Ordination Sermon
for Kent Krumwiede
January 21, 2017
at Trinity Lutheran Church, Truman, MN
Matthew 28:16-20
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
These
verses from Matthew 28 are like a pair of old shoes for you, Kent. As you told me, this passage has been “visiting”
you at key junctures in your life….hovering over your own Baptism….on your lips
as the script for a worship skit you were in as a Sunday Schooler…and, almost
inevitably, on your confirmation day, your Bible verse was this one, the Great Commission.
The
more these verse have “visited” you, the stronger your own sense of call has grown,
and so it makes perfect sense that today as your life comes full circle, once
again, you are under the banner of the Great Commission.
But
this is about so much more than good memories regarding all the ways God has
been getting at you over the decades….wooing and wheedling and working on you
to become a pastor in the church.
You
will always “look back” when you consider Matthew 28, but in these next moments
I invite you also to look forward, to the many years of pastoral ministry that
await. This text is a rich, rich
tool-kit for ministry, and you will never exhaust its treasures.
Let
me name five of these treasures.
First
there is the treasure of honesty
humility in this text.
“Humility”
might not be the first word we associate with the Great Commission. Some have been uncomfortable with the triumphalistic
ring about the whole notion of making disciples of all nations.
It
does fire the imagination—to envision Word of Christ encompassing the
globe. Reminds me of the old Lutheran
Hour Rallies I attended as a kid growing up over by Amboy. The venerable Oswald C.J. Hoffmann would
preach a fiery sermon, but only after the “parade of nations”—local folks,
arrayed in clothing reflective of all corners of the globe, filing into the
arena, all singing: “Jesus, shall reign where ‘ere the sun, does its successive journeys
run.” Hard not to get a shiver up
your spine—when you sing bold words like those!
And
yet there is a tone of sober realism at the beginning of this passage, because
it says that the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to
which Jesus had directed them (Matthew 28:16). Eleven disciples—that doesn’t sound
right---weren’t there supposed to be twelve? But there was a dropout, who abandoned Jesus
and skipped out on the apostolic adventure, the Betrayer Judas.
So
the eleven remaining disciples arrive at the mountain, and the Risen Jesus is
there, and they worshipped him—but some doubted. Isn’t that stunning: the glorious Risen Christ right before their
eyes, but some still doubted?
The
Great Commission starts with honest humility:
a realistic reminder that
ministry in the name of the Risen Christ always involves working with dropouts
and doubters. It was precisely for such
folks, people like you and me, that Jesus came into the world---to call us dropouts
and doubters to follow him.
May
such honest humility always be your starting point in ministry, Kent. You will do your best work, pray like crazy,
preach your heart out….and some will not buy it and others will have
doubts. But why should any of us
pastors be exempt from challenges that even Jesus faced?
The
second treasure in this text is the solid
grounding of our ministry, based solely on the saving work of Jesus
Christ. The grounding of our
ministry—the only reason we even attempt this audacious work—is that the Risen
Jesus has death behind him and now sits at the control panel of the cosmos: “All
authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.”
Again,
what an audacious claim! On Good
Friday, at the cross, Jesus seemed utterly powerless. But in the wild unpredictable way that God
does business with us—making power perfect in weakness!—the Biggest Loser turned
out to be the true Master of the Universe, God’s universe!
Kent,
you didn’t get yourself into this business.
God called you, and God in Christ will continue to call you. Some days—perhaps most days—that may be the
only thing that keeps you going as a pastor.
As we shall shortly hear in the rite of ordination: Be of
good courage, for God has called you, and your labor in the Lord Is not
in vain!
The
third treasure in this text is that tiny word:
GO. Pastors are persons on the go; they reflect a
“going” God,; they serve a church that
is on the move.
“Go, therefore….”the
Risen Christ commands his followers.
“Go!” We never outgrow our need
to hear that tiny word, because the longer we live in this world, the easier it
is to get settled and comfortable and, frankly, immobile.
The
church of our youth, Kent, was a church that emphasized “coming” more than
“going.” Come to our church where
you’ll come to know God. We’ll
even unlock our doors every Sunday and at other times, precisely so that persons
can come
to God, present themselves before their Creator.
The
church of today and tomorrow, is increasingly a church about “going.” And that isn’t some fancy new fad. It is rather about taking Jesus at his word
when he commanded his disciples: “Go, therefore…”
A
going church is more about people
than place, more about moving than settling in. A church that hears
Jesus’ “Go!” clearly will be a movement more
than an organization. We take our cues from a peripatetic Savior
who hardly ever sat still, but was always seeking, searching out sinners,
setting them free.
Pastoral
ministry that reflects Jesus’ own ministry is about such going, seeking,
searching finding and liberating sinners.
It is about mobilizing an all-too-often immobile community, just because
Jesus told us to “GO!” Get out
there. There’s a whole world dying to
hear what God has to say, and pastors provide the vocal cords to make that
happen and the hands to raise up a whole community of Good News speakers.
So
we go….and we move….but this is anything but mindless activity on our
part. Jesus’ Great Commission zeroes in
on specific, potent ways of continuing Christ’s work on earth. So hot on the heels of Jesus’ command to go
comes the fourth treasure in this text, the sharp focus for ministry that flows forth from making disciples…baptizing…and teaching.
The
momentum Jesus produces when he commands his people to Go, is purposeful. There’s an agenda here. Disciples who themselves are still trying to
get the knack of following Jesus are empowered to start making others into
followers of Jesus. The path begins
in the water and Word of Baptism, and it continues through a lifetime of
feasting on the Word made flesh, in the bread of life, the cup of
salvation. The path is widened and
deepened as disciples are taught what they need to know to heed the Great
Commission.
So
you’ll receive some gifts today, Kent. If
you’re lucky you’ll get a good walking stick, a baptismal shell, a communion
kit (though you may already have one), and—believe it or not!--a few more
books.
Now,
you and Lisa might think your house already has more than enough books—you’ve
finished seminary, after all! But don’t
forget that “seminary” means a “seed bed.”
All seminary really accomplishes is to give you a good start on a
lifetime of learning so that you’ll never run out of things to teach the people
of God.
You
and I and every other pastor needs to be a disciple always in formation, an
administrator of the sacraments who never plumbs the full depth of baptism and
the Supper, and one who teaches the faith in the face of your awareness that
the more you learn the more you know how much you don’t yet know.
Finally,
the Great Commission provides one last treasure for ministry: the
promise of our Lord’s stubborn, come-what-may, abiding presence. For
all the highs and lows, the ups and downs on pastoral ministry there is one
thing you can always count on: that
Jesus has your back!
That’s
why Matthew’s gospel ends as it began, with the promise of Immanuel, God-with-us
(Matthew 1:23). No words are sweeter to
the ears of every believer, every pastor, than Jesus final words in this gospel: “And remember, I am with you always, to the
end of the age.” (Matthew 28:20)
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment