The Rev. Paul J Cain
Psalm 139:16; Ezekiel 37; John 1; Ephesians 3
These Bones Live
Funeral Sermon for Gunnar Warpness + 31 January 2018
Tuesday of V after Epiphany,6 February 2018
Immanuel Lutheran Church, Sheridan, WY
Bulletin Cover Verse:
([My Savior’s] eyes saw me before I was formed; before a single one of my days took shape, they were all prepared and written in His scroll.)
([My Savior’s] eyes saw me before I was formed; before a single one of my days took shape, they were all prepared and written in His scroll.)
In the Name of Jesus Amen.
To celebrate the 500th
Anniversary of the Lutheran Reformation, the LCMS had a hymn competition. The
winning hymn, “Though All Our Life is Like a Scroll,” by the Rev. Dr. Wilfred
Karsten, echoes Psalm 139 verse sixteen
as found translated on your bulletin this morning:
as found translated on your bulletin this morning:
Though all our life
is like a scroll Unrolled with blemished pages; Though sin has shredded what
was whole And death is now our wages; Yet here we stand in confidence, With
Jesus as our sole defense, For He alone still saves us.
Sin blemishes the
pages of our life. All we can earn in this life is eternal judgement. We
Christians call Jesus the Savior because He saves us from sin and its
consequences, guilt, death, and eternal condemnation. With Jesus Christ as our
substitute, the Savior grants us forgiveness of sin, life, and eternal
salvation.
This contrast
between death and life, sin and forgiveness, condemnation and salvation is
reminiscent of the contrast in Nathaniel before and after he meets Jesus. “Can
anything good come out of Nazareth?” Philip says, “Come and see.” Seeing
Nathaniel coming, Jesus said of him, “Behold, an Israelite indeed, in whom
there is no deceit!” “How do you know me?” Jesus answered, “Before Philip
called you, I saw you.” In faith Nathanael confessed, “Rabbi, you are the Son
of God! You are the King of Israel!” Jesus answered him, “Because I said those
things to you do you believe? You will see greater things than these.”
Today’s Gospel
lesson was the last I was able to share with Gunnar as one of his pastors. Ann
and I went to visit by request. The Lord knew then what we only know now: that
Sylvia’s time resting that day gave Gunnar a special time with God’s Word,
prayer, a hymn, and the Sacrament of the Altar to prepare him for eternal life
in Christ.
Born on Christmas
Day 1924, Gunnar received the washing of water and the Word of God in Holy
Baptism on January 7, 1925, the day after Epiphany. An Epistle
lesson read on Epiphany is the one heard today from Ephesians 3. Like Gunnar,
we “are fellow heirs, members of the (same) body [of Christ], and partakers of
the promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel.” I’m told that it builds
character to live with a Norwegian. Immanuel, Sheridan in northern Wyoming still
had services in German when Gunnar was baptized in southern Wyoming. It’s a
good thing we all switched to English! Can anything good come out of the little
town of Laramie, WY in 1924? Yes, Gunnar Warpness, because he was forgiven in
Christ in Baptism.
Though pompously we
try to dress In costumes of our making; Though fig leaves of self-righteousness
Are futile and heartbreaking; Yet filthy rags Christ gladly wore So we would
perish nevermore. His grace alone still clothes us.
The white robes worn
at baptisms and confirmations, the white garments of Christian clergy and
brides (and even sometimes caskets) all reflect the white robes of the saints
in heaven. Gunnar was confirmed in Christ and received his first Communion on
April 15, 1953, the week after Easter that year. An Old Testament lesson often read
that week is the one heard today, Ezekiel 37. Gunnar married his bride Sylvia
in 1950. A wedding and a Confirmation are reminders that Christ clothes us Christians
in His righteousness. That is His gift to us. We rejoice in the gift that
Gunnar was to us in his 93 years of life and 67 years of holy matrimony. We are
grateful for the gifts the Lord gave to him that He also still gives to us.
Though earth’s deep
waters foam and roar As surging waves are rolling; Though all the nations rage
with war While bells of doom are tolling; Yet God gives peaceful fortitude, He
nurtures us with Heaven’s food. True faith alone still anchors.
Faith in Christ
anchored Gunnar’s life even in the midst of war. Jesus says, “Greater love has
no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13).
Gunnar saved a man’s life by pulling him from a burning tank. As impressive as
that is, Gunnar knew that Jesus’ rescue of us is the true fulfillment of Jesus’
words and the Greatest Love.
That Greatest Love,
the Gospel, is the Lord’s plan of salvation from Genesis 3:15. Jesus is the One
who crushes the serpent’s head underfoot. Sin brought death. Death is not a
part of life. Death is anti-life. Death feels wrong because it is. The
separation of loved ones from one another was not part of the Lord’s very good
creation, nor was the separation of our bodies and souls at death. The
Resurrection of Jesus means that because He rose from the dead we will rise
from the dead. His Resurrection means that those who die in Christ will be
reunited with all who have died in Christ. And the Resurrection means the
reunion of our souls with glorified, perfected bodies. Such is the comfort
Scripture gives us.
Though critics cut
out Scripture’s claims And treat them with derision; Though they conduct their
hostile aims With scalpels of suspicion; Yet how the living, two-edged sword Proclaims
the dead and risen Lord! God’s Word alone: still truthful.
It was a great joy
for us to see Gunnar’s smiling face here as he regularly received the gifts of
God in Word and Sacrament. The Lord gave him the gift of faith. It was also a
joy to bring church to him and Sylvia at home, sometimes with family gathered
around. He was thankful for the care from his children in these last years. We
knew that this day was coming, but not how quickly it would come.
In recent days
Gunnar got new hearing aids from the VA. On the road home I’m told he marveled
to hear his own voice and he whistled. He heard the sound of his wife’s voice. He
got one last game of cribbage in. And then he heard his family read John 14,
today’s psalm, psalm 23, and Revelation 21. And you prayed with him and for him
and the Lord called Him home.
Earlier in today’s
service we heard about the Lord’s promises to us about the connection between
Holy Baptism and our bodily resurrection. Whatever the Lord does not heal in
our bodies according to His good and gracious will in this life, He will in the
life to come.
“Can these bones
live?” the Lord asked Ezekiel in chapter 37. Later the Lord God answers His own
question: “Behold, I will open your graves and raise you from your graves, O my
people. And I will bring you into the land of Israel. And you shall know that I
am the Lord, when I open your graves, and raise you from your graves, O my people.
And I will put my Spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you
in your own land. Then you shall know that I am the Lord; I have spoken, and I
will do it, declares the Lord.” These bones live!
The great mystery that
St. Paul reveals in Ephesians 3 is that we Gentiles are fellow heirs with
Israel, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus
through the gospel. Therefore, goodness and mercy shall follow us all the days
of our lives in Christ, and we shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
Now sing a high
doxology To God who gives salvation. Both here and in eternity Let this be our
vocation. To Father, Son, and Spirit raise A symphony of grateful praise, For
He alone is worthy.
Amen.
In the Name of Jesus. Amen.