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December 31, 2006
New Year's Eve
Psalms 121:1-2
Pastor Joel Zank
Proceed with Confidence!
(Psalms 121:1-2) I lift up my eyes to the hills-- where does
my help come from? {2} My help comes from the LORD, the Maker of
heaven and earth.
In Christ Jesus who is always the same, yesterday, today and forever,
dear fellow Redeemed,
Have you ever driven into some unfamiliar city and gotten lost?
It has happened to me. Oh, I would never admit it at the time. Instead,
I usually tell my wife that it's just taking me a minute or two
to get my bearings. But by the fifth time we've passed the same
landmark, there's no convincing her otherwise. "We're lost!"
she announces in a very official sounding tone, and of course I
know what she's going to say next: "You need to pull over and
ask for directions." Oh that hurts. I know she's right, but
to have to ask for directions. You see, I pride myself in being
able to find my own way. But experience has taught me that pride's
a funny thing. You get yourself lost a couple of times, and pretty
soon your pride starts running out and your confidence too! Before
long, you're not sure of anything anymore. You don't know if you
should go to the right or the left, if you should go backwards or
forwards.
Maybe you're feeling that way this evening. Here we are cruising
down the expressway of life, headed into an unfamiliar place in
time. I suppose that's true every night, but there's just something
about New Year's Eve, something about crossing over the dateline
into a brand new year that leaves you with a feeling of uncertainty.
If you're like me, you start wondering about the days ahead and
what they will bring. Will 2007 find you traveling the highway of
happiness or heartache? You sure wouldn't want to make a wrong turn
would you! Maybe we should stop and get some directions before we
go any farther. Let's check in with the psalmist who has been down
this road. He tells us just what we need to hear: "Proceed
with confidence!" he says. And how do we do that? Well, to
begin with we will want to look up, not down, and secondly we will
want to look back, then ahead.
First, look up, not down. This piece of advice is taken directly
from the psalmist's own example: "I lift up my eyes to the
hills," he writes. Looking up does not come naturally to
us sinners. We tend to look down at our own abilities and what they
can do for us. We've been doing that ever since we were little.
Just offer to help a four year old tie his shoes and before you
can even bend down, he takes a step backwards and pouts, "I
can do it myself." Or try offering a piece of advice to a teenager
and see how quickly she tells you, "Leave me alone. I know
what I'm doing." And it's no different when we get older. When
someone suggests a new or better way of doing something, we're quick
to tell them: "I don't do it like that. My way works just fine."
Of course, that may be true. There isn't anything wrong with being
independent, until in our pride, we boast of and rely on abilities
that we simply don't have. That's when pride becomes sinful and
dangerous.
Maybe you've been guilty of such pride during this past year. Maybe
instead of looking up for help, you flirted with some temptation
to sin, thinking you'd have the willpower and strength to stop before
things got out of hand. But you didn't, and so they did get out
of hand. The sin proved too strong, and now you can't get away from
its guilt or its power. No wonder you're not looking forward to
the New Year, not if it means battling this same old demon for the
next twelve months.
Or maybe it wasn't a temptation, maybe it was some trouble in your
family, some problem at work, some health or financial worry, some
burden or another that you have insisted on carrying all by yourself.
You're all worn out. You don't feel like you can last another day,
let alone another year, but you'll go right on trying won't you
- that's the way it is with sinful pride.
And who should care? If you're willing to cart around the weight
of your worries and the shame of your sin, that's your problem,
right? It certainly is, but maybe you're not grasping the depth
of that problem. You see, when pride keeps us from taking our burdens
to God, there's nothing he can do for us, not now, not ever. Sinners
who arrive at God's Judgment seat proudly bearing their own guilt,
will suffer their own hell forever. That's when the real misery
begins. Pride will be their eternal undoing! But friends, there's
no need for any of us to come to such a fate.
