
Encore Post: [Eleventh post in a series on the Divine Service] I pray that you are being spiritually fed by the Word and Sacrament of our Lord Jesus Christ. The last time I talked about the sermon and its importance, and so today, we are turning our attention to the Offertory.
Depending on the Divine Service Setting one uses (again, I am speaking of the Lutheran Service Book) you might see a couple different settings of Offertories. But they, at least in my mind, serve different purposes. The Offertory of Divine Service 3 appears to serve more as a response of the congregation to the sermon that was just preached as it follows directly on the sermon’s heels.
The Offertory of Divine Service 3 comes from Psalm 51:10-12. We know the history behind Psalm 51 because the superscript tells us. Psalm 51 was written, prayed by David when Nathan the prophet confronted him concerning the murder of Uriah the Hittite and taking Bathsheba for himself. Those events are well documented in 2 Samuel 11-12.
Psalm 51 is a psalm of acknowledging one’s sin and thus repenting, pleading with God to be merciful to the sinner. The first verse of the Psalm says as much, “Be mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love; according to your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions.” What we sing as the Offertory comes later in the psalm, in a way a prayer that God again “create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.”
The sermon should have confronted us with our sins. Yes, we have sinned and have fallen well short of the glory of God. Indeed, we deserve everlasting death for our offenses against Him. But also in that sermon, we should have heard the Gospel that God has shown us mercy in sending Jesus Christ, who has taken upon himself our sins.
David’s prayer and our own in Psalm 51 is answered in Christ Jesus’ atoning death on the cross and resurrection from the dead with that forgiveness and everlasting life being applied to us via the preaching of Christ’s Word and the Administration of His Sacraments. Joy, even in the midst of suffering, is restored for God’s mercy is made manifest among us by Jesus Christ, who upholds us, giving us the promised Holy Spirit, Who comforts us with things which are Christ’s and declares them to us and makes them our own.
Rev. Jacob Hercamp
Christ Lutheran Church
Noblesville, Indiana
Originally posted at What does this Mean? Blog: https://whatdoesthismean.blog
The posts in the blog What does this Mean? are now available at What does this Mean? | Rev. Robert E. Smith | Substack
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