|
Print this Sermon
November 11, 2001
2nd Sunday of End Time
2 Thessalonians 1:5-10
Pastor Joel Zank
GOD'S JUDGMENT IS ALWAYS RIGHT!
(2 Thessalonians 1:5-10) All this is evidence that God's judgment
is right, and as a result you will be counted worthy of the kingdom
of God, for which you are suffering. God is just: He will pay back
trouble to those who trouble you and give relief to you who are
troubled, and to us as well. This will happen when the Lord Jesus
is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels.
He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel
of our Lord Jesus. They will be punished with everlasting destruction
and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the majesty
of his power on the day he comes to be glorified in his holy people
and to be marveled at among all those who have believed. This includes
you, because you believed our testimony to you.
In Christ Jesus whose glorious return draws near, dear fellow redeemed,
Have you noticed how many armchair generals there are in our country
these days? Ever since our nation declared war on terror there has
been no end of people willing to offer up an opinion as to how this
war should be fought on the home front and overseas. At news briefings
and press conferences every day the decisions and judgments of our
leaders are called into question. And nearly every day I see some
military analyst on one of the news networks explaining how he would
be doing everything different if he were the one in charge.
All this takes place, of course, because we live in a democracy
that grants us the freedom and even the right to question the decisions
and judgments of our leaders. This is a good thing, because our
leaders like us are sinful human beings who can make mistakes. Knowing
that they are accountable to us ought to be enough to lead them
to make the best, most considerate judgments they can.
But let me ask you this, should the decisions and actions of our
God be placed under the same scrutiny? I would guess that we would
all say no. The Almighty Creator of heaven and earth is not accountable
to us, his creatures. And yet how often don't we criticize the Lord
for the way he is conducting his war against Satan and this unbelieving
world. Today the Apostle Paul has something to say to all of us
arm-chair generals, something that will silence our criticism and
at the same time bolster our faith. For Paul tells us, GOD'S JUDGMENT
IS ALWAYS RIGHT! It is right this day and it will be right on the
last day.
Paul first wrote these words to people who may have thought that
they had good reason to question God's judgment. The Christians
of Thessalonica were brand new Christians. The Holy Spirit had just
recently taken up residence in their hearts through Paul's preaching
of Christ-crucified for sin. But no sooner had God brought them
into his kingdom and these Christians were under attack from all
sides. In Acts 17 we're told that jealous Jews from the local synagogue
accused the Christians of treason, convincing local authorities
that by claiming Christ as their King, these Christians were openly
rebelling against Caesar. You can well imagine that such hatred
stirred up all kinds of doubt and fear in the hearts of these Christians.
I say you can well imagine it, because you face the same kind of
hatred every day. The truth we believe and proclaim-that Jesus Christ
is the only way to heaven is not popular in a world whose people
either want to deny heaven's existence or want to believe that there
are other ways of getting there. Tell someone that without Christ
they will perish and you may well be mocked as an insensitive bigot
who ought to keep your politically incorrect opinions to yourself.
Even within Christianity we confessional Lutherans are ridiculed.
There are Christians who laugh at us because we insist that every
Word of Scripture comes from God, and that the Bible is his book
without any errors our mistakes in it. We're considered snobs because
we hold to what the inspired Scriptures say about fellowship. We're
thought of as backwards because we seek to live within God's roles
for men and women. All this ridicule, mockery and laughter-it all
flows from the hatred others have for us-hatred that fills us with
doubts and fears.
The same doubts and fears that lead us to question the truth of
what we believe. Are we sure we're right? And if we are, why isn't
God doing something about it? Why doesn't he silence our critics?
He shouldn't let things go on like this, not if he loves us. But
it's right here that Paul interrupts these thoughts of self-pity,
saying, "All this is evidence that God's judgment is right,
and as a result you will be counted worthy of the kingdom of God,
for which you are suffering" (v.5).
"All this" is a reference to the world's hatred for Christians
and to the way God sustains the faith of his people in the face
of that hatred. In fact Paul goes so far as to say that the world's
hatred for us is proof that God's judgment is right. What judgment
is his talking about? The judgment God has made on your behalf.
