We gather here today
to mourn a family man, a fellow member of the church, and a friend in this
community. Our grief is real. It’s always difficult to say goodbye to those
we love-- but it’s especially difficult when it is someone like Allan who was
such a blessing to so many of us.
I
know that everyone here today has happy memories of him and what a blessing
that is! To have lived such a life as to
inspire the admiration of this great family is a testimony to what kind of man
he was!
I
know that everyone has a story they would like to tell about a man who was such
a squirrel-catching, jackrabbit chasing, domino playing character as he was!
But
I would like to take this opportunity to tell you another kind of story—not a
story about something that Allan did—but
a story about what God did for Allan—a story of God’s grace that is still being
told as his soul rests in God’s presence.
The Bible says:
By
grace you have been saved through faith.
And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so
that no one may boast. For we are his workmanship,
created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we
should walk in them.
Saved. I would have you know and believe that above
all else: that Allan is saved. Safe and secure in his heavenly home. This day is not about the painful news that
he is gone from us—but that glad Good News that Allan has gone home. Saved by grace.
When
we hear that word “saved” many Christians think of a moment when they became
particularly aware that they were sinners who needed saving and were glad and
thankful that Jesus had done that for them in his death and resurrection.
Allan
was certainly “saved” in that sense. He confessed
the same each week in this place: I a
poor miserable sinner confess all my sins and iniquities. Each week he said: I believe in Jesus Christ, born of the Virgin
Mary who was crucified, died and was buried.
Allan knew that he was a sinner and that Jesus was his Savior.
Other
Christians, when they hear that word “saved” think about the moment when the
saving merits of Jesus Christ became their own, especially in the waters of
Holy Baptism and that was true of Allan too.
He
was baptized by his father at St. Luke’s Lutheran Church in Schroeder,
Texas on April 20, 1930. The Bible says
that in that moment he died with Christ and was raised with Christ and is
united with Christ in his resurrection. And
so he will be!
But
that word “saved” in the Bible includes even more than these moments. It includes everything that God has done for
us (from everlasting to everlasting) to forgive our sins-- and bring us to
faith in Jesus-- and lead us to our heavenly home.
The
comfort that we have today even as we mourn his passing is that Allan was
saved: God chose him in Christ, sent
Jesus to die and rise for him, brought him to faith and sustained his faith in
Jesus until that moment Monday evening when God called Allan home, saved by
grace—safe and secure in the place Jesus prepared for him.
And
so he is even at this moment! He is
saved from the sorrows of this life. He
is saved from illness and disability. He
is saved from worries and cares. He is saved
from failure and sin and eternal death. The
Bible says of the saints who are entering heaven:
“These are the ones coming out of the great
tribulation. They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of
the Lamb… They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore;
the sun shall not strike them, nor any scorching heat. For the
Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd…and God will wipe away
every tear from their eyes.”
So
it is for Allan right now--saved by
grace. I recently heard a wonderful
little definition of grace that I would like to share with you. You may already know it but it was new to me
and it vividly describes God’s gracious work in Allan’s life. It goes like this…
Grace
is: God’s Riches At Christ’s
Expense. “God’s Riches At Christ’s
Expense. I just love that! How true that was of Allan’s life and he knew
it!
During
this last month or so of his life, a month full of sickness and pain, Allan
could be heard constantly singing “Amazing Grace”—the song we just sang. “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that
saved a wretch like me; I once was lost but now am found, was blind but now I
see.”
You
see, the faithful child of God finds no shame in claiming for themselves words
like “poor and wretched and blind” –Allan certainly didn’t!
The
words of “Amazing Grace” were a comfort to him because they reminded him of how
far God had brought him--that there was something even greater and more
powerful than his sins and weaknesses--and that is the mercy and forgiveness
that God extends to us in Jesus Christ.
That
we are saved-- and that God is gracious towards us-- is all because of Jesus
Christ. We are saved by God’s grace
alone through faith alone in Christ alone.
Allan knew that Reformation rallying cry and believed it and built his
life upon it.
He
knew that Christ had carried his sins to the cross and suffered there in his
place and shed his life’s blood to wash them away. He knew that Christ was raised to give him
eternal life. And his confidence,
especially in these last days, was this promise of Jesus: I am the resurrection and
life. He that believeth in me, though he
were dead, yet shall he live.
That
was Allan’s faith—a faith that was given to him as a gift by the Holy Spirit and
sustained in him throughout his life by God’s Word and Holy Sacraments.
Every
time Allan heard the Word of God and received Holy Communion, the Holy Spirit
was right there in that moment, through those humble means, strengthening the
faith he had first been given as a gift in Holy Baptism—a faith that allowed
him to confess that he was, as God’s says, God’s
workmanship.
And
so he was. His heavenly Father had
created him and Jesus Christ had redeemed him and the Holy Spirit had
sanctified him and set him apart as belonging to God. He was God’s child, blessed by God with
countless earthly gifts.
God
caused him to be born to Christian parents who loved him and saw that he was
brought up in the Christian faith. God
watched over him and protected him during his military service in the navy
during the Korean War. God gave him work
to do in the oilfields of West Texas that provided for his family.
And
it was here especially—in Allan’s family-- that God graciously blessed Allan.
By
the goodness and grace of Almighty God, Allan and Marie were brought together
in Holy Matrimony. They were married by
Allan’s father at Elim Lutheran Church in Kenedy, Texas on June 25, 1955.
Their
love for one another was blessed by God with children and grandchildren and
great-grandchildren and great great-grandchildren—a beautiful heritage from the
Lord.
I
can’t tell you what a blessing it was for me to see nearly forty members of
Allan’s immediate family fill the hospital room and hallway when he first was
admitted to the hospital.
This
wonderful family is a testimony to their love for one another-- but more
importantly they are a testimony to God’s gracious love for them.
Allan
believed that. And he knew that as God’s
workmanship he had been created and redeemed in Christ Jesus to live a life of good works.
And
so he did. Not only did he work in the
oilfield he always had an extra job so that Marie could stay home. He made time every day to play cards and
dominos they both loved so much. He
served our church by helping the men’s group with their golf tournament and Bar-B-Q
and fertilizer sales. Pastor Budewig
called him “the fireman” because he kept our fire extinguishers serviced.
Allan
understood that being saved by God’s grace through faith in Jesus has a purpose
and that purpose is to serve God and others.
His
was a grace-filled life and now his earthly purpose has been fulfilled and God
has called him home to rest in his presence until that day when Jesus returns
and raises our bodies from the grave, never to die again.
I pray that everyone gathered here today would
know and believe what Allan knew and believed and built his life upon: that we are saved by God’s grace through
faith in Jesus. Amen.
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