Saturday, December 28, 2019

Reflections on “Ornaments: the Star on Top” SAPC, December 24, 2019, Matthew 2: 1-10


The Christmas  Eve sermon in the ornament series.  I do not believe I have ever preached on the wise men on Christmas Eve.  The focus on "the star stopped" came up at a preaching seminar Grace Prexbytery hosted with Dr. Anna Carter Florence from Columbia Seminary.  

“Ornaments:  the Star on Top”  SAPC, December 24, 2019, Matthew 2: 1-10 

In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men[a] from the East came to Jerusalem, 2 asking, “Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising,[b] and have come to pay him homage.” 3 When King Herod heard this, he was frightened, and all Jerusalem with him; 4 and calling together all the chief priests and scribes of the people, he inquired of them where the Messiah[c] was to be born. 5 They told him, “In Bethlehem of Judea; for so it has been written by the prophet:
‘And you, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah,
    are by no means least among the rulers of Judah;
for from you shall come a ruler
    who is to shepherd[d] my people Israel.’”
7 Then Herod secretly called for the wise men[e] and learned from them the exact time when the star had appeared. 8 Then he sent them to Bethlehem, saying, “Go and search diligently for the child; and when you have found him, bring me word so that I may also go and pay him homage.” 

9 When they had heard the king, they set out; and there, ahead of them, went the star that they had seen at its rising,[f] until it stopped over the place where the child was. 10 When they saw that the star had stopped, they were overwhelmed with joy.

Introduction: 

Move 1:  The star stopped.

a.  I have never seen a star stop.  have you?

1.  I am not much of an astronomer, but I do not recall reading about stars stop.

2. Stars shine brightly.

3.  Stars race across the sky.

4. Stars explode.

b. But the star the wise men followed stopped over Bethlehem.

1.  This was the place.

2.  this was the moment.

3.  This was the child.

4. God had arrived in flesh.
c. The star stops and declares God’s intentions.

1.  God will be with us.

2.  God will love us.

3. God will never forsake us.

Move 1:  Because the star stopped, we are a people of hope.

a.  I confess that I watch on Thursday night every week the TV show Grey's Anatomy. Actually, given our world of busy schedules and a DVR, I may not watch the show on Thursday night, but I do watch it at some point each week.

In an episode a few years ago, one of the married couples (two doctors) was dealing with a pregnancy gone bad where the baby would be born and die in just a short time.  

The pregnant wife is an evangelical Christian who is trying to understand her crisis through her faith and is wondering where God is. Her husband, who is a non-believer, is struggling with how to help her and also help himself.

As the crisis nears its climax, the husband finds himself alone in the chapel at the hospital talking to the God in whom he does not believe.

He says “God if you are out there, please show up.  Just show up for my wife.  She needs you.”

b.  Perhaps you know that desperate plea - God please show up.

1.  You are overwhelmed with grief.  Maybe sitting in your pew tonight remembering the person not there with you.

2.  you have a difficult medical situation.

3.  you are struggling in a relationship.

4.  You just feel a little off and cannot get back on track to be the person you want to be.

5. You look at the world and read the headlines and wonder how things can change.

6. You need God to show up.
c.  Hear the good news - the star has stopped.

1. We can dare to hope in the God who comes down to be with us.

2. God has shown up.

3.  the Christ-child has arrived.

Move 2:  The star stopped and changed the way we look at the world.

a.  Ornaments during Advent - we began Advent with my telling about the first Christmas tree Leslie and I had - no ornaments, until we made some homemade ones.

We also had some ornaments given to us by the newsletter women.  We called them that because each week they came to church to fold and prepare for mailing the church newsletters (yes, that was before email and constant contact and churches sent hard copies of newsletters).

I would often go in and talk with them and fold a few newsletters.  That first Advent, I told them about our tree with no ornaments.  Suddenly, I would come into my office and find an ornament or two left by the newsletter women.

One day, I walked in and there was a star.  it was from a  wonderful woman who made a star for each grandchild, and now she was making them for her great-grandchildren.  

Now I had always grown up with an angel at the top of the tree, and the star really wasn’t my style, if I had a style for stars, but we didn’t have anything else for the top of the tree, so we put the star up there.

