The Sunday night message in the Gettysburg United Methodist church on December 17, 2023. The Bible verses used are Luke 2:1-21.
What we read for today in
Luke is what we think of when we think about the Christmas story. It’s
the bit Linus reads in the Charlie Brown Christmas special. It’s Mary and
Joseph and baby Jesus in the stable with the shepherds around. This is
what we want to hear on the Sunday before Christmas. After all, who does
not love hearing a story about a baby?
And
it is an amazing story, really. The divine Son of God, taking human form,
coming to earth to live among us. Living as a human being, feeling all
the things we feel, enjoying all the things we enjoy, suffering through all the
things we suffer through. Limited by all the limitations we have.
You
know, at Christmas, we talk all the time about Mary and the faith she had and
all the suffering she endured. And that’s appropriate, because she did
have tremendous faith and she did have to endure a lot of suffering. And
we talk about Joseph, and the faith he had, and all the things he had to do,
taking care of his family and so forth. And that’s appropriate too,
because Joseph did have tremendous faith and he did have to do a lot of things
to take care of his family.
But we don’t usually talk about the
sacrifice Jesus made and the suffering he endured. I mean, we talk about
that during Lent. We talk about how Jesus was arrested and beaten and
tortured and ultimately killed on a cross. But we don’t talk about the
sacrifice Jesus made just by coming to earth in the first place. In fact,
we usually don’t think about Jesus’ birth that way at all.
But
we should. After all, we’re told that Jesus, the divine Son of God, was
with God the Father from the beginning. Remember what we read in
John: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God.” Jesus, the Word, was with God the Father from the very
beginning. And Jesus had been with God all through everything that had
happened since, everything that had happened up until this point in history.
And now, Jesus was separated from God, just like
we are. I mean, yes, Jesus had divine powers, power that you and I do not
have. But I have to think he could not possibly feel the sort of
connection to God the Father that he had in heaven. He had that same
separation from God that we have. He could pray, of course, just like we
all can, and he could go meditate and try to feel close to God, just as we all
can. And there were times, such as at the transfiguration, when he was
briefly given some of that connection back. But for the most part, when
he was on earth, it looks like Jesus was separated from God just like you and I
are.
I
wonder when Jesus really felt that. I assume he knew it was going to
happen, but when did he really start to feel it? Did he not feel it until
he was an adult, and fully realized who he was? Did he feel it already
when he was young, during that episode when he was twelve and went off by
himself, away from his parents, to go and visit with the rabbis? Or did
he already feel it in this scene, as a baby, when he was lying in the manger
with Joseph and Mary beside him?
Whenever
it was, it had to be really hard for him. He knew it was going to happen,
or at least I would think he did. I’d think Jesus would have to have
known, when he agreed to come to earth and live among us, that he would not
have that same connection to God the Father that he had while he was in
heaven. But did he really understand what that was going to feel
like? Did he know how hard it was going to be to lose that connection
with God, even if it was only going to be for those years on earth?
It
had to be a hard thing for Jesus. It was a tremendous sacrifice Jesus
made. He voluntarily gave up that connection he had with God. And
he did it for us. Jesus gave us an amazing gift when he did that.
You know, when you think about it, Jesus really gave
up his life twice for us. We know about how Jesus gave up his earthly
life for us when he died on the cross. But Jesus also gave up his
heavenly life for us when he was born to Joseph and Mary in the stable.
Jesus
gave up his earthly life on the cross to save us from the consequences of our
sins. He took the punishment that should have gone to us, so that if we
simply believe in him, we will go to heaven. And that’s an incredibly
awesome thing.
But
Jesus gave up his heavenly life to do something just as important. Jesus
gave up his heavenly life to come here to earth and live among us. Jesus
gave up his heavenly life so we could know God better and understand God
better. Jesus gave up his heavenly life so that we could see who God is
and how God wants us to live.
In other words, Jesus gave up his connection to God
the Father so that you and I could have a connection to God. Before Jesus
came, people did not know God, not in the way you and I can. They did not
have a personal relationship with God. Oh, maybe a few of them did, the
great prophets like Moses and Joshua and people like that, but not everyday
people. Not people like you and me. There was no thought that
common people could just talk to God. Why would God listen to you?
Why would God listen to me? If you wanted to talk to God about something,
you went and talked to the priest. You asked him to pray for you, and
they you waited and eventually asked the priest for God’s answer. The
priest might be able to talk to God, especially if he was a high priest, but
you and me? No way.
And
Jesus changed all that. Jesus came and showed us, individuals, common
people like you and me. He showed us how to talk to God. He showed
us how to listen to God. He showed us that we did not need to go through
a high priest to talk to God, we could do it ourselves. Everyone—you, me,
and everyone else you can think of, from the highest of the high to the lowers
of the low—can have a personal relationship, a personal connection, to
God. Jesus gave up his connection to God so that you and I could have a
connection with God.
Did
Mary and Joseph understand that, do you suppose? Probably not. Not
totally, anyway. They probably understood some. They knew this was
a special child. The angel had told them that he was the divine Son of
God who would save people from their sins. But did they really appreciate
how that was going to work or exactly what it meant? We don’t understand
it that well now. Could they really have understood it then?
But you know who maybe did understand it? The
shepherds. You know, as you look at this story, the shepherds really
don’t seem to have that much of anything to do with it. They did not know
Joseph or Mary. They were nobody important or special. They were
just ordinary people, people like you and me. They were just getting by
in life, doing their jobs, doing what they had to do. In George Carlin’s
phrase, they were doing just enough work to not get fired and getting paid just
enough not to quit.
And
then, all of a sudden, an angel appears to them. And then a whole company
of angels. And they tell these shepherds about this incredible thing that’s
happened. And they tell them to go see the baby.
And they
do. And they know. They don’t know everything. They probably
don’t understand what Jesus had to give up in order to be born as a human
being. But they know something is different. They know they have a
connection to God they’ve never had before. And they know that, somehow,
this baby caused that. They know that somehow, in some way, the birth of
this baby means that they are connected to God in a way they never were before.
And they know
that they’re never going to lose that connection. They know that
connection they have to God will always be there. And so they go away,
happier than they’ve ever been in their lives, so happy that they cannot help
but tell everyone they meet about this incredible thing that’s happened, this
incredible thing that they’ve not only seen but that they’ve felt in their
hearts.
We have
that same connection to God that the shepherds had. We have it through
Jesus Christ. And that connection will always be there for us, too.
We can give it up. We can let it go. But God will never take it
away. Any time we choose to turn back to God, that connection to God will
always be there for us.
Jesus gave up
his life in heaven to give us life on earth. And Jesus gave up his life
on earth to give us life in heaven. It’s an incredible gift. It’s
the gift of Christmas.
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