Thursday, May 29, 2014

Sealed by the Sacrifice

Exodus 24:1-8
Hebrews 19:11-22


            Tomorrow is Memorial Day.  For some it is just a three-day weekend.  Its meaning begins and ends with a trip to the beach and hot dogs cooking on the grill.  There is no memorial in the day. There is no remembering of anything. For others, meaning is marked with a flags planted on veteran graves and draped in the memories of those who sacrificed to the last full measure so that this nation might live free. Some still squeeze into old uniforms and limp down small town streets in parades that are attended by fewer every year.  When they see the flag through cataract eyes, they stand tall as they are able, and offer a salute, because for them it still stands for freedom.

They know more than most that freedom, in a sinful world, is never free.  There will always be those who hate freedom so much they are willing to drive airplanes into office buildings. There is always a price to be paid, and often that price is paid in blood. The truth of this is found in our texts today.  There is power in the blood.  Let us prepare ourselves in prayer:

Almighty God, give us wisdom to perceive you, wisdom to understand you, diligence to seek you, patience to wait for you, eyes to behold you, a heart to meditate upon you and life to proclaim you, through the power of the Spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ.  Amen.[1] 

Benedict 480-543


In the nineteenth chapter of Exodus, the Hebrew people camp in the shadow of Mt. Sinai.  And Moses went up to God, and God called to Moses from the mountain and said, “If you obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession.”[2] Obedience is intertwined with their relationship with God.  They can’t have one without the other. The terms of this covenant or contract will follow.  But, before the Laws is given the people need to appreciate the seriousness of what is being offered.  So, there is a time of preparation and consecration.  God said to Moses, “you shall set limits for the people all around, saying, “Be careful not to go up the mountain or to touch the edge of it.”[3]

What is the purpose of these limits?  Why are some actions and attitudes declared out-of-bounds?  Why, in fact, does God give any commandments at all that will define our relationship with him?  What is the purpose of the Law?  I believe one of the reasons for these limits and laws is to establish respect.  In fact, each one of the Ten Commandments defines the ways in which people are to show their respect for God and each other.  It is why we are forbidden to take the Lord’s name in vain, dishonor parents, or commit adultery.  Every commandment broken breaks relationship with God or another person because the other has been treated with a lack of respect.  Dignity and integrity have been betrayed.  No relationship can last long when disrespect dominates.  Treat God or others badly and the relationship will go badly.

If America ever falls, it will be because of the increasing disregard for personal responsibility.  It will be because of an uncaring attitude and civil amnesia.  That’s why I sometimes wince, when I stroll by the monuments on the Mall in Washington D.C. and see them treated as little more than jungle gyms by people who have no concept about who these forefathers were and what they represent. It is why I cringe when I see the flag treated like a rag. It is why remembering has been taken out of Memorial Day for many Americans.  They do not take seriously the sacrifice that was made, nor understand the foundation of their freedom.

In America limits are not much respected anymore.  People don’t want to hear about anything that might restrict them in what they want to do; and that’s why they want to remove these commandments from Memorial parks and courthouses.  If God can’t tell you what to do or how to live, then no one can.  The result of godless living though, is obviously life without God.  Life without God leaves little more than passing pleasures and a limited future.  Eternity without God becomes too scary to think about, so we don’t think about it.  That’s why our relationship with the Lord is so important. It helps us think bigger.  There is a larger picture than the one we sit in front of at the end of the day.

God said before we begin any kind of relationship together, before you can see the bigger picture, the ground rules must be set and the limits must be respected.  This was a serious thing, and to show the children of Israel how serious this was the Bible says, “On the morning of the third day (of preparation and consecration), there was thunder and lightning, as well as a thick cloud on the mountain, and a blast of a trumpet so loud that all the people who were in the camp trembled.”[4]

God got their attention.  No one was yawning or looking at their watches or sharing favorite recipes during this worship service.  All eyes were on Moses. So, when Moses went up to the mountain there was great expectation they he would come down the mountain with something big.  And he did. 

That brings us to this morning’s text.  In verse three, Moses came and told the people all the words of the Lord.  What words are these? They are the Ten Commandments found in chapter twenty and the laws contained in the Book of the Covenant in chapters twenty-one through twenty-three. 

