Rev. Jeffrey T.
Howard
Beaver Dam and Pitts
Creek Churches
Sermon Psalm 80 –
Make Your Face Shine on Us
November 30, 2014
Today we begin the
season of Advent. This is the beginning of the church year. We will
spend the next four weeks getting ready for the coming of a savior.
Advent will end on Christmas when we will celebrate our savior's
birth.
At some point in
our lives we will need a savior. Our problems will get out of hand.
We won't be able to solve them. We will look to others for help but
it won't be enough. And then we need a savior when there is no one
else to turn to.
The list of
problems we face as church are endless and growing. We have problems
with ankles, knees, hips, and shoulders. We suffer from chronic
pain, birth defects, and incurable diseases. We have friends and
family with terminal diseases. We have broken farm equipment, dead
chickens, and corn flattened by hail. We have floods, and droughts,
and hurricanes which cause damage. We worry about our church,
membership and finances. And are getting older every day. Sometimes
we can solve our own problems. Sometimes we can solve our problems
with the help of others. And sometimes we need a savior. Thankfully
we have a savior who was born on Christmas. Let's pray.
Thank you, God, for the gift of life today. I give thanks that your
face shines upon me for you are my salvation. Lead me like a
shepherd through this day.
Strengthen
me for whatever lies ahead. Grant me the spiritual gifts of peace,
patience, kindness, and gentleness, for I want to show your love, in
word and deed, to others. In Christ’s name. Amen.”1
In
the 8th
century before Christ the people of God were divided into two
nations. The southern kingdom was called Judah. It's capital was
Jerusalem. And in Jerusalem was a temple for the worship of Yahweh,
the Lord God of Israel. The northern kingdom was called Israel.
It's capital was Samaria. The people of the northern kingdom
worshiped golden calves erected by the king at religious shrines in
Bethel and Dam. Israel had abandoned the worship of their God Yahweh
and worshiped other pagan gods.
The
northern kingdom, Israel, needed a savior. The Assyrian army arrived
and encircled the capital. They were threatening to destroy the
nation. Israel could not save itself. And there were no neighbors
powerful enough to save them either. The gods they worshiped were
completely ineffective. Thet needed someone to come and save them.
They needed a savior, but who?
Then
they remembered the God they had worshiped generations before. A God
who had saved them in similar circumstances. Unfortunately they had
abandoned this God years ago. But, maybe, he would remember his
people. Perhaps this God could be persuaded to help them again. So
a group was assembled to travel south to Jerusalem to ask Yahweh, the
Lord God of Israel, for help.
When
they arrived in Jerusalem, they made their way to temple to plead
their case with God. It was believe that God resided in the temple
in a room called the Holy of Holies. God's throne was a box, the arc
of the covenant which the people of God had carried in the wilderness
for 40 years. Inside was the Law of Moses. God sat on top between
the cherubim. The group from the northern kingdom evidently entered
the Holy of Holies to ask God for help. This is what they said.
Psalm
80” 1-3 NIV - Hear
us, Shepherd of Israel, you who lead Joseph like a flock. You who
sit enthroned between the cherubim, shine forth before Ephraim,
Benjamin and Manasseh. Awaken your might; come and save us. Restore
us, O God; make your face shine on us, that we may be saved.
After
generations of unfaithfulness the people of the northern kingdom have
finally returned to the God of their ancestors. And they ask him for
his presence with them as they face the Assyrian enemy.
We
have this same hope for a savior. We know the our God does not
prevent problems from happening. We have too many problems to
believe that. Rather than prevent problems our God promises to be
with us as we face our problems. The benefit of your faith is that
whatever problem you face God will be there with you. His face will
shine upon you. You have a savior who will come to you aid. All you
have to do is to call on him in prayer.
Then
the people from Israel presented to God the prayers of their people.
Let's listen.
Psalm
80: 4-7 How long, Lord God Almighty, will your anger smolder against
the prayers of your people? You have fed them with the bread of
tears; you have made them drink tears by the bowlful. You have made
us an object of derision to our neighbors, and our enemies mock us.
Restore us, God Almighty; make your face shine on us, that we may be
saved.
They
offered up prayers to God asking that he remember that the people of
the northern kingdom were still his people. They told God that his
people were suffering. And therefore God's reputation would suffer
when others saw the suffering of his people. God needed to come to
save them to demonstrate his power to the world. Otherwise the
Assyrians will defeat them and mock their God. And so they asked God
to save his people and to remember what he done for them in the past.
Psalm
80:8-14a You transplanted a vine from Egypt; you drove out the
nations and planted it. You cleared the ground for it, and it took
root and filled the land. The mountains were covered with its shade,
the mighty cedars with its branches. Its branches reached as far as
the Sea, its shoots as far as the River. Why have you broken down its
walls so that all who pass by pick its grapes? Boars from the forest
ravage it, and insects from the fields feed on it. Return to us, God
Almighty! Look down from heaven and see!
They
reminded God that he had saved his people from slavery in Egypt and
had promised them the land they now occupy. But now the very land
that God had promised to them is occupied by non-believers. So they
pleaded with God to uphold his end of the covenant. They begged God
for his help.
Psalm
80 14c-19 Watch over this vine, the root your right hand has
planted, the son you have raised up for yourself. Your vine is cut
down, it is burned with fire; at your rebuke your people perish. Let
your hand rest on the man at your right hand, the son of man you have
raised up for yourself. Then we will not turn away from you; revive
us, and we will call on your name. Restore us, Lord God Almighty;
make your face shine on us, that we may be saved.
And
so they are waiting for a savior: God's son, who sits at God's right
hand and comes to earth as the Son of Man. The savior they were
waiting for is the same one we long for this Advent, Jesus Christ.
Sadly,
God ignored their plea and allowed the Assyrians to conquer the
northern kingdom and resettle the people of Israel in other parts of
their empire. God ignored their prayer. Why were their prayers
ignored? I think I know why.
No
where in Psalm 80 is there a confession. At no time in their prayers
to God did they admit that they had done wrong by worshiping other
gods at the shrines of the golden calves in Bethel and Dan. And
they made no promise to stop these evil ways and return to their God.
All they did was make demands on God and complain that he was not
protecting them well enough. And God responded by ignoring them.
God wants a confession, a change of heart, and a return of his people
and didn't hear it.
So,
if we want a savior to come this Christmas we must confess our sin
and change our behavior from evil to good. If we confess and repent
and turn to him, then God will forgive us and send us a much needed
savior. And the savior we are waiting for and expect is Jesus
Christ.
Father
in heaven we confess that we have turn from you to worship other
gods. We worship the god of consumerism which causes us to worship
money by working all the time and spending all we have. We have no
time left over to serve your church. And we have no money left over
to support the growth of your kingdom. We confess that this is our
sin. We pledge to set our priorities aright and place the worship of
you at the top. This we pray in the named of the savior who came at
Christmas and will come again. Amen.
1Feasting
on the Word Worship Companion: Liturgies for Year B, Volume 1 ©
2014 Westminster John Knox Press p20.
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