Monday, December 23, 2019

Sermon from Grace and St Stephen’s 12/22/19 Matthew 1:18-25



     “The most joyful event of the season!”  That’s what the glittery gold words on my screen read.  “The most joyful event of the season.”  By season they mean Christmas season so maybe the most joyful event of the Christmas season might be the mass or worship service celebrating the birth of Christ.  Or maybe it is referring to the actual birth of Christ- the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the taking on of flesh by God the creator of the universe, the proclamation of Emmanuel, the coming of the Prince of Peace, salvation for us all, peace for the world and hope for ages to come … But actually, the glittery gold words weren’t referring to any of those things.  Turns out, “the most joyful event of the season” involves Taylor Swift, James Corden and Jennifer Hudson dressed as cats in the movie based on the famous Broadway musical.  “The most joyful event of the season” is apparently sitting in a theater for two hours watching people dressed as cats dance and sing.  And maybe it is a good movie, but I feel like we can do better as far as joy goes …
          My skepticism continued as I sat in a crowded gymnasium and watched first graders dressed as Christmas trees sing and dance.  It was a lovely little play showcasing the talents and joy of the children.  At the end all the little Christmas trees learn from Santa Claus what Christmas is really about.  Turns out it’s friendship and kindness.  I clapped and smiled along with the rest of the audience but inside my head I was saying “really?  Is it?” 
          As far as pop culture holiday lessons go, few hit the nail on the head as well as the classic Charlie Brown Christmas because it’s difficult to truly capture the joy of Christmas without mention of Jesus.  I get the importance of being sensitive to all backgrounds and beliefs, but I think the secular messages of “what Christmas is all about” or “the most joyful event of the season” are really kind of sad and depressing, even though they may cause a passing nostalgic smile.  If all of the songs, decorations, anticipation, hopes, desperate cries and preparations are really just for a moment of feeling good- we walk away with our hearts longing for more.  Longing for something that cuts through the surface, digs deep within us and speaks to our souls. 
          Isaiah and Matthew have a different idea of “the most joyful event of the season” … or even “the most joyful event of human existence.”  Isaiah describes the sign God will send to “weary mortals” and the words echo across the pages of our Bible and over hundreds of years and then catch the ear of a troubled and confused man in a dream.  “Emmanuel”  “God with us” - convinces Joseph to take a chance on faith.  Hundreds of years later it echoes here in this space.  The hope of all creation, salvation for all of us, an answer to our longing - “Emmanuel … God with us.” 
          Theologian Elizabeth Johnson writes, “Christian faith is grounded on the experience that God who is Spirit, at work in the tragic and beautiful world to vivify and renew all creatures through the gracious power of her indwelling, liberating love, is present yet again through the very particular history of one human being, Jesus of Nazareth.  The one who is divine love, gift, and friend becomes manifest in time a concrete gestalt … According to the witness of Scripture, Jesus is a genuine Spirit-phenomenon, conceived, inspired, sent, hovered over, guided and risen from the dead … Through his human history the Spirit who pervades the universe becomes concretely present in a small bit of it … In a word, Jesus is Emmanuel, God with us … In the circle of life where Christ’s way is followed, a new possibility of shalom, of redemptive wholeness, is made experientially available and can be tasted in anticipation, even now, as the struggle of history goes on.” [1]
          Sounds pretty great … I  mean it’s no dancing cats, but … Salvation, joy, peace, redemption, Holy Spirit dwelling on earth, God in flesh, Emmanuel  … that’s where I am placing my hope. 
          I wonder what all of this meant to Joseph.  He had a very important decision to make.  The woman he was engaged to was pregnant and not by him.  That in itself is cause for heart break, loss of trust and anger, but at the time it also could mean severe punishment for this young woman he hoped to wed.   Shame, disgrace, even punishment by death were possibilities.  It sounds as though he weighed heavily his options and looked for what he deemed to be the most reasonable and compassionate option … until an angel showed up in a dream and reason went out the window.  Confusion, indecision, perhaps agony and grief gave way to faith and enlightenment.  That’s not always an easy step to make.
          As we have been studying the book of Job in Wednesday night Bible Study and reflecting on faith in difficult times I have been thinking about difficult times in my life.  There have been times when confusion, doubts, fear and anxiety filled my mind and my soul.  Times when I have sat with the door closed and wondered who I am, who God is, how do we cope with the pain of the world, how do we find assurance when doubt is so strong?  I have to say that in those moments of darkness, wrestling, grief and turmoil I have always known God is near … even when I don’t know what that means.  I don’t think it’s because I have some super faith or extra wisdom.  I just think it’s just practice.
          I have been praying over and over again on Sunday mornings, at bedtime, on walks and everywhere else throughout my life.  I have been listening to scriptures read, sermons preached and the faith stories of others.  I have been singing the words of hymns I don’t always comprehend in the moment.  I have looked at art dedicated to God, stared at scenes depicted in stained glass, lit candles, hung Christmas lights, witnessed incredible acts of love and read theology books.  Somehow, in all of that, something got inside.  In all of that practicing, a belief crept deep into my soul and set up camp.  And when all seems lost and my stomach churns and my soul seems unsteady I see the lantern lit and I somehow know “Emmanuel” God with us, even though I can’t explain it. 
            I remember a conversation some years ago with a church member trying to persuade me to put Christmas carols in the Advent bulletins.  She said “we all know what happens anyway, why wait.”  It’s true.  We know the songs we will sing on Tuesday night, the baby that will be placed in the manger, the familiar scripture that will be read and the order the candles will be lit.  But we keep telling the story anyway … over and over again.  We wait, we anticipate, we prepare and we hope.  And somewhere in that process our hearts are cracked open to the good news of Emmanuel, God with us.  As convincing now as it was when Isaiah said it and Joseph dreamed it. 
          Julian of Norwich writes, “For it is God’s will that we have true delight with him in our salvation, and in it God wants us to be greatly comforted and strengthened, and so joyfully God wishes our souls to be occupied with God’s grace.  For we are God’s bliss, because God endlessly delights in us; and so with God’s grace shall we delight in God.  All that God does for us and has done and will do was never expense or labour to God … beginning at the sweet Incarnation and lasting until his blessed Resurrection on Easter morning.  So long did the labour and expense of our redemption last, in which deed God always and endlessly rejoices.”[2] 
          I love that image of God sharing in our true delight, “joyfully occupying our souls.”  The most joyful event of the season, not just for us but for our God longing to be with us.  God with us, joyfully redeeming us, dwelling in time, setting up camp in our hearts. It’s coming.  So let’s practice, let’s prepare, let’s sing our Advent hymns and flood our hearts with anticipation.  Let us raise our hands in hope because Jesus is coming … and that is a joy that will last longer than a nostalgic memory, longer than a movie, longer than a twinkling light, it is an eternal joy-   Emmanuel- God with us.  Amen.



[1] Johnson, Elizabeth.  She Who Is: The Mystery of God in Feminist Theological Discourse. The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2002.  Pp. 150-151.
[2] Colledge, Edmund and Walsh, James, eds.  Julian of Norwich: Showings. Paulist Pres, 1978.  Pp 219.  (edited pronouns)

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