Ash Wednesday February 13, 2013
Psalm 51
What is repentance? This
is a day when that question must be asked and answered. We are
especially called to repentance on Ash Wednesday when we begin the
forty-day pilgrimage with Jesus to His regal enthronement on the cross
of Calvary. Christian repentance consists of two parts. First,
repentance is true sorrow over sin, which the Bible calls contrition.
David in Psalm 51 tells us that: "a broken and contrite heart, O God,
you will not despise" (Ps. 51:17).
Here we are talking about sin considered from the perspective of its deeply offensive nature. It is not just an external blemish, which we might brush off, like a pesky bit of dandruff. This is the attitude of smug persons. They think that sin is a few boo-boos.
Here we are talking about sin considered from the perspective of its deeply offensive nature. It is not just an external blemish, which we might brush off, like a pesky bit of dandruff. This is the attitude of smug persons. They think that sin is a few boo-boos.
King David does not
think this. He understands that sin is a deep power within us that has
been knitted into our fiber infecting us wholly (Ps. 51:5).
"Oh, I sinned. Oh, too bad. Can't we just move on? Let's just forget
about it, can't we?" Well, no. Let's be clear about the cost to God to
deal with this sin. He has delivered His Son, His dearest treasure into
the hands of sinful men that he should be mistreated, blasphemed,
cruelly tortured, bloodied, and loaded by the weight of sin, put to
death. No, it is not a light thing. Such an enormous cost would not have
had to be borne by Christ had it been a light thing. Christ's death
testifies to the enormity of my sin. A little thing would not have
required the eternal Son of the Father to take care of it. Those who
know of it, feel its weight, a grinding, crushing millstone dragging
down and driving us to agonized recognition of our horrifying depravity.
"O God, what am I, that such a price needed to be paid for my sin? Have
mercy on me, O God!"
This admission of our
deep depravity would result in our absolute despair, save the wondrous
news that the Lord has "laid on Him the iniquity of us all" (Is. 53:6).
We would be left a mere huddled mass of terrified flesh crushed by our
own sin, except that Christ has, by the pouring out of His innocent
blood, rescued us from bloodguiltiness (Ps. 51:14).
The second part of repentance, then, includes the confidence that the
God who condemns our sin also gives His mercy. He has promised us that
we would not be lost forever, that we would be purged with hyssop, and
cleansed. He will wash us, and we shall be whiter than snow. Our hearts,
weighed down by sin, will again hear joy and gladness. Even the bones
that He has broken to fracture our self-righteousness will rejoice. No
threat can overwhelm me where the promise of God to rescue sinners still
stands.
Rev. Dr Scott Murray
http://lutheracademy.com/about-us/officers2/rev-dr-scott-murray.html
Martin Luther
"No one should
understand David to be speaking with the absolute God. He is speaking
with God as He is dressed and clothed with the Word and His promises,
lest we exclude from the name 'God' Christ, whom God promised to Adam
and the other patriarchs. It is necessary for us to apprehend not a bare
God, but the God clothed and revealed in His Word; otherwise certain
despair will crush us.
"This distinction must
always be made between the prophets who speak with God, and the
Gentiles. The Gentiles speak with God outside His Word and promises,
according to the thoughts of their own hearts; but the prophets speak
with God clothed and revealed in His promises and Word. This God,
clothed in so compassionate an appearance and, as you might say, in such
a pleasant mask, namely, clothed in His promises, this God we are able
to apprehend and look upon by us with joy and trust. On the other hand,
the absolute God is like a bronze wall, against which we cannot run
without our destruction. Therefore Satan is busy day and night, that he
might place us on a collision course with the naked God so that we
forget the promises and blessings He has shown in Christ and think about
God and the judgment of God. When that happens, we perish right on the
spot and fall into despair.
"David is not speaking
this way with the absolute God. He is speaking with the God of his
fathers, that is with the God whose promises he knows and whose mercy
and grace he has felt. Therefore when a Turk, a hypocrite, or a monk
says, 'Have mercy on me, O God,' this is as though he had said nothing.
He does not take hold of the God he names as He is veiled in the kind of
mask or face that is accommodated to us; but he takes hold of God and
invades Him in His absolute power. There despair necessarily follows,
along with Lucifer's fall from heaven into hell (Is.14:12).
This is the reason why the Prophets depended so upon God's promises in
their prayers, because the promises include Christ and make God not our
judge or enemy, but a kind and favoring God, who wants to restore to
life and save the condemned."
Prayer:
Almighty and everlasting
God, You despise nothing You have made and forgive the sins of all who
are repentant. Create in us new and contrite hearts that lamenting our
sins and acknowledging our wretchedness we may receive from You full
pardon and forgiveness; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Psalm 51:
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm%2051&version=ESV
Foto: KL
Psalm 51:
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Psalm%2051&version=ESV
Foto: KL
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