PENTECOST 3
June 17-19, 2023
Pastor Timothy J. Spaude
Text: Matthew 9:35-38
“LOOK!!”
1. Look
around!
2. Look
up!
3. Look
out!
Matthew 9:35-38
(EHV) “Jesus traveled through
all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel
of the kingdom, and healing every disease and every sickness. 36When
he saw the crowds, he was moved with compassion for them, because they were
troubled and downcast, like sheep without a shepherd. 37Then he said
to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. 38Therefore
pray that the Lord of the harvest will send out workers into his harvest.”
What do an
officer from the Southern California Humane Society, Jesus and St. Jacobi
members have in common? More than you might think! According to a newspaper
report a while back officer Tori Matthews of the Southern California Humane
Society got an emergency call one day. A boy’s pet iguana had been chased up a
tree by a neighbor’s dog. It had then fallen from the tree into a swimming pool
where it sank like a brick. Officer Matthews came with net in hand, dove into
the pool and seconds later emerged with the iguana’s limp body. She promptly
began mouth to mouth resuscitation. As she later told the reporter, “I thought,
well, you do CPR on a person and a dog, why not an iguana? Now that I look back
on it,” she said, “it was a pretty disgusting animal to be kissing but the last
thing I wanted to do was go back to that little boy and tell him his pet had
died.”
You see when
Tori Matthews looked at that iguana she didn’t see a water logged lizard, she
saw a little boy’s beloved pet. She did what she had to do to keep it from
dying. That’s what Tori Matthews has in common with Jesus. You heard from
Matthew’s Gospel how when Jesus looked around He didn’t see a bunch of
disgusting sinners. He saw people who were loved by God and that moved Him to
do what He needed to do to keep them from dying eternally in Hell. And that’s
also what you and I have in common with Jesus. When we look at the people
around us, we also see human beings who are loved by God.
Now with the
way our country is going that is getting harder and harder to do, isn’t it?
Let’s look to Jesus for help. Jesus was in the part of Israel known as Galilee.
Matthew tell us, " Jesus traveled through all the towns and
villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel of the kingdom,
and healing every disease and every sickness.” Jesus saw people who
needed Him. That’s who He had come for and that’s who He ministered to. But
what did Jesus see when He saw people?
Even though
we aren’t specifically told we know what He would have seen because nothing has
really changed in this world we live in, at least when you are talking about
people. Jesus would have seen people whose lives were a mess because of sin’s
presence in their world and their own sinfulness. He would have seen people who
abused alcohol, who sold themselves as prostitutes or to prostitutes. He would
have seen people who abused their spouses and neglected their children. He
would have seen people whose greed, pride and hatred spilled from their mouths
and showed in their actions. He would have seen people who did these things
even though they knew better.
As the
sinless Son of God, the One whom the Father has appointed to be the Judge of
all people you would think His holy blood must have boiled when He looked
around at those people who were living in rebellion against God. You could just
imagine Jesus with his hands over the red destruction button ready to put an
end to the sin with His righteous Judgement. You would think He would look
around at those people and say, “If you want to live separate from God then so
be it, forever, in Hell.” That is what they deserved.
But what did
Jesus see when He looked around? “When he saw the crowds, he was moved with
compassion for them, because they were troubled and downcast, like sheep
without a shepherd.” Jesus didn’t just see sinners. He saw sinners who
needed a Savior. He didn’t just see people who were running away from God. He
saw people who needed to be led to God. He didn’t see enemies of God but
victims of God’s Enemy, the Devil. He didn’t see creatures that were disgusting
to Him, He saw creatures dearly loved by the Father and the last thing He
wanted to do was to tell His Father they were dead. Jesus had compassion on
them.
What do you see when you look around? I’m not talking about
the people here. I’m talking about the people you work with, that you see on
the news. What do you see when you look around? It’s not hard to see people who
don’t know God or even care. It’s not hard to see disgusting people you really
don’t want anything to do with. This is to be expected. This is what the Bible
prophesied about our times. (2 Timothy 3:2-5 EHV) "For
people will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant,
blasphemous, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, 3 unloving,
not able to reconcile with others, slanderous, without self-control, savage,
haters of what is good, 4 treacherous, reckless,
puffed up with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, 5 holding
to an outward form of godliness but denying its power."
It’s not hard to see people like that when you look around,
is it? It is hard to see them the way Jesus saw them. There is a remedy for
that though. Before you look around at others, look at yourself. In the mirror.
Not the mirror hanging in your bathroom. Try the mirror of God’s law. If you
take a good hard honest look, you will see a person “who loves him or herself,
loves money, is proud and abusive, has been disobedient to parents, ungrateful,
unloving and unforgiving.” And still Jesus had compassion on us. Compassion
that led Him to do not to something simple like kissing an iguana, but to
something most unimaginable and least desirable—death on the cross with the
full burden of everyone’s sins on Him.
The compassion that Jesus had moved Him to action. Knowing
full well what He would do for the sins of the world Jesus turned toward His
disciples and said, "The harvest is
plentiful but the workers are few.” In other words, “I’ve paid for the sins
of all people. How few there are that are willing to tell them!” Imagine being
one of the 12 disciples called to be witnesses for Jesus looking at all those
people. 12 disciples for an estimated world population of 300 million at the
time. Kind of like 1200 souls at St. Jacobi for an estimated world population
of 8 billion right now.
What a daunting task for them and us, to tell that many
people! It’s no wonder Jesus told these men to look the only place they could
find help. Up. “Look up!” Jesus said to those who would be His witnesses. “Therefore
pray that the Lord of the harvest will send out workers into his harvest.” Pray.
It can be intimidating to look at all
people and see them as troubled and downcast sheep rather than ugly iguanas you
want gone. It can be intimidating to look at all the people who need to know
Jesus save them. What a monumental task! How can we do it? It starts with
prayer. We can’t do it on our own. God can. Prayer works. Pray for people to be
witnesses.
Do you think God will answer that prayer? Will He really
provide the workers needed for such a great harvest? Immediately after telling
the disciples to pray, do you know what Jesus did? He sent the prayers out.
These 12 men were the answers to their own prayers. They were the workers they
asked for. That’s why I say to you look out! Look out because you also are the
answer to your own prayer for God to provide workers for His harvest. You are
His witnesses. Some of you boys need to seriously think about becoming WELS
pastors and some of you boys and girls need to think seriously about becoming
WELS teachers. However, the privilege and responsibility for telling others
that only Jesus saves is not reserved for workers called into the public
ministry. It belongs to everyone who has experienced God’s grace and
compassion. It belongs to everyone who received God’s grace in Baptism. It
belongs to everyone who knows and appreciates what it means that God says you
are forgiven for the sake of His Son Jesus. Look out when you pray for more
witnesses for you are the answer.
Brothers and sisters, I suspect that if present trends
continue we will find ourselves wishing that it was iguanas that God placed
before us instead of people. People are messy and getting messier. Some are following
lifestyles and ways of dressing that make us sick to our stomachs rather than
filled with compassion. But remember, the real enemy does not have skin on.
Until you know that a person is a willing servant to the Devil it is better to
view them as troubled and downcast and spiritually abused. Someone you don’t
want to tell the Father he has lost. So be nice. Be respectful. If God has
placed them before you, He may have picked you to be an answer to prayer. So
look. Look around, look up, look out and always, always, look at Jesus. Amen.
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