Monday, January 26, 2015

Information and Transformation

Why do people go to church? There are lots of reasons, but maybe the best one is to take advantage of the transformational power of God. Mark talks about this power in one of the first stories in his gospel. Read about it in this sermon, and then meditate on what might need to be transformed in your own life!

If I ask a group of people why they attend worship, I guarantee that I will get a lot of different answers. Some folks go to church to see their friends, and to be part of the fellowship there. They value the moral support that they receive among a Christian community. Others attend because “It’s the right thing to do.” For these people, going to church is simply part and parcel of what they do as Christians. Still others attend to learn about the Bible and about their faith. Education is important to these folks. I’m glad to get any of these responses! Fellowship and education are important for Christians; and worship should be a high priority in our faith lives. But there’s one reason that I don’t hear very often; and I suspect that it’s the most important one of all. “I go to church to become transformed into the person that God wants me to be.”

Do you think of worship as transformation; or is it only an opportunity for fellowship and learning? Certainly the people who heard Jesus teach in the synagogue experienced all three of those things. The gospel of Mark (1:21-28) tells us about a Sabbath that took place right after Jesus called his first disciples. While Jesus was in Capernaum, he taught in their synagogue. Now, typical Jewish teaching at that time was to consider what the scriptures might mean. And that’s a good thing to teach! We should all know, for example, what St. Paul means when he says that we are saved by God’s grace. But that kind of teaching emphasizes information. And there’s nothing wrong with that. Let’s face it, most people could stand to know a lot more about the Bible! But sooner or later, we’ll have all the information that we need. The question then becomes, what do we do with all that information? And that takes us into the realm of transformation. When we are transformed, we don’t just learn facts that fill our brains; we experience God’s power that can change our hearts and our lives! That’s what the synagogue worshippers experienced that day when Jesus was their teacher. Mark tells us that they were “amazed at his teaching, because he taught them as one who had authority.” These days, an authority is someone who has a lot of information, someone who knows more than most people do. And those authorities are a dime a dozen! There are authorities on church growth, personal finance, psychology, art, and music. There are probably even authorities on authority! But a real authority is not so much someone who knows a lot; it’s someone who has the power to get things done!

Fred and I recently wanted to reserve a rental property at the Jersey shore for our annual family vacation there. We contacted a realtor who was very pleasant. He had all kinds of information for us. But he couldn’t seem to get us a booking. After we had hit our frustration level, we called another real estate agent. This second young man was equally pleasant, and he knew just as much as the first realtor did. But there was a big difference between the two of them. No more than 3 hours after we talked with the second realtor, he had booked a condo for us, and we had the rental agreement in our hands. Real authority isn’t just having lots of knowledge; it’s being able to get things done.

In Jesus’ day, the highest authorities in the Roman Empire were the emperor and the people he appointed. They could do whatever they liked! But most people had very little authority; and the Jewish community had almost none. They had to do what the Romans told them to do. When Jewish leaders taught in the synagogues, they could talk about what the scriptures said, but they didn’t have any power to change the lives of the people who listened to them. But Jesus was different. He had that authority! When Jesus taught in the synagogue that morning, he had the power to get something done! Before the worshippers left the synagogue that morning, they knew what that kind of power looked like! With just a few words, Jesus cast out a demon from a possessed man. Only a few moments before, that man had been making a ruckus during worship. Because Jesus had the authority of God – and the power of God – that man was loosed from the power of the demon and set free to live a life of peace! His life was changed forever. He was not just informed by Jesus’ teaching; he was transformed.

Now, you may be thinking that this is probably a quaint story from a time long ago when people thought that demons were real. Most people don’t believe in demons today. We wonder whether this unfortunate soul might have been suffering from a form of epilepsy, or maybe from Tourette’s Syndrome, a mental disorder that causes its sufferers to shriek and curse uncontrollably. And that might have been the case. Mark’s gospel was, after all, written nearly 35 years after Jesus’ earthly life. This story had been passed down in the Christian community over and over and over again. Who knows what the facts of that healing really were? But this story is true whether or not its history is exactly right. Its truth lies in the fact that Jesus has the power – the authority – to transform our lives by his words and by his actions.

