24 December 2024 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
Eve of the Nativity of Our Lord Vienna, VA
Readings and Carols
Meditations
Genesis 3:1-15
It’s broken.
That will be uttered more than a few times tomorrow
as gifts that were received are dropped, cracked, shattered, or in some other
way damaged. Maybe the gift wasn’t as sturdy as hoped. Maybe it was
carelessness. With a child, tears may flow as well. Their joy so quickly turned
to sorrow.
It’s broken.
So it was for Adam and Eve. Except they didn’t just
break creation, they gift they received - they broke themselves. We’re
broken, they realized. When they didn’t follow the directions. And there was no
going back. No tape, glue, or fig leaves could fix what they broke. For this
was no small crack or tear; but a great shattering. Their perfect gift, perfect
home, gone in an instant.
And as parents console a sobbing child, maybe even
offering to replace was got broken, so, too, God consoles Adam and Eve. And
promises to fix what they broke. As we will hear tonight, it will be a costly
fix, though. For the one He will send to do this, to fix this . . . the one who
will bruise the serpent’s head while suffering injury Himself . . . will be God’s
own eternal and beloved Son. That in Him creation be restored and we be
redeemed.
So the story begins. And no matter how much you
spent on gifts this year, you didn’t spend more than that! That’s the gift of
gifts! That’s how much God loves you.
Isaiah 9:2-7
Many hundreds of years went by. And still
the world was broken. Still we were broken. People were walking
in deep darkness, with heavy burdens and dreadful oppression. There was war,
slavery, conquest, rivalry, family feuds. Oh, there were some good times, too.
But they didn’t last. Mostly, things seemed to be getting worse, not
better.
Did God forget? Was He able to do what He had
promised? Did He change His mind? They tried to keep the faith, but the faith
was hard to keep. Parents sometimes make promises they get too busy, or too
distracted, or too selfish to keep. God, too?
No! Isaiah said. And God sent prophets like him to
repeat His promises to the world. He hasn’t forgotten. He isn’t too busy. He is
able. And He did not change His mind. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will
do this.
Do what? Give His Son to us. When a child is
born for us. To shoulder the burden that is crushing us. The burden of
governing this ungovernable world. To lighten the darkness, give joy for
sorrow, and end the great tumult. To be a just and righteous King. To be the
Prince of Peace.
God is faithful. The zeal of the Lord of
hosts will do this. Soon.
Isaiah 11:1-10
Are you sure, Isaiah? Things don’t look so good.
Jesse’s son David built this kingdom up so grand and glorious and strong . . .
but look at it now. It’s like . . . a stump. The stump of a tree that was once
so strong and majestic, in which birds and critters nested. Now it’s nothing.
It’s dead. You said God keeps his promises. Well?
I’ll bet you’ve asked that same question. Maybe a
lot! Maybe now. When things don’t look so good in your life. When your tree,
your life, seems to be tottering, and on the verge of stumphood
. . .
There shall come forth a shoot
from this stump, the stump of Jesse, Isaiah says. And he says
that over and over, in different ways. There shall. He shall. Twenty
times in just these ten verses, by my count. Shall. Shall is the great
word of promise, and faith. It shall happen, just as He
said. One shall come filled with the Spirit of God.
Creation shall be restored in peace. The wars and the
hurting shall end. Just a little longer, until a
little child shall lead them.
A little child. The promised child. Who will have a
glorious resting place. In a manger. In a tomb. Places we don’t think so
glorious, but they are when this child is in them. For it’s not the place that
makes this child glorious - it’s this child that makes these places glorious.
And He shall. He shall.
Titus 3:4-7
Saint Paul wrote to Titus after the fact, after
this child came. Paul calls Him the goodness and loving kindness of God
our Saviour. All the goodness and loving
kindness of God squeezed together and put in one place, in one man. And with
all that goodness and kindness, look what He did: He saved us. He
did it! All the promises of God fulfilled. Not because of us, cuz’ we broke it! But because of His mercy.
Mercy which is even more than recreating a broken world
and redeeming mankind. It is mercy for you. Personal
mercy. Goodness and loving kindness mercy.
If your car is dirty, you hose it down. God did
that once to the world, with a flood. But you don’t do that to your small
children. They get special care. And so do you. For this child of God, once
washed by His mother, now washes you. A washing of
regeneration and renewal by the Holy Spirit. The same Spirit of which
Isaiah spoke, that filled this child, now given to you. To save you, yes. To
forgive you, yes. But even more, Paul says - the make you an heir,
a child who will inherit all that God your Father has! His life and His
kingdom.
