2 Corinthians 5:11--6:2 · The Ministry of Reconciliation
A New Beginning
2 Corinthians 5:16-21
Sermon
by Mark Ellingsen
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Is it really possible to make a fresh start? Can you really have a new beginning in relationships or on the job? Are new beginnings really possible?

Normally the answer to these questions is “no.” Bad marriages and bad parent-child relationships do not usually get better. And once institutions get established they resist change. We are pretty dull, monotonous people!

Part of the reason that change is so difficult is because we have histories that shape us and our character. We are the sum total of what we have done or the choices we have made. Famed New Testament scholar Rudolf Bultmann nicely made this point: 

The Christian conception of the human being is that man is essentially a temporal being, which means that he is an historical being, who has a past which shapes his character...[1]

Yes, the past is who we are, but we are not totally satisfied with the way things have happened in life. We wish things were different, better.

Americans still have hope (sort of). Our feel-good, therapeutic ethos and its media gurus say it is possible, especially if we buy the right products, network with enough important people, and make wise investments.[2] But what we do will not provide this sort of security for which we yearn. In line with Paul’s warning in Romans 7:18b-19 that we are trapped by our past and cannot do what we wish we could do, Rudolf Bultmann explains why we need a new beginning, but can’t make it happen on our own:   

... man forgets in his selfishness and presumption.... that it is an illusion to suppose that real security can be gained by men organizing their own personal and community life. There are encounters and destinies which man cannot master. He cannot secure endurance for his works. His life is fleeting and its end is death. History goes on and pulls down all the towers of Babel again and again. There is no real, definitive security, and it is precisely this illusion to which men are prone to succumb in their yearning for security.[3] 

Self-improvement will not alleviate our predicament.

We want meaning and security in life. But all that we might accumulate will not provide this, do not really change us. And so we remain the same insecure, uncertain, boring, or too cocky and selfish jerks we always were. Besides, all we possess or accomplish will wither and die. We are all on the way to the grave.

You and I want to forget these harsh realities, but it is good to be reminded of our dire circumstances during Lent. This is a season of repentance, as we have noted. Yet all the repenting in the world that you and I try to do cannot change our circumstances and will not in itself make us new. John Calvin made a fine point in this connection. He once wrote:

It is wretched sophistry to infer from this, that the grace of God is not exhibited to sinners until they anticipate it by their repentance... it is wrong to infer from this, that repentance, which is the gift of God is yielded by men from their own movement of their hearts.[4]

We can only have a new beginning, repentance only really happens, if God gives it to us. He did that on the first Easter!

In our lesson (v.17) Paul made this point about the new beginning we now have. But how can this be if you are stuck in a dead-end job, a failing marriage, have a bad child, or a bad reputation in school? How could you lie to us, Paul, like you seem to be in this lesson? How can we get this fresh start?

Lent and Easter are times for us to confess our sin and disbelief and to confess how we have squandered all the new opportunities Jesus has given us. We have missed how God has changed us. This word was at the heart of Jesus’ preaching of the kingdom of God coming near (Mark 1:5 — a text that most historians agree is one of the most ancient, historically accurate accounts of Jesus’ preaching and teaching). Repent and believe that the new has come and that the past no longer holds us in chains.

This message is evident in our other two lessons today. We see it in the first lesson’s proclamation that the Hebrews are no longer slaves (Joshua 5:9). It also reflects in the gospel lesson’s account of the prodigal son. His father gave him a fresh start (Luke 5:11b-32). When you hang around Jesus, new beginnings, improved relationships, and more fulfilling ways of life just seem to happen. We see this word in the second lesson, with its word that we are not to regard anyone from a human point of view (v.16a). Anyone in Christ is proclaimed to be a new creation. The old has passed (v.17)! This new beginning is a glimpse of the end tmes.

This new beginning is the result of the fact that Christ has reconciled us to God, forgiven us for how we’ve been lousing up our lives to date (vv.18-19). And it’s like anti-Apartheid leader Bishop Desmond Tutu once said: “Forgiveness says you are given another chance to make a new beginning.”

New beginnings, fresh starts, really are possible from God’s point of view. Lent is a season for helping us see that this is possible. Yes, Lent is an unattractive time, filled with sobriety. Yet it opens the way to the Easter celebration. It is God’s style to do things in surprising ways. That is what Paul means by calling us not to look at things from a human point of view (v.16a).

Don’t look at things from a human point of view, because we are in a new time. God clearly does not do things our way and does not work in accord with our expectations. The way in which our Lord loves and forgives makes that apparent. The great reformed theologian of the last century, Karl Barth, profoundly explains the nature of God’s forgiveness in this text. He wrote:

The act of divine forgiveness is that God sees and knows this stain [of human sin] infinitely better than man himself and abhors it. He covers it. He passes it by, he puts it behind him, he does not charge it to man.[5] 

Martin Luther also nicely explains the sense in which we should not look at things from a human point of view. For God’s love does not operate as we would expect love to work. The message of the cross, Luther says, is that while human love comes into being through that which is pleasing to it, “the love of God does not find, but creates that which is pleasing to it.”[6]

God has put the past behind us. He does not love like human love works. God loves the kind of person he is going to make us to be. Not what is but what will be is what he loves.

John Wesley nicely described what this new life in Christ looks like, how we live with our new beginning. He wrote:

He [the Christian] has new life, new senses, new faculties, new affections, new appetites, new ideas and conceptions. His whole tenor of action and conversation is new, and he lives, as it were, in a new world. God, men, the whole creation, heaven, earth, and all therein appear in a new light and stand related to Him in a new manner since he was created anew in Christ Jesus.[7] 

People made new in that sense can do what medieval mystic Meister Eckhart once suggested: “Be willing to be a beginner every single morning.”

Do you feel dead and need a new beginning? There is much to celebrate this day. You have a fresh start thanks to Jesus! It is a matter of looking at life, looking at the people in our lives, like God does. It’s time for you and me to stop being hung up on what looks pleasing, on what looks good. The new beginning that Paul and Jesus promise gets you to see things differently. Even age and circumstances can’t bind you anymore. God’s fresh start means we can live life as famed Christian writer C. S. Lewis advised: “You are never too old to set another goal or dream a new dream..” The unattractive ways of God and his creatures really are beautiful. No matter what the world says, life is beautiful too. Christians do indeed go against the grain, and rebel against the world and its ways.


[1] Rudolf Bultmann, Jesus Christ and Mythology (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958), p.30.

[2] For a similar characterization of American society offered two decades ago, but still relevant, see Christopher Lasch, The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy (New York and London: W. W. Norton, 1995) esp. pp.6-7,29-30,40-41.

[3] Rudolf Bultmann, Jesus Christ and Mythology (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958), pp.39-40.

[4] John Calvin, “Commentary On a Harmony of the Evangelists, Matthew, Mark, and Luke” (1555), in Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol. XVI/2, trans. James Anderson (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2005), p. 347.

[5] Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, Vol.IV/1, trams. G. W. Bromiley (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1956), p.597.

[6] Martin Luther, “The Heidelberg Disputation” (1518), in Luther’s Works, Vol.31, p.41.

[7] John Wesley, Commentary On the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Francis Asbury Press, 1990), p.525.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., A Rebellious Faith: Cycle B sermons for Lent & Easter based on the second lesson texts, by Mark Ellingsen