22 December 2024
St. Athanasius
Lutheran Church
Advent 4 Vienna, VA
“Joy that Will Not End”
Text: Luke
1:39-56; Micah 5:2-5a; Hebrews 10:5-10
Grace, mercy, and peace to you from God our Father,
and from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.
There will be lots of people leaping for joy
in a couple of days now, as presents are unwrapped, as family comes to visit,
as special foods and meals are prepared. That’s a good thing. We need that. We
need more of that in a world where joy is sometimes hard to come by,
hard to find, and comes too little and too infrequently.
But it was John the Baptist who was the first
to leap for joy with Christmas joy. The first to leap in joy at the
coming of His Saviour.
But would he have . . . would he have leaped for
joy if he knew how it was going to end up for him? That he was going to end his
life in Herod’s prison and with his head removed? Well, YES. Yes, because this
child in Mary’s womb that caused John to leap for joy has come to raise his
headless body and make it whole again. To raise his lifeless body and give it
life again. To raise his mortal body and make it immortal. To give him hope,
and a life and joy that will not end.
Which is the joy we need. The joy of these next few
days will be real and great - but it will not last. The presents will be used,
some broken, some consumed. Family will go home or return to old divisions and
feuds. The joy will fade as decorations are boxed back up and lights are
darkened for another year.
But that’s not yet! I don’t want to throw a
wet blanket on the joy we have now with our celebration of Jesus’ birth just a
couple of days away! But what I DO want to do is make this joy last beyond a
day or a season. To make Christmas the start, not the end, of our joy.
Because there are two kinds of people in this world . . . I’m sure you’ve
noticed: those for whom Christmas Day is the end of Christmas, and those for
whom it is the start. Those who take down the tree and decorations and lights
the day after Christmas because, after all, the gifts have all been given and
opened, so . . . it’s over, right? And then those for whom the joy lasts beyond
the day. The second seems better to me! A joy that lasts.
That’s the joy God created us to have, but we lost
it. And we seem to keep losing it! One day, one moment, yes! But then the next
. . . trouble, sadness, pain, division, brokenness. I wish I could say it’s all
someone else’s fault, but I know that’s not true. I do my share. And remember
when Adam tried that excuse? He was so filled with joy when God created Eve and
brought her to him. But how long did that last, before he was blaming her for
his sin? They start having children - that’s a joyful time! Until they start
killing each other. Isaac and Ishmael didn’t get along. Neither did Jacob and
Esau. Joseph’s brothers sold him. And in all this the only one really joyful is
satan! Who keeps turning us against one another
and against God and stealing our joy.
So the joy we heard of today - the joy of Elizabeth
and the joy of John - is significant. Because it’s not a joy they found or got
because of anything they did, but more like a joy that got dumped into their
laps! (Or maybe better to say, into their hearts.) They weren’t looking for
it or expecting it, but there it was. For there, in their home, was
Jesus. There, in their home, was the promise of God fulfilled. There in
their very home, was the almighty God in human flesh. Even though His human
flesh was at that moment smaller than a pea! All the fullness of God was there
with them. There to save.
That’s what Mary was confessing with her joyful
words. God had shown His strength - in her! A virgin was
pregnant. He exalted those of humble estate - He raised her
up to be the mother of God! He filled the hungry with good things
- her again! Filled her up with her Saviour.
And He remembered His mercy, His merciful promises of hope, to
Abraham and his offspring forever . . . to send Mary and Elizabeth and
John and you and me a Saviour. A Saviour
to restore the life and joy we keep losing. So we, too, can leap for joy.
And not just one day a year.
Now don’t confuse joyful and happy. They’re not the
same thing. We heard at the end of the Holy Gospel that Mary remained
with her about three months and returned to her home. After three
months of joy with Elizabeth, she went back home . . . to what? A man
who wanted to divorce her. A difficult and very pregnant trip to Bethlehem.
Then a trip to Egypt to protect her son. And you know what all those things
are? Satan trying to rob Mary of her joy and faith. Just as he is trying
to do with us. I think maybe he’ll put up with some Christmas joy if he can
quickly take it away and bring us down the other 364 days of the year!
So what’s the answer? How do we counteract this
work and these lies of satan, who keeps at us with
all his trouble, sadness, pain, division, and brokenness?
Well, it’s simple really: we counteract the work
and lies of satan with the work and truth of God and
His Word. Now for Mary, that would be to know that all that was happening to
her - the good, the bad, and the ugly - had all been spoken of before by God.
