(Audio)
John 8:42-59; Hebrews 9:11-15; Genesis 22:1-14
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
It has become difficult to communicate today, hasn’t it? No matter what you say, someone misunderstands. Words are taken out of context. Tone is misread. Clear words are stretched beyond recognition, while broad words are narrowed to mean almost nothing. And when you try to clarify, you are told, “That’s just your interpretation.” As if meaning itself were optional.
Foolishness. Words mean things. Language exists so that we may speak truth, know truth, and share truth. But in our age, many have been taught that words can mean anything, or nothing at all. And if words mean anything, then they mean nothing. And if words mean nothing, then truth itself dissolves.
Is it any wonder, then, that so many struggle to believe in God? For the God confessed by the Church is a God who speaks. He reveals Himself by His Word. And if words are uncertain, then God Himself is treated as uncertain.
But make no mistake, dear Christian: you worship a God of Word. You may look at creation and perceive that God is powerful. But that He is good, that He is love, that He is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, this you know only because He has spoken. And His Word is no empty sound. It is living and active. It does what it says.
“Let there be light,” and there was light.
“Little girl, arise,” and she arose.
“I forgive you all your sins,” and they are forgiven.
“This is My body… this is My blood,” and so it is.
God’s Word is powerful, not merely because of what is said, but because of who speaks. When Moses asked God His Name, God answered, “I AM.” He is not becoming. He is not changing. He simply is. And because He is, His Word is sure, certain, and effective. Before Abraham was, God is. Before a word was ever spoken, God is. And when He speaks, what He says comes to be.
This is what St. John confesses: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” All things were made through Him. And that Word became flesh in Jesus Christ. To reject Jesus, then, is to reject the Word of God Himself. And this is nothing new. Ever since Adam listened to the serpent rather than to God, mankind has been rejecting the Word and believing the lie.
That is exactly what we see in today’s Gospel. Jesus had said, “If you abide in My Word, you are truly My disciples… and the truth will set you free.” But the people responded with offense. “We are offspring of Abraham,” they said. “We have never been enslaved.” How quickly they forgot Egypt. Assyria. Babylon. Even now, Rome. But their deeper blindness was this: they did not see their slavery to sin.
So Jesus spoke plainly. Too plainly for their liking. “You are of your father the devil,” He said. “He is a liar and the father of lies… Whoever is of God hears the words of God. The reason you do not hear them is that you are not of God.” These are hard words. But they are true. There is no middle ground here. Either you hear the Word of God and believe it, or you reject it and believe the lie.
The crowd did not repent. Instead, they lashed out. They accused Jesus of having a demon. Still, Jesus persisted: “If anyone keeps My Word, he will never see death.” That only made them angrier. “Abraham died! The prophets died! Who do you make yourself out to be?” And then Jesus said it: “Before Abraham was, I AM.” With those words, He claimed the divine Name. He declared Himself to be the eternal God in the flesh. And for that, they picked up stones. They rejected the Word made flesh standing before them.
And yet, Abraham, the one in whom they boasted, did not reject that Word. Abraham believed. There was nothing outwardly remarkable about him. He was an idolater when God called him. His life was marked by both faith and failure. And yet, he believed the Word of the Lord. And God counted his faith as righteousness.
That faith was put to the test in a way almost unimaginable. God commanded Abraham to sacrifice his son, Isaac, the son of promise. And yet Abraham went. He obeyed. And he spoke in faith: “I and the boy will go over there and worship and come again to you.” He believed that God would keep His Word, somehow, even if it meant raising Isaac from the dead.
And on that mountain, the Lord provided. A ram was given in place of the son. Isaac lived because another died. There, Abraham saw the day of Christ and rejoiced. For that ram was a sign. A promise. A shadow of what was to come. God would provide the Lamb. Not a substitute to spare His Son, but His own Son given as the substitute for you.
On another mountain, the Son of God carried the wood of His own sacrifice. But this time, there was no ram caught in the thicket. No last-minute reprieve. Jesus, the Word made flesh, was bound, lifted up, and slain. For you. For your sins. For the sins of the whole world. And when He cried out, “It is finished,” it was not an interpretation. It was not a suggestion. It was a declaration. A performative Word. A divine Word that does what it says. Your sin, finished. Your guilt, atoned for. Death, defeated. This is the truth.
And now that same Word speaks to you: “If anyone keeps My Word, he will never see death.” To keep His Word is not first to do, but to believe. To trust what He says. To receive what He gives. You keep His Word when you hear the absolution and believe that your sins are truly forgiven. You keep His Word when you receive His body and blood, trusting that it is given and shed for you. You keep His Word when you cling to His promises in the face of doubt, fear, and death. And as you live from that Word, it bears fruit in your life, in mercy, in love, in faith toward God and fervent love toward one another.
The world may say that words are uncertain. That truth is flexible. That meaning is up for debate. But not here. Not with Christ. His Word is sure. His Word is true. His Word gives life.
Cling to it. Abide in it. Believe it. For in that Word, crucified and risen, you have life that does not end.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