It’s also true that we still have plenty of demons around that bother us today. Now, we usually don’t call them “demons.” But that’s what they are. They are conditions that take hold of us and imprison us as surely as the possessed man in the synagogue was imprisoned. Let me give you some examples of what I’m talking about, and see if you don’t agree that they deserve the title “demons.” Addiction. That addiction may be to alcohol, drugs, gambling, or the internet; but regardless of what the particular addiction may be, addicts are controlled by a disease that dictates their actions. Abuse. Victims of abuse, whether emotional or physical, are caught in a web of behaviors that they did not want to learn, and that they do not want to continue. But they don’t know any other response. And so they frequently become abusers themselves. Depression. Depression isn’t just “feeling blue;” it’s a disease that keeps its victims in pain and despair until many of them end their own lives in desperation. If these don’t deserve to be called “demons,” I’m not sure what does. And I’m sure that you can think of even more. But the good news is that Jesus has authority over all of them. Of course, Jesus is no longer here in the flesh to confront our demons face to face. Today, Jesus gives others the authority to cast out these demons. Doctors and nurses, psychologists and therapists, social workers and researchers – all these folks are partners in Jesus’ work of casting out demons from those who suffer from them.

But you may not be held captive by any of these things. Do you need to be transformed by Jesus? We all suffer from demons that may not be as dramatic as these big ones, but that are every bit as powerful. Some demons are very familiar to us. Do you recognize any on this list? Grief. Fear. Resentment. Prejudice. Anger. A negative self-image. Maybe one of these demons is working in your life right now. The good news is that Jesus has the authority to cast out all of these demons, too, and to transform us into the free people that God wants us to be! That’s what Jesus is all about, according to Mark. Jesus is the healer, the One who transforms our lives in ways that we can’t even imagine! And here in worship is where that can begin. As we come together as a community of faith, we hear about what Jesus has done in the past. That’s important information. But we are also reminded that Jesus can do the same things for us today. Jesus can change our lives for the better! And that’s transformation.


Did you realize that you can be a part of that? As we open ourselves to Jesus’ transforming authority, we are able to help to transform others! What do you think we’re doing when we listen compassionately to a friend, or take action on the part of someone who is oppressed, or share what we have with those in need? We’re sharing in Jesus’ authority, his ability to change things for the better, and helping to expand the Kingdom of God right here where we live! Heaven doesn’t start after we die. It starts here, in this life; and we are sharing in it when we help to cast out the demons who are keeping people captive! So when we gather with our community of faith, whether it’s on Sunday morning for worship, or on Tuesday evening for Bible study, or on Wednesday morning to join in the Mites’ fellowship, or in the fall to make peanut brittle, I hope that you don’t come expecting to just hear information. I hope that you come expecting transformation. And I hope that you come expecting to help Jesus transform others, too! Because that’s what the Kingdom of God is all about.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

What's the Hurry?

"Immediately" is one of the most-used words in the gospel of Mark. Everyone seems to hurry in that text! Why would that be the case? I have a few suggestions in this sermon. Should we be in a hurry for something, too?

“The time has come, and the kingdom of God is right here! Repent, and believe the good news!” Those are the first words that we hear Jesus speak in the gospel of Mark. They are nothing less than an introduction to Mark’s entire gospel! In those words, Mark introduces three themes that he will weave together just like someone might knit together different colors of yarn into a scarf. First, we don’t have to wait any longer for the kingdom of God, because it’s right here right now (and that’s the good news!). Second, the time has come for us to leave the old to behind so that something new can take its place. And third, repentance is a vital part of our being able to fit into God’s kingdom. But Mark doesn’t explain all these things by talking about them. He doesn’t make us sit through long sermons like those we read in the gospel of John. No, in his gospel, Mark shows us God’s kingdom.

And he doesn’t waste any time in doing it. In the very next scene, Jesus begins to show us what the kingdom of God looks like. It’s a new community that won’t be made up of just the rich and famous. Donald Trump might be in it; but so will the guy who washes his car and the lady who cleans his bathroom. Regular people like you and me will be in the middle of it! And so Jesus calls four very ordinary men to be his first disciples: Peter, Andrew, James, and John. We all know what Jesus says to them: “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men!”

Now, Jesus isn’t just offering them a new job. This isn’t just one more task to work into their already busy schedule. If that were the case, I can imagine Peter asking, “When am I going to have time to fish for people? I already have more than I can handle fishing for fish!  A week from Tuesday, maybe I can do that. Let me check my calendar and get back to you.” No, on the contrary, Jesus is offering these men a whole new identity! They won’t be fish-fishers any more. Now they’re going to be people-fishers. In the kingdom of God, we don’t just have new jobs; we are completely new people!

