Intro
“Now, if I told you once, I told you a thousand times.”  A dressing-down 
entwines itself in those words.  Often, we scold children through this warning, 
with an explanation trailing behind.  “Don’t play in the street.”  “Do your 
homework before turning on the TV.”  The overstatement of “1,000” clatters out 
the parent’s frustration.

Main Body
From afar, the exaggeration staggers with irrationality, announcing to all the 
futile interaction with your kids.  For they aren’t responding, not as you 
expect.  So, you crank up the volume, repeat yourself, or lash out with this 
over-the-top phrase.  Other times, you may say something, not meant to hurt, 
but the other person becomes upset.  How strange.  Feeble words at one time; at 
another, words packed with too much potency, with an unintended force you did 
not foresee.

The words of God also come with power.  Often more than we might realize.  
Consider this—you trust in Jesus for life never-ending.  Such faith can only 
exist because of the life-granting gift carried and contained in words, which 
bring to birth a belief in Christ.  “For faith comes from hearing, but hearing 
the Word of Christ” (Romans 10:17).

Didn’t Isaiah tell us as much?  The Lord’s Word comes with the strength to 
accomplish what He desires.  Long ago, beyond what any of our minds can 
recollect, the almighty Creator called the cosmos into existence from nothing.  
How?  Through words.  

The Old Testament proclaims this.  “In the beginning, God said” (Genesis 1).  
Later, “Gaze at the heavens and earth and what is in them.  Recognize God made 
them out of nothing” (2 Maccabees 7:28).  The book of Hebrews teaches the same. 
 “By faith, we understand the Word of God created the universe” (Hebrews 11:3).

An artist must use something preexisting to produce, like paint or canvas.  Not 
so with God.  “Be light,” and brightness broke into the darkness!  The origin 
of day and night, the creation of time, the first day.  Soon, the dry land 
appeared, and the waters formed into oceans brought about by words from God. 

Don’t miss the wordplay.  Through words (plural), God created, but also with 
His Word (singular).  The words and the Word.  Both intertwine themselves in 
the Almighty’s creational commotion, with God calling into being what did not 
exist moments earlier.

The first reading for today described God’s Word to be like rain or snow.  The 
rain falls and soaks the earth, as God intends, and the crops grow.  The wet 
droplets do what they are meant to do—what God sends them to do.  Such is His 
Word, fulfilling His purposes.

Let’s not forget the One who came, in His humanity, by spoken words—Jesus!  Not 
by any man’s might or seed did the virgin mother conceive.  The angel’s word, 
with the Spirit’s power, gave to Mary her Child, her flower.  The Word did the 
doing, as Mary’s response reveals.  “Let everything be according to your Word” 
(Luke 1:38). 

So, Jesus formed in His mother’s womb, developing, awaiting His birth.  The 
Son, who is God, grows into a man, whom the Father sent to carry out His will.  
The enfleshed One from all glory did what He came to do, take our brokenness 
into Himself to provide us a permanent restoration.  The Lord’s Word did not 
return to the Father empty.

In the one paradise, which flourished on earth, our first parents chose the lie 
over the truth and ate of the forbidden tree.  Now death is no more a stranger 
because of what we inherited from Adam, after the fall into sin (Genesis 2:17). 
 “By nature, we are destined for wrath” and “the wages of sin are death” 
(Ephesians 2:3, Romans 6:23). 

Inside each of us is a broken disposition, which contaminates everything we do. 
 Ponder the Messiah’s words.  “From the heart [from what originates within us], 
come evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, sexual immoralities, thefts, false 
testimonies, and slander” (Matthew 5:19).  Those wounding words we speak, the 
juicy tidbits of gossip, every evil thought and action, the hate, envy, and 
greed all arise from our fallen nature. 

So, Jesus bent down to bear all those injustices in His body on the cross.  For 
the God in bone and of blood will not go back empty-handed.  No, He will bring 
us wayward mortals in tow behind Him, “so we too can walk in newness of life” 
(Romans 6:4).

The Father’s words and the Word, Jesus, are inseparable.  So, based on the 
plans of God, Jesus arose from death.  The grave is now dust and ashes, 
stripped of its might because of Christ’s victory.  What our Lord did, and 
does, carries on.  For He didn’t only rescue us as a man but also as God, which 
is why the Word prevails evermore.

The Word of God still comes with authority, doing what God sends Him out to do. 
 For the Incarnate Word didn’t descend from heaven, to wear our robe of 
physical flesh, to redeem you by His death, to disappear.  An absent God does 
not deliver.  No, but since He perseveres forever, He can still come to visit 
His people and save them.  The alternative is to try saving ourselves, which is 
impossible and will never last!