Back in eternity God made a judgement to choose you to be one of
his dear children through faith in Jesus. You didn't do anything
to picked by God. God made a choice to show you love that you, a
condemned sinner, would never deserve. He did this because he is
love. In time he acted on his loving choice, putting the name of
Jesus Christ on you in baptism, giving you credit for the perfect
life Jesus lived for you, proclaiming your sins forgiven and forgotten
for the sake of Jesus' sufferings and death on the cross, and working
in your heart faith to believe that after living and dying for you,
Jesus has risen from the dead and now rules over this whole universe
with one purpose in mind, to bring you home to heaven. And how can
we be sure that God's judgment made so long ago is right? In other
words how do we know that his choice is effective and that we enjoy
this saving relationship with Christ this very day? Our answer is
found in the world's hatred of us. The world hates us the same way
it hated Jesus. Listen to what Jesus himself had to say about this:
"If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first.
If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it
is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of
the world. That is why the world hates you" (John 15:18-19).
As a result of God's eternal choice, as a result of all that Jesus
did to save us, you and I, to no credit of our own, will be counted
worthy of the kingdom of God.
Isn't this something, my friends! The very hatred you and I would
look to avoid is the very evidence that God's judgment on our behalf
is right this day. God's judgment is always right. This truth is
meant to encourage us as we look ahead to the future. God wants
us to know that his judgment that has made and kept us his people
to this point in our lives will never fail us. With this truth in
mind, Paul tells us that God's judgment will be right on the last
day.
Oh how we need to hear this powerful truth again and again in order
to keep life in its proper perspective. It so tempting for us Christians
to avoid the criticism of those who hate us by either abandoning
our beliefs or at the very least keeping them to ourselves. To our
great shame we so often treat the wonderful truth God has given
us as some kind of awful burden that we must bear in disgrace, all
the while envying those who live life without this handicap. We
consider them the lucky ones because their days seem trouble-free
and they appear to get away with murder. The psalmist, Asaph felt
this way about the unbelievers of his day. He said in the 73rd psalm:
"I envied the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the
wicked. They have no struggles; their bodies are healthy and strong.
They are free from the burdens common to man; they are not plagued
by human ills. Therefore pride is their necklace; they clothe themselves
with violence.... They scoff, and speak with malice; in their arrogance
they threaten oppression. Their mouths lay claim to heaven, and
their tongues take possession of the earth... When I tried to understand
all this, it was oppressive to me till I entered the sanctuary of
God; then I understood their final destiny" (Psalm 73:3-6,
8-9, 16-17).
It was in God's house that Asaph learned God's truth, the same
truth we are learning today, the truth that unbelievers aren't getting
away with anything. Don't worry, says the Apostle Paul, "God
is just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you and give
relief to you who are troubled, and to us as well. This will happen
when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with
his powerful angels" (vv. 6-7). Paul doesn't tell us this
so that we may gloat over the enemy or decide to withhold the gospel
from them. Instead he's giving us encouragement so that we may continue
to share the gospel even in the face of hatred. He's telling, hang
in there! Relief is on the way because the Lord Jesus is coming
back, perhaps today and when he comes the mouth of every mocker
will be silenced as all who hated God come face to face with the
blazing fire of his wrath. Paul describes the fate of God's enemies,
saying, "[God] will punish those who do not know God and
do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will be punished
with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the
Lord and from the majesty of his power" (vv.8-9).
What horror awaits those who do not believe in the Triune God of
Scripture. Such people will not live in heaven. Nor will those who
claim to know God, but fail to obey his gospel, that is, fail to
listen to and believe his promise that salvation comes as a free
gift through Christ alone. Their punishment will be everlasting
destruction, unending torture. They will face an eternity without
God's grace and without God's power to help them. They will know
only his anger. And be assured of this, the judgment God will pronounce
on these souls will be right, for in their unbelief they have rejected
Christ's payment for their sin. Having forfeited the gospel's gracous
gift, they will have to spend all eternity paying sin's wages for
themselves.
As we consider all the times we have turned our back on the gospel,
doubting or despising its promises, all the times we have questioned
the wisdom of God's judgment or the sincerity of his love, we shudder
to think how we deserve to hear him sentence us to hell "...on
the day he comes to be glorified in his holy people..." (v.10).
But instead of hearing his condemnation that day, he will declare
us innocent of these and all our sins and we will be numbered among
the holy. God's judgment of us that day will be right, not because
we never sinned or because we somehow managed to pay for our transgressions.
That could never be. No, his judgment will be right because through
the faith he gave us and preserved in us we will be washed clean
of our sins, purified by the blood of Christ. On that day, God's
people will marvel at grace so powerful, so divine that it saved
them even from their own self-destructive ways. This includes you,
my friend, you'll be marveling too because you believed our testimony
to you that you are saved by grace alone through faith in Christ
Jesus our dear Savior from sin. Amen.
|