Did you notice that all of the men Jesus calls respond to his offer? In fact, they hardly stop to think about it! They follow him “euthus.” That’s the Greek word for “immediately.” Mark loves that word “euthus”! In fact, he uses it over 40 times in his gospel. The other gospels don’t use it nearly that much. It only shows up seven times in Matthew’s gospel; three times in John’s gospel; and Luke only uses it once! But Mark uses it all the time. He likes the word “immediately” so much that he uses it an average of once every 16 verses throughout his gospel. Readers get tired of reading it, and so many Bibles don’t translate it the same way every time it appears. In some places, people do respond “immediately.” But in others, they respond “at once,” “without delay,” or “as soon as.” Sometimes, the translators even leave the word out all together! That wouldn’t make Mark happy at all. He uses “immediately” like an alarm clock ringing over and over again, urging us to take action! Mark doesn’t want us to just think about following Jesus; he wants us to do something about it right now!

But there seems to be a problem. In his very first words, Jesus calls us to “repent.” I don’t see anybody repenting in this scene. I see four men responding to an interesting offer that Jesus extends to them; but are they repenting? Actually, they are. To see it, though, we have to understand what “repentance” meant in Jesus’ day. In Jewish tradition, to “repent” didn’t necessarily mean to be sorry for something. The Hebrew word that means “to repent,” “shuv,” literally means to turn around. Repenting simply means changing your behavior. Now, when you do that, you’re frequently sorry for what you have done before. But repenting isn’t really about guilt and shame; it’s about changing. When Jesus calls us to repent, he doesn’t want us to put on sackcloth, sit in a pile of ashes, and beat our breasts in remorse. When Jesus calls us to repent, he wants us to change!

Did these four first disciples change? They sure did! When they walked after Jesus, they left behind a life that was familiar and comfortable, and they began a one that was new and uncertain. They didn’t know what they would be doing as people-fishers. They learn that, along with the reader, as they progress through Mark’s gospel. The only thing that they know when they respond to Jesus’ offer to follow is that their lives will never be the same again. We know that from what they left behind.

To begin with, Peter and Andrew left their nets behind. Now, those nets were the tools of their trade as fish-fishers. In Jesus’ day, fish weren’t caught with fishing poles, but with huge nets. No one could be a fish-fisher without a net. But as people-fishers, they wouldn’t need those nets anymore. They would need completely new tools! They would need compassion, humility, and courage. They wouldn’t be dragging in fish by force, but attracting people with love and mercy. Those nets were what they knew how to use, but they needed to leave them behind.

We see James and John leaving even more. First, they leave their father Zebedee. They leave behind their family and their tradition for something completely new! Now, there was nothing wrong with that tradition. It had raised them, nurtured them, and formed them into fine young men. But they left it behind when Jesus offered them something new; and they never even looked back. When the new arrives, we have to leave the old behind.

They left something else, too. They left their boats. I think that those boats represent more than just the tools of their trade as fish-fishers. Those boats are a symbol of the security that they had enjoyed. After all, their boats had kept them safe when they were catching fish on the Sea of Galilee. When the waters became choppy, those boats carried them safely to shore. They would have kept their boats in the best repair, just as we are careful to take care of our cars. By walking away from those boats, they walked away from the security of the life that they had always known.

When we look at the actions of these four men from the perspective of what they left behind – tradition, security, and the tools of their trade – it seems remarkable that they responded so quickly! They followed Jesus immediately! And they didn’t follow because of a glitzy sales pitch that Jesus gave them. He didn’t flash four tickets to the Super Bowl and a reservation at the local Hilton Hotel, and say, “This will be yours if you only follow me!” No, he simply said, “Follow me and I will make you people-fishers.” What was so attractive about that offer that those first disciples responded immediately?

Mark’s gospel doesn’t tell us, of course, but my own guess is that Jesus’ reputation had preceded him. They knew Jesus as the man who was talking about the kingdom of God. More than just talking about it, he was announcing that it was right here, right now! And everyone knew what the kingdom of God was going to be – a time when the hate and violence and brokenness of the world would disappear to be replaced by love and peace and healing. Who wouldn’t want to be a part of that? And so, when Jesus offered these four fish-fishers an apprenticeship in people-fishing in the kingdom of God, maybe we shouldn’t be surprised that they followed him immediately.

