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"Christmas Eve 2006"


St. Mark’s Episcopal Church
Sunday, December 24. 2006
Christmas Eve

Isaiah 9:2-7
Titus 2:11-14
Luke 2:1-20


When you get to be 43 years old, which I am, the Christmas story is like an old friend. You’ve encountered it so many times, in so many ways, and heard or seen countless manger scenes, crèches, cartoons, paintings, live nativities, crayon drawings, carols and cards that you begin to take it for granted. That friend can get a little tired and predictable. “In those days...” and “In that region” - the introductory phrases Luke uses - set the story apart from us in both time and place. It is an event with comfortable distance that took place a long time ago, when people wore robes and sandals and traveled by donkey.

But like old friends and all Scripture, surprises and newness are continually bubbling up, if you are open to it. First, take a moment to create a picture in your mind of the Christmas manger scene. What do you see? What do you hear? Are you close up or far away? Is it real or impressionistic? Put that image aside for a moment, and I’d like to share mine with you. This year, what I am noticing how little we really know about the Christmas story from the Bible. This is what Luke tells us: “And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.” There it is in one simple sentence. Why such a minimalist portrait? Are the details not important? In the vacuum of information, over the centuries our collective imaginations have filled in many details. But Shakespeare wrote that brevity is the soul of wit, so we can be confident that often less is more when it comes to stories, including Christmas. Sifting through these few pieces of information can yield many treasurers. One piece of this brevity is that “she laid him in a manger.” A manger – that is not a softly illuminated, straw-lined, open barn with sweet cooing of doves in the rafters. If you have studied French, you know that the word “manger” is a verb that means “to eat.” The mother puts the baby in a feeding trough – unsanitary by our standards but probably licked clean during the evening feeding of the sheep, donkeys or whatever animals were kept nearby. There is no barn or straw mentioned. It is likely that the trough is in the open, exposed to the night sky, surrounded by well worn earth, scratched bare of grass by the animals who feed there. In the middle of an open place, perhaps the only light that gives definition to the scene is from the cloudless starry night sky and a small campfire. Luke writes that the shepherds went with haste and found Mary and Joseph and the child lying in the manger, which is where Mary had just placed him. It didn’t take long for the shepherds to find them – in fact no time at all seems to have elapsed. When the angels had left them, the shepherds looked toward Bethlehem. A flicker of light from a distant campfire was perhaps no more than 200 yards away. There was no searching from manger to manger, barn to barn. It wasn’t hard to find what they were looking for, but would they have bothered to investigate without having been visited by the angels? The light that tells us where the child is is always closer than we expect.

Another piece of the Christmas story that we know well is that “there was no room for them in the inn.” We can imagine the heartless innkeeper, standing in the doorway of a small rooming house, basked in the warmth and light of a fireplace in the background, denying the man and woman a place of shelter, even as he sees the woman make a fist as she fights the intensifying labor pains. As bad as this may sound, I think the actual situation was even worse. Luke tells us that Joseph went back to his family of origin in Bethlehem. This was a town populated with his cousins and assorted other relatives. It is these people – Joseph’s family - who do not show mercy, not just to him but to his betrothed who is going into labor in the middle of the night. Luke is silent on the emotion of Mary and Joseph – but I think we can only begin to imagine the feelings of anger, abandonment and despair at their situation. Desperate for shelter, perhaps it was on their way to one of the many caves in the hillside near Bethlehem when Mary simply had no choice but to stop in the middle of a field, a feeding trough the only object to mark the place.

With these images of the story in mind, I received a piece of junk mail several weeks ago. The cover of the thirty page pamphlet has a yellow background, headshots of Osama Bin Laden and North Korean President Kim jong-il and menacing red block letters that announce: “Investing in a World on the Brink.” Following a table of contents, a page of introduction includes these headings: “Then the World Changed” and “Get a Grip on the New Reality.” This isn’t an investment ploy, I thought...this actually is the Gospel! Indeed, the world is on the brink – when we see a woman giving birth next to a feeding trough in the middle of the night. The world is on the brink as the death toll of American soldiers in Iraq nears 3,000, as Bethlehem is orphaned by road blocks and a separation barrier that cut it off from neighboring Jerusalem, as Islamic fighters and government soldiers clash in Somalia, as temperatures in Europe are at their warmest in 150 years of record-keeping, as 200 acres of Brazil’s rain forest are destroyed during the time of this sermon, as rival groups of Christian monks clash in Greece in a 1,000 year old monastery using crowbars and sledgehammers because one of the two groups opposes improving ties between the Orthodox and the Vatican, and as soaring demand for cashmere in the United States has resulted in overgrazing in China, destroying vast grasslands, sending dirt into the atmosphere that pollutes the skies and reaches portions of the west coast of the United States carried by the winds of the Pacific jet stream.

The world is on the brink, and it is into such a situation that God invests – in fact, bets the house, puts everything on number 13. Spin the wheel. Tick, tick, tick. Then the world changed. In the shortest of moments, the mysterious vastness of the universe, the galaxies, the majesty and awe of the heavens, the glory of the firmament, the kingdom, the power and the glory are at once collapsed into a tiny, helpless newborn, laid in a manger – a feeding trough. Those tightly wound bands of cloth hold it all in place. The psalmist cries out, “Lift up your heads, O gates, lift them high, O everlasting doors; and the king of glory shall come in.” (Psalm 24).

It is a terrifying thought. God almighty, the creator, the eternal, the One on whom we live, move and have our being, realized entirely in the person of a newborn baby on the rugged plains of Israel. It is an insane bet, an investment with odds of any return of 1 in infinity. But the angel said to the shepherds, “Do not be afraid!” And why not, please tell us? Because, “I am bringing you good news for all the people – to you is born a Savior, the Messiah, the Lord. To you is born. And they went with haste to see the baby because it was theirs. And the baby is ours. And the baby belongs to all of the people. As the piece of junk mails says, “get a grip on the new reality.”

The reality of a baby is one we all know from personal experience, in the deep recesses of our memories, and for some of us, as parents who have witnessed and nurtured the life of babies. Who we are, our personalities, temperaments and physicality to a large degree reflect our lives when we were babies. A baby must be fed and cleaned or it will die. It must also be held and touched or it will die. A baby learns how to talk by being around and in constant conversation. A baby’s first words are invariably “no” and “mine” but over time are mingled with “yes” and “ours” with conscious care and nurture. A baby learns to love by being loved and to share by the example of sharing. A baby is not a piece of clay – but will reflect the type of care it receives from its parents, its family and its community. “To you is born a Savior” declares the angel. This baby is ours and will thrive or die depending on us. God, in other words, turned the tables on us, leaving us as creators and God as the one who will reflect who we choose to be and how we choose to raise the baby in a broken and risky world. What a foolish bet by the world’s standards, but not God’s. This is the Christmas story.

Luke writes that “the shepherds returned” – which holds an ambiguous meaning. Did they return to their fields or to the baby at a later time? Perhaps both – because we follow their example, returning time and time again to the manger, the feeding trough, the campfire, under the vastness of the night sky, to see, to touch and to love the God who risks everything in a foolish bet, on a broken world. God has invested in a world on the brink – on the brink of desperation and hopelessness and has brought us to the brink of joy. This is the Christmas story, the old friend, once again made new.

Amen.




 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 


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