The Sermon Notes of Harold Buls


The Sermon Notes of Harold Buls

On the Gospel Lessons of the Ingrian Lutheran Church of Russia

Text from Luke 6:36-42

Trinity IV

1. Vs. 36 is the theme for vss. 37-42. But vs. 36 is a "hinge" vs. It looks backward to vss. 27-35 about loving enemies. God, in His mercy and compassion, loves even those who hate Him. Cf. Jn. 3:16. But vs. 36 also looks forward to vss. 37-42. God forbids judging that destroys. He forbids cheating others. Loveless people are spiritually blind. How can they lead others? Loveless people, who do not see their own sins, become hypocrites. They condemn in others what they allow in themselves. Ps. 118:1 has often been called the summary of the OT. It occurs about twelve times in the OT. It reads: "Oh give thanks unto the Lord for He is good because His mercy endures forever." He is good in the sense that He is merciful. Vs. 36 of our text says: "Be merciful just as your Father is merciful." only Christians are addressed here. They say "Our Father, Who art in heaven." They are the redeemed people who have faith in Christ. The Jews never speak of God as their Father. Vs. 36 tells us not who we are but what we should be. The adjectives are in the predicate.

2. Vs. 37 forbids only destructive judgment, Jesus said at Jn. 7:24: "Judge not according to appearance, but judge righteous judgment." He is not contradicting I Cor. 5:12; I Jn. 4:1 or the disciplinary judging of the church, Mt. 18:17.18; Jn. 20:23. He does forbid self-righteous, self- exalting, hypocritical judging. At Jn. 8:15 Jesus said: "You judge according to the flesh. I judge no one. And if I do judge, my judgment is genuine because I am not alone but I and the One Who sent me." Meditate on Jn. 12:46-48: "I (Christ) came [as] a Light into the world so that everyone who believes in Me does not remain in darkness. And if someone hears My utterances but does not observe them, I don't judge him, for I've not come to condemn the world but in order to save the world. The person who rejects Me and does not receive My utterances has that which judges him; the Word which I have spoken that will judge him on the last day."

3. God has given us courts so that justice is done. That's the meaning of Ps. 82:6, quoted at Jn. 10:34: "You are gods." Judges and courts are gods, appointed by God to establish justice among people. God has given us the church and pastors to show us our sins so that we might repent. God. has given us parents and teachers to guide us and to discipline us when we wander. Jesus is not talking about that in vs. 37 of our text. He's talking about sinful judging like that of the self- righteous Pharisee in the Temple. Lk. 18:9-14. Are we guilty of unjust and destructive judging? Our Confessions say again and again "The Law always accuses us." But the Gospel always forgives us.

4. Vs. 38 involves us in a market illustration. In the market, grain (usually barley) was sold in bulk, not packaged, form. An honest merchant would weigh out a generous portion for the buyer. Then the buyer would pull up the bottom of his outer garment, like an apron, and the merchant would deposit the barley in the garment which served as a bag. Honest merchants sold generously. That's the point. Jesus is saying: "Deal generously with people and God will reward you." He's speaking of Christian living, not the way of salvation. These generous deeds don't save us. Jesus already did that. We should be like Him. It is more blessed to give than to receive.

5. Vss. 39-40 contain two axioms, general truths understood everywhere. Blind guides can only produce blind followers. And, don't expect pupils to rise above the level of what they have been taught. In application this means: If you are merciless, judgmental and stingy, you will produce people who are merciless, judgmental and stingy. You teach what you are. A serious student who has a competent teacher will also be competent. Like begets like.

6. Vss. 41-42 contain a highly exasperated illustration: If a person has a beam in his own eye, how can he see the splinter in a neighbor's eye? He cannot. Jesus is speaking about the hypocrite who is blind to his own great faults but picks at the little faults of others. Read Lk. 18:9-14; I Jn. 1:9-10; I Tim. 1:15.


The Sermon Notes of Harold Buls

On the Gospel Lessons of the Ingrian Lutheran Church of Russia

Text from Luke 6:36-42

Trinity IV

Theme: Everyone Who Is Well Trained Will Be Like His Teacher

INTRODUCTION

Our theme. is vs. 6 of our text. The teacher is Jesus. The pupil is the Christian. In the fall (Gen. 3) man lost the image of God. But the image of God is restored in the Christian (Eph. 4:20-24). The Christian is not sinless. He still has the old man. But a Christian is renewed. He also has the new man. Jesus' Sermon on the Mount (Lk. 6:20-49) speaks about the renewed man.

I. THE CHRISTIAN IS WELL TRAINED ABOUT HIS OWN NATURE. Vss. 41-42.