Romans 12:1-8 · Living Sacrifices
A Living Sacrifice
Romans 12:1-8
Eulogy
by Lawrence Ruegg
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For a seventy-year-old woman

This funeral sermon was for a woman who had been a faithful member of the church most of her life - a person who put her faith into practice at every hour and situation.

"Therefore, I appeal to you, brethren, by the mercies of God to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God; which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect."

In the calendar of the Church Year, one day is set aside to cornmeinorate St. Augustine. There is much that could be said about him; but of greater significance today is his mother, Monica, who for years had hoped and prayed that her son would become a Christian. His mother kept on hoping, praying, believing; until one day Augustine had a religious conversion and was finally baptized at age thirty-three in the presence of his mother. St. Augustine, himself, attributes much of his conversion experience to the faithfulness and the prayers of his mother. The Bible speaks about the sins of the fathers being visited upon their children; but it was Charles Dickens who wrote: "I think it must somewhere be written that the virtues of mothers shall be visited on their children, as well as the sins of their fathers."

St. Paul writes to all Christians through his letter to the Christians at Rome. It is interesting to note that Paul expounded for eleven chapters in that book about what God has done for us in the life and sacrifice and resurrection of Jesus the Christ. And then Paul used the last five chapters to speak about our response to God's Grace in his forgiveness and salvation. Chapter twelve begins the transition between what God has done for us and what we can now do in the name of God: and it begins with the word "therefore." "THEREFORE" - because of all that God has done for you - "Therefore I appeal to you to present your bodies as a living sacrifice ... that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect."

You may think that the initials of ____________ are [A, B, C]. If that were the only truth, then there is little that we could celebrate today: "God gave; God took away; and somehow we must bless the name of God." I am here to testify to those who may not really have known her; and also to remind those of you who knew her so well, that ____________ had other initials; and it is because of that something extra that the sorrow of her exit from this life cannot equal the joy and comfort that having lived in her shadow brings.

I want to bear witness that she had other initials. Three of them were L.C.W. Yes, I know they stand for Lutheran Church Women; but they signify something far greater than that. They remind me that today we bury the body - not the person - the body of a Church Woman; a Christian, whose first values related to the Lord of the Church. L.C.W. is a symbol of that; and many of you know how great her love was for that organization, because her greater love was for her Lord and Savior, Jesus.

In the life of this modern saint - and in her suffering and dying - the initials L.C.W. remind me of all that Paul has written about in the first eleven chapters of Romans. Her faith was not the result of her good works. Her faith was a gift of God, acknowledged often by her with deep gratitude and thanksgiving. She was dedicated to that Gospel of God; that Good News that life is meaningful and eternal only in the death and resurrection of God's Son.

But there is another set of initials which describe her; initials which grow out of the first; initials which relate to the second section of Paul's letter to Christians at Rome. "Therefore I appeal to you to present your bodies as a living sacrifice ... that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect."

How do you spell that? Well, people can spell in it many different ways because we are all different people. But in _____________ case it is spelled: R.S.V.P.: Retired Senior Volunteer Program. And many of you here know of her great love and dedication to those initials.

Here is Christian response: here is the response of a Christian to all that God has done for us in our salvation. We call these works good because they are done for others out of the goodness which God has done for us. I think ___________ own words can best state it. She wrote: "When I was asked to witness about my God-given time, I had to admit that I waste much of it, just as we all do. However, there are a few ways that I use it I want to share with you.

"Talking to people I know and some I don't know wherever I meet them; remembering to keep your tears to yourself but sharing your courage and in some way let them know of God's reassuring love. There are many lonely people in a world today. A few minutes talking with them doesn't cost a cent. Another way I use my time is sending a note or card to someone in trouble, ill, or perhaps full of joy. Again, it lets them know you want to share God's love with them and that you care.

"Then, I find prayer takes much of my time; not long, formal, memorized prayers, but a sort of lengthy conversation with my Lord, thanking him for my many blessings, asking him for guidance in what I say and do; asking him for hope and comfort for others; asking him for forgiveness; praying that with his help I may be able to fulfill his purpose for each new day he gives me; praying that I might be still and listen to what he is trying to tell me. And so it goes throughout my day of time."

St. Augustine's mother died shortly after his baptism. Another mother has died. But who are the real saints: Paul? Augustine? Monica? _____________? We are all saints in Jesus Christ. And that is what makes this a day of celebration. Christ rose from death and all who live and believe in him never die; only their bodies die and that is all that we return to the earth.

The sorrow of her death cannot match the peace of knowing who she is and where she now is. The loneliness that her death brings cannot equal the comfort that comes from the presence of the God whom she so faithfully followed. The guilt that one's death opens up to us all is covered and removed by the loving forgiveness from the One God who both welcomes her into his Heaven and reassures us on this earth.

What more can we say? We pray for God's love upon us and we commend to God one whose initials are L.C.W., praise of God, and R.S.V.P., service to people, and whose name is ___________ who has indeed presented herself as a living sacrifice and proved what is the will of God, and what is good and acceptable and perfect.

"Well done, thou good and faithful servant."

Amen.

C.S.S Publishing Co., IN SURE AND CERTAIN HOPE, by Lawrence Ruegg