Tomorrow marks the 505 th anniversary
of what is considered the opening salvo
of the Reformation.
Martin Luther,
a German Augustinian Monk
and professor of the Scriptures
at the college in Wittenberg,
took exception to the selling of indulgences,
a papal “Get out of Hell Free” card
being peddled by the Roman Church.
Luther wrote 95 theses in opposition
and posted them to the church door of Wittenberg Castle,
which was not,
as some have characterized it,
some act of defiance.
In Luther’s day,
most folks couldn’t read,
let alone read Latin,
the language in which the theses were written.
Posting these theses to the church door
was like posting them in a community page
at the college,
and they were to be the beginning
of an academic debate among scholars and learned folk,
rather than the first shots fired in a revolution.
I guess you could say,
though,
that Luther was the first person
to have a post go viral.
Someone translated these 95 theses into German,
and used this new-fangled invention
called the printing press,
to disseminate myriad copies
in both German and Latin.
Now, this is likely the story we all know.
But just what was so revolutionary
about what Luther had to say?
Sometime before Luther’s viral moment,
Luther was reading the very passage from Romans
we just heard.
When he came across verse 3:28,
“ For we hold that a person is justified by faith
apart from works prescribed by the law,”
Luther had something of an epiphany.
Luther had spent his whole life to that point
trying to please God,
to make God happy,
or at least no longer angry.
He had lived a life of self-denial,
of constant prayer,
of study of the scriptures,
all the while believing that
despite all the good he had done
he was still a sinner,
condemned in the eyes of God.
But this passage changed everything.
If we are justified,
that is made righteous in the sight of God,
NOT by works prescribed by the law,
but through faith in Jesus Christ,
(which is actually better translated,
“through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ,”)
then God is not mad at us,
but rather has come to set us free
from Sin, Death, and the Devil.
For Luther,
this was a revolution.
As Luther scholar Steven Paulson put it,
once Luther realized
that he did not have to make God happy
in order to be loved by God,
but that God IS Love,
and grace is the way that love behaves,
then Luther’s fundamental question became,
“what am I going to do with all this free time?!”
Our scriptures today
point us toward the truth Luther discovered,
buried beneath years of institutionalism,
clericalism,
politics,
and religiosity.
Luther did not discover something new,
but new-to-him.
He read a text that,
to him,
was 1500 years old,
and discovered something
that had been hidden to him.
It wasn’t even new
when the Apostle Paul said it.
It wasn’t even new when Jeremiah said it!
But the retelling,
this reframing of this gospel message
felt new,
and it landed in minds and hearts
that were fertile ground
for such truly good news.
The power of this reformation
had less to do with the re-form-ation
of the institutional power structures
of the Roman Church,
and so much more to do
with the reframing of the gospel message.
It changed our relationship with God
to know that our relationship to God
was based on who God is
and how God acts,
and not who we are
or how we behave.
*******************************************
In the musical Dreamgirls ,
character Effie White
sings “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.”
In “the biz,”
this kind of song is called a “torch song,”
as in “carrying a torch for someone.”
It is the kind of love song
that one sings for an unreciprocated love,
a lost love,
or when that love is abused,
taken for granted,
one-sided.
Ellie sings this song to her manager,
imploring him not to go.
She sings,
“And I am tellin' you I'm not goin'
You're best man I've ever known
There's no way I can ever go
No, no, there's no way
No, no, no, no, way
I'm not livin' without you
I'm not livin' without you
I don't wanna be free
I'm stayin', I'm stayin'
And you, and you
You're gonna love me”
She continues,
“We're part of the same place
We're part of the same time, yeah
We both share the same blood
We both have the same mind
…”
If the commemoration of the reformation
has more to do
with remembering that the gospel can be reframed…
How might we hear the Gospel differently
if we understood the message of God,
of Jeremiah,
of the Apostle Paul,
of Jesus,
to be a sort of torch song,
the proclamation of God’s one-sided love?
What if we understood the law of God
as simply the invitation to love God back?
What if we were to hear Ellie White’s words
as God’s own words?
What if it were God saying to us,
“I’m staying…
and you’re gonna love me.”
Might coming to understand
that God is not mad at us,
that we don’t have to work for God’s love,
that we are loved already
because of who God is
and how God acts;
might this new-to-us understanding
have the power to change our understanding
of who we are
and how we ought to act?
Might we,
like Luther,
wonder what we will do with all this free time?
God has set us free
through the faithfulness of Jesus
to remind those
who have never heard,
who have forgotten,
who find it hard to believe,
and even our own selves,
that we are loved by God.
We can tell the world
that not only is God not going anywhere
but neither are we.
Beloved,
hear the word of God:
“I’m staying,
and you’re gonna love me.”
This is the message of the gospel
reframed in the reformation.
We are God’s beloved,
claimed in baptism,
nourished at the table,
and sent into the wide world
to share the Love of God.
We can rest in the trust
that this is true.
God loves you
and there is nothing you can do about it.
Amen.