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Click to hear this sermon sermon071223
"Now
the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way..."
Being Prepared: God With Us - Matthew 1: 18-25 - December
23, 2007 - Cicero United Methodist
Church - Everett 1. Bassett
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"Now
the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way." Those are the
words Matthew used to introduce the Christmas story. They are wonderfully
simple words to represent a process that I imagine was a complicated and even
messy one. It is fairly clear from the Bible that the stories of Christmas
arose after the fact. Jesus had completed His earthly ministry. His death on
the cross had happened; His resurrection from the tomb had happened; disciples
were carrying the exciting news to more and more places; people were trying to come
to grips with who this Jesus was.
And it
would only follow logically that as people shared about the incredible things
Jesus had said and done they would begin to be very interested in His origins:
where did He come from? How was He born? And then maybe someone said,
"Well, I heard that He was descended from King David." And someone
else said, "I heard something about a carpenter named Joseph." And
someone else said, "I heard about shepherds," or, "I heard that
He was cousin to John the Baptist." And so, these threads came together,
and at least two people we know about wrote some of them down.
Those two
people are Matthew and Luke. Matthew and Luke are the two writers in the Bible
who wanted us to know where Jesus came from, and the way they tell that story
has been both fascinating and beautiful. It's a story we all love.
Trying to
imagine who these two writers are, and what they were trying to accomplish, is
part of the fun. Matthew seems to have lived among some fairly well-to-do
people. We guess that from the way he talks about money, and the way he talks
about cities, where the wealthy were most likely to be. And so, when he tells
the story of the birth of Jesus, he does it from the perspective of the
better-off -- the Gospel for Bill Gates and Donald Trump. The characters in
Matthew's Christmas story are kings, wise men with expensive gifts, and Joseph,
Jesus' father. Joseph probably was not rich; but as a person with a specialized
skill- a carpenter - he probably did all right; and, as a man, he automatically
had particular privileges and advantages in that society. So, in Matthew's
story, when the wise men find Jesus, they find him not in a barn, but in a
house.
On the
other side of the coin, if you read through the Gospel of Luke, you'll see very
special attention paid to the poor and the downtrodden in society. When you
read the Christmas story from Luke's perspective, the characters are shepherds,
peasants; there are no expensive gifts for the baby; and the shepherds find
Jesus, not in a house, but as an outcast in a stable, lying in a manger. And
the story is told from the perspective of Mary, the mother of Jesus, who prays
about her poverty, and her lowliness; and who, as a woman, is considered a
second-class citizen, with no legal standing or rights.
And so, we
have two contrasting stories of Jesus' birth, and we have handled that by
putting the stories together. As a result, at Christmastime we celebrate both
Jesus the baby, and Jesus the king; we say both that the rich came, and the
poor came; the wise came, and the simple came; we say that Jesus was conceived
by the Holy Spirit, but born
to very human parents; that he was worthy of the gifts of
gold and frankincense and myrrh, but also of the pure worship of those who had
no earthly gifts; that his birth sparked both the violent decree of Herod, and
the quiet contemplation of Mary.
Yet amidst
all those contrasts, the simple truth holds the same - this was Emmanuel! This
was God is with us! When those first followers of Jesus began to pull together
those stories about His birth in Bethlehem,
they were talking about something that had changed their lives forever. God had
entered the world in a way that He never had before. The Jewish people had
always had a personal sense of God - that God was not some faraway spirit or
some philosophical idea.
But now,
Christians claimed that with Jesus God had taken a Giant Step forwardGod had
entered the world through His own Son. As they shared that message in a
skeptical world, no doubt one of the responses was something like, "Oh,
come on! You're saying that God was there in that little baby?"
Yes! That's
exactly what we're saying. Emmanuel! God is with us! You would think God would
do something much more grandiose. We have no trouble imagining God when we
think of thunder and lightning and mighty waves and nations rising and falling.