Of course, Jesus had some education to do with them. In the first chapters of Mark’s gospel, he shows his disciples what the kingdom of God really looks like. We’ll get to that next week. In the meantime, it’s important to remember that Jesus is still offering us the very same thing that he offered his first disciples – an opportunity to be people-fishers in God’s kingdom. We know how they responded. Will we respond that way, too? Will we repent by immediately turning around and changing our ways? Will we leave our old nets behind and learn new tools of the trade? Will we move beyond the way that we’ve always done things and open ourselves to the guidance of the Spirit? Will we take a risk and follow Jesus into the uncharted territory of God’s kingdom? Are we ready to stop thinking about the kingdom and follow Jesus into it right away?

“The time has come! The kingdom of God is right here! Repent, and believe the good news!” Maybe we should follow Jesus – immediately!


Monday, January 12, 2015

Beginnings

This year, my sermons will concentrate on texts from the gospel of Mark. Mark begins not with Jesus' birth, but with his baptism. Why do you suppose that is? This sermon might give you an answer.

Some of you might wonder now and then (maybe when you can’t get to sleep at night) how I choose the scripture texts for my sermons. I don’t have one method that I use all the time; but for the most part, I preach from the lectionary. Now, some of you may not know what a lectionary is. A lectionary is just a list of scripture readings for each occasion of worship in the Christian year. The lectionary that I use – the Revised Common Lectionary – supplies four scripture readings for each worship service: an Old Testament reading, a text from Psalms, a New Testament reading, and a text from one of the gospels. My lectionary is on a three-year cycle. With respect to the gospels, all the readings are from Matthew in the first year (Year A). In the second year (Year B), the gospel texts are from Mark; and in the third year (Year C), Luke supplies the readings. The gospel of John appears mostly during Lent and after Easter of all three years.

Right now, we are in Year B of the lectionary cycle. That means that the gospel readings for this year will come mostly from the gospel of Mark. Now, I want to say just a word about Mark. If you ask a random sample of church-goers what their favorite gospel is, most people won’t respond with Mark. Mark just doesn’t have the pizzazz that the other gospels do! For example, Luke is chock-full of parables; Matthew gives us the Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount; and John paints the beautiful picture of the Word made flesh! But Mark’s gospel isn’t really very distinctive. In addition, it is very short, with only 16 chapters. 6 of those chapters take place during Holy Week. That leaves only 10 chapters for Mark to tell us about all the rest of Jesus’ life! Besides, most of the material in Mark’s gospel is also in Matthew and in Luke. Many scholars believe that Luke and Matthew copied whole chunks of Mark when they were writing their own gospels.

So why do we even bother with the gospel of Mark? One very important reason is that it was the first gospel that was written. Mark wrote his gospel only about 35 years after Jesus’ death and resurrection, just as the apostles were dying of old age. The stories that they told about Jesus were in danger of dying right along with them. So Mark wrote his gospel in order to pass on the stories about Jesus to future generations of Christians. We certainly don’t want to lose the very first gospel that the early church used! But an even better reason to take Mark seriously is that Mark wrote his gospel to teach and encourage early Christians in their faith. It can do the very same thing for us, if we will let it. Its very structure is like the faith journey of a new believer in Jesus as the Messiah. In chapters 1 through 8 we are introduced to Jesus; and we watch him teach and heal and perform miracles. In chapter 9, we see him transfigured, and we realize that this man is more than just a miracle-worker. In chapters 9 and 10, we learn what we are called to do as Jesus prepares for his crucifixion and resurrection. In chapter 11, we watch him ride into Jerusalem and reject the religious establishment through cleansing the Temple; and we learn about the coming kingdom of God. And when the gospel ends with Jesus’ resurrection, we come face to face with the question “Will we tell anyone about what we have heard and seen?” We’re not that different from Mark’s original readers, are we? So during this year, we’re going to become very good friends with his gospel. We’re going to examine it, and we’re going to invite it to examine us. We might be surprised at what we’ll find there!

Like everything else, Mark’s gospel has a beginning. But it doesn’t begin where we expect it to. Mark doesn’t say anything at all about Jesus’ birth. He doesn’t tell us about angels or shepherds or Bethlehem or a star or the wise men. No, those stories are in Luke and Matthew. Instead, Mark begins his gospel with Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River. Now, Mark could have skipped all that and started with what is now verse 14 of the first chapter: “Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God.” After all, that’s what Mark’s gospel is, God’s good news as shown in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. But Mark started with Jesus’ baptism. Why would he have done that? What kind of beginning is baptism, anyway? Maybe it’s worth a look.

