December 2019

Behold the Child

“The true Light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world”(John 1:9).

Our days will get increasingly shorter until December 21, which is the winter solstice. That day has the least amount of sunlight for those of us in the northern hemisphere. The birth of Jesus was most likely in early spring with “shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night” (Luke 2:8) during lambing season. However, it is encouraging to have the celebration of the “the true Light…coming into the world,” when our physical environment is craving more light. May the truth of Jesus’ coming to us be edifying as we live in not only a physically dark world, but we also live in a dark, fallen-in-sin world that ends with death. “In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men. The Light shines in darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:4-5).

Jesus Christ, the true Light, came into the world as a baby; Behold the Child.  This method of entering the world as a baby is and has been true for everyone, except Adam and Eve. Jesus entered the world as a living, flesh-covered human; nevertheless, He is eternal, just as the Father is eternal, and the Holy Spirit is eternal. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God” (John 1:1b-2).

Behold the Child, Jesus Christ, who came into the world to serve mankind. He served us for thirty years, being in an earthly family, walking with people, being with people, working with his adopted dad. (Note the following historical point that can be applied to Joseph and Jesus.  The town of Sepphoris was 3.5 miles from Nazareth. In 4 BC the Romans destroyed the town and rebuilt it at great expense. This would have meant many years of construction work for dad and Son.) Jesus revealed that He was True Man. Behold the Child who “increased in wisdom and stature” (Luke 2:52).  

Jesus served us throughout His three-year earthly ministry which revealed Him as the True God in the flesh. Behold the Child as He steadfastly had His face set toward Jerusalem in order to make just payment for sin. Behold the Child who died an excruciating death as a young man.

Jesus served us by rising victoriously over sin, death, and the devil. Through His victory, the Christian is also victorious. Behold the Child who is our risen Lord!

He serves us through His omnipresence: “I am with you always, to the end of the age” Matthew 28:20b. He is also uniquely present “wherever two or three are gathered in [His] name” (Matthew 18:20); as well as uniquely present through His instituted sacraments of Holy Baptism and the Sacrament of the Altar. Behold the Child, Jesus Christ as we gather in His name to receive His service, a Divine Service.

Enjoy this festive season to celebrate the coming into the world of the “true Light, which enlightens everyone.” Faith Lutheran’s Advent theme is “Behold the Child.” The three midweek services will expound on 1) the Child who was sent for us, (2) to set us free, as (3) He was in the flesh to bear our weakness.

 

The Lord be with you,                                                              

Pastor Sam Wiseman

November 2019

Jesus Gave Thanks

At that time Jesus declared, “I thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little children” (Matthew 11:25)

In the mid-1990s, my family and I were challenged with the loss of a job from which I had often visualized myself retiring. There were some leadership changes at the college where I worked, and my perceived accomplishments were not as big of a deal as I let myself think. What now? Do we need to move? How are going to make it next month? Charlotte and I struggled with these questions. I was told about a graveyard shift job at the front desk of the Ridpath Hotel in downtown Spokane. This would allow me to work a variety of jobs during the day, at least for a short-term solution. When I checked out the job, I was assured “Oh, anyone can do this job!”

          Well, I was not “anyone.” I took extra toilet paper to the wrong room at 3 a.m. The occupants were shocked and not happy, as was the person whom I was supposed to be serving. Other times I gave out wrong keys, had trouble checking people in, but my regular failure was not accomplishing the night audit.  In the month I worked that job, I don’t remember ever getting the night audit done properly and on time.  The person who trained me had the audit done normally by 4 a.m. Three hours ahead of time!

          My skill set or aptitude did not show me to be “wise and understanding” with the night audit. I was performing like a little child. I do respect those who survive and thrive in such services to humanity.  In fact, I am thankful for the many other professions where others do their jobs so well.

          “I thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth” that my belonging to Your family is not dependent on me being “wise and understanding.” Both Matthew and Luke (11:20) recorded Jesus’ gratitude for God revealing to “little children” the way of salvation which is God’s gift through Jesus Christ. Jesus plainly explains, “Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of heaven like a child shall not enter it” (Mark 10:15). May we be childlike in receiving God’s gift, and then mature as we live with those gifts. 

           These words of Jesus are comforting. They assure us that salvation does not depend on human wisdom. He has “hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little children.” Jesus finishes this thought with the following:

Come to Me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.

Take My yoke upon you, and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in

heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My

burden is light (Matthew 11:28-30).

