Saturday, 29 December 2012

First Sunday after Christmas [Luke 2:33-40] (30-Dec-2012)

This sermon was preached at St Paul's Lutheran Church, Darnum (9am) and Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Traralgon (11am).


Grace, mercy and peace be to you from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ.

Text: (Luke 2:33-40)
And the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom. And the favour of God was upon him.

Prayer: Heavenly Father, send us the Holy Spirit so that I may preach well and that we all may hear well, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Our Gospel reading today is set 40 days after Christmas, when Mary and Joseph brought the baby Jesus to the temple. In the bible, not much is said about Jesus’ childhood. And this is a very significant fact. The gospels of John and the Gospel of Mark say absolutely nothing about Jesus’ childhood, but begin with his baptism, and the preaching and healing that Jesus performed after that time. Jesus’ ministry of preaching, teaching and healing began with his baptism.

In the Gospel of Matthew, we are told about how an angel went to Joseph in a dream to encourage him to take Mary to be his wife. We are told about wise men visiting from the East. We are told about King Herod’s plot to kill the baby Jesus, and the family’s flight as refugees to Egypt. And we are told how the angel of God guards the family and warns them at various stages along the way, and how they eventually return to Nazareth after Herod’s death.

At the beginning of Luke’s gospel, Luke tells us about his efforts to write an orderly account, “having followed all things closely for some time past.” We are told about the Angel Gabriel visiting John the Baptist’s father Zechariah in the temple to tell him that his wife Elizabeth will conceive in her old age. We are told about the same angel visiting the Virgin Mary and announcing to her the conception of the baby Jesus. We are told about how Mary visits Elizabeth, and how the baby John leaped for joy in his mother’s womb when the sound of Mary’s greeting reached his mother’s ears, and how Mary sang her great song: My soul magnifies the Lord. We are told about the birth of John the Baptist and how eight days later when the baby was to be circumcised, Zechariah’s voice was given back when he named his son John.

In chapter 2 of St Luke, we are told about the birth of Jesus, following the travelling of his parents to Bethlehem for the census decreed by Caesar Augustus. We are told about the great appearance of angels to some shepherds in nearby fields watching the flocks. We are told about the circumcision and naming of Jesus eight days after his birth. Later in the chapter we are told about the boy Jesus who goes missing, and is found by his parents in the temple.

In our Gospel reading today, Jesus, Mary and Joseph go to the temple 40 days after his birth. This is the occasion which is known as Jesus’ Presentation, or Mary’s Purification. In the church, this event is traditionally celebrated on February 2nd, 40 days after Christmas, as is sometimes known as Candlemas. In the mediaeval times, people often brought candles to church, and had a procession with candles, because of Simeon’s words: “A light to reveal you to the Gentiles.”

There were two things that needed to be done on this occasion. In Exodus 13 it says that “Every male who first opens the womb shall be called holy to the Lord”. So Jesus needed to be brought to the temple to be presented to the Lord. Also, after childbirth, a woman would have to wait 40 days, if she gave birth to a boy, and longer if she gave birth to a girl, before she could enter the temple, and would have to make a sacrifice of a Lamb and a pigeon or a turtledove. But if she couldn’t afford the lamb, then she could bring two pigeons or two turtledoves.

On this occasion, Mary and Joseph brought two turtledoves to the temple, by which we learn that Mary and Joseph were not wealthy people, but were in fact poor.

When they go to the temple, they are met by a Simeon, who had it revealed to him “by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord’s Christ.” So he sees the baby Jesus, picks him out from the crowd, and says the words which many of know so well, since we sing these words every Sunday after we have received the body and blood of Christ in the Lord’s Supper: “Now, Lord, let your servant depart in peace.”

So this is the occasion on which the events of our Gospel reading today happen. But our reading today starts just after Simeon has sung his little song.

And we read: And his father and his mother marvelled at what was said about him.

Now, it often happens that parents marvel at their children. They marvel when they say their first word, when they take their first steps, and all that sort of thing. All these occasions cause parents to marvel, because it reminds them that they were just like this helpless baby once upon a time. And what a miracle it is when each of us a preserved through life and brought to adulthood!

But very rarely does it happen that someone should come up to a child’s parents in a public place, or in a church, as in the temple, and speak a prophesy about the child. This is something that hadn’t happened to Mary or Joseph. This event separates the child Jesus from them. Jesus is different from his parents: he will learn to walk and talk just like them, and just like any other child. But no other child will offer to an old man the certainty of a blessed death, in such a way that he can say: “Now, you are letting your servant depart in peace.”

And so we read that his father and his mother marvelled at what was said about him.

And the Holy Spirit also calls us to join in with them and marvel at the baby Jesus, and stand in wonder at him. In verse 18, we hear that all who heard the report about the shepherds wondered at what the shepherds told them. But that Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart. Here, with the shepherds, as they go about telling everyone this exciting news, the wondering is much more of a mixed bag: some people would be excited and some people would be quite scared at what was being said.

And the same thing happens at Christmas: some people take the Christmas message to heart in such a way that it amazes them every year, and offers them great spiritual food to hear the good news of the angels again and to join in singing with them. Some people may become fearful at the prospect that this could be true, and stay away. Some people may be cynical and sceptic, and think that Christmas is a whole lot of mumbo jumbo.

But when it says that Jesus’ mother and father marvelled, we’re not talking about that sort of wondering and amazement, a mixed bag of doubts. The text is saying that Mary and Joseph were truly amazed at the child Jesus in such a way that it caused them great joy and awe and reverence.