The simple answer is that baptism marks the beginning of a life in a community of faith. Baptism is the sacrament that celebrates a person’s entrance into a particular Christian community, as well as into the Christian church as a whole. That’s why the very first question that I ask anyone who wants to become a member of our congregation is “Have you been baptized?” Now, don’t misunderstand me. Anyone is welcome in this church, whether they have been baptized or not! But making a commitment to a church first requires a commitment to Jesus Christ. Baptism is the public sign of that commitment. But there’s more to baptism than just the first step to church membership. Baptism is a lot more than just learning a membership oath and a secret handshake so that you can join the Loyal Order of Water Buffalo. Anyone in the early church would have known that baptism isn’t just the start of life in a faith community; it’s the start of a completely new life! Mark’s description of Jesus’ baptism gives us a picture of what that new life looks like.

First off, God acknowledges us as his beloved children. When Jesus came up out of the waters of baptism, he heard a voice from heaven saying, “You are my Son, whom I love. I am so pleased with you!” God said that to Jesus; and he says it to each one of us, too. We tend to forget that. It’s easy to remember that we are God’s creations, made in the beginning with all the rest of the cosmos – grasshoppers and galaxies, salamanders and stars, planets and puppies. But because of the mess that we’ve made of things in our world, it’s easy to forget that we are also God’s children. Our baptism reminds us that we are not just creations of God, but children of God; and that, despite all the messes that we make of our lives and of the world around us, God is pleased with us.

Because our baptism means that we are God’s children, it also means that we are invited to live our lives in God’s presence. When Jesus was baptized, the heavens were “torn open,” and God’s presence was available to us in a new way. The same thing happens to us. The heavens are “torn open” at our baptism, too! When we are baptized, God is present with us in a new way. Our baptism reminds us that nothing – not sin, or mistakes, or limitations, or gender, or race, or creed, or color, or anything in all creation – can ever separate us from the presence of God.

And our baptism means that we are filled with the Spirit. Now, that doesn’t necessarily mean that we speak in tongues, or deliver prophecies, or have powers of healing. Some people do those things; and we know that they are the Spirit’s doing. But most of us don’t do anything special. We follow Jesus the best that we can, we try to love our neighbors as ourselves, and we show compassion to those who need it. Who do we think leads us in doing that? We couldn’t do any of those things without the guidance of the Holy Spirit who filled us at our baptism and continues to fill us throughout our lives! Just as the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus, it descends on us, too.

Do you remember your own baptism? If you don’t, then you were probably baptized when you were a baby, just like I was. I don’t remember wearing a white baptismal outfit, or my family proudly sitting in the front pew while the pastor took me in his arms and sprinkled a few drops of water on my head. But those of us who were baptized as babies are a powerful symbol of a reality that we must never forget: God accepts us as his children before we can respond to him! Even before we know our own names, God knows us and loves us and adopts us as his own. None of us have earned God’s love any more than a baby in a bassinet has earned the love of her mother! The good news is that in God’s kingdom, there’s plenty of love to go around.

And some of you do remember your own baptism. If you do, then you probably made the decision as an adult to join the great crowd of disciples who follow Jesus Christ. You remember the pastor putting water put on your head – or maybe even immersing you in a baptistery or in a local river (when hopefully, it wasn’t as cold as it is now)! If that’s the case, then you are a powerful symbol of another reality. Even though God accepts us before we know anything about Jesus, we have to make the decision to follow him for ourselves! God doesn’t force us to follow Jesus. He gives us a choice, and he respects what we eventually decide to do. Infant baptism and adult baptism are two different sides of one reality: that God loves us and accepts us no matter what; but that we have to respond to that love ourselves.


Whenever you were baptized, though, just as Jesus’ baptism was the beginning of his life of ministry, baptism is the beginning of a new life in Christ for us. Remember your baptism, children of God! Remember your baptism, and be glad! And as you remember, give thanks for the new life that fills you through the Spirit, and leads you ever closer to the presence of the Father who is well pleased with you!

Monday, January 5, 2015

Saving the Best for Last

This past Sunday was Epiphany Sunday, the day that we celebrate the visit of the Wise Men to the Christ Child. In our congregation, it is also the day that we share the Sacrament of Holy Communion for the first time in the New Year. My sermon focuses on gifts, both the gifts of the Wise Men and the gifts that God offers to us, especially the ones that don't seem to be on time. Did you receive a late (but right on time) gift this Christmas?