Further things to be thankful for this month of Thanksgiving! For your information, there are four other times recorded in Scripture that Jesus gave thanks to the Father. They are 1) feeding of the four thousand, 2) feeding of the five thousand, 3) raising of Lazarus, and 4) institution of the Lord’s Supper.  May we continue to give thanks for our daily bread, being risen with Him, and God’s gifts in the Word and Sacraments.

The Lord be with you,                                                              

Pastor Sam Wiseman

October 2019

Housebreak Sandy Dog or a Wasp

“Those whom I love, I reprove and discipline, so be zealous and repent” (Rev. 3:19).

          A wasp was in the house, so I rolled up a newspaper, and the hunt was on. I sought that wasp until I “cornered” him. The newspaper served its role as I swatted, and the wasp was cast outside. Why such “zeal” (eagerness and enthusiasm) for taking care of that wasp? I do not love wasps, especially in the house.

          Sandy Dog was a different situation. She was a beloved pet for our family. I remember the day that we went to get her; I was about nine years old. She was chosen out of a litter of about six to seven adorable puppies.  Sandy’s mother was a Dachshund, but Sandy had long legs, so she was a cross of some sort. I remember it was an overcast day; we all wore jackets. The mother and puppies were outside by a worn doghouse. “Ok, kids, which one do you want?” asked mom as dad picked up one after the other for us to get a closer look. Sandy was chosen, I am not sure by whom or why. But she was chosen to be with our family, to be part of our household. Oldest brother Jeff spent the first couple sleep-disrupted nights consoling Sandy.

          Sandy was scolded and disciplined for making messes. We spent time and resources setting boundaries for her. A fence in the backyard (“no digging in the yard!”) and a leash to go elsewhere. Our family put in numerous hours training Sandy to sit, stay, come, fetch, to not bark at people, to not jump up on people, and—we did not do as well with this--teaching her not to beg. My memory is dad would give her a little taste. The kids witnessed this, and she would receive several tastes through a meal. When she did receive “reproof and discipline,” Sandy was scolded, her collar yanked, a slap on the rump, etc., all to get her to do what we wanted. The aim was to get Sandy disciplined so  that she could live with us. We were not training her to be happy by doing whatever she desired. Nevertheless, her tail wagged and happiness was at its peak when she accomplished something that she knew pleased us.

          You and I are loved children of God.  He chose us. We also receive His love through “reproof and discipline,” in order that we are most joyful when we are in His grasp, doing what He would have us to do. God’s aim, His will for us, is not for us to be happy in our sinful flesh, as a component of this fallen-in-sin world, influenced by Satan’s deceptions. God’s aim for us is for us to be with Him now and forever. So, in this present, lost situation, we face suffering that draws us ever closer to the One who is in control. God uses suffering to speak to us (Job 36:15). God uses suffering to enrich our hope (1 Peter 5:10).  God uses suffering to have us find peace in His promises (Psalm 119:50). There is also much more of God’s loving work with us in Hebrews ch.12.

          Praise God that we are not viewed like a wasp. To remove pages of suffering from our lives would be seeing humans as nothing more than a wasp. That wasp had minimal suffering. It was doing what it wanted and no efforts to discipline it were used. Cast the thing away. Praise God that we are loved, more than a good pet, and that He uses suffering to increase our faith by having us listen to Him, hope in Him, and live in His promises. “Draw us to Thee Unceasingly, into Thy kingdom take us” (LSB701:5).

The Lord be with you,                                                              

Pastor Sam Wiseman

September 2019

Christ’s Church

“I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it” Mt 16:18).

          These are the words of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world. Jesus Christ is the “only begotten Son” who was given for us because of the Triune God’s love. Hell is a reality! God in the flesh Jesus described hell graphically: “weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Matthew 8:12, 13:42, 24:51) “where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched” (Mark 9:48).  All these words are Jesus Christ’s! Hell is a tormenting truth and Christ builds His Church. Christ is victorious over the devil and His Church is victorious over hell: “the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” Alleluia!

With these truths the Church is surely sought, and people gather as often as possible, right? That would be a reasonable conclusion; however, we all know of situations where the church is ignored, avoided, and/or shunned. What? How can that be? Mankind doesn’t think Jesus is a liar, do we? I have not heard that exact question, however, since Jesus said those words, how can mankind ignore, avoid, and/or shun the Church, His Church? I think we can place these self-justifications into three categories: 1) Indifference= “Church, God’s Word through the Church is not on my radar,” 2) Self-centered= “I am fine, I can get all I need without church,” 3) Critical= “Mankind has so polluted the Church. Church is controlled by sinful, hypocritical people. Church is man’s polluted creation, not God’s work.” Or any combination of all three. Sad situations!

