Proper 27
November 3-8, 2014
The Day of our Lord
Collect for Proper 27 – Lord God, heavenly Father, send forth Your
Son to lead home His bride, the Church, that with all the company of the
redeemed we may finally enter into His eternal wedding feast; through the same
Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, now
and forever.
Prayer for responsible
citizenship – Lord keep this nation under Your care. Bless the leaders
of our land that we may be a people at peace among ourselves and a blessing to
the other nations of the earth. Help us provide trustworthy leaders, contribute
to wise decisions for the general welfare, and thus serve You faithfully in our
generation to the honor of Your holy name.
For blessing on the Word – Lord
God, bless Your Word wherever it is proclaimed. Make it a word of power and
peace to convert those not yet Your own and to confirm those who have come to saving
faith. May Your Word pass from the ear to the heart, from the heart to the lip,
and from the lip to the life that, as You have promised, Your Word may achieve
the purpose for which You send it; through Jesus Christ, my Lord.
A prayer before we study the
Word – Almighty God, our heavenly
Father, without Your help our labor is useless, and without Your light our
search is in vain. Invigorate the study of Your holy Word that, by due
diligence and right discernment, we may establish ourselves and others in Your
holy faith.
The
Lessons for this coming week help us prepare for the coming of our Lord. In the
Old Testament lesson the prophet Amos encourages us to prepare for the day of
the Lord by exceeding justice. In the Epistle lesson Paul assures us that at
the Judgment Day Jesus will bring with him all who died and the Christian
people still living on earth will go with them to heaven. The Christians of
Paul’s day believed that Christ’s return was at hand. This caused concern for
those who already died. Would they miss the glorious event and the opportunity
to go with Jesus to heaven? Paul assures them that the dead in Christ will come
with him and then he will gather the living. Together the dead and living will
go to heaven to be forever with Christ. In the Gospel lesson we find the
parable of the wise and foolish maidens. Only Matthew gives the parable. It
concerns the return of Christ. His coming is delayed. During the delay, foolish
people go to sleep and run out of oil for their lamps. At midnight when least
expected, the Bridegroom (Christ) comes. The unprepared have the door shut in
front of them. The parable teaches us to be constantly alert and prepared for
the sure and sudden return of Jesus Christ.
Monday,
November 3, 2014 – Psalm 84:1, 9-12 - The Antiphon for this coming Sunday
is from Psalm 84:3, “Even the sparrow
finds a home, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young,
at Your altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God.”
Tuesday, November 4, 2014 –
Amos 5:18-24 - Through Amos God
is speaking, “I hate, I despise....” Can God hate? Is He not love? Since God is
a personality, He has, like us, the capacity to hate as well as to love. In
fact, if one cannot hate, one cannot love. But what or whom does God hate? It
is not “whom” but “what.” Always He loves the sinner but not the sin. God hates
our wickedness, our insincere worship, and our religiosity: “feasts,” “solemn
assemblies,” “noises of your songs.” God hates your hypocrisy. If God hates
sin, should Christians not also do the same?
Wednesday, November 5, 2014 –
1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 – Paul uses “sleep” to describe the dead in
Christ. They are asleep in Jesus. “Sleep” is a comforting concept of the
Christian dead. When we sleep, we are at rest. Our labors are over and we rest
at peace. When we sleep, we are not dead but alive. We shall awaken out of
sleep. We fall asleep on earth to awaken in heaven for a fuller, better life
with Christ.
We grieve over the loss of loved ones, but not as those who have no
hope of heaven. In Paul’s day, people were grieving because they were worried
lest the departed miss out on the return of Christ. They wanted the dead to
share in His victory, to see the destruction of Satanic powers, and to rejoice
in the spectacular glory of Christ. For Christians, the end time will be a
glorious time and we want our loved ones to share it.
When Christ returns at the end of time, the living and the dead in
Christ will be together. When Christ leaves heaven for earth, He will bring
with Him those who died in faith. There is going to be one great, colossal
reunion of heaven and earth! Since this is the case according to Paul, we know
where our departed loved ones are now. They are with Christ in heaven. To be
with Christ is to have life, love, joy, and peace. What more could we want for
ourselves or our dearest?
Thursday, November 6, 2014 – Matthew 25:1-13 – Five
girls are wise and five are foolish. Could there be that many foolish people?
According to this, five go to heaven and five to hell; five have life and five
have death; five have joy and five are miserable. We fall into one of these two
categories. There is no in-between state. When it comes to being prepared for
Christ’s return, we are either wise in being prepared or foolish in not being
ready to receive him.
Christ’s return is delayed, because the first Christians expected his
return in their lifetimes. Since this time, there were Christians in each
century who expected the last great day to happen within a short time. Here it
is the beginning of the twenty-first century and He still has not come. We
humans tend to get weary in waiting to the point that we conclude He is not
coming in our time. This results in carelessness expressed in “sleep” (v. 5)
and not having an adequate supply of “oil” (v. 3). The delay is fraught with
danger for us.
Friday, November 7, 2014 –
Psalm 50 - This Psalm is the appointed one for this Sunday. Verse 1 is the key verse, “O
Lord, make haste to help me.” This is the prayer of faith. When we reach out to the Savior with our
burdens, joys, sorrows, and cares, He answers every petition. Our only request,
“Thy will be done Lord, Thy will be done.”
Saturday, November 8, 2014 – Matthew 25:1-13 –- Our reading is the inspiration for the hymn,
“Wake Awake, for Night is flying.”
The bridegroom comes at midnight. Surprise! Who would imagine a bridegroom
coming for his bride at the ungodly hour when the world is asleep? It is the
least expected time. Those who stay up late are surely in bed by midnight, and
even the early risers would not get up at midnight.
Jesus said His return would be like this. No one would know the day and
hour — so be ready! Moreover, the signs of His coming are associated with the
midnight of day, which becomes the noonday of hell: wars, earthquakes,
catastrophes, fear, and so on. When times are at their worst and when people
are at their lowest and darkest moments, Christ will come.
Sources
LUTHERAN SEVICE BOOK © 2006 Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis, MO
LECTIONALRY
PREACHING WORKBOOK SERIES A © 1980 John Brokhoff CSS Publishing Lima, OH
Schnorr von Carolsfeld, woodcuts © WELS
Permission to use these copyrighted items is limited to personal and
congregational use.
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