We call it baptism. That is where the child God
promised, His own eternal and beloved Son, keeps coming to us and making us
children of God. It’s pretty amazing, this goodness and loving kindness
of God. That He would do so much for us. But He did. And is. And it all
started this night.
Matthew 1:18-25
Why me? Think Joseph asked that question a time or two?
What had he done to deserve this? It wasn’t right. It wasn’t fair. Why me
God?
Joseph was right. He didn’t deserve . . . this honor!
Oh, that’s not what he was thinking. Or what you were thinking. You and
(perhaps) he were thinking he didn’t deserve the shame, the hardship, the pain,
the trouble, the confusion. Maybe, maybe not. But really what he didn’t
deserve was this honor. The honor of being betrothed to the mother of
God. The honor of being the guardian of God’s Son. But for this he was chosen
by God. By grace.
Yes, Joseph, God was fulfilling His promise of old.
This child is not just a child, but Immanuel, God with us. God in
this tiny baby. Which can’t be! But is. The zeal of the Lord of hosts had
done it!
Why me God? Next time you ask that question (and I’m sure
there will be a next time!), maybe remember Joseph. Maybe there’s more going on
than meets the eye. Maybe God is with you, even in the pain. Maybe God is . . .
honoring you!
Joseph woke from sleep and did as he was commanded. I’m sure it wasn’t easy.
I’m sure it took great courage and faith. It probably will for you, too. To do
what God has given you to do. But the faith you need is the faith God gives.
For God is faithful. How do you know? Look in the manger. Joseph did. And
he called his name Jesus.
Luke 2:1-7
And it came to pass.
Caesar Augustus didn’t notice. His eyes were filled
with visions not of sugar plums, but of tax revenue. Cyrenius had more
important things, government things, on his mind. And all those pilgrims that
filled the roads were, perhaps, too busy grumbling to notice the man with his
very pregnant wife on the journey with them. But there they were, going to the
city of David, which is called Bethlehem, because they were of the house and
lineage of David.
And a child was born.
The child of God’s promise which first filled the
ears of Adam and Eve.
The Son given to shoulder the crushing burdens of
this world and life.
The child that
shall lead a world back to Paradise and raise men and women fallen into sin.
The who showed us the goodness and loving kindness
of God.
The son who is not just the child of Mary, but the
Son of God, God with us.
That child, that Son, is now here, wrapped in
swaddling clothes, not royal robes, laid not in a soft bed, but in a manger,
and whose attendants are not adoring family or guests, but animals.
The Nativity scenes that we see so much this time
of year capture that image, but only partly. Part of it must remain a mystery.
That the almighty, all-present, all-knowing God would do this, be
this, for us. It boggles the mind. But shouldn’t it be so with God? He should
be doing things beyond our imagination. And He is.
And not only with this birth, but in your life.
Many, like Caesar and Cyrenius, won’t notice. They’re too busy with other
things, more important things. Or so they think. But let that not be us. Let us
stop and know that on that Silent Night, Christ, the Savior, is born!
And on this Silent Night, let us pray that the light that beams from His
holy face fill us with wonder, faith, and love. To believe. To confess. And to
love one another as He has loved us.
Luke 2:8-20
It seems that angels appearing and singing to a
group of shepherds near Bethlehem was quite the unusual and irregular thing
that night. But actually, it is quite the opposite. Angels and men were meant
to dwell with each other in joy and peace. That this is unusual and irregular
is because of our brokenness. So their presence this night is not only to
herald the birth of Jesus to the shepherds, but is also a sign - that
what was broken is being put back together this night. Things are returning to
normal. So Glory to God in the highest! And on earth peace, goodwill
toward men.
And the shepherds went to Bethlehem and saw that of
which they were told. They saw Jesus, there, in the manger, in swaddling
clothes, for them. And that’s what we are doing tonight as well, coming to this
place, as we have been told, for Jesus is here, on the altar, under bread and
wine, for us. Same Jesus. Same Body and Blood. They were filled
with joy at salvation come. We are filled with joy at salvation
accomplished and given, as we eat and drink for the forgiveness of our sins.
And for our brokenness. For when we break things
still. For our doubts and fears. For our stubbornness and rebellion. For all
the ways we have not lived as the sons and daughters of God we are. So we come
and join the angels and archangels and all the company of heaven here, and give
glory to God as He gives Himself to us.
And the promise is kept. A Saviour
is born. A Saviour for the world. A Saviour for Adam and Eve, for Isaiah, Titus, and Paul, for Casear and Cyrenius, and for you. Good tidings of
great joy. Ponder this in your heart. This Joy, to the
World.
In the Name of the Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.