But there is also power - and in some ways even more profound power - to be
found in the helplessness of a tiny little baby in a manger. If you don't believe
that a little baby has the power to totally overturn a household, then I know
some young parents you should talk to. But a tiny little baby does more than
overturn your household; a tiny little baby can overturn your heart. And that's
what the baby-of-Bethlehem wants to do; it's about love, and some say love is
the most powerful force of all.
God could
have overpowered us; he could have tom the sky open and shocked and awed us.
But all that does is change the balance of power; it doesn't change anybody's
heart, or anybody's way of thinking. All it does is rule by fear. And God
didn't want fear; God didn't want violence and power. God wanted to touch
hearts, to change lives, not by violence, but by the most profound change agent
the world knows - the power of love. In this world, there are few things that
tug the heart like a little baby.
Probably in
every age of history, wherever there are people who are allowed to think and
talk freely, God is one of the first topics. And it is no different today.
Today we have former believers in God who are now atheists writing books and
making children's movies. We have former atheists who are now believers writing
books and sharing their testimony on talk shows. We have politicians giving
statements about what God wants them to do of they're elected. We have
conservatives in every faith saying that if we don't believe their way, God
will punish us; we have liberals claiming exactly the same. Great lecture halls
ring with debates about the meaning of scriptures, and which interpretations
are truly carrying the light of God. We have nations attacking nations in the
name of God; armed vigilantes carrying out what they see as divine missions.
Every human abomination imaginable is carried out in the name of God.
And with
all those voices, and all those forces, and all those arguments pulling at us
and vying for our attention and our devotion and our vote and our dollar - how
do we know what is true? How do we sort it all out?
As
complicated as it all sounds, I still don't believe it is that hard. You choose
love. Both Matthew and Luke want us to know that Christ came as a baby - not as
a king, or a warrior, or a political or religious leader. A baby just comes to
love and be loved. So when Jesus was asked what was the greatest commandment,
he said, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and mind and soul and
strength." "Love your neighbor as yourself." "Love your
enemy." Love the poor and forgotten ones.
If you're
confused about who speaks for God, or which doctrine is true, or which church
or religious leader to follow - one question can sort a lot out: Is it loving?
Does it embrace people rather than turn them away? Does it affirm people rather
than attacking them? Does it lift people out of the poverty of soul and body,
rather than make their burden heavier, or ignore them? And does it overturn
your life for the sake of making you a messenger of love rather than judgment
and violence? You can have a lot of unanswered questions about God, but choose
the path of love, and you will never be far from Him.
That's what
it means to worship a God who would dare come into this world as a little baby
named Emmanuel. The arrival of a baby in a household is not a little event.
It's not something you spend a few days getting ready for, and then it comes
and goes. The arrival of a baby takes months of preparation - maybe even years.
People take courses and classes, read books, decorate rooms, have parties, buy
furniture, share stories - all to get ready for a baby. I've known people who
built additions on their houses, or moved to a bigger place, or changed jobs -
all to get ready for a baby. The arrival of a baby changes things forever. Life
is turned upside down.
And I
suppose that's what you and I have to decide this Advent. Is the baby coming to
your house? If not, then your life can go on pretty much as it was before.
You'll hear the Christmas story, and celebrate a little bit, and life will go
on same old-same old. And the world will plod along. But if you want something
more; if you hope for something new; if you're here this morning because
something inside you wants good news of great joy, then Jesus is ready to come
to your house. Get ready for big changes. Because you don't dabble in
Christianity. Christ came as a baby, and left as a Risen Lord. And either way,
same old-same old just won't cut it. Your life will be transformed by love, and
you won't act the same, think the same, want the same, work the same.
Millions
throughout the centuries have given their lives - literally and figuratively -
to place that Savior at the center of who they are, and have found their worlds
transformed by Emmanuel- God with us. What's standing in your way? Money?
Pride? Fear? Sin? God has reached out to you in a vulnerable little child,
seeking love and welcome in this world. Think of that. Christ is born for you.
Will you let the Christ-child enter your world with a transforming love this
year?
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