16 December 2020
Saint Athanasius Lutheran Church
Advent 3 Midweek Vienna, VA
“Ageless
Advent Questions: For Me?”
Text:
Isaiah 62:1-12; Luke 2:8-16
For
me?
That is a question that
will be heard a lot next week as gifts are given and received. For me?
Somewhere along the line,
though, many Christians, even churches, stopped asking that question. God was
no longer seen as a gift giver, and we as the
recipients of His gifts. God became a demanding God; a God who demanded gifts
from us.
But gifts can’t be
demanded, can they? If they are, they aren’t gifts anymore - but payments. And
so it began to be with God. Many viewed what they did as payments to God. Payments for their sins. And
so the whole Bible, all of Scripture, was turned upside down.
Because that’s not
how the true God is. That’s how false gods are. The Baals of the Old Testament, and the false gods today.
False gods today like riches and success, two of the more popular ones, which
demand such sacrifice, leave people always striving for more, and for which
people often pay with health, family, and happiness. It’s no wonder so many
have strayed from the church. If their false gods are making such demands on
them, who needs another God making even more!
But the Scriptures paint
quite a different picture. Of a God who gives. And is always
giving. Even when He commands, it is so that He can give! Repentance is
to give forgiveness. Sacrifices are to give atonement. The Divine Service is to
give us Himself.
Christmas is the time
many people wake-up to that - at least a little. For here is
a gift that is clearly a gift - the gift of God’s Son, born into the world.
That we did nothing for. That we could
do nothing for. But a gift from God is only half the picture. The other
half is our Ageless Advent Question for tonight: is this gift for me?
So tonight we heard the
story of the Bethlehem shepherds, to whom the angels came and said: for you.
Fear not, for behold, I bring you -
you shepherds! - good news of great
joy that will be for all the people. But
not just for all people. For unto you -
for you shepherds! - is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who
is Christ the Lord. And this will be a sign for you: you will find a
baby wrapped in swaddling cloths and lying in a
manger.
You’ve undoubtedly heard
those words many times. And familiar words we have a tendency to skip over,
because we know them so well. Don’t. Notice that the angel is not only
announcing the gift, but that yes, the gift is for you, shepherds.
Now, I don’t know what
you think of shepherds, but throughout the Bible, to be a shepherd was not a
job people aspired to. It was looked down on. It was hard, dirty, often lonely
work. Shepherds were generally not people you wanted to hang out with. If a shepherd were to ask for me? the
answer usually would be a resounding NO!
Except
this night. Tonight there was a gift for them. For lowly shepherds. One who would turn out to be a shepherd
Himself - the good one, in fact. And who wanted
to be one! And had it not been told by angels, the shepherds probably wouldn’t
have believed it. Nobody gives gifts to shepherds! Except
God. He does. For with God the last are first, the low are high, the
poor are rich, the unwanted are wanted, and shepherds are honored. These are
the ones perfect for His gifts. The empty that He fills with
His gifts of grace and love.
That baby lying in the
manger is no demanding God, but a God who - as the angels proclaimed - had come
to give . . . to give peace on earth. Peace between God and man. Peace that we
throw away with sin, but which forgiveness will restore.
But is this gift really
for all people? For me? For after all, didn’t the
angels say: and on earth peace among those with
whom he is pleased? So, not for all people - only those
with whom God is pleased?
But that is our old,
upside-down thinking creeping back in . . . that we have to do something for
this gift. No. The old King James translation of this verse says it this way: and
on earth peace, good will toward men. That’s better. Because God’s gifts, God’s peace, is not limited to only a few, but
is for all. For me.
God’s good will is for all people. For all people to be His
children.
And so in the reading
from Isaiah tonight we heard that the Lord has proclaimed to the end of
the earth. There is no one He does not want to hear this Word. And what
were the words Isaiah proclaimed? He is the prophet of the word of the virgin
birth (ch 7),
the word of a light in this dark world of sin (ch 9), the word of a branch that would grow from the stump
of Jesse (ch 11),
the word of God’s servant who comes and suffers the punishment our sins
deserved (ch 53).
And this word, too, as we heard tonight: that as the bridegroom rejoices
over the bride, so
shall your God rejoice over you.
Let those words soak in
for a moment. God is not disappointed in you or mad at you or demanding from
you, but rejoices over you like a bridegroom over his bride! How
can that be? It must be a gift.
Those shepherds that
night near Bethlehem got that. They heard the for
you of the angels. We hear it, too. And need to keep hearing it! For when
you sin, when you fall again, when you fail, when you aren’t the person you
know you should be, satan
will be right there, whispering in your ear, that this is not for you!
You don’t deserve it.
And maybe you’ve turned
to God and asked: is this really for me? If so, you’re not the first,
and you won’t be the last. But during this Advent season, the answer to that
question is a resounding YES! For you. Who
else? For Jesus is a Saviour not
for those who do not need a Saviour, but exactly for
those who do. For you. For shepherds, for
fishermen, for tax collectors, for adulterers, for prostitutes, for lepers, for
the weak, for the low, for the outcast, for the forgotten, for the ignored, for
the homeless, for the hungry, for the cold, for the unloved, for the deplorables, for the struggling, for the hopeless, for the
left behind, for the fatherless, for the widow, for the downtrodden . . . for
you.
So when you hear that
question asked this year - For me? - smile. A smile of faith. And know that whatever gifts you do or do
not receive, this gift of God is for you. From the one who came
to be your shepherd. To do that job no
one else would do - to die for you. Which is the best gift of
all. Or as they angels put it: For unto you -
yes, you! - is born this day in the city of David a Savior,
who is Christ the Lord.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.