|
Click here to print
this Sermon
March 24, 2004
Midweek Lent
Luke 22:60-62
Pastor Joel Zank
Hear the Crowing Rooster
(Luke 22:60-62) Peter replied, "Man, I don't know what
you're talking about!" Just as he was speaking, the rooster
crowed.61 The Lord turned and looked straight at Peter. Then Peter
remembered the word the Lord had spoken to him: "Before the
rooster crows today, you will disown me three times."62 And
he went outside and wept bitterly.
In Christ Jesus who took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows,
dear fellow redeemed,
The summer after we got married, Cindy and I lived in Lake Mills,
Wisconsin where my bride had a pretty good job with some nice benefits.
I was still in school and had thought about taking the summer off,
but I really didn't want the reputation of being a kept man. So
I took a job as a custodian at our Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary,
sixty-five miles from where we were living. I knew it would be a
lot of driving, but I decided that if I timed everything just right,
I could sleep in till 6:00 a.m., eat breakfast in the car, and still
make it to the Seminary in time to start work by 7:30 a.m.
So my first night in Lake Mills I headed off to bed figuring the
next sound I'd hear would be the music of my clock radio gently
rousing me from my slumber. I was sadly mistaken. You see, even
though we were living in the heart of the city, it turned out we
had neighbors who raised chickens. That in and of itself wouldn't
have been so bad, but as this city boy was about to discover, where
there's a hen house full chickens, there's bound to be a rooster.
My alarm was set for six; but the rooster went off at about 4:45
a.m. Now I never became particularly fond of that bird, but I have
to tell you, that he saved me some embarrassment. As you might imagine,
I got an earlier start than I had planned that first morning of
work-good thing too. I had never before experienced Milwaukee's
morning traffic. Had I followed my schedule, I would have been very
late for work. That rooster turned out to be a blessing in disguise.
Today our Lord uses another rooster to bless his disciple Peter
and all of us. So as we gather to once again listen to the sounds
of our Lord's Passion, let's take time to hear the Crowing Rooster:
1) sounding the alarm of sin; and 2) signaling a new day of grace.
It was earlier in the evening on Maundy Thursday that Jesus had
made mention of a rooster. He had told his disciples, "This
very night you will all fall away on account of me" (Matthew
26:31). That was too much for Peter. He loved his Lord, and he was
never, ever going to fall away from him. "No, Lord!"
he insisted. "Everyone else may fall away, but I never will."
Isn't that classic Peter - bold, brash, and self-confident? The
others might let Jesus down, but Peter never would.
You can just about see the sadness in the Savior's eyes. He loved
Peter so much, but he knew his faults only too well. "Simon,"
Jesus said, "Satan has asked to sift you as wheat.32 But I
have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail" (Luke
22:31?32). "I tell you the truth, this very night, before
the rooster crows, you will disown me three times" (Matthew
26:34). But Peter was not convinced. "Lord," he said,
"even if I have to die with you, I will never disown you."
(Matthew 26:35).
Here's where Peter's troubles began. He didn't take Jesus at his
word. So instead of praying in Gethsemane for needed wisdom and
strength, he slept. When the crowd came to arrest Jesus, he relied
on his own wits and power, thinking he could take on a whole detachment
of soldiers with nothing more than his sword. That was a mistake,
one that Jesus took care of. But still Peter hadn't learned his
lesson, because, then, when Jesus provided cover for Peter and the
others, making sure that they got away safely, Peter again foolishly
ignored his Savior's will, putting himself right back in harm's
way by following Jesus to the courtyard of the high priest.
One sin of Peter's led to another, but still the worst was yet
to come. You know what happened next. A servant girl of the high
priest recognized Peter. "You, you were with him too!"
she said. Now what would Peter do? He'd been spotted. Could he pretend
to be someone else? He hardly had time to think. "No, that
wasn't me," he said. "I don't know him" - denial
number one.
Luke reports, "A little later someone else saw him and
said, "You also are one of them." "Man, I am not!"
Peter replied" (Luke 22:58) - denial number two. St. Luke
continues, "About an hour later another asserted, "Certainly
this fellow was with him, for he is a Galilean." (Luke
22:59). Peter responded, "Man, I don't know what you are
talking about!" St. Matthew adds, "Then he began
to call down curses on himself..." (Matthew 26:74) - in
effect saying: "I would rather end up in hell than stand with
this criminal named Jesus;" and with that the rooster crowed.
Right then and there time must have stopped for Peter as the sound
of that rooster flooded his mind with memories-the memories of Jesus'
warning, the memories of his proud boast - "even if I have
to die with you, I will never disown you." He had said
it just a little while ago, but now still sounding in his ears was
the alarm of sin. What had he done? What had he said? I would rather
be in hell than stand with Jesus? That's exactly what's going to
happen to me. I just disowned the Son of God, my only hope of heaven.
That's why Jesus wanted me to pray. That's why he wanted me far
away from this place. But now it's too late. I've ruined everything.
Have you ever known that feeling-that sick feeling of disowning
Jesus? It happens in so many different ways. Maybe we're caught
off guard in a conversation about religion. Someone says, "I
don't think it really matters what you believe, as long as you're
sincere. Don't you agree?" There it is, the perfect opportunity
to stand with Jesus, and what do we do? Like Peter we panic, afraid
that if we say something, people may get upset. So we say nothing,
disowning Jesus by our silence.
