Jesu Juva
“The Light Shines in the
Darkness”
Text: John 1:1-14; Titus
3:4-7
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
We heard these words from St. John: The
light shines in the darkness . . . He was in the world, and the
world was made through him, yet the world did not know him.
The darkness does not understand it. How could
it? What God has done this day is unfathomable, incomprehensible, and quite
frankly, against all human reason.
For today, the Lord God, the almighty,
all-powerful, all-knowing God, creator and sustainer of all, the only infinite
One, the alpha and the omega, without beginning or end, is born a man. The
Word became flesh; that’s how John put it. The glorious God lies humbly
in a manger. The eternal Son of God, at the Father’s right hand, now Mary’s
son, nestled in her arms.
The true light, the light of the world,
the light which gives light to everyone, John said, now lies in
the darkness of this sin-darknened world. To enlighten it. To save it.
The darkness does not understand this. What
darkness? The darkness of evil? Yes. The darkness of the evil one? Yes. The
darkness of our evil world? Yes. The darkness of sin?
Yes. But also our darkness - the darkness of
our hearts and minds. Our sin-darkened minds focused only of the things
of this world. Our sin-darkened hearts desiring only the
things of this world.
We do not understand. What is God doing? Why
am I here? Why is there so much evil and sadness in the world? Why are things
not better for me? And what we do not understand we fear and sometimes turn
away from. He came to his own, John said, and his own
people did not receive him.
It’s true, isn’t it? We turn to the darkness for
answers, for comfort, for relief. We hurt those who hurt us, or better, before
they can hurt us. We keep chasing joys that do not last and feelings which are
even more fleeting. We question God and believe what makes sense to and pleases
me.
And so there was a man sent from God, whose
name was John. He came as a witness, to bear witness about the light, that
all might believe through him.
John pointed to Jesus. God sent him because he
knew the darkness would not understand what he was doing and how He was doing
it. And so John proclaimed Jesus. Proclaimed that He is the
light of the world. He is the Lamb of God, your Saviour.
He is your God in human flesh.
And the darkness said: him? The just Mary’s son. Just the carpenter’s
son. Nobody special. The darkness did not
understand. Even worse, the darkness killed Him. Snuffed out
the light of the world. Brought to an end the one
without end. Crucified the very one who gave all things life. And by all
rights, His death should have been our death. And I don’t mean just that we
deserved to die, although that’s true. But in this sense: that when you kill
what gives you life, your life should cease too. It’s
like turning off the pacemaker that keeps your heart beating, or stopping the
oxygen that keeps you breathing. Kill the source of your life, and you’re
cutting off your future too.
But that did not happen. Because here’s something
else the darkness did not understand: the darkness could not overcome it.
I’m not a scientist, but there something in the
universe that science calls a black hole. And it’s called that - black -
because it’s a place where the gravity is so intense that nothing can escape
from it - not even light. And that’s what the dark one, the evil one, thought:
he could put out the light of the world.
And for a day or so it looked that way. A cold,
lifeless body laid in a tomb. The Jewish leaders going
home to prepare to worship the God they just killed, satisfied with their job
well done. Was there ever a darkness so deep as that
Good Friday?
But because it was, there was also never a light
as bright as on that morning when the light came out of the darkness; when
Jesus came out of His tomb alive. Triumphant. Glorious. As so John’s Gospel ends just as it begins: the
darkness could not overcome the light.
And that is true not only of the world, in a
general sense, but also of the darkness in you and your heart. And Titus, too,
bore witness to us today, saying: when the goodness and loving kindness
of God our Savior appeared, he saved us. When He appeared - does
that mean Jesus’ birth or His resurrection?
Yes. The light that broke the darkness on that
Christmas morn Is the light that broke the darkness on
that Easter morn and is the light that broke the darkness of your heart when
you were baptized. When, according to His mercy . . . you were saved by
the washing of regeneration and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom He poured out
on you richly through Jesus Christ our Savior. The washing
for the forgiveness of your sins, your darkness, your doubt; and the renewal
for a new life, a Spirit-filled life, a life of light. In Christ. When you were born not of blood nor of the
will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.
And so what John said is now also true for you: and we have seen his
glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.
You now see. And so while you still may not know
what God is doing, why you are here, why there is so much evil and sadness in
the world, or why things are not better for you - you know the goodness
and loving kindness of God, for you know the One
lying in the manger. And so you know the love of God who would give His Son for
you. So that no matter how deep the darkness gets - in the world or in your
life - you always have this light, to give you hope and peace and life.
And now, like John, you are sent out into a world
of darkness, and you too get to proclaim this unfathomable, incomprehensible
mystery: that on this day not just a child was born, but the Word became
flesh and dwelt among us. And He still is. Still baptizing, still
forgiving, still giving us His Body and Blood to nourish and strengthen us in
Him. The Christmas gift that keeps on giving, and will never
stop.
So Joy to the World (LSB #387), for the One of the
Father’s Love Begotten (LSB #384) has come, and is the child Gentle Mary Laid in a
manger (LSB
#374), the
rest for our souls (LSB
#372), and
the song of the Angels we have Heard on High (LSB #368). All these you sing
today, for the light has shone upon you and you are in darkness no more. Merry
Christmas!
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.