|
Click here to print
this Sermon
December 31, 2003
New Year's Eve
Psalms 31:10, 14-16
Pastor Joel Zank
My Times are in Your Hands, O LORD
(Psalms 31:10, 14-16) My life is consumed by anguish and my
years by groaning; my strength fails because of my guilt, and my
bones grow weak...14 But I trust in you, O LORD; I say, "You
are my God." 15 My times are in your hands; deliver me from
my enemies and from those who pursue me.16 Let your face shine on
your servant; save me in your unfailing love.
In Christ Jesus who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty,
dear fellow redeemed,
In 1 Corinthians 12:4 the Apostle Paul writes, "There
are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit." In
order that the members of his body, the church may function as a
unit, the Lord Jesus makes all of us managers of different kinds
of gifts so that pooling our resources, we may work together to
serve him and his kingdom. But there is one blessing that God gives
to all of us in the exact same quantity-that blessing is time. With
the exception of the newborns among us, we were all put in charge
of 8,760 hours again this year. When the clock strikes midnight
in a few hours we will all have withdrawn from the bank of time
the same 210,240 minutes. We will all have spent the same 12,614,400
seconds.
All this time has come to us as a gift from God. But like all the
other gifts we receive from him, time is something that God loans
to us. We are only managers of this gift. We don't own it outright.
God does. So on this New Year's Eve, it's very fitting that we should
join King David in saying, "My Times are in Your Hands, O LORD.
So to you I confess my sins; and in you I put my trust."
Since our times are in the LORD's hands, we are accountable to
him not just for the way we use our time, but also for the way we
think about time. The LORD says, "You shall have no other gods,"
but just think how often we make time our god, worshiping it as
if it owned us. We let deadlines and schedules dictate our moods.
We live for vacations and holidays, expecting that time away from
work will cure all that is wrong with us. We convince ourselves
that if we could just learn to make better use of our time, there
would be no end to the happiness we could experience here on earth.
In all these ways and many more we look to time to do for us what
only God can do. And what is the result? Wouldn't many of us say
with King David: "My life is consumed by anguish and my
years by groaning" (Psalm 31:10a)?
Worship it as we may, time can't live up to our expectations. Time
off at Christmas and New Year's doesn't prove to be the stress reliever
we thought it would be, so we head back to work or school more disappointed
and depressed than ever.
Why does time treat us so cruelly? Well first of all let's realize
that just as time is not a god to be worshiped neither is it a monster
to be dreaded. As we said, time is a gift from our loving Creator.
God made time to serve us. But our sin spoils time as it does the
rest of God's creation. As is the case with all his other good gifts,
we sinners abuse time. For example we spend time worrying because
we don't trust God to take care of us. We steal time from our employers
by slacking off on the job. We take time to gossip and curse. We
waste time in sinful fantasies. You name the sin and we find the
time to commit it, day after day, year after year. And then we have
the nerve to think of time as our enemy, blaming it for aging us
and draining us of strength, while all along, the real culprit is
our sin. God caused King David to realize this. David too had abused
God's gift of time. He had taken some of the time God gave him and
spent it lusting after his neighbor's wife. When that sin spun out
of control, threatening to ruin his life, David found more time
to plot and plan his neighbor's death. He thought had gotten away
with his sin, but in time he became completely miserable. And yet
try as he might, he couldn't blame time for his troubles. In the
end he had to confess, "My strength fails because of my
guilt (see N.I.V. footnote), and my bones grow weak" (Psalm
31:10).
Time posed no threat to perfect Adam and Eve. It was only after
they sinned that the passing of time brought aging and death to
them and all of us. So tonight, as we mark the passing of another
year, a year which has taken its toll on all of us in any number
of ways, like David before us, it is right for us to make the connection
between our sin and the pain that it brings to us and others. That's
not to say that we must always look for or find some specific piece
of suffering in our life for each and every sin committed. But we
will acknowledge that sin in general causes all suffering in life.
And so it is right for each of us to bring our many sins to God
and say to him, "My times are in your hands, O LORD, to you
I confess my sins, including my misuse and abuse of your gift of
time. I've been selfish with time. I've squandered it, giving too
little of it back to you in the form of praise and service. I deserve
to suffer your punishment here in time and forever in hell."
