24th Sunday after Pentecost

Text: Matthew 25:1-13

 

+INJ+

 

For whatever reason, the hymn we just sang, “Wake, Awake, for Night is Flying,” has always stayed with me. It’s haunting, yet you can hear how the trumpets might sound in the background as a choir sings, and a bride makes her grand entrance.

 

However, as the hymn writer Phillip Nicolai wrote the hymn, life was not that joyful. But instead, an epidemic hit his town of 2,500 people, killing 1,400 of the townspeople. Nicolai recounted that some days, he’d performed nearly 30 funerals. By all accounts, this number is simply staggering to us. But it was the reality of those living in the tiny German town of Unna.

 

One would surmise, amid all the sickness, war, and death, these people must have prayed the closing words of Revelation quite often, “Amen, come Lord Jesus!” (Revelation 22:20)

 

And yet, that is precisely what the hymn “Wake, Awake, for Night is Flying,” and our Gospel reading today are about – the coming of the Bridegroom, Jesus Christ.

 

Like a “Mighty Fortress is Our God,” today’s hymn is a complete paraphrase of Holy Scripture, a marriage of hymn text and Scripture. It’s pretty beautiful.

 

Now, there is a twofold aspect to the Gospel today: the first is preparation, and the second is the ability to remain vigilant and ready.

 

It’s Veterans Day weekend, and for those of you who have served in the military, you know how painstaking the process of training and preparation for a mission can be. The details matter, and you train over and over and over again to ensure a state of readiness because the training and preparation before meeting the enemy can mean life and death.

 

In many ways, this is the same mentality we must have today as the Church.

 

And for this reason, today's text is not speaking of a strictly physical and mental alertness; instead, it speaks of a spiritual readiness.  A readiness that requires all hearts to be prepared for, as we confess in the Creed, the Bridegroom, “who will come again with glory to judge both the living and the dead.”  

 

While this daily and weekly confession should arouse us from our spiritual slumbers, we must ask if our ears actually hear the words of our lips. Do we take our confession of faith as seriously as we ought? Does our confession reveal hearts with the necessary oil of faith to await the Bridegroom, your Savior, Jesus Christ?

 

The twentieth-century German theologian Hermann Sasse wrote, "Is the foolishness of the virgins not also our foolishness? Have we not become tired and sleepy in the light of the Christian faith? Have we not let the lamps of hope, with which we would escort the coming of Christ, go out?"

 

The midnight cry that goes out will separate the wise from the foolish. This is all so disturbing because in the Gospel today, it’s not that the lamps of the wise were continually burning; they weren’t. Instead, it was that they were prepared and ready with the oil required to burn their lamps and greet the coming of the Bridegroom. While the foolish spurned preparation, they had been in the company of the wise and yet turned out very differently.

 

We often ask this question about brothers and sisters – how are they both from the same parents and mature so differently? How is it that we can come and hear the same Gospel, the same sermon, and receive the sacrament at the same rail, and yet, some of us will depart today, wise and prepared, while others will not take seriously the call to be ready for the day of death? Truthfully, I don't know; however, sin works in each of us differently; the devil and the world attack us in different ways, according to our individual weaknesses.

 

Now, while we all confess with the Church in the Creed, "And He will come again with glory to judge both the living and the dead," we must continually examine and ask ourselves, have we, as our brothers and sisters, grown weary as we journey through this life and world of sickness, war, and death? Have we permitted the flame of faith to grow dim as we travel to the grave? Have we begun to mechanically confess and gloss over the gravity of these words of the Creed?

 

To you, the cry comes out, awake! Prepare! The Bridegroom is near!

The time of judgment and the time of the Bridegroom's return draws nearer with each passing breath. We do not know the day or the hour. Yet, the words, "I never knew you," should frighten and arouse you to awake from slumber and confess your sins to God, confess your sins among one another, announce and extend forgiveness, receive forgiveness and the oil of faith that only God can provide to you.

So the time is at hand for us to prepare for the Bridegroom, to be like soldiers obsessing over the details of faith and practicing them over and over and over again.

How do we do this? First, by coming to the Divine Service and being mentally, physically, and spiritually involved. By making the liturgy our song, a song that abides in our hearts and leads us even to sing it throughout each week while we go about our daily tasks.

But also by getting back into the Small Catechism. No, the Catechism is not just for kids; it's for all of us. In fact, it’s the most basic form of preparation and training of the Christian faith that we cannot outgrow. Instead, through careful repetition of the catechism and liturgy alike, the lamp of faith continues to receive the oil needed for young and old alike.

Why? Because repetition and preparation are the difference between life and death. Of possessing the oil of faith or hearing the Bridegroom pronounce to you as the door to the eternal marriage feast closes, “Truly, I say to you, I do not know you.”

On the last day, age will make no difference; intellect will make no difference, only faith. So, prepare.

 

Because while we do not know the day or the hour, we do know Christ Jesus is coming. This is what all the Gospels are leading to at the end of the Church Year, the return of Christ Jesus. So let us hear His call today to prepare and make ready our hearts for His return.

 

Now, I get it, for some these readings always seem down and gloomy, but shifting back to our hymn, “Wake, Awake, for Night is Flying,” did you notice how we sang in the first stanza, "The watchmen on the heights are crying." But, in the second stanza, the watchmen break forth in joy as we sang, "Zion hears the watchmen singing…." Why is this important? Because the watchmen of old never sang to announce an arrival, good or bad, into their town or village, they shouted! But, the news of this Bridegroom is too exciting not to sing; they cannot help themselves.

 

As the days of life grow shorter and darker, as you approach the day of your death, remember the joy of the watchmen. Let their song be your song, and sing not only with the Church on earth but with the Church Triumphant (Those who now rest from their labors and are with Christ). For as you sing, you confess the virgin birth, the crucifixion and resurrection, the ascension, and the coming again of the Bridegroom – your Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

 

So my friends, amid all this world's sickness, war, and death, prepare each day for your Lord's return by keeping His name and life upon your lips. Praying with the Church, “Amen, come Lord Jesus!” (Revelation 22:20) In this way, even upon your deathbed, you join in keeping watch for the Bridegroom. +INJ+

 

 

 

The peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

 

Rev. Noah J. Rogness
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Tomah, WI

 

Previous
Previous

Funeral of Dawn Hawkins

Next
Next

Reformation Sunday 2023