Look up, this evening, not down. Look up to him who knows and sees
all things. Put away your pride; bare your soul to God. Acknowledge
your sin before him, the blatant sins that have proven so hurtful
to you and others; and not just those sins, confess your secret
sins too, the ones you've tried to cover up and hide in your heart.
Bring all your sins to God in repentance, knowing that there is
nothing else to do with them except to perish in them. Look up and
ask with the psalmist, "Where does my help come from?"
And then by faith say with him, "My help comes from the LORD!"
The LORD Jehovah is the God of free and faithful love. He built
his temple on Mount Zion in Jerusalem. So when the psalmist lifted
his eyes to the hills, that's what he saw, the Holy Place from which
God proclaimed his love for sinners and his plan to save them. That
temple is, of course, long gone, but the promises God made there
are not. They are promises God kept on another hill called Calvary.
Sinner, lift your eyes to that hill. Your help comes from the LORD
who took your place on the altar of the cross. That shame and guilt
you've been carrying around with you, they're no longer yours. Jesus
claimed them from you long ago and paid for them all in your place;
even your sinful pride became his to pay for in the fires of hell.
You want more assurance? Lift your eyes tonight to the bread and
wine of our Lord's Holy Supper. See in, with, and under these earthly
elements the precious body and blood that set you free from sin's
curse. There's no guilt or fear for you to carry into the New Year.
The Lord is with you to forgive all your sins. Proceed with confidence!
Look up, not down. And while you're at it, look back, then ahead.
"Where does my help come from? My help comes from the LORD,
the Maker of heaven and earth!" The psalmist looked back,
all the way to creation. Why would he do that? Creation is a constant
reminder of God's wisdom, power and love. With nothing more than
his word, God formed the whole universe, made it all just for you
as he had planned to from all eternity. With such tremendous power
at the command of his wisdom, and with such love directing all that
wisdom and power on your behalf, what is it that you should be afraid
of? What could happen in this world, what could come your way that
God would fail to know about, take charge of and make into a blessing
for you? Do you really suppose he who crushed Satan for you, lacks
the power and love to keep you save from that defeated foe?
On the surface, these questions seem like they should be easy to
answer. But late at night, when you're alone with your thoughts,
it's a different story, isn't it? These are the questions that keep
you awake when you're trying to sleep. These are the questions that
make it hard to enter a New Year:" What will become of me and
my loved ones in the months ahead? You and I have no answer to that
question, until we put them into the context of our lives in Christ.
Instead of looking ahead in fear, look back to the year now drawing
to a close. Ask yourself, "Were there no enjoyable days in
2006? Were there no moments of meaningful love shared with those
dear to you? Were there no accomplishments or successes?" Of
course there were? Well, then, where did these come from? All these
things and more were gifts from the Lord of your salvation, the
one who made heaven and earth for you. In his love, he'll grant
more days like these in 2007. Sure he will. "BUT...",
we'll be quick to add, "...there were some hard days this last
year, awful days, sad days when the load of pain and trouble seemed
too heavy to bear." Yes there were days like that. But these
days also teach us something about our future. Tell me, those problems
we fretted over, where are they now? In all honesty some of them
never materialized. How often we worried over nothing at all. Other
troubles did come, but now, they're long gone, lifted by the loving
hand of an almighty God. And yes, some of the problems are still
with us, but these give us reason to say, "Thus far the
LORD has helped us" (1 Samuel 7:12). Here we are as living
proof. God has been seeing us through the trouble, and more than
that, he's been using it to help us grow as his people.
Friends, God never changes. What he's done for us in the past he
will continue to do for us in the days and months ahead. Our loving
Lord will be with us in every situation of life. I like how the
psalmist put it in Psalm 37:25 "I was young and now I am
old, yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken or their children
begging bread." When it comes to God, past blessings really
are a guarantee of future security. Proceed, then, with confidence,
dear Christians, into 2007. You won't get lost! Look up in faith,
not down in pride; look back in gratefulness, and then ahead in
anticipation of all the blessings that await you in the year ahead,
for Jesus' sake. Amen.
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