Sermon for the Sixth Sunday after Trinity
July 12th, A+D 2026
Our Savior’s and Our Redeemer Lutheran
Churches
Hill City and Custer, SD
Based Exodus 20:1-17, Romans 6:1-11, Matthew 5:17-26
Audio of the Sermon can be accessed HERE.
In the Name of Jesus, our Catechist.
Here is a question for you: Do you hate the
Catechism?
There are always links between the readings for any Sunday in the liturgical calendar and Luther's Catechism. But today, with the Ten Commandments from Exodus 20, St. Paul's discourse on Baptism in Romans 6, and Jesus' teaching in Matthew 5 on the correct understanding of the Law, the connections to the Catechism are numerous and obvious.
I spend a lot of time in the Catechism. In recent months I had the privilege of studying through it with three different households, and we received 5 new members at Our Redeemer through that time spent in the Bible, and with Luther. I have lots of books, but truth be told, the Bible, the Catechism and the Hymnal occupy a very high percentage of my reading and conversation. Which is good and right. The Small Catechism is a basic and primary tool for a Lutheran pastor because the Catechism is drawn from and is faithful to the Scriptures, which are the source of all teaching in the Church. The Word of God is also the means, or the instrument which the Holy Spirit uses to create and sustain saving faith. The Catechism's value lies in offering us a faithful summary of Christ's fundamental doctrines, as well as giving us a guide to dig deeper and gain more from the Bible.
I love discussing and studying the Word of Christ using the Catechism. Except when I hate it.
Our relationship with God’s Word and the Catechism is always one of love and hate. And it's not simply because teenagers don’t like memory work, or that sometimes pastors are boring and unengaging in their manner of teaching. This can happen, and it is a problem. Teachers should do their job well, and students should be patient and look beyond the surface, remembering that studying God’s Word and the Catechism is extremely important. But even when the Catechism's presentation is phenomenal, pedagogically speaking, we will still have a love-hate relationship with it. Or rather, by the grace of God, we will have a relationship of hate, and then love.
The reason for this love-hate reality is given in the text of the Ten Commandments: I am the Lord your God, a jealous God, punishing the children for the iniquity of the fathers to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.
God speaks to us of two options: the path of hatred, and the path of love. Our days are always a mixture of hatred and love: I hate waking up in the morning and getting out of bed, but I love the cool morning air and my first coffee. So, I get out of bed. I hate cooking, except for grilling, but I love eating a good meal, so I accept the bad with the good.
I think this hate-love dichotomy is how our
lives go a lot of the time. But in
relation to Himself, God doesn't want to mix hatred and love. He says,
"Either you love me, or you hate me, and I will return the same to
you."
Well, then, let us love God, brothers and sisters, so that we may live! No problem, right? Well, there is at least one little challenge: God binds our love for Him to the keeping of His commandments. I show mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments. Now do you see the problem?
I can agree that the commandments are valuable and just. They are good and right, entirely fair. How great this world would be if we all obeyed them, if no one lied, cheated, stole, or hurt other people! At my best, I want to follow God’s righteous path, laid out in the commandments. But I cannot keep the commandments, especially not in the way Jesus Christ demands of us. For the Son of God, teaching the multitudes in Galilee, explains His standard for obedience. An outward fulfillment is required, in our visible words and actions, and an inward fulfillment is also required, in our mind and heart. Do you love this Word?
Jesus says,“You have heard that it was said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to judgment.’ 22 But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment; whoever insults his brother will be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ will be liable to the hell of fire.”
Very few people ever end the life of another person. So far so good. Maybe I can control my tongue! O.k. But if simply becoming angry with my brother breaks the 5th commandment, I have a problem. What about you? Every time we think ill of our spouse, our parents, siblings, or a neighbor, we are, according to Jesus’ interpretation of the Law, guilty of murder. And, if we continue reading in Matthew 5, we will see that Jesus does the same thing, raising the standard of the law, with all the commandments.
For example, the Lord says: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ 28 But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart…” It was also said, “Anyone who divorces his wife must give her a certificate of divorce.” 32 But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, makes her commit adultery, and anyone who marries a divorced woman commits adultery… You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ 44 But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45 so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven…
This Word of Christ is too much for us. We may appreciate the wisdom, usefulness, and beauty of the Bible and the Catechism. But we also fear and feel unease about studying them. The law, that is, the commandments, always accuse us because we never keep them perfectly. Moses gave us a list of laws that we struggle to keep outwardly, and which we certainly cannot truly and fully keep, outwardly and inwardly.
Jesus in Matthew 5 elevates the commandments to a level that destroys any hope we might have of being righteous before God through our obedience. Which, if we take God’s Word seriously, should ruin our day. These radical requirements may even cause us to hate this Word, and worse, even hate its Author. The young monk Martin Luther struggled with this.
“God, if you're going to punish me, destroy me, how can I not hate you? I hate my miserable situation, and I fear that my hatred might even be directed at the Lord himself. I would like to live, but because of my sin, which receives power from the Law, I am destined to die.”