There are other areas of our life that it is just different passions. Consider the preparation of food. 1) “Preparing food, that is not on my radar. I just eat it.” 2) “I am fine. I can get nutrition without preparing food, I just eat it.” 3) “Mankind has so polluted food with unhealthy stuff. Food prepared by humans is the problem. I just eat like the wild animals and be critical of other peoples’ food.” OK, and the people still survive, for a while even though they do not prepare food.  We can also consider many other activities of humans, that we are not universally drawn to, such as sports, theatre, music, art, hunting, fishing, hiking, etc. Activities that people can be indifferent to or self-centered and critical about. Some sadness, but not has sad as defying what Christ builds.

Mankind is in desperate need of God’s grace. We “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). Jesus “is the Way, the Truth, and the Life” (John 14:6), through Whom we can receive God’s grace of forgiveness. God took great steps to become flesh and dwelt among us.  On His last night Jesus gave His last will and testament with the institution of the Sacrament of the Altar. What should we do with a last will and testament? Jesus willingly went to the cross, shedding His blood for the forgiveness of sins, He died. He rose from the dead instituting the announcement for the forgiveness of sins: “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you withhold forgiveness from any, it is withheld” (John 20:23). And before ascending into heaven, in His resurrected body, Christ instituted disciple making with Baptizing and teaching.

Lord strengthen us to be among the indifferent, self-centered, and critical “…always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect” (1 Peter 3:15).

The Lord be with you,                                                              

Pastor Sam Wiseman

August 2019

Thus Far

…[God] said, “Thus far shall you come, and no farther, and here shall your proud waves be stayed?” (Job 38:11).

          The above passage is after Job had questioned God’s way with him. “Then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind and said, “Dress for action like a man; I will question you, and you make it known to me….Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?...and prescribed limits for it and set bars and doors, and said, ‘Thus far shall you come, and no farther….’”

          Charlotte and I were privileged to have a vacation the end of July.  We went hiking up the North Fork of Deer Creek in central Idaho.  This is an area in which my family had spent a fair amount of time when I was growing up.  However, I had not hiked up the trail of the North Fork of Deer Creek. We usually stopped at a little valley, and I fondly remember my grandpa teaching me to shoot the .22 there fifty years ago. “Hold the gun firmly, site in the can, and squeeze the trigger. Do pull quickly, just squeeze the trigger.” 

          I wonder what’s up that trail? So Charlotte and I took off. We thought there was an amazing number of wildflowers still in bloom for the end of July. Charlotte took many pictures and did a masterful job of identifying many of them.  I looked forward and saw what I thought should be the top of the hill. “I think just a bit further,” I said. We hiked on thirty more minutes, with a cross-back climbing of a hill that I did not foresee.  From that vantage point, I looked to another ridge: “I think just a bit further.” I was thinking five minutes; however, it was another thirty minutes when we reached the ridge with a small pond that started the North Fork of Deer Creek.  “Thus far shall you come, and no farther…” at least for that trip. We had hiked longer than planned and the grade had been steeper than anticipated. What did we see at the top of the ridge? Further mountains beyond mountains--way more than we could explore on that day.

          The next day we were at Redfish Lake with the opportunity to rent a canoe. Charlotte and I got in and started paddling. Where were we going? Don’t know, just going. I suggested, “How about going to that point of land up there?” Charlotte was agreeable, and when we got to that point, the water was beautiful, it was so peaceful and we kept paddling to the next point, only to see a couple more “points” farther up the lake. This time I suggested, “Before we get too far into this ‘just a bit further’ situation, let us pick a stopping point now.” Charlotte suggested two points forward with, “that should be the end of the lake.” We paddled on. When we got to the “two points forward,” we looked around the point and saw that we were only about halfway up the lake.  We arrived at our spot of “thus far shall you come, and no farther.” Good thing, because we had paddled longer than planned and the lake was bigger than we thought--way more than could be explored with a one-hour rental of a canoe.

          The trail and the lake offered many more sights for our exploring that we could do.  My application with this is God’s Word; It has more exploring that can always be done. However, we must remember He has set limits with what He has already revealed. We shall not go further than Scripture as we appreciate it vast grandeur.

The Lord be with you,                                                                   

Pastor Sam Wiseman