27 December 2020
Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Saint John, Apostle and Evangelist Vienna, VA
“Move on from Christmas? Never!”
Text:
John 21:20-25; Revelation 1:1-6; 1 John 1:1-2:2
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God
our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
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T |
he gifts have all been
opened. The lights are starting to be turned off. I saw a tree out for the
trash already. The music on the radio has gone back to the usual fare.
Valentines candy is out in the stores. And all the talk now is on New Years - what celebrations will be taking place, how, and
the hope the next year will be better than this year.
The world can’t wait for
Christmas to get here, but once it does, it moves on quickly to the next thing.
Which is too bad.
But
not so the Church. And not only because our Christmas
celebration lasts for the twelve days of the Christmas season, but because the
Church never moves on from Christmas. Because the Word who
became flesh, as we heard and rejoiced in two days ago, still is. And
always will be. For the Word of God, the Son of God, didn’t just wear our flesh
for a while and then cast it off once He was done with it, like a costume or
some dirty clothes - He became flesh. He became this - one of us.
This is who Jesus, our Saviour, now is - God
and man in one person, united for eternity.
Which
is good news for us! That there is hope
for us. That our human flesh will live
for eternity as well. That as John preached in the
reading from Revelation this morning, Jesus is the firstborn of
the dead - not the only, but the first. The first of many more. Of all who have
been freed from our sins by
his blood. His blood not only shed on
the cross, but born into this world at Christmas.
So while December 25
comes at the end of a calendar year, it is the start of eternity
for us. Jesus’ birth into this world for our birth into the
next.
So the Church never moves
on from Christmas. It’s simply too important. It’s why Luther called
the bread and wine of the Lord’s Supper the manger
in which Jesus lies for us today - His Christmas Body and Blood, once dead but
now risen, now here for us. But the same Body and Blood. Do this, Jesus
said, in remembrance of that, of Me.
But while the Church
never moves on from Christmas, we do hear the rest of the
story which Christmas begins. We do move onto Epiphany and Lent and Easter -
but building on the story, not leaving anything behind. Not moving onto the
next big thing, but unfolding, unpacking the story. And the Apostle and Evangelist
John, who we are commemorating today, helps us do that
uniquely. He is the only New Testament writer with three kinds of writings for
us. Luke has two - a Gospel named for him and the history told us in the
book of Acts. Paul wrote the most letters, or Epistles. But only John
has a Gospel, three Epistles, and the apocalyptic book of Revelation. So we
heard from John three times today - the only time in the Church year that ever
happens. And from John we hear many things we would not know had John not included
them. There was certainly no shortage of things to write about Jesus’ life! As
John told us, if one were to write everything Jesus did, the world itself
could not contain the books that would be written.
And we would not have the time to read them all.
So what is included, must be important. Must have something to tell us,
teach us.
So what to learn today,
from the verses we heard from John - especially these verses we heard about the
saying that spread among the disciples that John (called here the
disciple whom Jesus loved) was not going to die? What can
we possibly learn from an intra-disciple misunderstanding, and perhaps even jealousy?
Jealousy, I say, because
right before these verses that we heard today, Jesus tells Peter how he
was going to die; by what kind of death he was to glorify God (John 21:19). That is, how he would
be martyred; killed for his preaching Christ. Which, quite
frankly, shouldn’t have been a surprise. Jesus had told them before that
they would be thrown out of the synagogues and killed by those who thought that
by such actions they were serving God (John 16:2).
But still, it is a shock
to us. To hear of death. Like Peter, we all know we’re
going to die. But we do not know the when, or the where, or the how. Imagine
you were told that - how you were going to die, but not the when
or the where. Would you like to know that? Or, that you were going to die a
martyr’s death and so glorify God by your death? Or would you, like Peter, say
to Jesus: Uh, Lord, I’d like to return my gift? I’d like his gift -
of not dying! Yes, I think that’d be better for me!
But as John correctly
points out, Jesus didn’t say he wasn’t going to die. But God has different
plans for each of us. He doesn’t treat us all the same. Because
while He loves us all the same, we’re all different, and love takes that
into account. What’s good for you might not be good for me. What I can
handle you might not be able to handle. What you need isn’t what I need. And so
God, in His perfect wisdom and love, doesn’t give us all the same
things. We don’t have all the exact same presents under the tree, all
wrapped exactly the same way, all identical! That’s not love. That’s indifference.
That’s uncaring. That’s . . . whatever. And so that’s not
God. God is never whatever, indifferent, or uncaring. And so to each of us,
what is exactly right for us.
