Sin and Death Undone

A sermon for the Twenty-First Sunday after Trinity, by Fr. Dan Suelzle.

This past Sunday’s sermon draws upon Isaiah’s vision of a future feast on Mount Zion where God will eternally defeat death, which is the consequence of sin. While sin and death are enemies too great for mankind to conquer, Jesus began fulfilling this promise in His earthly ministry. He takes Isaiah’s promise, where sin, suffering, and death are undone, and instantiates it in the present. We see this in the Cana miracle where His powerful Word healed the nobleman’s dying son, offering a “glimpse” of victory over death. However, this sign ultimately pointed to the greater work of Christ’s death and resurrection. He took our sin upon himself, and the grave gladly swallowed him up. But the grave could not contain him and he forever remains the one with authority over death itself. This Word of Christ remains powerfully present in the Church as Christ continues to speak—through absolution, Baptism, and the Eucharist—to deliver forgiveness and eternal life, assuring us that our enemies of sin and death have been vanquished. Listen to the entire sermon below.