"The Fruits of Our Lord’s Redemption Are Manifest in Us"
Maundy Thursday
March 24, 2016
John 13:1–15

With these words in the Collect for Maundy Thursday we are shown what
the Lord’s Supper is: “O Lord, in this wondrous Sacrament You have
left us a remembrance of Your passion.” What makes the Lord’s Supper a
wondrous Sacrament? In giving us His Supper, how is it that He has
left us a remembrance of His passion?

The wording of the Collect picks up on the language of the Old
Testament reading: “This day shall be for you a memorial day, and you
shall keep it as a feast to the Lord; throughout your generations, as
a statute forever, you shall keep it as a feast.” This memorial day,
this feast to the Lord, was to be in celebration of the Lord’s
deliverance of His people. He would strike down their enemies but
preserve them. The angel of death would pass through the land of Egypt
smiting the firstborn of each household. When he came to homes that
had painted on the doorposts the blood of a lamb that was slaughtered,
the angel would pass over that home. Celebrating this festival each
year would bring remembrance to them that their God was the one who
delivered them.

Fast-forward to Jesus celebrating this very festival with His
disciples, as John tells us in the Gospel reading. Paul describes what
happened in the Epistle reading: “The Lord Jesus on the night when He
was betrayed took bread, and when He had given thanks, He broke it,
and said, ‘This is My body which is for you. Do this in remembrance of
Me.’ In the same way also He took the cup, after supper, saying, ‘This
cup is the new covenant in My blood. Do this, as often as you drink
it, in remembrance of Me.’”

What Jesus did was take the memorial meal of the Passover and turn it
into a memorial meal of His Passion. He instituted a new feast, the
wondrous Sacrament of His body and blood. In the Passover, the
Israelites were to eat the flesh of the lamb they slaughtered. In the
Meal the Lord instituted they were to eat and drink the very body and
blood of Jesus. No longer would a lamb’s flesh be slain, He was the
Lamb of God who would be slain on the next day.

It’s no wonder Paul spoke of partaking of this Feast in the way he
did. “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord
in an unworthy manner will be guilty concerning the body and blood of
the Lord. Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread
and drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without
discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself.” When one
partakes of the bread of this Meal and drinks of the cup of this Meal
they are partaking of the very body and blood of the Lord Himself. He
gives Himself to us in this wondrous Sacrament, and if we partake of
it in an unworthy manner, we will be guilty of the Lord’s body and
blood and eat and drink judgment on ourselves.

The Lord’s Supper is most definitely a great mystery. It is a wondrous
Sacrament. It is beyond our ability to comprehend how in bread and
wine our Lord gives us His body to eat and His blood to drink. But by
faith given us by the Holy Spirit we don’t try to solve the mystery
but rather, as Paul says in the Epistle reading, “For as often as you
eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until
He comes.” This proclamation springs not from rational understanding
but rejoicing that what our Lord gave over on the cross is given to us
in His Holy Supper.

On the cross His body was delivered into death. His blood was shed for
our eternal redemption. That was the great miracle and mystery. But He
continues the miracle and mystery in His Holy Supper. That is why we
prayed as we did in the Collect, “Grant that we may so receive the
sacred mystery of Your body and blood.” You can’t fully get a handle
on a sacred mystery. We shouldn’t want to!

When two people fall in love, do they want to dissect everything about
their relationship, break all the details down, so that they have a
solid, rational understanding of the love they share? Or do they
rather see that the benefits of their love exceed comprehending it
rationally? Love is given and received, not dissected apart. The
sacred mystery of our Lord’s body and blood is something, as we prayed
in the Collect, that we receive. It is not something we bring about.
Our Lord brings it about. He gives, we receive. He gives His body to
eat and blood to drink, we eat and drink.

He not only is the host, He is the servant. He not only welcomes us to
His Table, He serves us. John says in the Gospel reading that Jesus
got up from the table and put a towel around Himself and began washing
His disciples’ feet. This task was not the task of the host. It was
the task of the slave. In girding Himself with a towel He was showing
that He is the master who doesn’t lord it over us but rather serves
us. He came not to be served but to serve.

He began washing their feet, which is a yucky job. They didn’t wear
socks and shoes in those days. And they didn’t walk around on pavement
all day either. The walkways were dusty and dirty and who knows what
kind of mess was worked into the dirt from various animals. It was
definitely a slave’s job. But this is exactly what Jesus came to do.
He came to serve. He came to wash us clean.

Peter, often getting ahead of himself, saw the indignity of this and
began correcting Jesus. Jesus, on the other hand, ever patient, told
him that he didn’t understand what was going on now but that he would
in time. Yeah, that was true, Peter didn’t understand it, and he
didn’t want to. “Lord, you will never wash my feet!” Jesus expressed
to him that it was the only way. Only Jesus, the Lord, could serve
them in the way they truly needed. And so Jesus said, “If I do not
wash you, you have no part in Me.” Well, in that case, Peter realized,
I want as much washing from Jesus as I can get! “Lord, not only my
feet, but also my head and my hands!”

But Jesus was not doing this simply to clean their feet. He was there
to serve. To cleanse them of their sin. Foot washing wouldn’t do that.
His Holy Supper would. That is why He has given us this wondrous
Sacrament. In giving us His body and blood we are cleansed throughout,
in body and soul.

And even so, with Christ it’s never enough just to give and leave it
at that. There’s always more to the mystery and the wonder. We prayed
in the Collect that our Lord would grant that we may so receive the
sacred mystery of His body and blood, that the fruits of His
redemption may continually be manifest in us. There is the redemption
and then there is also what results from that—the fruits of the
redemption. He doesn’t simply redeem us, the fruits of His redemption
are made known through us.

Jesus bent down and washed His disciples’ feet. If He, their Lord and
master, served them in such a way, then they too would serve others.
Jesus does not come to us to wash our feet. But He does come to us in
bread and wine. In doing so He gives us the sacred and wondrous
redemption He brought about on the cross. And in redeeming us He
brings about fruit in us which is a blessings to others.

We cannot give as our Lord gives, even in our good intentions we are
tainted in sin. But God, having given us His Son in His Holy Meal,
will produce in us the fruits of His redemption. He serves us so that
we serve others. We are forgiven so that we forgive others. As we pray
in the Post-Communion Collect, we give thanks to our Lord who has
refreshed us through this salutary gift, and implore Him that of His
mercy He would strengthen us through the same in faith toward Him and
in fervent love toward one another. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
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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