Pastor Sherry’s message for October 4, 2025
Scriptures: Lam 1:1-6; Ps 127; 2 Tim 1:1-14; Lk 17:5-10.
Today’s Gospel (Luke 17:5-10) consists of what is known as the “Faithful Service” parable: Jesus is speaking to those who believe in Him, rather than to nonbelievers. Using the example of a servant’s relationship to his or her master, He makes the point that our obedience to God is not a matter of merit but of duty. We don’t rack up “brownie points” with the Lord by living out the 10 Commandments or by donating to the poor. After all, like a good servant, we are just doing what the Master (our Lord) expects us to do. And if we are obeying God’s will, we shouldn’t be looking for an immediate reward.
This seems like another of those hard sayings of Jesus. He is stating, essentially, that we need to hold on to our faith–even through tough times–by remembering that our salvation is a gift to us from God. We don’t work to earn it; but we express our gratitude to the Lord for it by our service to Him and to others. The word in the Greek for servant is doulos. If we love Jesus, we gladly become His doulos, just as He became like a servant, going to the Cross for our sakes.
Our other passages assigned for this Sunday offer a contrast between what life is like for us when we surrender and become a doulos of Christ vs. when we don’t:
A. In our Old Testament lesson (Lamentations 1:1-6), we find the prophet, Jeremiah, grieving for what has happened to the disobedient and rebellious Southern Kingdom. The prophet is inconsolable! He weeps and laments for Judah and Jerusalem, personalizing the city as a desolate woman. He witnessed the destruction of Solomon’s Temple by the Babylonians in 586BC. He saw his countrymen and women killed, wounded, or carted off into slavery. They had abandoned being servants of the Most High God, and instead were forced to become servants of the pagan empire of Babylonia.
In his grief, Jeremiah reveals to us the heart of God. Our God is heartbroken when we veer off into sin and apostasy. God had had Jeremiah repeatedly warn the people of His coming judgment. But they chose to disregard all the prophet’s admonitions to return to return the Lord. So, in 586BC, the Lord severely chastised them, at the hands of King Nebuchadnezzar and his army.
B. Psalm 137 continues this tragic narrative. The captives in Babylon remember Jerusalem and their formerly magnificent Temple with grief and sorrow. It was common knowledge in the Ancient Near East that as many as 100,000 worshippers might raise their voices in unison to praise God during the great feasts in Jerusalem. King David had amassed an orchestra of hundreds of musicians. Hearing the gigantic choir together in combination with the huge orchestra must have been a sensational experience!
Now their captors urge them to sing as they used to do. Can’t you just hear them egg them on? Come on, come on! Sing for us! But they are too bereft to sing! Instead, they hung their harps on willow trees (now called weeping willows), and wept, insisting they could only sing as they once did if they were back in Jerusalem. None of the historical books of the Old Testament describe for us what the experience of captivity was like for the common Israelite. Daniel narrates the fate of princes; Esther, that of the queen and her uncle, a scribe; but no where do we see described what life was like for the ordinary Jew taken into Babylonian slavery—except in this psalm. They were slave laborers whose job was to dig irrigation canals in this dry land. Remember Babylon was noted for its lush hanging gardens, possible only with massive and effective irrigation.
(J.Vernon McGee, Through the Bible Commentary on Psalms, Thomas Nelson, 1991, p.149.)
Furthermore, these slaves recognize by now that they are captive laborers in Babylon because of their rebellion against God and their idolatry. They are too sad to sing. And they are too angry with their enemy captors to entertain them! In verses 7-9, they call down revenge on two enemy groups:
(1) The Edomites, descendants of Esau, the carnal twin brother of their patriarch, Jacob (distant cousins). Their Edomite kin had witnessed the destruction of Jerusalem and had ridiculed these Judeans in their defeat. The Jewish captives were furious with this betrayal by extended family members. They wanted God to avenge them. (2) And they certainly wanted vengeance against the Babylonian army! Perhaps they seen their babies ruthlessly killed by enemy soldiers, so they pleaded with the Lord to do the same to Babylonian infants.