To which we might object,
like Peter, and say: not fair! Which, maybe it’s not. Maybe it’s better.
Better than fair. Maybe it’s good - like how God created all things in
the beginning before we messed it all up with our sin! Maybe it’s love -
like how God is restoring the creation that we messed up. And still do.
So Jesus treated John
differently than Peter. And John and Peter differently than
you. And you differently than me. And that’s
good.
But while there are some
gifts that Jesus distributes differently, there are some He gives to us all.
John wants you to know that, too. And chief among those is the forgiveness of
sins. He does not withhold that from anyone!
We heard some familiar
words about that this morning; words that we use in our liturgy at times. If we confess our
sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness. And then this too: if anyone does sin, -
Anyone! No limitation on that. Anyone! - we have an advocate
with the Father, - someone who will stand up
for us, and stand in for us - Jesus Christ the
righteous. That is, Jesus the Christ, the Word made flesh. He is the
propitiation - the atoning sacrifice - for our sins, and not for
ours only - for only a few - but also for the
sins of the whole world. So there is one Christmas
gift for all the same. The one we all need.
And so
just as the Church never moves past Christmas, we never move past this
gift either - like we don’t need it anymore. John says that too: If we say we have
not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.
So if we ever show up one Sunday and say or think: I didn’t sin this week
. . . we’re in trouble! It’s not a small thing to call God a liar. But the
opposite error is just as bad. If we show up and say or think: I sinned too
much this week - there isn’t forgiveness for me. There is. When
John said that Jesus died for the sins of the whole world, he
didn’t say: oh, except you! Except that one! Whole world
means whole world, and each and every one of your sins. No matter how big or
how little. That baby in the manger grew up to bear them all on
His cross.
Which is why we don’t
move on from Christmas or this gift, but every week the Divine
Service begins with the Confession and Absolution, and then most often we sing
the song the angels sang at Jesus’ birth - the Gloria in Excelsis!For the gift we need, is the gift
given, and the gift received. That whenever we die, wherever we
die, and however we die - whether like Peter, a martyrs
death, or like John, after a long life - our flesh will live eternally. The
glory of Christmas that the world moves so quickly past will be ours without
end.
And with such a gift,
John says, we have something special here; a fellowship
here. Which we call the Church. And fellowship means
much more than that we simply like each other and hang out together. You may
not, in fact, “like” everyone in our church or in the church. But we
have this fellowship with each other, in Christ, that transcends that.
For the word for fellowship there is the same word that we say in the
Creed for the communion of saints, and the communion we have here
together. It is to be bonded together in a common thing - a common ONE. In Jesus. In His Christmas flesh. That flesh that we’re
baptized into. That flesh that we receive in the Lord’s Supper. That flesh that gifts us the forgiveness of sins. United to
Christ like that unites us to one another in a very special way. That whether I “like” you or not, you are my brother, my sister.
And so I will love you like that. I will care for you like that. For I will live with you like that forever. Yet another
reason why the Church does not, can
not, move past Christmas.
For
while Christmas happened at a particular moment in time, when the Word
became flesh, it encompasses all of time.
For the Word who became flesh is the one, again as John told us today (I told
you he says a LOT!), who is and who was and who is to come.
The infinite one in finite flesh and blood.
Or, as John also put it: That which was
from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes,
which we looked upon and have touched with our hands
. . . That is, the one who was in the beginning, the Word who was with
God and was God, we’ve now heard Him, seen Him, and touched
him! No one ever did that before! But Christmas changed everything. Now
God has flesh and blood. Which, really, you can’t make this up! It’s too
fantastic. Too wonderful. Yet, John says, it’s true.
We are the eye witnesses, ear witnesses. And we want you and all
the world to know it.
But to know especially
this: not to be jealous of us - as perhaps Peter was jealous of the one
who didn’t have to die a martyr’s death like he would! - but
rather to know that you have something even greater. For
while maybe you didn’t get to touch Jesus, He has touched you. He
baptized you and made you His own, His child. He puts His Body and Blood into
your mouth to holy you with His forgiveness. He washes you with the blood of
His forgiveness. And because He has, you have life. A
life without end. A gift that neither martyrdom, or
old age, or Covid can take away.
So let the world move on
from Christmas. We’ll keep it. Because our Lord took our
flesh and keeps it, and keeps us. He’s not ashamed of us, or to
become one of us. Not at all! Rather, as John tells us, this is His glory
(John 1:14). And when we see Jesus - whether it’s in the manger,
in the Jordan, or on the cross - we see the glory of God.
So yes, thank you, we’ll
keep Christmas. But even better: our Christmas God will keep us. Forever.
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.