Blessed are those who wash
their robes, that they may
have the right to the tree
of life and that they may
enter the city by the
gates. (Rev 22:14)
There is a famous scene in
William Shakespeare’s
Macbeth. Perhaps
some of you have learned
it; I did when I was in
high school. Lady
Macbeth is racked with
guilt over the bloody
murders she and her
husband have committed.
She roams through the
halls of the castle in her
sleep late at night,
desperately wringing her
hands, trying to wash away
the bloody evidence that
tortures her conscience to
the point of madness.
“Out damned spot, out I
say!” but the spot just
won’t go away. “Who
would have thought the old
man to have so much blood
in him,” she cries,
scrubbing her hands.
She can smell the blood on
her hands. “All the
perfumes in Arabia will
not sweeten this little
hand.”
Sin has left its mark on
you - on your soul, your
body, your mind, your
psyche, your robes.
The damned spot of Adam,
the original sin and the
origin of all sins - your
lies, your immoralities,
your blasphemies, your
idolatries, your greed,
your coveting, your
murders, your
disobedience, insolence,
arrogance, hatred -
there’s no covering them
up. They have all
left a mark on you. You
have blood on your hands.
You search in this world
for something that will
wash that damned spot of
sin away- drugs, alcohol,
religion. You
discover the terrible
truth of Lady Macbeth.
That damned spot doesn’t
go away, no matter how
hard you try. Your
prayers and pieties won’t
do it. Your guilt
and shame won’t wash it
away. The smell of
sin is on you and all the
perfumes of Arabia will
not sweeten it. And
then you hear Jesus say,
“I am coming soon,
bringing my recompense to
reward everyone for what
he has done.” So now
what?
You need to wash, and I
don’t mean clean up your
act. You need to be
cleansed, and like Lady
Macbeth, you can’t do it
for yourself. All
you can do is wring your
hands in madness.
But is a detergent for the
damned spot of sin - the
blood of the Lamb, the
blood poured out for you
on a cross, the blood
poured out on you in your
Baptism. Though your
sins be as scarlet, this
blood of the Lamb will
make them white as snow.
“Blessed are those who
wash their robes.”
Blessed are you baptized,
believing one. The gates
of the heavenly city lie
open to you. The
Tree of Life is waiting
for you to pluck its
life-bearing fruit.
Earlier, John saw the
worshippers of heaven, a
congregation no ushering
crew in the world could
count, from every nation,
tribe, people, and
language. He asked
one of the 24 elders, “Who
are these in white robes
and where did they come
from?” And the elder
said this: “These are they
who have come out of the
great tribulation; they
have washed their robes
and made them white in the
blood of the Lamb.”
Who would have thought
that the Lamb would have
so much blood in Him? And
such a blood it is that
can cleanse the spot of
sin and wash it away
forever! Behold the Lamb
of God, who takes away the
sin of the world.
Have you ever wondered
where your sins go when
they are washed away?
It all has to go
somewhere, right?
Ever wonder where where
the drain goes, where the
sewer pipe ends? It
goes out, away, far away,
deep into the earth,
outside the city.
There is no place for sin
in the heavenly city of
God.
Outside the city gates is
the garbage dump, the
septic tank, the cesspool,
the place where the dogs
hang out, not referring to
the likes of that poor
Canaanite woman with her
puppy dog faith you’ve
heard of, but those who
revel in the stale stench
of humanity gone bad - the
sorcerers and the perverts
and sexually immoral, the
murderers and idolaters,
and all who practice and
delight in falsehood and
lies. Do you lie?
Outside the city gates
would be our destiny too,
were it not for Jesus.
But He was crucified
outside the city bearing
your sins on the garbage
heap called Calvary.
Jesus was made sin for us.
He absorbed the damned,
indelible spot of fallen
humanity - Adam’s sin and
yours - and washed it all
away in the blood and
water that flowed from His
side and ran down the wood
of the cross to the
cursed, weedy soil,
trickling down into the
deepest depths of hell,
where they belong.
If you wish to keep
company with your sin, if
you wish to commune in
your corruption, if you
wish to take delight in
the evil you have done,
then you must go outside
the gates of God’s city,
to the dogs. You
must go to hell. But
that’s not what Jesus has
in mind for you. He
died and rose so that you
would have a rather
different outcome.
The Spirit and the Church,
say “Come.” You are
invited. Come.
Come, you sinners, poor,
broken, needy. Come,
young and old, torn by
guilt and shame. There is
living water to refresh
you here, cleansing blood
to wash away that damned
spot. Flush it down
the drain of your Baptism
together with the old Adam
and all his sinful desires
and deeds. Let Jesus
deal with it. He
already has. Come,
drink of that stream of
forgiveness that flows
from His cross to you.
Come the church, God’s inn
of mercy. Come to the
ministry of forgiveness
and healing, to your
fellow priests clothed in
Christ. Come, sons
and daughters of Adam, no
matter how great your sin,
no matter how deep the
stain, it’s all washed
away by the slain Lamb who
lives and reigns.
“Yes, I come quickly.”
Jesus’ last word to His
Church. “I come quickly.”
Speedily. To save
you. To raise you.
To welcome you. To
claim you. To
forgive you.
And the Church, washed in
the blood of the Lamb,
responds with that little
Hebrew word that
encapsulates all of faith:
Amen. “Come, Lord Jesus.”
The grace of the Lord
Jesus be with you, His
saints.
Amen.
by The Rev. William Cwirla
Rev. Cwirla is Pastor of
Holy Trinity Lutheran
Church in Hacienda
Heights, CA. He serves as
President on the Higher
Things Board of Directors
and preached this sermon
at the 2008 Amen
Conference.