This is called an imprecatory psalm because it calls for revenge arising from bitter hatred. This side of the Cross, we know we are not to hold bitter hatred in our hearts. Instead, Jesus expects us to pray for our enemies and to forgive them. At least these slaves knew they were in no position to pay their enemies back. They realized God is the only One Who could bring them justice. Sure enough, less than 50 years later, the Babylonians were defeated by the Persians under King Cyrus in 539 BC. It was Cyrus who agreed to allow the Israelites to return to Jerusalem and rebuild it. He even sent them back with the golden implements from the Temple, with money, and with soldiers to protect them. What a miraculous move of God!
It is well for us today to note that we can take our anger and our desire for revenge to the Lord. Vengence is Mine, says the Lord. Furthermore, in Galatians 6:7 (NLT), Paul reminds us : Don’t be misled—you cannot mock the justice of God. You will always harvest what you plant. We tend to remember this as, You will reap what you sow. My experience over the years has shown me that we often reap exactly what we sowed, almost like our actions boomerang back to us. I am thinking of a woman I know, the first wife of a man married four times. He told her she needed to pay off a debt of $300 before their wedding. She did. He found out his fourth wife, after he married her, had maxed out 3 credit cards, borrowed against two life insurance policies, and took out a mortgage and a second mortgage on a home that had been willed to her totally debt free! His focus had been on indebtedness as he entered his first marriage. How interesting that he found himself so encumbered in his 4th one.
Now contrast these two passages with Pauls’ admonitions to Timothy (2 Tim 1:1-14). Paul is writing to Pastor Timothy(around 67AD), his disciple, who he has left in charge of the Church in Ephesus. Paul is providing this dearly beloved [spiritual] son with instruction on how to become a successful minister of the Gospel. He wants Timothy to note that he is at the top of Paul’s prayer list—what an amazing place to be!–and that he appreciates the faith of Tim’s mother (Eunice) and grandmother (Lois) in helping form him as a Christian believer. Especially in this 2nd pastoral letter (also his final letter before being beheaded in Rome), Paul warns Tim about the afflictions that can beset a congregation and its pastor—especially apostasy. Apostasy is the willful turning away from the principles of the Christian faith. It is a rejection of God not due to ignorance, but due to the human choice to turn one’s back on the Lord and on one’s faith.
This is what the Jews of Jerusalem and Judea had done in the time of the Babylonian Exile.
To prevent against apostasy, Paul wants Timothy to continue to preach the Word of God and the Gospel:
1.) No matter if people turn away;
2.) No matter if congregational size dwindles (which had happened all over since the Covid epidemic, but may be turning around as a result of Charlie Kirk’s assassination);
3.) No matter if people don’t feel sufficiently entertained by church;
4.) No matter if folks don’t want to hear the teachings of Jesus.
Paul is saying, in so many words, “Make it as attractive as you can, but don’t skimp on presenting the reality of the Gospel. No matter what forces come against you, Timothy,” Paul exhorts him, “you remain strong!” In verse 7, he famously reminds him, For God did not give us a spirit of timidity [fear, cowardice], but a spirit of power, of love, and of self-discipline [a sound mind, some translations substitute]. Paul is saying, when the world comes against you—and it will—remember that you have a spirit of power: The Holy Spirit is in you, to guard, guide, teach, and strengthen you! Additionally, the love of Jesus and of God the Father enfold you and stand behind you so that, rather than fearing people’s bad opinions or getting angry and becoming vengeful, you can operate out of Spirit-induced self-restraint and self-control.
Paul knew Timothy lacked self-confidence—and we may as well. So he told him (and us) this to provide assurance and to help us all to recognize the true source of our strength.
Finally, like an excellent coach, Paul inspired Timothy with his own example of bearing up under persecution, hard times, and trials. Paul wants us all to be aware that tough days, weeks, or even seasons may assault us. These happen to all of us—especially if we love and serve as servants (doulos) of Christ. The evil one doesn’t bother those he already holds in his hands, such as non-believers and the apostate (like the folks in Jerusalem in 586BC). Make no mistake, as the enemy of God, he comes after true believers, tooth and nail, trying to make us so discouraged that we abandon our Lord. Knowing this, we don’t want to give the evil one a victory over us.
So Paul reminds Timothy (and us) to (v.14) : Guard the good deposit [of faith and love] that was entrusted to you—guard it with the help of the Holy Spirit who lives in us. This is what makes us and keeps us a servant of Christ. Amen!
©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams