Grace, mercy, and peace be to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
The theme for this morning is this: I have come into the world and I have overcome the world.
The King of heaven and earth claims His territory. As far as the east is from the west, as far as the north is from the south, the King is the King of kings and the Lord of lords. The King who created the world has come into this world. The King who created this earth has come in order to save it. He came, He saw, and He conquered. Like a conqueror declaring the victory in the streets, our Lord Jesus Christ declared the victory over each and every one of our enemies. Over sin, we are covered with forgiveness. Over death, we have the Lord who lives and who gives life to us forever. Over the devil, we have Jesus who withstood temptation, but more than that, who conquered the wicked foe.
Our Lord has come into the world, and He has overcome the world. For we know our Lord is the Lord of hosts. The hosts are the angels who came to Bethlehem to the shepherds. The hosts are the angels who rolled away the tomb. The hosts are the soldiers of the cross who have fought the good fight, who have finished the race, who have kept the faith. We are part of these hosts, the hosts that won and never will lose again, the hosts who gather at this altar and receive the only life-giving, strengthening and preserving food for the battle in this world.
Of course, Jesus came into the world. We have celebrated it in December every year. This Incarnation Invasion brought God to earth, God with us. Mary was right; “with God all things are possible,” even a virgin birth, even the birth of God in flesh, even that his name is Jesus, even that “He forgives His people of their sins.” Jesus came into the world, came as a king, not according to earthly standards, but according to heavenly standards. Jesus came into the world, to claim His territory, the earth He created, the world He loved, the creation that needed its King.
But we just can’t wait to be king. Maybe we don’t even like Burger King, but we certainly would like to have it our way. Like Adam and Eve and the serpent before them, we forget what God says and do what we want anyway. Or David and Bathsheba. Or Peter drowning in the sea. We think we know best, or right and wrong, or moral and immoral. We want to be able to tell so-and-so to do what we want rather than let God tell us what He wants and what He says. Our will be done, and not God’s will.
This becomes especially troublesome in the church. You’re a sinner, I’m a sinner, we’re just a bunch of sinners. And we are not free to make decisions like we might in our families, or in our businesses, or in our daily lives. We have God’s Word that is what we believe, that teaches us what is true, and that is outside of ourselves. Much like the Incarnation Invasion, the Word enters our own flesh, creates faith in our souls, and sustains that faith unto life everlasting. This is the great power of the Sacrament, that Jesus enters in, and there faith within, and eternal life begin. And so what God’s Word says is all that matters, not what the world says, not what we would like, but what God has said for us to do.
And this will certainly make me unlikable, like Jeremiah, like Ezekiel, Daniel, Haggai, and Habakkuk. That I will lead our church according to God’s will and not my own will, or your own, or anybody else’s own. That I make decisions for the whole and not the most powerful parts. That I make decisions based on God’s Word and not on my preference. This humbles me, and it humbles you. At the end of the day, we just can’t wait to be king of the church, but that’s just it, we can’t be king of the church. Jesus is the King of the Church. And this will certainly make us unlikable, when we are the church and not the world, when we are believing and the world is doubting, when we are gathering around God rather than becoming gods unto ourselves.
Worried about the world? Worried about the church? Worried about the family, or the business? Let Jesus tell you today: “I have overcome the world.” As the Catechism says, this is most certainly true. Jesus has overcome the sin of Adam and even the sin of us. Jesus has overcome even the punishment of sin, death, and was raised to new life. Jesus has overcome the devil, who tempted Adam and each and every one of us, and proclaimed the victory and claimed the territory.
For the Lord Jesus Christ has overcome the world, even our own world. There is no forgiveness of sins found in this wicked world except here at the church. There is no life everlasting in a world scared to death except that which Jesus accomplished when He said, “It is finished.” There is no curb against temptation in our lawless society except that the Word of God is our sword of the Spirit against every temptation we face. Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, has overcome the world.
This is no throwaway statement that we can overlook. This is the very promise of the Gospel, that Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. That God created this world and sent His Son to save it. That God’s will was done by Jesus’ death on the cross, that the Lord saved you from each of your enemies. Jesus is the King of kings and the Lord of lords. Of course Jesus came into the world. He came, He saw, and He conquered for you.
This Jesus who called the disciples and sent them as far as the east is from the west, as far as the north is from the south, has worked faith in His Church. He has sent the Gospel even to us, that Jesus is Lord, even Lord of this Church. He humbles us with His Word that comforts us and His Sacraments that relieve us. The Lord of heaven and earth who lives and reigns over this congregation forever and ever has already claimed the everlasting territory, Jerusalem the golden, the mountain of Zion for you, His dearly beloved people, for whom He came, and for whom He overcame, until you shall come into the kingdom that shall have no end.
In the holy name of Jesus. Amen.