God with a sheep?  Do you think He needs a 
pigeon?  Do you think He needs a check in the offering plate?  Think again. 

God had put those Old-Covenant sacrifices to teach the Israelites how to live 
from the death of another.  That’s what they were supposed to learn: The blood 
of the animal stood in place for your life.  It was grim news for the lamb, but 
life-saving news for you.  It was God’s training ground in trust.  He was 
teaching His people to live from the forgiveness that He gave through those 
sacrifices.  God was teaching His people to look forward in faith to the Lamb 
of God--the Sacrifice--through whom He would grant eternal life.  

Instead, the Old Testament Israelites had turned the sacrifices into something 
they were doing for God.  (Is that not eerily like what some have done, turning 
baptism and the Lord’s Supper into what they are doing for God, even calling 
them “ordinances”?)

Of course, in the Old Covenant, you brought your sheep or bought one from the 
local sheep seller.  But the gift of forgiveness and life was what God granted 
through the blood of the Lamb.  It was a gift from God, not a work that you 
did.  Yes, it was a sacrifice--but even more of a Sacrament; for through that 
sacrifice, God granted His forgiveness to His people.  Wow, it almost sounds 
New Testament!

But the Israelites turned it all around.  They turned what God had intended to 
be His work for His people into their own work.  They turned a gift into a 
transaction where God did His part, and you had to do yours.  Isn’t that 
similar to what takes place in the so-called “Sinner’s Prayer”?  God won’t save 
you until you do you part of praying to Him?  Jesus overturns the tables on 
such self-made religion.  That wasn’t what God had set up.  No wonder Jesus 
burned in righteous anger. 

Think about what Jesus did.  He ran roughshod over the religion that His own 
people had twisted with their own traditions.  For Jesus was all about God’s 
religion and His traditions, not what people necessarily wanted.  He 
slaughtered the sacred cows of His day.  He broke the Sabbath rules.  After 
all, those rules had taken the focus off the Sabbath from being a day of 
rest--where God came to feed and strengthen His people--and turned it into a 
work.  Imagine turning rest into a work!  

Yes, Jesus took the distorted religion of His day, with its sacrifices, purity 
laws, and money changing, and He overturned the tables on it.  Jesus said, 
“Destroy this temple and, in three days, I will raise it up again.”  When He 
said that, He was talking about His death and resurrection.  But the people 
misunderstood Him and became outraged.  What’s this lunatic saying?  We’ve been 
working on this temple for 46 years, and He’s going to rebuild it in three 
days?  He’s insane!

Jesus was saying, “Enough of this nonsense.  Look to me.  Don’t look at this 
building, but to my flesh and blood.  I am the true Temple, where God is with 
you.  I am where true worship takes place, in my body.  I am where you meet 
God--in my crucified and risen flesh.”

For Jesus is the true Temple, the place of true worship, the supreme Sacrament. 
 His body--born of the Blessed Virgin Mary, crucified on Calvary, raised from 
the dead, and glorified at the right hand of the Father--that Jesus is the only 
place where God and humanity are at peace.  For only in Jesus, the true Temple, 
does God forgive and give us a foretaste of heaven on earth. 

Yes, Jesus is the true and perfect Temple.  He is where God locates His Name to 
save, where God comes to us, in whom we worship the Father in Spirit and Truth. 
 Where the body of Jesus is that’s where God forgives and blesses.  That’s 
where heaven kisses the earth, where the infinite meets the finite, and where 
eternity breaks into time.  

This God-with-us event takes place in the Divine Service.  For here, sinners 
are baptized into the Triune Name of God.  Here, sinners hear and receive the 
full forgiveness of their sins.  Here, sinners have Jesus preached into their 
ears and hearts.  Here, sinners eat and drink the body and blood of Christ. 

In the New Covenant, we gather as God’s people to be saved.  This happens every 
time we gather in His name and receive His gifts of life and salvation.  Yet, 
we aren’t saved simply by our gathering, as if our gathering is a work that 
somehow saves us.  If that were true, then we would be no different from the 
Pharisees in Jesus’ day.  

We must never turn our Sabbath, our time of rest, into a work.  Worship is 
about God doing His work for us and in us.  If it’s not, if worship becomes 
about what we do for God, then we are no better than the Israelites of old.  
For worship to be a Sabbath rest, God is the one who is doing the doing.  You 
are here to receive what God has to give you.  You do the doing the rest of the 
week, by serving God through serving others God has placed into your life. 

In Jesus’ death, resurrection, and ascension, God has done everything needed 
for your salvation.  That’s why we can’t take credit, for there is no sacrifice 
for sin except a dead Jesus on the cross.  The only way to God is through His 
Son, Jesus.  And there is no temple, except the Temple of Jesus’ body, the 
Temple into whom God the Holy Spirit has placed us. 

It’s as the Apostle Peter wrote.  “You, [the baptized] like living stones, are 
being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual 
sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 2:5).  The Church 
is God’s Temple built on the crucified-and-risen body of Jesus.  That’s who we 
are.  

Conclusion
Jesus said, “Destroy this temple, and, in three days, I will raise it up.”  And 
that’s exactly what happened.  Jesus was crucified.  The Temple of His body was 
destroyed in death.  And in three days, He rose from the dead.  

Death and resurrection is the way of God’s Temple, the body of Christ.  But 
it’s also your way.  For you and I will go down into death.  That’s what 
happens when we die.  But from there, Jesus, through the Holy Spirit He has 
sent, will raise us to eternal life.  

That’s why you have all the Temple you need.  You have the body of Jesus!  So, 
come forward now to receive that Body, for your forgiveness of sins, life, and 
salvation.  Amen. 


 --
 Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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