Every Christmas, there is one gift that arrives late. On the morning after Christmas, the doorbell rings, and the mail carrier hands you a box. The return address says that it’s from Aunt Susie. When you open that box, sure enough, it contains a package wrapped in red and green paper and tied with a silver bow – the kind made from that pretty curly ribbon. The gift card wishes you a very Merry Christmas! But it’s the 26th of December, and Christmas was yesterday. So what’s the first thing that you think after seeing Aunt Susie’s gift? “Oh, what a shame that it didn’t get here in time for Christmas!” After all, all the other gifts have been opened already. This one seems out of place, a Johnny-come-lately to the party.

But there’s another possible response to Aunt Susie’s gift. What if, instead of lamenting its late arrival, we are thankful for the opportunity to celebrate Christmas for one more day? The fact that we opened all the other gifts on Christmas morning doesn’t mean that we have to stop celebrating the holiday. In fact, Aunt Susie’s gift might turn out to be the perfect gift, the very thing that you wanted! You know the old saying: It’s good to save the best for last.

Sometimes the gifts that arrive late turn out to be very good ones, indeed! The Wise Men seem to have begun the tradition of saving the best gifts until last. The Gospel of Matthew doesn’t tell us exactly when they arrived in Bethlehem, only that they had followed a star from their home in “the east.” Now, they didn’t begin their long journey to Bethlehem until the star appeared when the Christ Child was born. And after we allow time for them to prepare for that journey, we realize that they must not have arrived in Bethlehem until months after the Christ Child was born. They were certainly not in Bethlehem to sing “Silent Night” on Christmas Eve with Mary and Joseph! No, Jesus might have celebrated his first birthday before those Wise Men showed up at the front door with their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. Talk about late Christmas gifts!

But even if they were late, their gifts were absolutely appropriate for the Child they were honoring. They brought gold for a king; frankincense for a priest; and myrrh for a sacrifice. I’m sure that Mary and Joseph received lots of lovely gifts on the Christmas that Jesus was born – baby towels and rattles, receiving blankets and cute little one-piece sleepers with pictures of sheep on them, maybe even a diaper tree – but all of those are gifts that any baby might receive. Gold and frankincense and myrrh are gifts that are perfectly suited for the Child who rules us, who shows us what acceptable worship looks like, and who sacrificed himself on our behalf. The gifts of the Wise Men might have been late, but they were the best.

Throughout history, God has given his people gifts, too. Creation itself was a gift! God didn’t have to make the universe; and God didn’t have to put us in it, or give us the capability to enjoy it. But God did both of those things. When we disobeyed God’s very first rules, God could have given us up as a bad job and abandoned us to work our own way out of the mess that we had made of things. But God didn’t do that; God stuck with us. And God promised that he would stay with us through thick and thin. God gave us the gifts of a covenant with Abraham, a land where the children of Israel could live in peace, and a law that guides us as we live together. God even gifted his people with kings like David and Solomon to lead his people, and prophets like Amos, Isaiah, and Jeremiah to guide them.

But the very best gift that God gave us – that gift was saved for the very last. The book of Hebrews talks about that gift as it begins: “In the past, God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days, God has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things.” As awe-inspiring as God’s other gifts to us are, surely God saved the best for last when he came to us in the person of Jesus Christ.

Do you suppose that the Wise Men understood what they were doing when they offered gifts to the child Jesus? Did they realize that they were giving gifts to The Gift? As they knelt before him, do you suppose that they heard the faint echo of nails being pounded into a cross? Did they catch a whiff of incense from the heavenly temple, or see the glint of the sun reflected off a crown as Jesus took his place at God’s right hand? The three gifts of the Wise Men, after all, are only tokens of the honor that all of us owe to Jesus as our King, our Priest, and our Savior.


And here, as we prepare to share the Sacrament of Holy Communion at this table, we are invited to gather together and meet him once again. Here, at this table, he invites us not only to give him honor, but to receive the gifts that he offers to us – strength for living each day, guidance for the future, hope in days of difficulty, and joy in days of celebration. Here, at this table, he offers us eternal life in him and through him. Yes, indeed, God saved the best for last when he came to us as Jesus Christ. God saved the very best – for us.