70 x 7: the new math for forgiveness The following is a prayer of Martin Luther’s as he prays through the Gospels. This prayer is based on Matthew 18:23-35; The Unforgiving Servant. Read through the Matthew text, then read through and pray this prayer. Remember prayer is praying back to God what He teaches and delivers to us through His Word. God begins the conversation with His Word, we respond with prayer. Praying God’s Word begins to shape our hearts and in turn our actions towards others. Author of Forgiveness, You see things so differently from the way the world sees them. Give me insight, dear Jesus. I want to understand how I can be expected to let go of unloving actions done to me over and over. Yet You have forgiven me so much and so many times for the same sin. I want to be able to forgive my neighbor the way you have forgiven me. Open my heart to grasp that In Your kingdom there is nothing but forgiveness of sin, pardon, and giving. There is no anger, no punishment, pure brotherly love, and kindness. How I long to live in such a place! Because I want You to live and reign in me, I ask You to teach me to forgive. Civil government provides punishments to reduce wickedness and to discourage people from hurting each other. This is necessary and good. Guide me to understand, O Christ, that Your kingdom is a spiritual one. Your forgiveness is forever because grace is forever, and by this I am saved. Forgive me for thinking my efforts in praying, fasting, going to church every week, or self-flagellation remove my need to let go of wrongs others have done to me. Help me recognize that my efforts to earn Your favor are a rejection of Your mercy, for mercy is shown only when no payment can be made. Because You love me, I can love others. You’ve given me worldly goods in love and Your kingdom will come as I do the same with my neighbors. Show me the blessing found in giving. Let it be one of the ways I praise and return love to You. Increase my trust that You saved me, that You received the punishment for all my sin, and that You set me free to know the comfort of the gospel. Thank You for faith that has led me to You. Now let my works of love declare my faith. Send me to people who will benefit by receiving the love I have for You. Inspire me to be committed to the welfare of the world because You showed such boundless love for me. Bring me into Your kingdom as I try to live as You lived. Amen. Meier, Paul W.. Praying the Gospels with Martin Luther: Finding Freedom in Love. Malcolm Creek Publishing.
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Repent and Believe the Gospel After THE Baptism, that is Jesus baptism where He identifies with us sinners by getting into the waters – here the Word (Jesus) is added to the waters to purify them and all who enter. Sins washed away, cleansed by the holy One of God. After THE Temptation of Jesus by the ancient serpent (the deceiver, the father of lies, Satan himself); Jesus does what Adam (son of God) and Eve could not do; what the children of Israel (sons of God) could not do; what you and I cannot do – He defeats the devil by not falling into temptation. Mark now records for us what Jesus says about repentance and belief: Mark 1:14 Now after John was arrested, Jesus came into Galilee, proclaiming the gospel of God, 15 and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.” “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand” – The Kingdom of God is here with Jesus presence. The promised One of the Old Testament is found in Jesus fulfilling. The Kingdom is here and we are living in the End Times right now in His coming (but that is for a longer discussion at another time). Christian Repentance Christian repentance is not merely feeling bad about our sins (as Judas). Instead, Christian repentance involves:
Where is this written? St. Paul writes in Romans chapter six: “We were therefore buried with Him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.” (Rom. 6:4) [Small Catechism, Baptism, Fourth Part] Rising to new life in Christ through Baptism involves two major issues.
"you are the christ, the son of the living god"Matthew 16: 13-16 (ESV) 13Now when Jesus came into the district of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, “Who do people say that the Son of Man is?” 14And they said, “Some say John the Baptist, others say Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.” 15He said to them, “But who do you say that I am?” 16 Simon Peter replied, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” Is Jesus Moses; Elijah; some other prophet; John the Baptist; a great moral teacher; a life coach; an example; as “people” claim? Is Jesus someone who speaks God’s Word and points to a Savior, or is He God’s Word and is He the Savior? The Son of Man identifies with us as brothers and sisters, born of a woman, with the vocation of a man. Yet Son of Man also points back to Daniel 7:13-14, with the vocation of an omnipotent God with an everlasting kingdom. All of Christianity revolves around how one sees this Son of Man – Jesus (Yahweh saves) Christ (The Anointed One; as prophet, priest, and king), the Son of the living God – Peter’s answer. “What is the Christian faith?” an: The Christian faith is the confession that Jesus Christ is the world’s only Savior and Redeemer (John 14:6; Acts 4:12, 1 John 5:11-12). “What is Christian?” an: A Christian is someone who, by the power and work if the Holy Spirit through the Word of God, believes in and confesses Jesus as Savior and Lord. Through Baptism, a Christian is adopted into the Father’s family, the Church (Romans 8:15, and 10:10; 1 Corinthians 6:11, and 12:3). 2017 CPH Luther’s Small Catechism with explanation Matthew 16: 17 (ESV) 17 And Jesus answered him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. Simon, Bar-Jonah (son of Jonah) vs. Son of the living God. Jesus is not just flesh and blood (Son of Man) like others born in this world, but existed before the creation of the world. And He now says “Blessed are you…you have a wisdom that far exceeds anything in or of the world – no man’s imagination, no world religion, no works of man - but from the very God Himself revealed to you through and in His Word made flesh (God incarnate – Jesus) and/or His written Word (Jesus), by the Father through the Holy Spirit. This is the peace that surpasses human understanding. |
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AuthorJimmy Riley - Husband, Father, Pastor, Sinner saved by God's grace ArchivesCategories |