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	<title>Our Savior</title>
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		<title>Salt and Light</title>
		<link>http://oursaviorwfb.org/archives/221</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 2011 21:19:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>mhenrichs</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[St. Matthew 5:13-16
February 6, 2011
Epiphany 5A
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus~
Regardless of what the final score of today’s game ends up  being—regardless of who wins and who loses—at the end of the game a  select number of players will be described as “difference-makers.”  In  football, the “difference-makers” are those who [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://oursaviorwfb.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Split+Rock+Lighthouse.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-226" title="Split+Rock+Lighthouse" src="http://oursaviorwfb.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Split+Rock+Lighthouse.jpg" alt="" width="249" height="166" /></a>St. Matthew 5:13-16<br />
February 6, 2011<br />
Epiphany 5A</p>
<p>Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus~</p>
<p>Regardless of what the final score of today’s game ends up  being—regardless of who wins and who loses—at the end of the game a  select number of players will be described as “difference-makers.”  In  football, the “difference-makers” are those who are in the right place  at the right time.  They make a key tackle, execute the perfect block,  snag the interception, pounce on the fumble, toss the touchdown pass.   The difference-makers regularly change the game’s trajectory and  re-shape the outcome.  And they accomplish all this simply by doing  their jobs to the very best of their abilities—by playing their assigned  positions with smarts and strength and skill.  They are the  difference-makers.</p>
<p>Today, from the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus is  also describing difference-makers—difference-makers of a different  kind.  They are salt and they are light, He says.  They are men and  women called by Jesus to follow Him in faith.  They are always in the  right place at the right time precisely because they are following  Jesus.  By their words and by their deeds—by living out their assigned  positions in this life to the very best of their ability—they change the  world.  They do the ordinary work of their callings; but they do that  work extraordinarily well.  And on that last day when the fourth quarter  finally expires for planet earth—only then will it be fully revealed  how <em>these</em> difference-makers changed the trajectory of history  and brought life to a dying world.  Today Jesus declares that you are  one of these elect, select, difference-makers.</p>
<p>These  difference-makers are the disciples of Jesus—those who follow Him in  faith.  These difference-makers are distinct from all the other players  on planet earth.  There are plenty of nice, friendly folks in this  world, but not all are difference-makers for the Lord.  For when Jesus  said, “You are the salt of the earth” and “You are the light of the  world,” He wasn’t addressing those words to the entire crowd that had  gathered on the mountainside, but only to the select group of disciples  whom He had called.  They (and only they) are blessed (we heard last  week).  They (and only they) are salt and light.<br />
<span id="more-221"></span><br />
Those are the  two simple, yet powerful metaphors Jesus uses to describe  difference-makers like you.  You are the salt of the earth, and you are  the light of the world.  Salt and light are difference-makers.  Salt is  used for flavor.  Salt is a preservative.  Salt melts snow and ice.   Salt is a necessary nutrient.  If you do any cooking at all, then you  know the importance of salt.  Rarely does a recipe call for more than  just a teaspoon of salt; but if you forget to add the salt you’ll  realize it when you take your first bite.  And light—light is  indispensable.  Light brings safety and security.  One night this past  week I drove from Whitefish Bay (a community with the good sense to  install street lights) into a small municipality just north of here—a  municipality which I will not name because it does not have the good  sense to install street lights.  Let me tell you, driving from this  village to that village—from light into darkness—was not a good feeling.   The difference on that dark night was astonishing.  Why?  Because  light—and salt—are difference-makers.</p>
<p>Jesus says you are salt.   You are light.  You are a difference-maker in this world.  And please  notice the present tense.  It’s a done deal.  You <em>are</em> salt; you <em>are</em> light.  This is not due to any decision that you make.  It’s no achievement on your part.  Jesus isn’t saying that you should <em>aspire</em> to be a difference-maker the way high school football players <em>aspire</em> to be like Aaron Rodgers or Charles Woodson.  It would be absurd to  think that a handful of uneducated fishermen from Galilee could be  difference-makers for the whole world because of their own efforts and  skill.  No, they—and you—are difference makers because Jesus declares  it.  Jesus makes it so:  “You—you who follow me in faith—you are the  salt of the earth.  You are the light of the world—a city set on a  hill—a brightly-burning lamp.”</p>
<p>And your marching  orders—the way that you will make a difference as a disciple—is simple  and straightforward:  “Let your light shine before men, that they may  see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.”  That God-given  light inside of you is shining for the sake of others.  Your good deeds  are to be done, not just to be nice and helpful, but so that others may  see and hear your good and gracious God, and possibly become  difference-makers themselves.</p>