When Moses was through telling them what limits God set to show respect to him to and to each other, all the people answered with one voice, “All the words which the Lord has spoken we will do.”[5]   They signed the bottom line.  It won’t be long before they break the second commandment with their construction and worship of a golden calf, but the important thing to note here is not that they so quickly broke the covenant, but that they so quickly entered into it.[6]  They agreed to follow it before they had any of their lawyers read it over to add any articles and amendments and stipulations. They didn’t try to whittle it down from 10 to five.  There were no, “what ifs” or “even though”. There was no negotiation. God said it and they agreed to follow it no questions asked. 

Their questions would come later, but my question is, “why did they agree so quickly?”  Did they consent to follow God’s Law out of gratitude to God for their liberation from slavery in Egypt?  Possibly.  Did they concur to this covenant out of fear because they had witnessed the power of God in the thunder and lightning and the drowning of the Egyptian army in the Red Sea and were afraid they might be next?  Maybe some did.  Or maybe some agreed to this covenant because they recognized the difference between freedom born of lawlessness and freedom enjoyed when the law provides for respect and equal treatment for all.  They had seen how cruel people could be to people.  They had experienced oppression first hand when the law was arbitrary and decided by only one person.  They knew that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely because they experienced Pharaoh’s subjective whims.  They had felt his whip upon their backs for no reason other than his pleasure.

When Moses recited God’s Law that respected the rights of the individual and protected equality, the children of Israel signed up immediately because they wanted to be treated fairly and with respect.  They wanted to live free from the fear of living under the thumb of someone else.  They had been there and done that and they didn’t want to do it again. 

When Moses spoke the word from the Lord, and then wrote it down, he gave to them God’s Law unchanging, codified in the written word.  Writing it down insured that whether you were rich or poor, well connected or not connected at all, everyone is to be treated the same in the sight of God’s law. The words of the Law were carved in rock by the finger of God.[7] Race or gender or position or politic don’t figure at all into the Ten Commandments.  “Thou shall not kill” applies to everyone, president or pauper.  You don’t get a pass in the sight of God because you are important and the victim was not.  God did not say, “Thou shall not bear false witness” unless you have a really good reason, and there are extenuating circumstances.  

John Adams, the second President of the United States made this same observation:

If “Thou shalt not covet” and “Thou shalt not steal” were not commandments of heaven, they must be made inviolable precepts in every society before it can be civilized and made free.”[8]

When he and the rest of our forefathers affirmed in the Declaration of Independence, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights”, they drew from this principle that was established through God’s Law at Sinai.  The Law is supposed to treat everyone the same. 

They knew, as Moses knew, that in a sinful world these rights and freedoms do not come cheap.  That’s why they concluded this Declaration with the words, “with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred honor.”  When they put their names beneath those words they knew these were not idle words.  They knew that they might have to make a sacrifice because of their signature.  Many of them did, some of them paid with their own blood.  Freedom is not cheap and easy.  Treat it that way and you will lose it in no time.  There will always be someone who wants to take your freedom away.

Moses understood that, so, a sacrifice was made to remind them of the cost of freedom. He gathered the blood of the animals that were sacrificed.  Half he splattered on the Book of the Covenant and half he splattered on the people themselves.   They had signed the dotted line of this covenant, and the blood now served as their notary public.

In that action he emphasized the importance of the written word and the importance of the sacrifice they make.

He got their attention. I know he did because I know you would long remember any worship service I led that involved me splattering you with blood from a bucket.  Long after I’d been asked to leave this church, you’d remember that day.  That kind of thing always makes an impression.

When the writer to the Hebrews looked back on this Exodus event through the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ he saw a connection between this sacrifice and the sacrifice made by Jesus.  His blood covers our sin in the same way the blood of Moses’ sacrifice literally covered that people.  The point of this is purification.  It is to make things right.  In fact he wrote, “under the law almost everything is purified with blood, and without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins.”[9]

For many today, this Biblical emphasis on the blood of the sacrifice is difficult to grasp. It’s just too messy.  We don’t understand the reason for it. We don’t see the connection between the sacrifice and the sanctification.

Louis Evans, the former pastor of the National Presbyterian Church, described a conversation he had with another church leader who rejected the theological emphasis on the blood of Christ.  He derisively called it “slaughterhouse religion.”  He said, “I don’t believe in blood sacrifice; we don’t do it anymore.”

