Good Morning All,
Exodus 6:7; “Then I will make you my people, and I will be your God. You
will know that I am the LORD your God, who brought you out from under the forced labor of the Egyptians"
A couple of nights ago,
I was watching an old western. It had
John Wayne and Dean Martin in it. John
Wayne is a sheriff trying to keep a bad guy in jail while the bad guy’s
family/gang is trying to free him. He
gives Dean Martin a badge and tells him he is the new deputy. When Dean Martin balks, John Wayne opens the
door of the jail and tells everyone “this is my new deputy”. When he turns to Dean Martin he tells him,
“Mister, you are now.” Once he wasn’t
the deputy but now he is.
We experience change often in our
lives. Once you were single, now you are
married. Once you were a child and now
you are an adult. When these changes
occur, we are different. You act, think,
and behave differently when you become married or a parent or a house owner or
whatever it is. Once that change occurs
you are different from what you were before to what you are afterwards. This is what our verse for this morning is
about.
At
one time, we were just bunch of individuals wandering around lost; slaves of
the devil. Now we are God’s people. This is a source of great comfort. This phrase may not mean as much to us as it
did in earlier times. At the time that
this was written and for centuries following; most people were viewed as
property. You belonged to the king or
the prince of the territory. So, for a
time you might be King Bill’s people and then you are Prince John’s people and
then there is a war and you are King Xavier’s people. If the war was long enough you were nobody’s
people. This was the worst because you
had no one who would protect you. The
roving bands of thieves and thugs could attack you all they wanted and you had no
one to protect you from them.
This is how we see unbelievers, as those
who have no king; no one who protects them.
They live in a place of lawlessness where everyone is a victim and
everyone is a target. When we are not a
people, we are just left alone with no help and no support. The devil, the world and our sinful nature
can do whatever they want to terrorize us.
There is no hope.
But now we are God’s people. Jesus came to reconcile us back to God. In Baptism, God claims us as his own. God declares us to his children, his
people. Now we don’t have to face the terrors
of this life alone; we have someone we can call upon. We can call upon the Lord to be our refuge,
our security and our hope. Now that we
are God’s own we have mercy, his undeserved love. Now we are different; we are God’s chosen
children redeemed by the blood of Jesus and secure in the knowledge of our
salvation with him. We no longer have to
fear the devil; we have the triumphant Savior as our king.
Gracious
Lord and King, you lovingly make us your people and guard and protect us. We ask that you send your Spirit of comfort
to those who do not know of you great love and that you would bring them to
faith. Be with those who experience the
pains of this life and reassure them of your great mercy. In your precious name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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