<p>These words of Jesus are  ultimately about good works.  Good works are the whole reason that we  are here.  Of course, God doesn’t need our good works; but other people  do—our family, our neighbors, our fellow believers.  Good works from  God’s perspective are anything a child of God says or does in faith, for  the glory of God or for the good of your neighbor.  And based on that  definition, you are doing good works all the time.</p>
<p>But there’s  something peculiar about these good works that we do.  On the one hand,  they are supposed to be noticeable.  Our good works are obviously  supposed to be public and visible and audible.  We are supposed to let  our light shine <em>before men so that they may see your good deeds</em>.  But notice that it doesn’t say, “see your good deeds <em>and praise you</em>.”  It’s “see your good deeds and <em>praise your Father in heaven</em>.”   The good works we do in faith—the truth that we speak—the seasoning  and light we give to this tasteless, dying world—is not to put the  spotlight on us, but on the gracious God who has called sinners like us  to follow in faith.  A little later on in the Sermon on the Mount Jesus  makes clear that those who do good works <em>only</em> to be seen and praised by men have already received their reward in full.</p>
<p>We are called to let our light shine—to be difference-makers in this  dying world—to act in mercy and to speak the truth in love.  But the  great temptation for the Christian church is to hide that light—to blend  in and conform to the world around us—to water down the truth that we  are called to bring to the world.  For instance, churches that cannot  speak clearly about God’s gift of life and the sin of abortion have  ceased to be salt and light.  Churches that cannot speak clearly about  God’s gifts of sex and marriage and about the intrinsic sinfulness of  pornography and adultery and homosexual acts—those churches have ceased  to be salt and light.  Churches that do not proclaim Jesus Christ  crucified for our transgressions and raised again for our  justification—there is no salt and no light.  Rather than making a  difference in the world, those churches are taking their cues from the  world—adopting whatever fads and trends the world is offering.</p>
<p>For each of us as individuals, as well, there is the danger of  conformity to the world, of blending in, of keeping and holding our  faith so private that we are indistinguishable from unbelievers.  We do  good works—we let our lights shine—we are difference-makers in the  callings that God has given us—within the family, within the church, on  the job, and in the neighborhood.  In those ordinary vocations you are  called to do extraordinary things.  Parents, are you raising your  children any differently than the un-believing parents down the street?   Are you difference-makers?  Teenagers, do you go about your work as a  student any differently than your fellow students who are unbelievers?   Is your attitude/behavior any different than theirs?  Are you  difference-makers?  With friends and co-workers and neighbors, do you  offer something more than idle chit-chat?  Are you a difference-maker in  the lives of those around you?</p>
<p>I’m here to tell you:  YOU ARE!   Jesus says so.  You are salt.  You are light.  You have something that  this dying world needs more than anything, and that something is a  someone.  You have Jesus.  Or rather, Jesus has you.  You are not your  own.  You are bought, purchased and paid for by the Lord Jesus, who gave  His life for your life.  He has called you and made you His disciple in  the cleansing splash of your baptism.  In word and in deed Jesus made  it clear that He wants you to be His own.</p>
<p>You have the power to  be difference-makers in this world—right here and now in the simple good  works that you do in faith every day.  And you have this power to be  difference-makers because your life has been claimed and cleansed by  Jesus—and He makes all the difference.  Jesus’ death for your sins as  your substitute makes all the difference between heaven and hell.  Jesus  is the difference-maker who makes the difference between eternal  punishment and eternal life, the difference between death and  resurrection life, the difference between punishment and forgiveness,  the difference between losing everything and being handed a victory that  no one can ever take away from you.  Whether the Packers will win or  lose today I do not know.  But this I do know:  You are more than  conquerors through Him who loves you (Rom. 8:37).  Thanks be to God who  gives us victory over death through our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor.  15:57).</p>
<p>Jesus is the difference-maker that matters on this day  and every day.  Your baptism into Christ makes all the difference, for  that baptism has brought you salvation.  In His Word, preached and  proclaimed Jesus is making a difference in your life, equipping you for a  life that is filled with brightly-shining words and deeds.  In the  bread that is His body and in the wine that is His blood, Jesus is  making a difference in you, forgiving your sins, placing His life in  your dying body, so that you will live forever with Him.</p>
<p>Jesus  Christ is the difference-maker who declares that you are salt and you  are light.  The words you speak and the deeds you do have sacred  importance for the people that you meet and greet and work with each  day.  When Jesus spoke of a city set on a hill, His listeners would have  thought of Jerusalem—that high and holy city where the temple was  located—the place in which God blessed His people.  Today you have come  to that city set on a hill.  The church is now that holy place, where  the grace of God brightly shines—the place in which God has promised to  bless and forgive His people.  God grant that in our good works—that in  our offerings and in our service to others—people would not see us, but  see the Savior who loves us and gave Himself for us.  He makes all the  difference—for your life—on this Super Sunday and forever.  Amen.</p>
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