Satan wasn’t in control; God was. Things weren’t going horribly wrong; they
were going according to God’s plan. We heard one of those Scriptures today: Micah’s
prophecy of this birth happening in little Bethlehem. Their
not-quite-a-vacation trip to Egypt had also been foretold. So in the midst of
trial and unhappiness, Mary could find refuge and joy in the fact that God was
carrying out His plan of salvation, even using her. If Bethlehem
wasn’t too little, neither was she.
We heard also from the book of Hebrews how God fulfilled His
Word. Now, the book of Hebrews was written to Christians in Rome who were
experiencing a lot of trials and struggles, persecution and pain, and were
listening to satan and thinking of going back to
Judaism, because it was legal to be a Jew and their life would be
easier. They were looking for joy in their life again. But they wouldn’t
find it by going against Jesus and His Word, but in believing that Jesus
had fulfilled all that God had said. Jesus was the one who could give
them hope, and with hope, joy. Even, like John the Baptist, if they -
literally! - lost their heads. Which, turns out, many of them did.
Now what about you? Where are you looking for
joy? And are you confusing happiness and joy and so maybe looking in the wrong
places?
I hope you are filled with happiness and joy
this week as you celebrate Christmas, as you celebrate Jesus’ birth and the
fact that God became man and is here with us. But even more I want you
to be filled with joy here [every Sunday]. That’s what I said earlier:
God wants you to have a joy that doesn’t end on Christmas, but a
joy that starts with Christmas and goes on and lasts. That like
Mary, you know that God has shown His strength in you, by
His Spirit giving you the faith to believe. That He has exalted you
of humble estate and made you His child - that if Bethlehem wasn’t too
little for Him, neither is the water of Baptism, and neither are you. That He
has filled you with good things - namely His Body and Blood for
the forgiveness of your sins. Bread and wine not being too little for Him
either. And that He remembers His mercy to Abraham and his offspring
forever. That’s you, too. True children of Abraham by faith. And if we
rejoice in God in the manger on Christmas, even more should we rejoice
in God here for us every week. Every week, working in us, working
for us. Fulfilling His Word. Every week here being Christmas, as here
we receive the gifts - the gifts of God, and of God Himself.
Which makes this place, humble as it is, a place
of hope, and with hope, joy. That after another week of struggle, when you
just want to close off the world and stay in bed, you come here and find
hope, and with hope, joy.
That after another week of sinful deeds and
thoughts and desires, you come and hear once again that your sins . . . were even
worse than you thought and crushed not only those you sinned against, but
Jesus Himself! But that Jesus wanted that. He wanted to take the brunt
of those sins and your punishment for them and provide you with forgiveness. So
you have hope, and with that hope, joy. Not so you go back and think and do
those things again, but so you won’t.
And that after another week of being assaulted by satan and hearing his lies, you hear again the truth of God’s
Word. The prophecies fulfilled, the work for you completed, and the future for
you secure. That satan is not in control; God is. And
that as horrible as the sin in this world is - and it is pretty horrible - God
is - somehow - able to turn it around and use it all for your good. And
with that Word and truth you have hope, and with that hope, joy.
Like Mary. She rejoiced in God her Saviour, even with great difficulties facing her.
And that is where our joy is as well. No matter what else is happening in your
life and in the world. No matter how hard satan
rages. What’s done is done; and what’s done is your salvation.
In just a moment now, when I finish this sermon, we’re
going to pray for that joy. We have been for some week actually, though
maybe you didn’t notice. For when the sermon is over, you’re going to stand and
sing, and you’re going to sing these words: restore unto me the joy
of Thy salvation, and uphold me with Thy free spirit. The Spirit of
God that is His gift to you. A gift that cost you nothing, but cost Jesus
everything. The Spirit of God from Jesus to give you Jesus, and with
Jesus, hope, and with hope, joy. A joy that lasts far more than just one
day a year, or even a lifetime - but a joy that will last forever.
So leap for joy in a couple of days now. I hope you
do. I hope you have a very merry and blessed Christmas. But come joyfully to
the altar first. You weren’t there is Nazareth when the angel Gabriel came
to Mary, and you can’t go to the manger, but you can come here. To the same
Jesus for you. You aren’t too small, this place isn’t too small, and this
bread and wine aren’t too small. They are just right, and where Jesus want to
be, with hope, and with hope, joy, for you.
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.