What else can we say to God? Can you think of some offer we sinners
might make to him, that would cause him to withhold the punishment
we have coming to us? Can we promise him that we will never misuse
his gifts again? And even if we could keep such an impossible promise
from this day on, should we expect that to be enough to satisfy
God who demands a lifetime of perfection from us and who insists
that every sin be paid for? No, there's nothing we can do to right
even one of our wrongs, let alone all of them. From the moment sin
entered into the world, all hope in our own efforts to gain heaven
was lost. All hope now must be focused on God, the same God against
whom we sin every day. There's nothing to do but to beg for his
mercy and plead for his forgiveness.
I suppose that might sound like a waste of time. But King David
didn't think so. Having acknowledged the guilt of his sin, he says
in all confidence with his very next breath: "But I trust
in you, O LORD; I say, 'You are my God.' 15 My times are in your
hands" (Psalm 31:14,15a). David's hope was not in himself,
but in the God of all grace who had made a promise to show David
love, not because David deserved it, but because God is love. The
same God made the same promise to all of us at the time of our baptism.
His promise is not conditional. It is not dependent on our ability
to earn God's love. It is founded on Jesus and what he did with
time as our substitute.
At the beginning of time, only moments after our first parents
ruined themselves and all of us with their sin, God promised to
send a Savior to rescue them and us. The Apostle Paul records how
God kept this promise, writing in Galatians 4:4-5 "When
the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born
under law,5 to redeem those under law, that we might receive the
full rights of sons." Jesus, our eternal God, stepped into
time and used it to save us from sin. He spent his 33 years on earth
living a perfect life that God is willing to accept as a replacement
for our lifetime of sin. And then at the end of his 33 years, Jesus
spent six God-forsaken hours on the cross, suffering in our place
the full punishment for sin that we would have had to endure throughout
all eternity. But not anymore, this punishment no longer awaits
us because just three days after he died, God raised Jesus from
the dead to prove that his sin-payment has been credited to our
account. Think of it! God used 33 years, 6 hours, and 3 days to
save us from an eternity of misery! Such mercy invites each of us
to say, "My times are in your hands, O LORD. In you I put my
trust - my trust for forgiveness and my trust for deliverance.
You see my friends, with our trust placed in God and his great
love for us, we can enter the New Year, praying to our LORD as David
does here in our psalm, "deliver me from my enemies and
from those who pursue me" (Psalm 31:15b). Having rescued
us from our greatest enemies, sin, death, and Satan, we can count
on Jesus to protect us every day from everything that might threaten
our relationship with him. This doesn't mean that Satan will give
up on his efforts to destroy us. It doesn't mean that all the world's
terrorists will suddenly disappear. But it does mean that our dear
Jesus will watch over us in such a way that he will either keep
us from evil or make evil serve our good. Either way we can depend
on him to deliver us from our enemy whether that enemy has flesh
and blood or he's the devil himself.
We can even count on Jesus to help us battle the enemy inside of
us, our own sinful nature. This enemy looks ahead and sees a whole
new year of hours to spend committing every sin imaginable. But
our sinful nature need not get his way. You and I have other plans
for the year ahead. We want to dedicate every day as a thank you
to Jesus who gave all his days for us. To this end, we will make
plans right now to begin every week by spending a couple of hours
in God's house for worship and Bible study. We can plan to spend
a few precious moments every other week communing with our Savior
in his Holy Supper, receiving the very body and blood with which
he purchased our forgiveness and salvation. We can plan right now
to set aside fifteen minutes or so each day to pray and meditate
on God's Word so that we may live out the remainder of the day in
the peace and with the strength that only God can give. There is
so much we can do to serve our God in the year ahead as we spend
time loving the family he has given us, and serving the people he
has placed around us. But to carry this all out we must have the
LORD's blessing or all our plans will come to nothing. So in the
closing words of our text we pray, LORD, "let your face
shine on your servant;" Help me live each day for you,
and if I fail you, as I have so often in the past, please, LORD
"save me in your unfailing love" for Jesus' sake.
Amen.
|