Fast forward to the next summer.  By this time, the woman who had given us the star had moved to her daughter’s house and was under Hospice care.  the daughter lived a few hours away, so the minister and I took turns calling her each week.

the last time I called her, I asked: “what are you doing, Gibbye?”  (pretty good pastoral care!).

She sort of hemmed and hawed and I heard some laughter in the background.  and then her daughter said, “go ahead and tell him.”

“Well,” she said, “I am making one last star for a Christmas tree. The star I gave you was the one I had made for the next great-grandchild who was born earlier this year, and I can’t die before I make another one to give her.”  She died a couple of days later.  Her last star had been made.

The next to the last star she made for her yet-to-be born grandchild that she gave to Leslie and me has been atop our Christmas tree every year since.  

when I see the star on top of the tree, I am reminded that the world can be a place where a great-grandmother would give away a precious gift to simply share with someone else.

b. The star stopped and changed the way we see the world.

1. the world is not just a place  where violence and bloodshed continue, but a place where peace and reconciliation are possible.

2. the world is not just a place where death arrives, but a place of resurrection and hope.

3.  The world is not just a place with challenges, but a place with opportunities for new life.

4.  If that star can stop over Bethlehem because God chooses to join with us, then the world is suddenly a place  of possibilities and promise.

5. Possibilities, promise, and hope for all God’s people.
Move 3: the star stopped, and the wise men were overwhelmed with joy.

a.  they could not help themselves.

1.  Knowing what God had done.

2.  Knowing that they were no longer alone in the world.

3. Knowing that God cared enough to send God’s very own son.

4.  they were overwhelmed with joy.

b.  Time would lead them beyond that moment.

1.  Life did not suddenly become a fairy tale when the star stopped.

2.  There were still difficult challenges ahead for them

3. We know they had big decisions, life-changing decisions to make.

4.  But they knew with certainty that God was in their midst, and it overwhelmed them with joy.

c.  Tonight is just one singular moment in your life.

1.  The world will continue moving.

2.  The days ahead will surely have good times and some difficult times.
3. but in this moment may joy overwhelm you as you lay claim to this truth - God has come to be in our world, God has come to be with you.

Conclusion:  The star stopped.  

Amen.
 











Sunday, December 22, 2019

Reflections on “Ornaments: the Special Ones” Isaiah 7:10-16


I preached this sermon on the fourth Sunday of Advent.  I enjoyed preaching it.  If I have ever preached the Isaiah text, I do not remember.  It was fun to dig into the Isaiah text a bit.  it might have been fun to push harder on the idea of Ahaz not being willing to ask God for a sign.

“Ornaments:  the Special Ones”  SAPC, December 22, 2019,   Isaiah 7: 10-16

 Again the Lord spoke to Ahaz, saying, 11 Ask a sign of the Lord your God; let it be deep as Sheol or high as heaven. 12 But Ahaz said, I will not ask, and I will not put the Lord to the test. 13 Then Isaiah[d] said: “Hear then, O house of David! Is it too little for you to weary mortals, that you weary my God also? 14 Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Look, the young woman[e] is with child and shall bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel.[f] 15 He shall eat curds and honey by the time he knows how to refuse the evil and choose the good. 16 For before the child knows how to refuse the evil and choose the good, the land before whose two kings you are in dread will be deserted.

Introduction:  Ornaments tell our stories.   Some of the stories are love stories.

Maybe you have ornaments that reveal some of your love stories.

A child’s photo in the ornament.

Or, an ornament marking your first year as a married couple.

Or an ornament from a special friend.

On my mom’s tree having from the angel at the top of the tree is one of those ornaments with my brother’s photo.  it is one of those ornaments that reveals the love of a parent and a child.    Why it hangs from the angel is another story that I better not tell since my mom is listening and my she probably does not want me to tell.

Move 1:  God insists on giving the gift of love to us.

a.  Back up for a second and remember that King Ahaz is the King of Judah, who is caught in the power struggle between Syria and Assyria.

a.  From King Ahaz’ view, all he can see is the world’s powers pressing in on Judah.

1.  he knows he cannot overpower them.

2. He recognizes that Judah and his reign are threatened.

3.  He is a man who looks to the world, and all he sees is trouble.

b. The prophet Isaiah comes to him in the midst of the problem with a word from the Lord  - ask for a sign.

