Reflections

Saturday of the Sixth Week After Pentecost


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July 26, 2025

Today's Reading: Introit for Pentecost 7 - Psalm 119:145-149; antiphon: Psalm 50:15

Daily Lectionary: 1 Samuel 10:1-27; Acts 22:17-29

“Hear my voice according to your steadfast love; O LORD, according to your justice give me life.” (Psalm 119:149)

 

In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.

What is God’s justice, and how does one gain life from it? The Psalmist would seem to know the answer, and God grant that we would come to know the same. But we must be on guard! For when we, or those dear to us, are hurt by another, or when we have worked hard toward some great accomplishment where others have not, we crave the kind of justice which reigns in this fallen world; justice which dictates that everyone get what they deserve. We desire to see payment commensurate with the amount and quality of one’s work, and punishment of wrongdoers befitting the harshness of their crime. A desire for such justice in this world is not wrong. The Scripture speaks often of curbing evil and promoting good (e.g., Leviticus 19:15, Proverbs 18:5, Is 1:17, Amos 5:15, Romans 13:1-7). However, may God preserve us from coveting such justice against any wrongdoer’s status in the kingdom of heaven. Jesus makes the danger of this clear when he says, “… with the judgment you pronounce, you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you.” (Matthew 7:2)

In God’s kingdom, nobody gets what they deserve. In God’s vineyard, the worker who labored but an hour receives the same pay as he who toiled the whole day. In God’s household, finding one lost coin or sheep is celebrated with absurd lavishness, and the wretched, ungrateful, rebellious, wasteful son, who deserves nothing more than enslavement, is welcomed home and restored as an heir. In God’s kingdom, he who is so indebted to the king that he cannot possibly atone for it in a lifetime is completely forgiven of it. Yet, anyone who would exact punishment rather than bestow mercy upon one indebted to them cannot abide in God’s kingdom, where nobody gets what they deserve.

What is God’s justice, and how does one gain life from it? The answer to both questions is the same. God’s justice is the broken body of Christ nailed to the course wood of the cross. God’s justice is the blood and water flowing from the spear-gouge in Christ’s side, pouring into the font of your Baptism and into the cup of the New Testament for the forgiveness of sins. To look for justice anywhere but Christ crucified is to look for justice to be visited upon oneself. And you can’t handle the justice that God gives any more than those whom you are tempted to condemn. Look to Christ crucified and see God’s justice such that you, and even those by whom you have been harmed, are given life from the author of life; life where all conflict, division, pain, and sin are put to death forever. 

In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.

 

Since Christ has full atonement made and brought to us salvation, Each Christian therefore may be glad and build on this foundation. Your grace alone, dear Lord, I plead, Your death is now my life indeed, For You have paid my ransom. (LSB 555:6)

Rev. Jeffrey Ries is the pastor of Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tacoma, WA.


Audio Reflections Speaker: Pastor Jonathan Lackey is the pastor at Grace Lutheran Church, Vine Grove, KY.

Step back in time to the late Reformation and learn about a divisive yet inspirational figure: Matthias Flacius Illyricus. His contributions to Lutheranism still echo in our teachings today, from the Magdeburg Confession to parts of the Lutheran Confessions. Learning about Flacius’s life will help you understand more intricacies of the Reformation than ever before.

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