So, this day, the Word sounds forth, “I baptize you,” “I absolve you,” “Eat and 
drink, for this is my Body and Blood.”  The risen Word calls belief into being 
by the breath of the Spirit.  The Gospel brings life like a spring shower 
germinates the seed and gives bloom to the blossom.  By what Jesus still does, 
He liberates us from what we deserve—everlasting damnation.

The Word never ceases, containing the vigor to do what He speaks.  So, baptism 
saves, being born anew, through the Word of God, by Jesus and His saving work.  
With His Word, God pardons and acquits you.  Through the preached Word, which 
is Jesus voiced into your ears, God the Father, in the Holy Spirit, creates and 
sustains faith.  The pastor’s words, “I forgive you,” can only be true because 
our Savior fills them with His power.

The Lord speaks, and sins vanish.  Now flung far away, forever from the Father, 
they sink into the sea of forgetfulness.  Divine words move molecules of air, 
from breath, en-Spirited to do the doing.  The words can only do what they say 
because Christ Jesus conveys His authority in them.  For if you or I don’t 
speak what our Lord gives us to say, we only breathe out hot air and exhausted 
vapor.

Like Jacob wrestling with God at the Jabbok River, five centuries ago, a German 
monk also grappled with the Word.  What does Scripture mean by “the 
righteousness of God”?  In his scuffle with the written Word, Luther came to 
understand the holiness of God came from God, gifted to the unrighteous sinner. 
 All heaven now opened as he sat on the cloaca, the outhouse, next to the 
tower.  The life with God comes in grace, given to you.  To search for anything 
else will only fail you and forsake you.

Such blessed righteousness is a gift from God because of His Son.  The Father’s 
Son, the Word, is the embodiment of sinlessness, which He exchanges to us in 
His death for all.  So what—I can’t run to where Jesus died to retrieve what He 
grants to us! 

Listen to what Jesus told the Pharisees, “You search the scriptures.  For you 
think you will find eternal life in them.  No, they testify of me” (John 5:39). 
 The Bible, which we call “the Word of God,” is the Word because Jesus is 
residing in those words.  Without Jesus, the sacred text becomes meaningless, a 
chasing after the wind.

The sermon is nothing but a vehicle to carry Christ, which, as Jesus says, is 
to bring someone into the forgiveness of sins (Luke 24:27).  Otherwise, the 
pastor is being unfaithful and preaching something else. 

Don’t fumble around trying to find Jesus inside yourself, for you will uncover 
a sinful creature.  Thank the Lord you don’t need to.  For Jesus tells you 
where to find Him—where the Word, Jesus, touches your eardrums and feeds you 
with Himself in His Supper.  Go anywhere else, and you are left unsure and 
doubting.

The Reformation’s legacy continues only because the Word of the Lord is 
eternal.  So, when you receive Jesus, where He pledges to come to you, you take 
in what He gives—life and salvation, which takes you into eternity.  

Though now famous, Luther refused to take credit for what took place or 
bringing back to mind the gift of our redemption.  With a singular focus on the 
Word, he spurned the spotlight, for only Christ mattered.  Listen to Luther’s 
quip.  “With Philip Melanchthon or Amsdorf, I slept or drank beer.  The Word of 
God did everything, and I did nothing.”

The Word of God did everything—500 years ago and also today.  Trust Jesus, the 
Word of God, for He is eternal, which means what He does is also eternal.  
Trust the enlivening Word, who promises mercy and life because He is the Word 
made flesh, who doesn’t return to heaven barren and unfulfilled. 

Words from our epistle reading became a slogan during the Reformation.  The 
Latin is Verbum Domini Manet in Aeternum.  The initials spell out, “VDMA.”  In 
the 1500s, people sewed those letters on clothing, flags, and banners, etching 
them on swords and the armor of war horses.  So what do those words mean?  “The 
Word of the Lord endures forever.” 

So, who or what is this Word?  The Apostle Peter answers.  “This Word is the 
Gospel, which we proclaimed to you.”  The spoken word is to deliver the Word, 
Jesus.

Final
The Word of Jesus, from Jesus, does the doing.  The mighty Word of God cleaves 
the gloom of our corruption and death, speaking our righteousness into being.  
“Fear not,” our Lord declares.  “All your sins are gone, washed away by the 
water and Word.  Though the heavens and earth perish, not one letter of my Word 
ever will.  Remember, as I am eternal, so will you one day be.”  Amen.
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