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Sermon for the Third Sunday in Lent – March 23, 2025

Luke 13:1-9

Dear friends, grace to you and peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ.

Wouldn’t it be great to know what Jesus thinks about current events, about all the things happening in our world today? Wouldn’t you love to get Jesus’ hot take on the latest news? Wouldn’t it be interesting to have our Lord give color commentary on the most recent terrible thing that happened? Maybe he could get his own show on one of the cable news channels, or his own Twitter account where he could post his thoughts.

There are many who claim to know what Jesus thinks about this or that. Oh, they are quite sure the Lord is on their side. There are some who turn to preachers to give them these hot takes, and there are no shortage of preachers who are happy to do so. The trouble is, these people who claim to know exactly what Jesus thinks about the latest current event often contradict each other. These takes are often just thinly veiled political ideologies from one side of the aisle or the other, so how do we know which side is correct?

Well, today we actually get to hear Jesus respond to the news. They aren’t current events, of course, but today we hear how Jesus responded to the breaking news stories of his time.

Some people came to Jesus with a situation which was deeply troubling. This was breaking news. The Roman governor Pontius Pilate had massacred some Galileans and then went on to mock their religious practices by mingling the blood he had spilled with the blood of the sacrifices they had offered to God in worship. It was a horrible act of violence and desecration. It was the kind of story that got people’s attention. This news traveled fast. It was a story that shook people up.

And as people often do, they gave their hot takes. People were trying to make sense of the evil Pilate had done. Jesus, perhaps hearing the chatter in the crowds about this horrible story, understood that some people believed these Galileans had actually brought this on themselves. They must have done something. Maybe they provoked Pilate. Maybe they even provoked God somehow!

Jesus soundly and swiftly rejects this kind of thinking. “Do you think that because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all other Galileans?” Jesus pointedly asked. “No, I tell you!”

And then Jesus turned their eyes from the headline to their own hearts. “But unless you repent,” Jesus said, “you will all perish as they did.”

Jesus then brought up a different news story. “You know those eighteen people who died when the tower of Siloam fell on them? Do you think they were worse offenders than everyone else in Jerusalem? No, I tell you.”

And then Jesus did it again. He turned their attention from the headlines to their hearts. “But unless you repent,” he said, “you will all perish as they did.”

What is going on here? What does Jesus mean by this, and what does it mean for us?

Whether the latest tragedy in the headlines is due to wickedness or a freak accident, Jesus encourages us to respond in the same way. He calls us to repent. He calls us to turn our attention from the headlines to our hearts.

There is certainly a place for analyzing why bad things happen in order to stop them or prevent them from continuing. Sometimes it is indeed bad people or bad choices that bring on bad consequences – St. Paul has something to say about that in our second reading for today. It is also worth noting that Jesus makes it clear that victims of violence or accidents – then or now –  are not being punished by God. And none of this suggests we should all just put our heads in the sand and ignore the world around us.

But Jesus points to these unsettling new stories as opportunities for us to not only look outward, but to look inward. They should prompt us not just to look at who we can blame, he says, but to take a close look at our own lives. They should prompt us to repent.

To repent is to turn back to God. Whenever we see a news story that reminds us of the wickedness and evil of this world, it should drive us to God. Whenever we see a news story that reminds us of our mortality, our human frailty, it should move our hearts to repentance, to taking stock of our lives and recommitting ourselves to living lives of faith in God and love for one another.

This leads us to the second part of our reading for today, the little parable Jesus tells. Jesus tells the story of a man who had a fig tree in his vineyard. He came looking for fruit and found none. He was ready to cut it down, but the gardener pleaded for a little more time. “Let me put some manure on it. If it bears fruit, well and good. If not, you can cut it down.”

At first glance it is an odd juxtaposition – having these brutal news stories alongside this quaint parable about gardening. But what Jesus is saying here is that we have something that the victims in the latest news do not. We have time. We have life yet in us.  We’re still here. And Jesus is the gardener who has come along to coax some fruit out of us while we are here. What’s more, Jesus is going to use manure to grow that fruit.

St. Augustine taught that the manure in this parable represents the sinner’s sorrows. He wrote that “the basket of dung is filthy, but it produces fruit.” I think this interpretive move by Augustine is the key to connecting the parable to those horrific news stories. Our Lord Jesus, the gracious gardener, is using the sorrows of life to draw us to himself. He is using the manure we see or smell or step in to help us become more deeply rooted in him. Christ Jesus, the savior of the vineyard, is using the filthy parts of life in this broken world to grow fruit in us, the fruits of repentance.

This is how God often works in the Bible. When Joseph’s brothers sold him off, God used that stinky move to save all of them from famine. “What you intended for evil,” Joseph would eventually tell his brothers, “God used for good.” When the Assyrians and then the Babylonians invaded and conquered Israel, God used those bloody situations to call his people back to the covenant. When the early church was violently persecuted, God used the dispersion it caused to spread the gospel out from Jerusalem to Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth. In each of these cases God used the wicked and evil dung scattered around by human beings to a greater purpose: to draw people to himself, to root people in him, and to grow the fruit he desires, the fruits of faith.

The best example of this, of course, is found in the cross. What Pilate did to those worshippers, spilling their blood and mingling it with their sacrifices, desecrating God’s beloved children, was a foreshadowing of the desecration Pilate presided over in the crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ. And as wicked and evil as this certainly was, God brought life out of it! God used it as the very means of our salvation!

We don’t come to worship to look at headlines, we come to look at our hearts. We don’t come to worship to look at who we can blame, we come to look in the mirror. We don’t come to merely to rally, but to repent. We don’t come to worship to get a hot take on the news, we come to hear the Good News.

And the Good News is that even amidst the horrific events that make us afraid or angry or quick to blame, the patient gardener of our souls is still at work in us turning fertilizer into faith, turning manure into good fruit, turning all the world’s excrement into the first blossoms of hope.

The Good News is that on the fig tree of his cross, our Lord Jesus stretched his arms out over every bloody headline the world has or ever will see, taking it upon himself. The cross is God’s commentary on every human tragedy, telling us that there is no story or situation which is beyond his redeeming love.

The Good News is that after enduring the cross, where his own sacrificial blood was spilled, after experiencing his own brutal death, Jesus rose again. Pilate did not have the last word. Evil did not have the last word. Sin and death did not have the last word.

The Good News is that none of the violence or tragedies we see in the news today will have the last word either – for the most important headline of all is that Christ is risen, and that’s the headline we need to focus on the most.

Thanks be to God. Amen.

Rev. Jeffrey R. Spencer
Oak Harbor Lutheran Church