1. In other words, turn to God.

2.  King Ahaz declines - “I will not put the Lord to the test.”

3. Before we applaud him for not trying to test God, we hear Isaiah’s critique and wonder:

Does Ahaz not care what God might do

or does Ahaz does not think God

or does Ahaz not think God can do anything that might help 

or maybe Ahaz will not ask God for a sign because the sign from God might not be what he wants.

Somehow, King Ahaz, the king of God’s people, the one who ought to be in right relationship with God, is not willing to turn to God.

Maybe we recognize Ahaz in ourselves?  

b.  But even Ahaz’ refusal to ask for a sign will not stop God from giving a sign.

1.  God insists on sending a sign.

2. Even if Ahaz will not ask, God is going to send a sign, a child, one named Immanuel.

3.  Immanuel, which means God with us.

4. Immanuel, the name given to the Christ-child.

c.  For whatever reason, King Ahaz does not think it is time to ask for a sign from God.

1. But God chooses to send a sign anyway by coming to be with us.

2.  Immanuel arrives.

Move 2:  God with us means God cannot stop loving us.

a. the term “God with us,” has taken on different meanings through the years.

1. In the 17th century, during the bloody Thirty Years war fought in Europe “God with us,” or “Gott Mitt Unz” was a password used by the Swedish army under Gustavus Adolphus.

2. In the 18th century, the phrase “God with us” was inscribed on the coat of arms of king Frederick I, the powerful Prussian king.

3. In WWI, the phrase was inscribed on the helmets of German soldiers.

4. In WWII, it was inscribed on the belt buckles of the German soldiers and became a symbolic phrase of Nazism.

5. “God with us” describing the worldly power and might that tried to overcome others.

6. “God with us” taking on the meaning we give it from our worldview where power is most important (see Barbara Lundblad Union Theological Seminary New York, NY; http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=1942 for more thoughts on this; also, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gott_mit_uns)

7. King Ahaz would have understood that kind of sign, one that was about power and might.
b.  But God lives out Immanuel in a very different way - by coming as a child to join with us in the vulnerability of our humanity.

1.  Immanuel, who will grow up to teach and preach love, not worldly power.

2. A baby who cannot overcome the power of the world with might, but a baby who can bring love into the world.    

3.  Surely King Ahaz would have been disappointed that God’s sign was a baby.

4.  What better symbol of God’s love than a baby?

5  What begins with a baby in Bethlehem continues to a  cross in Calvary then to the resurrected Christ who sends the disciples into the world to teach and preach his message of love.

3.  God insists on loving the world.

b.  Michael Brown suggests that Advent asks the question:  “What does it mean that Jesus comes as Word made flesh?” (Journal for Preachers, Advent, 2019; “advent and the power of Positive Faith,” Michael Brown, 17-18).

1.  The answer is not found in riches, or power, or control.

2.  In fact, the answer is not found in the pageantry or cantatas or celebrations.  

3.  The answer is found in the infant cradled in mary’s arms, Immanuel who announces for all to hear:  
God loves you; 

God desires to be with us;

God comes to love a broken world and make it whole.

Conclusion: I heard a story recently about a young boy at a  Christmas party that had one of those white elephant gift exchanges.   You know the kind when you choose the gift you want, but then it can get taken from you by a person choosing after you.

Most of the gifts were toys a boy would like.  the young boy, in fact, had already opened a fun toy, but then it was stolen from him.  When he chose again, he ended up with a picture frame ornament.  As you might imagine, no one who chose after him took the picture frame from him.  He was stuck with it.

The adults supervising the party were worried about him.  they did not want his party experience ruined by this odd gift for an 8 yr old boy.  So, they offered to let him choose something else instead of the picture frame ornament.

He said no, he would keep the picture frame ornament.

they insisted he could choose another gift that would be more fun.

Finally, he told them, “I am going to put my picture in the frame and give it to my grandmother as a Christmas gift.  She’ll love it.”  And, he did.

And she did.  HIs picture frame ornament hangs from the Christmas tree every year.

Imagine how great it must be to know without a doubt that someone loves you.

Imagine the God who comes as Immanuel and know without a doubt the God who loves you.