Louis replied,

“We don’t do it anymore? In the twentieth century more people were killed in various wars than in the preceding eight centuries.  During World War II we saw the waves on Tarawa washing over the bodies of forty thousand young Americans.  He said, I walked through the city of Dresden, where, in one night of bombing three hundred thousand lost their lives.  Millions have died in Cambodia and Viet Nam.  The sin of humanity’s inhumanity is costing us more human lives than we are willing to admit.  Sin is costly and still demands the blood sacrifice.  What do you mean we don’t do it anymore?  Either we proclaim the One perfect sacrifice and the blood that was shed to cleanse humanity of its mindless stupidity as well as its ignorance or we shall continue to pay for our sins by our own blood sacrifices that can never take away sin, but only reproduce them in uncontrollable numbers.  O that we had eyes to see and accept God’s great act of redeeming love in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.”[10]

The cross of Jesus Christ is more than a memorial.  It is more than a symbol that just reminds us of something that happened a long time ago.  It is the means of grace that God uses to redeem and purify those who have broken the covenant he established through his Law.  It recognizes how quickly we sacrifice our birthright of freedom for a bowl of porridge.[11]  God understands that though the “spirit is willing, the flesh is weak.”[12]  God knew that he needed to make an impression upon the soul, and believed that the sacrifice of his own son was the only way to do that.

For those of us upon whom this impression has been made, the cost of discipleship is not seen as being cheap and easy.  Sin requires a serious sacrifice.  It requires your whole life, but how do we do that?  What does that really mean?

In our response the “Assurance of God’s Grace” earlier in our worship service we sang the fourth verse of the Battle Hymn of the Republic.  You sang the verse that is written in most modern hymnbooks, “As He (Christ) died to make men holy, let us live to make men free.” 

That was not what Julia Ward Howe original intent. She wrote, “As He (Christ) died to make men holy, let us die to make men free” because that is exactly what people were doing in 1862 when she penned these words.  In the middle of the Civil War people were dying to set others free, and they were dying in great numbers.  There was no other way to purify this nation from slavery than with the sacrifice of blood.  Memorial Day has its origins in that time.

In the 1960’s though many began to re-think this notion of “dying to make men free”.  They were thinking in terms of killing as well as dying.  They thought living in a way that respected the freedom and equality of others might go just as far as dying or killing.  After considerable debate, the word “die” was changed to “live”. Both variations are accepted today.

The best memorial we can offer then for those who have died to make men free is to live in a way that respects the freedom and dignity and integrity of others.  The Apostle Paul put it this way:

“For freedom Christ has set us free; stand fast therefore, and do not submit to a yoke of slavery.  For you were called to freedom, only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for self-indulgence, for the flesh, but through love be servants of one another.” [13] 

In one of the last scenes of Steven Spielberg’s D-day movie, “Saving Private Ryan”, the captain played by Tom Hanks lay dying from his wounds.  He and his men had been assigned the task of saving one soldier, whose three brothers had already been killed in other battles.  Instead of one dying to save many, many died to save one.  Looking around at the carnage from the battle, the last thing Tom Hanks said to Private Ryan before his life ebbed away was, “Earn this!”  By that he meant, live in such a way that the sacrifice he and so many others made was not in vain.  Make your life count for something.

As disciples of Jesus Christ, we do not earn our salvation.  It has been freely given to us by his sacrifice.  But, we are to live in such a way that his sacrifice for us was not made in vain.  We are to make our lives count for something.  Sometimes that means we die to make men free.  More often it means we live to make men free respecting the freedom and equality of all God’s children.  We are to love and serve one another.  We are to share the good news of Jesus Christ with the words of our mouths and the actions of our hands and the attitudes of our hearts.  That is the way we glorify God.  That is the way His truth is marching on.  Glory! Glory!  Hallelujah!

Let us pray:

Our father’s God, to Thee,
Author of liberty,
To thee we sing:
Long may our land be bright,
With freedom’s holy light;
Protect us by Thy might,
Great God our King.[14]
Amen.
                                                                               



[1] Adam, David:  Forward to Freedom, From Exodus to Easter.  Upper Room, Nashville. 2001. pg  157.
[2] Exodus 19:3,5
[3] Exodus 19:12
[4] Exodus 19:16
[5] Exodus 19:3
[6] Exodus 32
[7] Exodus 31:18
[8] www.christiananswer.net, “Does American government need the Ten Commandments Anymore?”
[9] Hebrews 9:22
[10] Evans, Louis: Hebrews, The Communicator’s Commentary.  Word Publishing, Texas, 1985. p. 166.
[11] Genesis 25:34
[12] Matthew 26:41
[13] Galatians 5:1,13
[14] My Country ‘Tis of Thee. Verse 4.

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