But that's not only way we deny the Savior. Like Peter there are
plenty of times when we foolishly rush right into harm's way, flirting
with temptation, thinking that we of all people will be able to
handle it. We'll know when and how to stop. This drink, this pill,
this kiss, this bet, this argument, this piece of porn, this bit
of gossip, this lie, this will be the end of it. This is where I
will stop. But even by the time we're thinking that way, it's too
late, right? Sin has taken over completely and we want the sin.
We want the pleasure we think it can bring us more than we want
anything, even more than we want Jesus. So we give ourselves up
to the sin, but the next thing you know the rooster is crowing-not
literally, of course, but our own sin alarm is going off. Something
we hear from a family member, a friend, a teacher, something our
pastor says in a sermon, something we remember from catechism class
- it strikes our conscience like bolt of lightening and in that
instant we become so very aware of what is that we have done. We've
ruined everything; and there's no lie, no excuse, and no explanation
that can make it right again. We've chosen sin over Jesus, hell
over heaven. We've disowned the only one who can save us.
It's a horrible feeling isn't it? But for all the misery it brings,
it so very necessary for us sinners to come face to face with our
sin. Jesus knows this. And so it is in the deepest of all love that
he sends his Holy Spirit to trouble our conscience with the demands
and threats of his law, so that we will run from our sin. But run
where? Not into despair like Judas, but into the loving arms of
Jesus like Peter.
You see, the sound of the crowing rooster called to Peter's mind
not only the Lord's warning about sin, but also the Lord's unwavering
love for sinners. Let that sound do the same for you. Hear the crowing
rooster today. For the good of your soul, hear it sounding the alarm
of sin, but don't stop there. For your soul's salvation, hear also
the crowing rooster signaling a new day of grace.
Do you remember what Jesus had said to Peter? "Satan has
asked to sift you as wheat.32 But I have prayed for you, Simon,
that your faith may not fail" (Luke 22:31-32). After all
that Peter had just done, could it really be that Jesus still loved
him, and was still praying for him? Oh yes! It was no accident that
at the very moment the rooster crowed, Jesus made sure he was in
a place where he could strengthen Peter's faith with one simple
look. Luke tells us "The Lord turned and looked straight
at Peter" (Luke 22:61). I've tried imagine that look so
many times. Given all that Jesus was doing that day as the friend
of sinners, I'm sure of this: it was not a look of hurt or anger.
It couldn't have been. Peter's soul was hanging in the balance.
He needed rescuing. That's what Jesus was there to do. The Savior's
look was one of love, "I'm here Peter. All this is for you,
for your friends, for a whole world of sinners."
Jesus had prayed for Peter's faith. Jesus does the same for you
and me. When we have sinned, it's not the depth off our sorrow that
restores us to Jesus. It's not our anguish or how truly terrible
we can make ourselves feel about sin. Judas felt really terrible
about his sin, so terrible he hung himself and ended up in hell.
It's not what we do that restores us to Jesus. It is what Jesus
has done for us. That night, like every other night Jesus spent
on earth, he was Peter's substitute - yours and mine too. While
Peter was lying about who he was, Jesus was in court telling the
truth about himself, about his kingdom, about his saving work. While
Peter was caving in to the tempter's power; Jesus was standing strong,
resisting perfectly every temptation to save his own skin. Jesus
was doing that for us. That holy life he was living -- that's our
life, all ours through our God-given faith in Jesus. When Jesus
prays for our faith he's praying that the Holy Spirit gives us the
strength we need to believe that Jesus' holiness covers us completely,
perfectly hiding all our sin from God's sight.
And that's not all. Jesus is also praying that we find peace, peace
from the guilt of our sin and from the curse of its punishment.
Isn't wonderful how Jesus used a rooster, nature's alarm clock to
send a spiritual wake-up call to Peter and us. For on that Friday
morning the rooster's crowing ushered in a new day of grace unlike
any the world had ever seen. For by the time the sun set that day,
Jesus, the God-man, had taken our place in hell where he faced everything
we sinners have coming to us. He stood before our angry God; and
in his body he took the full force of God's explosive wrath for
all the times we have disowned and denied our Lord by the evil we
have done and by the good that we have failed to do. During the
course of that one day, Jesus removed from each of us a life-time
of guilt and an eternity of punishment.
So yes, like Peter we will still spend some time each day, sorrowing
over the fact that we disown our Lord too often and in too many
ways. But each day that healthy sorrow will give way to joy - joy
that comes from knowing that we are right with God through faith
in Christ. Rather than living in fear, we get to live each day at
peace with our God, knowing that whatever the day brings, our God
is for us and not against. Rather than living each day desperately
trying to earn God's love, we get to spend all our minutes thanking
God for showing us love we cannot earn and do not deserve. And what
a God we have! For his says this gratitude of ours is best expressed
when we let the rich love and kindness he shows us, spill over into
the lives of all the people we know and meet. And still the day
brings more joy, for when we come to its end, painfully aware not
only of our sins but also of our failures to thank God as we should,
we get to bring all those sins and failures to Jesus who is always
waiting to pardon us and to promise us more love for tomorrow. Go
home thinking about that as you live out the rest of this day's
grace. Think about it this evening as you set your alarm, anticipating
tomorrow's grace. And then when your alarm goes off, think about
is some more. Think of that crowing rooster. Think of your sin and
how it has all been forgiven; and then get up and live in God's
grace all over again for Jesus' sake. Amen.
|