25 December 2016 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
The Nativity of Our Lord
Vienna, VA
“A Great and Mighty
Wonder”
Text:
John 1:1-14; Hebrews 1:1-6; Isaiah 52:7-10
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
The Word became flesh.
The Light of life has pierced the darkness of death. The Creator has entered
His creation as a creature. The perfect and sinless One has come to redeem a
sinful world. The Truth has come to set straight a world of lies. The grace of
God has appeared and as we heard last night, is wrapped in swaddling clothes
and laid in a manger.
And the world yawns.
Yeah, we’ve heard the story before. It’s the same every year.
Others who do not yawn rage against this story as a threat to them and the way
they want to live their life. The truth is not always welcome; the darkness
hides what we do not want others to see in us.
And then some think this
all religious silliness. After all, a world that has evolved doesn’t have a
Creator that can become a creature. And men that are evolving are making
everything better and advancing anyway.
But know this too: these
thoughts don’t only come from outside the church, they
can slither into the church and creep into our minds as well - before we know
it or realize it - and make their home there. And so we need to be on guard.
For we,
too, have heard the story before and maybe take it for granted, passing by and
over the words without really thinking about them too much.
There is darkness and sin
in us we do not want others to see or know, and some we don’t even want to
repent of, or are afraid to repent of. It is tempting to deny the truth to keep
what we want to be true; to hold onto what we love or think we love.
And while we may not
think the Word of God silly, do we perhaps act that way? Do we make it the
priority it really should be in our lives? Or do we just fit it in when we can, thinking we’re doing pretty good on our own, or focused
more on what we can do more than what God can do?
But Christmas, if we take
it seriously, shatters all that thinking and sets us straight. The Word
became flesh because there was simply no other way for us to live. For
those who turn away from the Light are overcome by the darkness. Those who turn
away from the Truth are consumed by the father of lies. Those who think they
need no redeeming must save themselves. Yet every grave from Adam’s until today
is still full. No one has done it yet.
So good news today! Wonderful news, in fact. Hear it again and let it fill you
with wonder, like a child’s eyes seeing the tree and presents on this day. The
Word became flesh.
The world says the gifts
you get are because you deserve them, because you’ve been so good this year.
This gift, however, is given to those who do not deserve Him; to those who have
not been good, but have sinned, repeatedly and grievously. To a world where
there is no naughty list and nice list - only sinners.
For this world, for you
and me, the Word became flesh.
For those who take the
gifts He has given and either abuse them or throw them away, the Word
became flesh.
For those who deny His
Word or disregard it, the Word became flesh.
For those who take Him
and His grace and mercy for granted, the Word became flesh.
He did not turn His back.
He did not give up. He did not take back His promise. Today He comes for you,
for one and one reason alone: because still He loves you. And He always
will.
Unless you understand
that, unless you realize our need, you won’t get the wonder of Christmas. You
won’t hear the wonder that fills the words we heard today.
The wonder John is
expressing when He says, Folks! the Word
became flesh! The Infinite became finite. The Uncreated became a
creature. The all-powerful One became a helpless baby. Do you realize the glory
of God, that He would do this for us?
Iconographers try to
depict this wonder by painting icons of Jesus with a gold halo, or nimbus,
around His head. And within that halo they put three Greek letters, forming the
words: ho on, which means: the one who was. Meaning
that the one who always was, who had no beginning, is now here, enfleshed in this man. So if you want to know God
and see God, look no where else but here. For the
Word who was in the beginning, and was with God and was God, is now
here. The Word became flesh, for you!
And we heard that wonder
also today from the book of Hebrews, that in
these last days [God] has spoken to us by his Son! Or in other
words, the time of the prophets is done. No more messages from angels. Dreams
and visions are a thing of the past. The same Word of God that spoke in the
beginning and everything came to be is now in the flesh and speaking to us!
Do you get the wonder? Do
you know what that means? That Word that spoke and created is speaking and
still creating. Creating us anew. Re-creating us. To we who chose death He is speaking life.
To us who choose sin He is speaking forgiveness. To us who have
turned away He is calling us back. If you’ve ever got the cold shoulder from
someone, or can’t get your phone calls, emails, or texts returned, you know how
frustrating the silence is. But God is not silent. He is speaking. To you. A Word which does what it says! Can you believe
it?
And Isaiah is marvelling as well. The Lord has bared his holy arm!
he says. He
has rolled up His sleeves and bared His holy arm to get to work. Not against
us sinners but for us. And for all people.
That all the ends of the earth see the salvation of our
God. And those feet which bring such good news and peace and joy
. . . are the ones now wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.
How beautiful those little feet! The feet of God!
Those feet which, as you
know, would soon be marred and pierced with nails and fastened to a cross. That
creating, life-giving, forgiving voice silenced by those He came to save. And
the Word which became flesh laid lifeless in a tomb.
But this is exactly why the
Word became flesh. This is why Jesus was born - not to be an
inspiration for you or an example for you, but to die for you, for your sin.
Which would have been the
end of the story and the end of all hope, had this not been true as well: The Word
became flesh . . . and shines in the darkness, and the darkness
has not overcome it. The darkness of sin and death and grave, John says,
did its worst, raged its hardest, and clamped down
with all its strength . . . but could not extinguish the Light. And so the Word
that became flesh and died is not overcome, but overcomes. The Word rises to
life again.
And so, John says -
writing to people after all this happened, and not just reporting
history, but reality - John is saying here: Folks! This light is still
shining in the darkness. This light continues to shine in the darkness.
It didn’t just shine in the darkness once and then leave - it is still
shining for you. The One born for you, lives for you and lives in you. To wonderfully fill you with His grace and truth.
To fill you with Himself. To fill
you with His life. To fill you with His forgiveness.
To fill you with His Spirt. To fill
you with His Body and Blood.
And He does. For no
longer is He born in a stable, but born in us through water and His
Word. No longer is He wrapped in swaddling clothes but wraps us in His
forgiveness. And no longer is He laid in a manger but
in our mouths, the bread and wine now His poor and humble manger, as we come to
feed on Him. And so He who created all things is creating
still, creating in us clean hearts, giving us hope, and providing a life that
will never end.
And with such gifts -
Christmas gifts! - we can now repent and truly
rejoice, but more than that, also give these gifts to others, the grace
and truth filling us also overflowing to others. God
using us as His blessing, His gift, to others. Not only saving sinners,
but using us in this blessed and blessing way as well. Which truly is adding
wonder upon wonder, is it not?
And that wonder starts
today as we look into the manger and see in the face of a child, the face of
God! Our Saviour.
For to us a child is
born, to us a son is given;
and the government shall
be upon his shoulder,
and his name shall be
called Wonderful, Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting
Father, Prince of Peace (Introit Antiphon).
So marvel again, today,
at this birth. Not so much how it took place, but that it
did. That God did this for you. The Word became flesh. O
come let us not only adore Him, but worship Him by receiving His gifts, and
then marvel again at the wonders of His love.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+)
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.