The Garment of Salvation
A Sermon On:
PREPARED BY
KEN GEHRELS
PASTOR
CALVIN CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH
NEPEAN, ONTARIO
Options..... without obligations.
We like the option of being
able to shop from store to store, pick a bit here and a bit there, coming
and going 7 days a week as we wish.
Elbow room, and a chance
to do what we want, when we want it.
Let me set my own hours
at work.
Develop my personalized
exercise routine.
Custom tailor a package
of cable TV channels and options.
When that personal space is cut short, interrupted - we can get downright irritated. Frank Sinatra's song resonates in more of our lives than perhaps we care to admit. We all like to do it "my way."
Which is fine.... sometimes.
But on other occasions....
well....
So, yes Virginia - you DO
have to stop when the light turns red.
And when the fire ban is
on this summer, no campfires - no matter how badly you want to satisfy
your inner pyromaniac urges.
Sometimes, you see, that's
just the way it has to be.
There are no options.
You can't just do whatever
you want.
Which is something the unfortunate
wedding guest of v.11 discovered the hard way.
The parable which Jesus spoke
speaks of God's great and gracious act of saving humanity - welcoming those
who were estranged into the intimacy of His family; inviting them to join
in the great banquet feast where the Bride is joined to His Son, the groom.
Throughout the Bible bride
is symbolic picture language for the people whom God has called, those
who believe in Him and surrender their lives to Him. It is the Old Testament
people of Israel. It is the New Testament Church. The wedding is the great
and final day of cosmic history, when Jesus returns as Judge.
That will be the day when
the tragedy of Eden lost, where God wandered Paradise and called, "Adam,
where are you?" - where that tragedy will be reversed. The heavenly
Father and His children will be together again, face to face. We will enjoy
His full divine presence; a presence of which we are given a taste now
by the Holy Spirit's living within us.
Many will be, many even
now are, invited to that very special celebration - to be part of the reunion
between God and humanity.
The invitations go far wider
than we dream of or hope, drawing in ones that we, perhaps, would walk
right by. Some, tragically, reject the invitation. Praise God - some accept.
Consider them for the moment.
The Heavenly Groom says
"Come."
And they do.
But this one guest - Everyone
else is dressed in their best, in wedding finery. Their wedding best is
different from person to person, for each is of different means. But each
in their own way has on the best. Some in tuxes, some in borrowed house
ties. But all showing that this moment was special.
Except this fellow -- who's
just wearing whatever. Track pants and t-shirt, say. Saturday morning in
the backyard sort of fare. Nothing special at all.
Nobody's going to tell him
what to wear.
He's his own man.
Life plays by his rules.
He just does it.
It's a huge insult to the
host, a brash and highly improper push forward.
And to this comes the reply
"toss him out."
Weeping, grinding teeth
in despair, darkness - that's the result.
When I read this parable
about the relationship between people and their God I hear in the background
echoes of the prophet Isaiah -
"I delight greatly in
the Lord; my soul rejoices in my God. For He has clothed me with garments
of salvation and arrayed me in a robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom
adorns his head like a priest, and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels."
(Is 61.10)
He has clothed me.
Garments of salvation.
Robes of righteousness.
We're not talking the stuff
of fabric. Rather, think in the same way as St. Paul when he writes in
Colossians 3, "Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved,
clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience...."
We're talking of a wardrobe
of the heart, clothing for the mind.
Not the outer mask, a think
veneer.
Rather, the inner adornment
that truly matters in the eyes of God.
The wedding banquet of the
Son of God is coming.
We have an invitation to
attend. But the Father of the Groom wants us decked out in wedding attire.
It's not so that anything goes. We can't simply take the invitation, tuck
it in our pocket and carry on as though nothing has changed. We can't go
straight to the party from the garage, so to speak. There needs to be a
time of changing. New clothes.
Isaiah already has shown
us something very unique about this coming banquet. Unlike other weddings,
where we come with whatever clothing we can find, the best in our wardrobe,
this wedding will be one where the Father of the Groom will provide the
clothing.
He dresses all who come
in the garments of salvation, the robes of righteousness. He dresses us
in clothing for the heart and soul that have been prepared, custom-tailored
for us, by Jesus. He invites us to put them on.
We must put
them on.
It's the only way to attend
the banquet.
The dressing in those clothes
of salvation, so freely provided, is something to which the ancient liturgy
of the Church points. It is what the music of Schubert's Mass sings. Notice
the pattern it follows.
Seeing our sin, we confess
them with words like Isaiah 64:6 --
"All of us have become
like one who is unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags..."
We stand before the cross,
and allow the Christ who died there for our sins to remove those rags.
Kyrie.
We stand with Isaiah in ch.6
- before Him.
"I saw the Lord, seated
on a throne, high and exalted...."
We see Him in His holy glory.
Gloria!
Praise my soul the King
of Heaven!
And as in Isaiah 6 the angel
comes with a hot coal and purifies Isaiah, so we stand open and honest
before the throne of heaven and plead for the purifying fire presence of
the Holy Spirit to touch us.
We long for the robes of
righteousness - right attitudes and right living; living reflected by the
creeds of the church, living directed by the Holy Word. And then we respond
with actions - going into the world to serve Him, wanting to make this
world a holy place for the inhabitation of our God; a place fit for the
return of the Bridegroom.
We DON'T go into life on
our terms, doing what we want, living our
way.
Sanctus -- To
the holy glory of God!
And as we go, we can serve
with bold confidence for we go with the sacred blessing of God -- Benedictus.
We go with confidence because
we go into life under the direction of the victorious Lamb of God, Agnus
Dei, who takes away the sin of the world, the bridegroom with whom
one day we will be reunited.
If you look through scripture
you'll see the same pattern in various places. I think of the book of Romans
for example:
- exposing our sin in the
first chapters
- drawing helpless people
to the only source of salvation, Jesus Christ.
- calling us to surrender
to the life-changing power of His Spirit.
- directing us to submit
our lives in active service to Him.
- looking forward the grand
day of reunion in His presence.
Stepping out of the rags
of sin.
Dressing in the freely provided,
Christ-tailored garments of salvation;
the Holy Spirit shaped robes
of righteousness.
The rhythm of the liturgy reflects the call of scripture; the expectation of the Father of the Groom - our heavenly Father. It is a dressing to which we are pointed week after week. And necessarily so - for within all of us is the tendency to quickly lapse into a self-directed, self-centred, my-way kind of living.
Which would lead to us experiencing
the same sort of horrible, dumb-struck dark fate as that guest at the wedding.
It's a real possibility.
Else Jesus wouldn't have said, "Many are called, but few are chosen."
Meaning - many receive and hear the invitation, but not all make it through
to the end.
Too many want to pull their
old clothes back on.
Thank you, choir, for singing for us tonight. Thank you for helping us to see again that which is so basic, so essential, to life. Let us return then to the rhythm, to putting on those garments of salvation. Let us worship God.