God's Law is holy, good and right. It is also impossibly demanding for us. As Jesus says, "truly, truly I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished." Therefore, because of the Law, and because of our inability to keep it, we must die. There is no other way.
But cheer up! You've already died. Or “do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? 4 We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.” That’s lovely! And amazing!
The Law and our sin drive us to despair of saving ourselves, and make us ready to hear a different Word from God, a better Word, a Word we can love. Which God gives to us in the work of His only begotten Son, Jesus Christ, who lived in perfect obedience to the Law, and then suffered and died. All this He did, not for Himself, not for any debt He owed, but rather He did these things in our place. Let me repeat that point: All that Jesus did, both His life of obedience to the Law and love toward God and neighbor, and also His suffering and death, He did in our stead, to win forgiveness and perfect righteousness, for us, and for all sinners.
And then, since He is the Author of Life, He didn’t stay dead. Jesus rose again, revealing the Good News that He has achieved forgiveness and salvation for the whole world. Gotta love that!
No one likes the despair that comes when God's Law threatens us. We hate that. And God is love; certainly; His desire is to bless us, not burden us. Still, because God is love, your situation is simply unacceptable to Him. You are His favorite of all creatures, and so, even though your condemnation would be just, the Lord will not accept that you are lost. This is why He sends His Word of Law, of accusation and threat, so that we would stop clinging to our sins, and be made ready to hear of His grace.
Now that Jesus’ has done His great work, in our place, our old nature, that is our sinful nature, which makes us incapable of fulfilling the law, was crucified with Jesus. Because Jesus became a man, brother to all humanity, and then hung on the Cross, this body of sin has been destroyed, so that we no longer serve sin. God has saved us, not to live in sin, but to live in Christ, and to live like Christ, as Christians. We do not do this not by our own strength, but only through an intimate connection to Jesus Christ. For only Jesus lived a perfect life of keeping God’s Law. Only Christ died for the sins of the whole world. Only Jesus has risen from the dead to reveal the righteousness of God, which is His gift to sinners.
That you have died with Christ is a saving Word, because he who has died has been freed from sin. In Christ, we have been declared innocent by God. If we died with Christ, and we already did in our Baptism, we believe that we will also live with him; knowing that Christ, having been raised from the dead, dies no more; death no longer has dominion over him, nor over us. Love wins!
As things are for Christ, so also they are for those who belong to Him. For in that Jesus died, he died to sin once for all; but in that he lives, he lives to God. So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus. There’s a lot to love here. Even though once and again we may still feel like we hate God’s Word and Luther’s Catechism, we know that their goal is always forgiveness and new life for us sinners. And this is literally the best news anyone has ever heard. This is the Truth that gives us hearts that want to follow in God’s way.
To be sure, the challenges of living in God’s love continue. Because we are bound to Christ, we bear crosses in this life, by the good and gracious will of God. The first cross of every baptized believer is our own sin, which so clings to us. The closer we are to Christ, the more we feel our sin. This is because, in Christ, by faith in Jesus, we have God’s true love working in and through us. Our love is still imperfect, but it is real. Love for our neighbors, and also love for God's commandments, which are just and good.
As long as we live in this broken world, the uncomfortable, maybe even shameful accusations of the Law will tempt us to avoid God’s Word, in the Bible and in the Catechism. Be aware, this is Satan’s goal. The world teaches us to avoid anything unpleasant, which also serves Satan's purposes. The world has long been whispering to God’s people that the Bible gets some things wrong. Today, the world’s default is that the Bibles is always wrong; often it is called evil. The world may also tempt us to believe that, if there is a God, surely, He wouldn’t be so demanding.
Jesus warns us against this nice-sounding but ultimately hate-filled preaching of the world and Satan. And, He has proved it to be a lie. In the Savior, we see that God's Law is good, and how it serves our good. And, we know that it is always worthwhile to hear, study, pray, and meditate on the Word, because, along with the Law that accuses us, Christ himself is present in the Word, ready to rescue us, again and again. A lovely way to live. The only way to live!
Do you need even more strength for the Christian life? Jesus already knew that as He foreshadowed His Supper in the feeding of the 5,00 and 4,000. Because we need strength for the journey, along with His Word, Jesus gave us the Lord's Supper. Or better said, that's why Christ gives us the Supper, today. The Lord’s Table far exceeds the miracles of multiplied loaves feeding thousands. In the Supper, Jesus is the host, and also the Meal, giving His own body and blood, to forgive us, and to give us strength.
Hearing the Word and feeding on the Holy Supper, we the Baptized walk with Christ, until that Day when He grants us perfect liberation from sin, eternal peace, and joy that never ends. This is our goal, and through the eyes of faith, we already see our goal, in Jesus Christ, crucified, risen, and ascended into heaven, out of love, for you, and for all people, Amen.


