Lent
2 Midweek
“The
Little (or BIG!) Peter in Each of Us: Complacency”
Matthew
26:36-46; 1 Thessalonians 5:1-11
In the Name of the
Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Fresh off Peter’s
confident statements that he would never fall away from Jesus, even if all the
others did; and, that he would never deny Jesus, even if it meant death, Peter
now finds himself . . . asleep. He is not overcome when the shepherd is struck.
He is not overcome with fear or threats. He is overcome with sleep.
He is worn down. He is drained. Physically, emotionally,
spiritually. His spirit is willing but his flesh is weak.
That’s how it is, isn’t
it? With us, too. We get tired. We let our guard down. And before you
know it, we have drifted off into sin.
Jesus and His eleven
disciples had eaten the Passover and had gone to the Mount of Olives. Now the
hour of evil, the hour of darkness, is almost here. Jesus knows it; the eleven
do not. He singles out His special three - Peter, James, and John. The three
who saw Him in the glory of His Transfiguration would now be with Him in the
agony of His prayer. They should have known something was up, as Jesus began
to be sorrowful and troubled. Something which, according to the
Gospel accounts, they had not seen before. And Jesus voices it to
them: My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here, and
watch with me. He then goes a little farther and falls on His face
in prayer.
How long did it take? 15
minutes? 30 minutes? before their eyes closed in sleep, so that when
Jesus came back in one hour, He found them sleeping. And
notice: Jesus addresses Peter. All three fell asleep, but Peter is
singled out. For Peter had confidently and pridefully singled himself
out: Though they all fall away because of you, I will never fall
away. Peter is not as strong as he thinks. If the shepherd was
going to be struck and that shepherd is now sorrowful and troubled, why wasn’t
Peter on the alert and watching and ready?
And so Jesus warns
them. Watch and pray that you may not enter into
temptation. The danger is not just to Jesus. There is danger for
them as well. But Peter is oblivious to the threats that might be out there. So
off to sleep again he goes. Sleep well, Peter, while
your Savior wrestles in prayer. Sleep well, Peter, while
your Savior agonizes for you. Sleep well, Peter, for
your Savior will not sleep again until He sleeps the sleep of death
and is laid in the tomb.
Watch and pray
that you may not enter into temptation. Those are words for us tonight as well,
for whether you are aware of it or not, the tempter wants you. And while he may
at times come at us with a full-frontal assault, more often than not, I think,
he wears us down, tires us out, physically, emotionally, and spiritually, until
we let our guard down. A day without prayer quickly becomes three. A week
without God’s Word becomes two or more. Coveting replaces contentment. Grudges
become firmer and forgiveness becomes harder. Disobedience grows into
disrespect and bears the fruit of bitterness. Fear increases, and faith
decreases. And how else? For you? You didn’t even see it coming.
It just happens . . . like sleep in a garden. Watch and pray that you may
not enter into temptation. The tempter wants you, and he is
patient and persistent.
But here is the good
news for us tonight. As much as the tempter wants you, Jesus wants you
even more. And so the agony of Gethsemane is just the prelude to the
suffering of the cross. Jesus would drink the bitter cup of God’s wrath - every
last drop of it - so there’s none left for you. He saw what was in that cup,
the horror of sin and evil and the crushing weight that awaited Him. Your
sin, your death, your hell, on Him, in Him. That is why He asked if there
was any other way. But there wasn’t. Thy will be done, He prays. And
with that prayer, the Father’s will is His will. He drinks it. He goes to the cross,
so you never will.
Thy will be done we also pray, with Jesus. But
now it is quite different. For God’s will is that we now drink a different cup
- not a bitter cup, but a cup of blessing; not a cup filled with wrath but
filled with forgiveness; not a cup of horror, but the blood of our
loving Savior, poured out for you. That’s your Father’s will for you
now.
With that cup comes life
- a new life. A life of forgiveness, not grudges. Of contentment, not
coveting. Of joyful obedience and good works. Of faith and
peace. And a life of prayer. Of knowing the danger that lurks around
us everyday, and so praying: And lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil. Deliver us from the evil one. Make the fruits
of Your cross grow in us, that we not fall asleep, that we not be
unaware, that we not grow complacent, but live in Christ and His life, and He
in us.
Maybe the current
direction of our culture will help wake us up. The wrestling’s of
Christians being persecuted in our own country, the agony of Christians being
beheaded in others, and the sorrow of the general movement away from the truth
of God’s Word. Paul told the Thessalonian Christians to be ready, good
words for us as well, and to encourage one another and build one
another up, which sounds very much like Jesus’ watch with me.
And it is. For whatever you do to one of the least of these brothers of
mine, you have done it unto me (Matt 25:40).
Let us watch and pray
with our brothers and sisters and so - even today - watch with Christ. But even
more important than watching with Christ is to watch Christ. To
watch His love. To watch His struggle in the garden. To watch Him on
the cross. To watch Him rise. To watch Him come to us and for us now
in His Word and Sacrament. And one day to watch Him come again in glory,
when all who sleep in death will rise, and live where no temptation or sin or
evil will ever come again.
To watch with Christ
is what we should do. Lord, help us to do that! But to watch Christ is
to see what He has done for me. And seeing, believe. And believing, have
life. A new life that starts now and lasts forever. And that you have
that life is the Father’s will for you. In
the Name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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