The Large Catechism – part 54

 

The Large Catechism – part 54

Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Scripture Text: Joshua 8:32–35

Series: Lessons in the Lutheran Confessions

Today’s Scripture Jigsaw

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From the ConfessionsThe Large Catechism, The Ten Commandments

The First Commandment

You shall have no other gods before me.

Let everyone, then, be careful to esteem this commandment above all things and not regard it lightly. Search and examine your heart diligently, and you will discover whether or not it cleaves to God alone. If you have a heart that expects nothing but what is good from him, especially in need and distress, and that renounces and forsakes everything that is not God, then you have the only true God. If, on the other hand, your heart embraces anything else, from which it expects more good and help than from God, and does not take refuge in him, but in times of trouble flees from him, then you have an idol, another god.

Pulling It Together: If you have ever watched someone incise a single letter into slate, you can imagine how long it took Joshua to engrave the whole law on the altar at Mt. Ebal. If you were an Israelite, having just passed through Jericho and Ai with Joshua, you would not need to imagine. You would have taken note how long it took him because it would have been the central activity in all of Israel. After engraving the law, he read it to all the people. Now here, you need not imagine. As he read the law to them, would it have convicted them of any sins? When it is read to you, or when you read it, hopefully, you feel guilty too. I say hopefully, because there in the midst of your guilt, having trespassed the commandments of the Lord, you have the opportunity to keep the law. You have the occasion for faith.

When you are guilty and your conscience troubles you, do you run to the bedroom to sleep away your shame? Do you turn to a bottle, to increased work, the gym, or any other diversion? Or do you turn to the Lord, expecting all good, especially that best and greatest of all good things: forgiveness in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit? If, in your guilt, you turn to God, then you have honored him as God above all else — even above your own sin. And in this, you may know that yours is no religious idol, but instead, the one true God.

Prayer: Forgive me my trespasses, Lord. Amen.

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