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When I was small,
money was tight and Christmas presents were few and each one was
savored.
I spent hours
pouring over the Sears catalogue, knowing full well that none of
those things would appear on Christmas morning.
But one box that
did appear each year contained a long-sleeved plaid flannel shirt.
It wasn't a
present that I particularly wanted, but one that I needed to help
deal with a drafty one-room schoolhouse.
Oh boy, Santa
knew just what I needed, or was that grandma? Merry Christmas.
The gift not
wanted,
but the gift
truly needed:
that is
the theme of this night.
I.
We could say that
it is all tied up in the name that the angel announced to Mary:
Jesus (translated
from its Greek form) or Joshua (translated from the Hebrew).
It means O
Lord, save!
or The
Lord is salvation.
Taken as a
statement, the name Jesus, then, is an announcement of the
truth of the ultimate purposes of God.
Translated as
O Lord, save! it is the fervent prayer of every believer: O God,
make good on your promises, and do it now!
We've been
through the times of expectation and waiting; a gift is coming and
is now come among us, Jesus himself.
This is the gift
we truly need in order to get along from day to day;
but it may be the
gift that we really didn't want so much.
For this Jesus is
determined, once he gets hold of us, to make us over,
to transform us
from what we have been into what we will finally be.
Generally, our
prayer has been, “Lord, save me...but leave me pretty much as I am.”
The prophets of
old and the evangelists also have made it clear that this attitude
is not sufficient or appropriate.
To receive the
gift of Jesus means that we need to remind each other,
“Watch
out! Things are going to be different with us, starting right now,
and being completed in the fullness of God's time with us.”
II
Another way of
looking at the gift that we are not sure that we want is to talk
about one of the titles given to Jesus,
Christ in
Greek or Messiah from the Hebrew.
It calls to mind
all of the ancient longing of Israel:
Messiah–
the one to whom the Father gives the throne of David, the one whose
kingdom is without end.
Messiah –
the one who comes as the culmination of the history of God's actions
with his people, the one who shows that God keeps his word.
Messiah –
the title which catches up all of the past and binds it to the
future of God.
Messiah, the
Christ—the name that rips like lightning through the way things
have always been.
Messiah is
the trumpet which announces that history has purpose and meaning;
we are heading in
a particular direction, following a certain voice.
Is this a gift
that we want?
It is a gift that
we need.
III.
Another of the
titles given to Jesus expresses yet again the gift that we are not
sure that we want.
Jesus is Lord.
is the earliest form of the creed, one that appears in scripture
itself.
There are many
who say that we ought to give up this title.
Those with the
power of publishing are eliminating the word from hymns and other
materials as much as they can,
because it has
allegedly been so misused over the centuries, caught up in the power
struggles of mankind, slavery, oppression, brutality, and
self-centeredness.
But just because
we misuse power is no reason to assume that Jesus does!
Jesus uses power
lovingly, in perfect wisdom, for the sake of those who call him Lord
and are his servants.
Jesus purifies
the title, and makes it wonderfully true.
To know Jesus as
Lord is a gift worth having.
It releases us
from ultimate worry about ourselves and others; we can entrust all
of those worries to the one who finally is Lord.
One of the times
that I remind others of this gift is in that last visit before
surgery, when all of the tests and plans have been made and the best
judgment and decision is reached to proceed, and the prayers have
received their Amen, then we can say
“When you awake
from surgery, either you will be restored to us we hope in a better
condition than you are now, or else you will be full-time with
Jesus. Either way, you win, because Jesus is Lord of all time, every
place, and each situation.”
Walt Wangerin has
pointed out a bit of word-history that we have completely forgotten.
The English word
Lord is actually a contraction of two old Anglo-Saxon words
which are loaf-ward or bread-keeper.
From the
loaf-ward the people receive daily bread and sustenance.
There is power
here, power used carefully for the good of the whole community.
The one who is
the Bread of Life is also Loaf-ward, giving himself in the
Holy Communion.
If we were ever
not sure that Lord is a gift we want, it is surely a gift we
need.
IV
And there is yet
another pair of titles which our great story this night uses, and
these should be whispered with the greatest wonder: Son of God
and Child of Mary.
We ponder the
mystery of how this can be so; --that God would care so much about
us,
--that he
chooses to humble himself in this way,
--that he
is this determined to get through to us.
God and man at
one and the same time:
He is God,
begotten before all worlds from the being of the Father, and he is
man, born in the world from the being of his mother--
existing fully
as God and fully as man....
he is not
divided, but is one Christ....
completely one
in the unity of his person, without confusing his natures....
as the Athanasian
Creed phrases it.
We're not sure
that we want God quite this close to us.
Is this a gift we
really want?
But it has been
shown across the ages that this is the gift we truly need: Emmanuel,
God with us,
God understanding
everything there is to know about us,
God facing every
trial, heartache, and sorrow that we can know,
God conquering
that final enemy, death from the inside out,
God inviting us
into that new life, that resurrected life, with hints and samples of
it even now.
Jesus, the Lord
is salvation,
the Messiah, the
Christ,
Lord of all,
Son of God and
Child of Mary...
a fearsome gift,
a wonderful gift,
the greatest gift
of all.
Let all who hear
it,
receive it with
joy. Amen.
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