The Holy Spirit also causes us to be amazed and marvel with them, and to meditate upon just what a wonderful thing it is to be in the living presence of Jesus, to have access to his name in prayer, and to be covered in his blood in baptism. What a wonderful occasion his birth really was! How wonderful and marvellous it really was!

So many of the Christmas carols teach us this attitude and this reverence: O come, all ye faithful, joyful and triumphant, Come and behold him, Born the king of angels. Joyful, all ye nations rise, Join the triumph of the skies. O the joy, beyond expressing, When by faith we grasp this blessing. Wondrous birth! O wondrous child Of the virgin undefiled! Joy to the world! The Lord is come: Let earth receive her king.

And then we read: And Simeon blessed them and said to Mary his mother, “Behold, this child is appointed for the fall and rising of many is Israel, and for a sign that is opposed (and a sword will pierce through your own soul also), so that thoughts from many hearts may be revealed.”

We read that Simeon first of all blessed the parents. And here should be a particular encouragement to all Christian parents. God blesses parents, and blesses the duties of parents, and wants to encourage parents in their parenting. Parents will learn very quickly that their children are sinners, but also they should marvel together with Mary and Joseph just what blessings are being poured out on their children through baptism, and just how much they can learn through the Scripture. So many times, many children will quickly become wiser than their parents in the faith. As Jesus says from the words of Psalm 8: Out of the mouths of babes and infants you have established praise to still the enemy and the avenger. Or when Jesus says: Let the little children come to me and do not stop them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.

So many Christians who are parents carry a great burden and weight on their shoulders, in that they know and feel what they perceive to be their failures in parenting. Parents know that they haven’t perfectly fulfilled the task that St Paul commands: “Do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.”

But this is why it is so important to confess our sins to God regularly, and especially those of us who are parents, and to confess our sins of parenting, and to receive God’s living words of forgiveness for us, and to come to church and badger our pastors to speak the absolution, the words of forgiveness from Jesus, for our comfort again and again. Let God bless you in all your weakness and helplessness, just as he blessed Mary and Joseph through Simeon in all their poverty.

But what are these words that Simeon speaks to Mary: Behold, this child is appointed for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is opposed. Jesus is the rock of stumbling and offense. Many people will be offended by him, and will fall when they join the voices of Pilate and Caiaphas and want to sentence Jesus to die on the cross. But Jesus says: Blessed is the one who is not offended at me! These people will rise. As Simeon says: This child is appointed for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is opposed. See, how especially when Jesus is on the cross how he is opposed, and rejected! And Simeon says to Mary: And a sword will pierce through your own soul also. This happened when Mary had to watch her firstborn Son die so cruelly. It’s one thing for a mother to endure the death of any son, but for Mary to endure the death of her Son is a great weight—a sword which pierces through her soul. Mary didn’t participate in suffering for the sins of the world, but she experiences what it means to take up the cross and follow Jesus daily. So we too as Christians should be ashamed to take up our cross and join Mary at the foot of the cross.

And Simeon says: so that thoughts from many hearts may be revealed. Here at the bottom of the cross, the thoughts of many hearts are revealed. Do we stand at the bottom of the cross and let the blood of Jesus drop down upon us, or do we mock Jesus, and say: “If you are the Son of God, come down from the cross!” The cross, and how we view the crucifixion and the death of Jesus: this is the place where the thoughts of many hearts and laid bare and naked before the eyes of Christ our judge. But as we read in the gospel of John: He did not come into the world to condemn the world, but that the world may be saved through him. His blood is not shed in vain, but is shed so that together with the repentant thief, he may also say to us: Today, you shall be with me in paradise.

In the last two verses we read: And when they had performed everything according to the Law of the Lord, they returned into Galilee, to their own town of Nazareth. And the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom. And the favour of God was upon him.

Isn’t this amazing, too, and deserving of our amazement and astonishment? Jesus was the word became flesh, the true Son of God, as we say: God of God, Light of Light, and nevertheless, he grew! Just like any other child, he grew up, and became strong. And we read that he was filled with wisdom.

This is something that is so lacking in our education system today. It is rare to find a child who is filled with wisdom, but what a great gift it is when we meet one! What a tragedy it is when children are left unloved, and uncared for, and wander about the streets like they own the place, foolish and without wisdom.

We need to urgently expose and teach the wisdom of God to children today. They too need to grow with Jesus and be filled with wisdom. And not the wisdom of the world—the wisdom of how to get rich, how to become famous, and not get caught doing bad stuff—but the wisdom of the cross, the wisdom of the forgiveness of sins. This is the wisdom that all people of all ages need to return to daily, and never to think we’re too old for it. There should never be a person who says, “I’m too old for learning with Jesus now. Instead, I’ll just pretend like I know everything and be rude to everyone.”

No—let Jesus be your wisdom. Let his cross sink into you and be your heavenly wisdom! And let him not just be your wisdom, but also your righteousness and your sanctification. Let him clothe you with his holiness and make yourself small with him to share in his holiness with him. When we really see ourselves as little children, and desire to go back to school with Jesus, only then can we learn wisdom with Jesus. Because just as the favour of God was upon Jesus, so that divine favour will also be upon us. May the Holy Spirit kindle in us and grow in us such a childlike humility!

And the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom. And the favour of God was upon him.

Amen.

Lord God, heavenly Father, let us not be ashamed to be a child together with Jesus. So much of our childhood was wasted on sinful things, but we place the perfect obedience and the perfect humility and the perfect childhood of your Son in our place. Fill us with the wisdom of the cross, and let your favour rest upon us, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

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