John 12:20-36; Ephesians 2:1-10; Jonah 2:1-10; Psalm 103
Jesus Christ, My Lord: From Death to Life – Creator / Life-Giver
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
There is a fundamental Christian truth that is the most difficult for us to admit and to confess, while being the most liberating at the same time: “We are all conceived and born sinful and are under the power of the devil until Christ claims us as His own.” What that means is that when we are conceived and born, before we’ve even had a thought, inclination, or desire, before we’ve learned language or spoken a word or done anything at all, we are dead, spiritually dead, D-E-A-D DEAD, dead like Lazarus, we “stinketh.” And yet it’s worse than that! Not only are we spiritually dead, but we are hostile and opposed to God and His Word, Commandments, and Will. Using our own reason and strength we cannot believe in, trust in, or make any movement towards the LORD or His Christ. All we can do is rot and decay in our sin, iniquity, and death, because that’s what dead things do.
It is so very difficult for us to admit and to confess that we are spiritually dead; and yet, it is the most liberating thing we can do. For, only those who have nothing of their own can truly appreciate the value of a gift, of grace. Only sinners can be forgiven, only slaves can be set free, and only the dead can be raised to life. Moreover, that’s why Jesus became a man. Jesus came to call sinners to repentance. Jesus came to call dead sinners like you and me and all of us to new and forever life in Him.
The scribes and the Pharisees demanded a sign from Jesus, but Jesus answered them saying, “An evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah.” What is the “sign of the prophet Jonah”? Jesus continued, “Just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.” Now, it’s entirely clear to us that Jesus is referring to His death, burial, and resurrection. However, there is more to the “sign of Jonah” than that. The “sign of Jonah” means the death of the perfect man for all sinful men. This is nothing less than the harrowing of hell. As Jonah was swallowed up by the great fish and was in its belly three days and three nights in the depths of the sea, at the very root and foundation of the mountains, so Jesus was swallowed up by death and truly experienced its thrall, but death could not hold the righteous Son of Man and was burst open and destroyed, foreshadowed by the great fish expelling Jonah safely onto dry land.
In His Incarnation, Jesus not only took on human flesh, He took on all humanity. “God became man, so that man might become God.” When Jesus died, you died, I died, all humankind died. And when He rose, the promise and hope of your resurrection, my resurrection, and the resurrection of all who trust and believe on Him rose. St. Peter writes, “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit, in which he went and proclaimed to the spirits in prison, because they formerly did not obey, when God's patience waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was being prepared.” Jesus did not go to hell to suffer; indeed, all suffering was fulfilled, completed, and finished on the cross. What we confess in the Creed is that Jesus descended into hell to proclaim His victory over sin, death, and the devil, a death which affected salvation for those who believed in the promise of the Seed before the Incarnation every bit as much as for those thereafter.
Our resurrected Lord was still Jesus, the same Jesus the Apostles had known, but clearly more. While He passed through the stone that sealed His tomb as easily as through the locked door of the upper room, and He could appear and disappear at will and ascend bodily into the heavens, still the fullness of His glory remains yet to unveiled and revealed until His return, the day of resurrection and the judgment of all humankind. Now, and forever, Jesus is the “Lamb standing as though slain,” even now leading a host of captives back to Paradise through death into life that cannot die.
Jesus compared Himself to a grain of wheat sown in the soil of this Earth. A grain of wheat does nothing and is of no value unless it splits open and dies. “Truly, truly,” Jesus says, “unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” Jesus is the grain of wheat who died, and you, dear Christian, are the fruit. Because Jesus died, you live. And because Jesus died, you live even though you die. Indeed, you must follow Jesus through death, first dying to yourself in this life and world, and living to God through Jesus, and then rising from death in and through Jesus who is the resurrection and the life.
Only sinners can be forgiven. Only the dead can be raised. In Jesus, the Greater Jonah, you are forgiven, death has been defeated, and you have already been raised to new life that cannot die through faith in Him and baptism into Him. You have literally, spiritually, been born into a new life, a new creation. Your new life in Jesus is nourished and sustained by the spiritual food of God’s Word and Sacraments, and it is lived in daily repentance through faith and trust in the Father’s forgiveness through Jesus Christ. You are a part of Jesus, a branch grafted into the True Vine, and the fruit you bear is Jesus’ fruit, good works which serve our neighbor and glorify God.
Our Lord heard Jonah’s cries. He forgave him his sins. God rescued him from the womb of hell itself. Like Jonah, we can remember with thanksgiving that God has brought us up from the bottomless pit and seated us in a safe place. The radical problem, our being dead, is solved by the radical solution, Jesus’ death and resurrection. Our sanctification is not just a change of attitudes or the introduction of certain habits, but it is a product of our being alive in Christ. Our new life in Christ is shaped to do good works. This too is the Lord’s doing.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.