The Sunday night message in the Gettysburg United Methodist church on May 21, 2023. The Bible verses used are Hebrews 2:10-18.
Every year, at
Christmastime, we tell the Christmas story. And we should, of
course. But you know, sometimes, when we tell that story, we get a little
too bogged down in the details. We love to hear about the Joseph and Mary
being turned away from the inn and going out to the stable. We love to
sing about how Jesus was born there and was placed in a manger. And then
we love the part about the angels and the shepherds and the star and the wise
men.
And
that’s all great. I’m not criticizing it at all. But the thing is
that we sometimes focus too much on the “what” of the story. What we
don’t focus on enough, sometimes, is the “why”. Why did God do this?
Why did God send Jesus, the divine Son, to earth in the first place? Why,
in short, is this story such a big deal to us?
The book of
Hebrews tells us why. You know, Hebrews is really a remarkable
book. Someday we may do a sermon series on it, because there’s a lot of
really good stuff in it. We don’t actually know who wrote it.
Traditionally it was attributed to the Apostle Paul, and some sources still
give him credit for it, but most scholars don’t think he actually wrote
it. We don’t know who did. But whoever it was, was an excellent
writer, because he or she could say an awful lot in just a few words.
Look at the
first sentence of our reading for today. “In bringing many sons and
daughters to glory, it was fitting that God, for whom and through whom
everything exists, should make the pioneer of their salvation perfect through
what he suffered.”
Let’s break
that down. “God, for whom and through whom everything exists”.
Think about that. We talk a lot, as Christians about how everything was
created by God. But Hebrews does not just say that it is through God that
everything was created. It also says that everything was created for God.
In other
words, all of creation exists for God. It exists to give glory to
God. Everything. The animals. The birds. The
trees. The rocks. The snow. The sky. All of creation
exists for the glory of God. That’s why you’ll read things in the psalms
like “The heavens are telling the glory of God and the firmament proclaims
God’s handiwork.” That’s in Psalm 19. “Let the heavens be glad and
let the earth rejoice; let the sea roar, and all that fills it; let the field
exult and everything in it! Then shall all the trees of the wood sing for
joy before the Lord.” That’s in Psalm 96. We read something similar
in Psalm 98, too. And there are lots of other examples. “God, for
whom...everything exists.” All of creation exists for the glory of God.
And that includes
you. And it includes me. You and I exist for the glory of
God. And sometimes, we try to give glory to God. And sometimes we
even succeed. But of course, you and I are fallen, broken, sinful
people. We may succeed in giving glory to God sometimes, but there are a
lot of times when we fail. As the Apostle Paul says in Romans Three,
Twenty-three, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”
So God’s goal,
as the first phrase in our reading says, was to “bring many sons and daughters
to glory.” Now, in using that word many, I don’t think the writer was
saying that God purposely wanted to exclude some. I have no doubt that
God would like to bring all human beings to glory. But God knew that some
people were going to reject him. The only way to avoid that would be for
God to take away our free will, to take away our ability to make our own
choices, and God does not do that. So, God knew that all human beings
were not going to be brought to glory. But God still wanted to bring,
“many” to glory, as many as possible.
So, what was the best
way, the “fitting” way, as our reading from Hebrews puts it, for God to do
this? It was to become one of us. Jesus, “God the Son”, would
become human.
And it’s
important that we understand that. Jesus was, in fact, fully human.
Yes, he was still the divine Son of God. But he was also fully
human. As verse seventeen of our reading for today says, he was “made
like them, fully human in every way.”
There are a
lot of things that means, but one of them is that when Jesus died on the cross,
he truly did experience death. Jesus truly died, just as you and I will
die. And that had to happen, because the purpose for Jesus coming was, as
it also says in verse seventeen, to “make atonement for the sins of the
people.” Jesus, by dying on the cross, took the punishment that should go
to us for our sins.
But there’s
more to it than that. I mean, that would be awesome enough, to have our
sins forgiven by the death of Jesus, but there’s more to it than that. Go
back to verse eleven. Listen to what it says. “Both the one who
makes people holy and those who are made holy are of the same family. So
Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers and sisters.”
Think about
that. The one who makes people holy--Jesus--and those who are made
holy--you and me, through our faith in Jesus--are of the same family.
Jesus is not ashamed to call us, you and me, brothers and sisters.
Is that not
incredible? By the life and death of Jesus Christ, you and I are on the same
level as Jesus himself. We are his brothers and sisters. Jesus
himself calls us that. In verse twelve, Jesus is quoted as saying to God,
“I will declare your name to my brothers and sisters.” That’s you and
me.
You and I are
Jesus’ brothers and sisters. There’s no way we deserve that.
There’s no way we’re worthy of it. I mean, you and I don’t belong in the
same area code with Jesus Christ. And yet, Jesus calls us his brothers
and sisters. Jesus, who was and is completely holy, makes us holy, too.
And it’s all because God, out of God’s tremendous, unbelievable love for us,
wanted to bring us, you and me, to glory.
That’s the
why. That’s why Jesus came to earth as a human being. He could not
come as an angel because he did not come to save angels. He could not
come as a spirit because he did not come to save spirits. Jesus came as a
human being because he came to save human beings.
Listen to how the letter to the
Hebrews sums it up:
For this reason he had to be
made like them, fully human in every way, in order that he might become a
merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make
atonement for the sins of the people. Because he himself suffered when he
was tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted.
This was such
an incredible sacrifice Jesus made. Think of it: to give up his
life in heaven. To give up, even if temporarily, his part in the
trinity. To sacrifice all that, in order to save us. And to come as
someone who, as the letter to the Hebrews says, was fully human in every
way. To start out as a baby, completely helpless. To be a
toddler. To have to learn how to walk and talk and use a spoon and learn
all the things that little kids have to learn. To grow, to change.
To go through being a young person, learning about the world. To be a
teenager, to be a young adult. To learn a trade. To learn how to
find his place in society. And then, eventually, to leave home, to leave
his family, to leave the only life on earth he’d ever known, so that he could
truly be the Savior that he was sent here to be. And then, ultimately, to
be killed, murdered, to take the punishment that should have gone to us for our
sins.
That is
love. That is incredible love. That’s a love beyond our ability to
understand love. And it’s the love God has for you and for me and for
everyone.
The Christmas
story is an awesome story. But let’s go beyond the “what” of the
Christmas story. Let’s remember the “why”. And let’s be grateful to
God every single day of our lives, and give glory to God every single day of
our lives, for the incredible love that God has for us.
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