Friday, December 27, 2019

The Best Pro-Life Sermon I've Ever Read or Heard

Dr. David P. Scaer
Matthew 2:16-18

            The Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion should be commemorated on December 28, the day of the Holy Innocents.  Churches should be decked in black for the hideous American crime of abortion which matches in its brutality Stalin’s extermination of the Ukranians in the 1930's, Hitler’s destruction of Jews in Germany and Poland in the 1940's, and the near obliteration of the Cambodians by the Khmer Rouge in the 1970's.  Our slaughter is more thorough and covers the 70's, 80's, and now the 90's.  We could very well pray the collect for the Day of the Holy Innocents:

“O God, whose martyred innocents showed forth Thy praise not by speaking but by dying, mortify all vices within us that our lives may in deed confess Thy faith which our tongue doth utter; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.”

            With these words we are at the very foundation of Christian truth–not that we speak the right things and sigh in horror at the abominations of others, but, as the collect says, “that our lives may confess” that which “our tongue . . . utters.”  For the time comes when the Christian faith is only inadequately expressed by words and must be brought to perfect completion by action.  The slaughter of the holy innocents is for the church an unrefusable crusade call to repentance, faith, and action.

            Our opposition to abortion is part of our confessional commitment.  With Luther in his explanation to the Fifth Commandment, we say that we should “help and befriend our neighbor in every bodily need.”  And no bodily need of our neighbor’s has a greater claim on us than the unborn who die their deaths not by their own desire or God’s, but by the will of those whose bodies have given them life.  Though burdened with inherited sin from Adam in their conception, they have not been born to a life of sin.  Though they are among those who are redeemed by Christ, they hear not the Gospel of that redemption.  Their infant bodies, washed in salt, never are comforted by the saving flood of baptism.

            Thomas Jefferson said that: “A single human being is of infinite worth.”  This non-religious principle is sufficient to oppose abortion with every fiber of our bodies and every thought of our souls and every emotion of our spirits.  But the sacredness of human life has been raised to an even higher dimension by the coming of the Son of God in the flesh.  “In Him was life and this was the life which lightens everyone who is coming into the world” (John 1:9).  Now through the incarnation, the Son of God shares in the life of every man, woman, and child; and not only those children who are born, but those who were conceived and never born.  The incarnation is bound to one place and time, but it has a universal dimension infiltrating every life, filling every place, and affecting every time.  We human beings are not a collection of individuals, but we are all taken out of the flesh of Adam so that we are part of one another.  By His conception the eternal Logos permeated all of humanity, and all of humanity became part of Him.

            In the moment of our conception we are all without visible race or gender, without culture or inheritance, without language or skill.  We stand coram Deo, before God, with the first Adam to hear a verdict of condemnation and death: “in sin did my mother conceive me.”  And more importantly we stand coram Deo, before God, with the second Adam, our Lord Jesus Christ, to hear a verdict of righteous acquittal and justification, of holiness and innocence, of life and resurrection.  “This was the light which lightens everyone who comes into the world.”

            If life which exists between the conception of one simple cell and a fully developed baby is so insignificant that it can be arbitrarily snuffed out for whatever reason, then our Lord’s life within His mother’s womb was equally unimportant and we would be without hope and salvation.  But life within the womb is the most significant of all lives, and our Lord’s conception of His pure mother and His life within her womb raised to a level of perfection that life already sacred before God.  The womb of the virgin was, as Luther says, the throne room of God.  It was here as St. Paul says, that the man Jesus saw Himself with all of the attributes which are God’s.  The womb of His mother was the temple of God where Christ ruled the world and still offered Himself in continual prayer to God and His Father not for His sake, but for ours.  Here even He before He received the adoration of the shepherds and the worship of the magi, He received the worship and adoration of the Baptist, who though still unborn was already the greatest of all the prophets and in whom all the prophets from Adam to Malachi were present.

            We are here to commemorate those who were once alive, but are never born.  Yes, we offer our prayers for ourselves and for a nation which permits the holocaust to continue and even for the mothers who out of ignorance or willful design or simple inconvenience or apparently legitimate financial reasons abort their own children.  These, however, still have time to pray for themselves, to perform their own penitential vows, and to cry their own tears of sorrow.  But let us shed our tears for those who were never able to shed their own tears of repentance.  Let us ask God to remember in His mercy those who will never be able to ask mercy for themselves.  As did Luther and the fathers of Lutheran orthodoxy, we pray that God in His mercy would provide a way for those who forever remain unborn in this world to be born into the next world.  For if John the Baptist could at the voice of the mother of God confess the faith by leaping in Elizabeth’s womb, perhaps God in His infinite grace and mercy may provide a word of redemption which these children may hear and believe before their lives are snuffed out.  They no less than the Holy Innocents slaughtered by Herod are entitled to be called innocent and deserve our commemoration on this day of remembrance.  “Rachel is still weeping for her children, because,” as Jeremiah says, “they are not.”

            If their lights are not permitted to shine on earth before men to glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, perhaps they can still shine in heaven.  God can perfect praise from unborn babes, as easily as He can from sucklings.

            If with these words we trespass into the land of divine mysteries, we have done it not only out of a sense of our own frustration, but out of the knowledge that these children have been redeemed by the one who lived His life in the womb specifically for their sakes.  When the church confessed, “incarnatus est de Spiritu Sancto ex Maria Virgine et homo factus est,” “He was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary and was made man,” let the church not only genuflect in devotion to this greatest of mysteries, but may her corporate heart bend in sorrow and contrition for those who go from conception to grave without birth, for those whose mothers’ wombs are not temples of safety but halls of slaughter.

            Will He, who reigned over heaven and earth from His mother’s womb and who in his infancy escaped the butcher’s hand of King Herod, not hear our prayer and join His prayer with ours before God and His Father in heaven even now for those for whom no way of escape is provided?

            I am not one for drawing banners.  But I would be pleased to march with the community which is Concordia Theological Seminary this Saturday morning at the City-County Building behind a banner which said, “The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us.”  Let us pray.

O almighty God, who out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast ordained strength and madest infants to glorify Thee by their deaths, mortify and kill all vices in us and so strengthen us by Thy grace that by the innocency of our lives and constancy of our faith, we may glorify Thy holy name; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.


I ran across this sermon early in the 1990's (though I don't recall exactly where).  A very similar sermon is included in “In Christ: The Collected Works of David P. Scaer — Volume 1, p. 282. Published by Concordia Catechetical Academy. Used by permission.
 


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