Monday, December 21, 2015

A Song of Joy

The song of the angels in Luke 2 is one of the most joyful songs in all of scripture. But where is the joy in our world today? Oh, it's there -- but sometimes we have to search for it. This sermon might give you some ideas where to look.

It was a night like any other night. The sheep were calm, moving quietly through the pasture. Some were softly munching grass, while others were sleeping peacefully in the starlight. The shepherds were quiet, too. A few were keeping watch over their wooly charges, but the rest were enjoying some well-deserved sleep before dawn broke. Suddenly, without warning, the night became as bright as noontime, waking the shepherds, and paralyzing them with fear. An angel voice boomed from the heavens: “Don’t be afraid! I have good news for you! And not just for you – for everyone in the whole world. The Messiah has been born in Bethlehem! If you want to find him, look for a baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” And then, there were millions of angel voices all singing together, their music surrounding the shepherds in a great cloud of harmony: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth, God’s peace to everyone!”

The light disappeared as quickly as it had come, leaving the shepherds stunned and bewildered. It took them a few moments to realize what had just happened. The skies had split apart, and heaven had touched earth. They had seen the glory that surrounds God with their own eyes! They looked at one another in confusion. “What should we do?” one of them asked. “Should we go tell a priest?” “No,” answered another. “A priest would never believe us. Let’s go find that baby!” And, of course, that’s exactly what they did. They ran to Bethlehem as fast as they could and searched through stable after stable until they found a brand new baby, wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger. What do you suppose they thought when they saw him? He looked like a very ordinary baby, after all. Do you think that they were disappointed? Maybe they secretly wondered what all the fuss was about. I doubt if he was surrounded with the heavenly glow that we see in all the nativity pictures. He was just a baby. But in that baby, the veil between God and humanity split apart, and heaven touched earth. His birth was good news of great joy, indeed!

That is our joy, too, on each Christmas day and on every other day of the year. God is with us! But sometimes that reality is very hard to see in the darkness of our world. We have to search for it, just like the shepherds had to search through dark, crowded, smelly stables until they found what they were looking for. If the angel hadn’t told the shepherds where to look, you know, they might never have found that baby. We need some help, too, to find the Child that is living among us. We aren’t looking for a baby in a manger these days; but we are still looking for signs of Emmanuel, “God-with-us.”

What would the angel say to us today? Maybe the announcement would go something like this. “Listen, I bring you good news of a great joy that is for everyone in the world! God is among you! And this will be a sign for you. Look for a man who is helping his elderly neighbor by carrying in her groceries for her, by shoveling her snow, and by checking up on her every now and then.” We might have to search to find something like that. Oh, we know that there are many caring people in the world, but they don’t usually post a neon sign when they show that care to others. On the contrary, they are as secret as a baby born in a stable. God is among us.

Or maybe it would be an announcement like this. “Listen, I bring you good news of a great joy that is for everyone in the world! God is among you! And this will be a sign for you. Look for a woman who carries bags of toiletries and comfort items in her car, and gives them to the homeless people who stand on street corners begging for help.” That would be even more difficult to find! How many cars in the WalMart parking lot would we have to look through before we found something more than gift wrap, cheap trinkets, and bags of bows? But I assure you, there are folks in our midst who help the homeless on a regular basis. God is among us.

If we traveled to the Middle East, the angel’s announcement would sound a little bit different. “Listen, I bring you good news of a great joy that is for everyone in the world! God is among you! And this will be a sign for you. Look for a Jewish boy who is friends with a Muslim girl.” That might be the most difficult of all to find. But I guarantee that such children exist. And they are our hope for the future. God is among us.

Actually, that angel could give us all kinds of signs that God is among us. This will be a sign for you: “Look for a woman living in Chicago who is caring for her three grandchildren because her daughter is in prison for dealing drugs. Even though she has already raised a family, she makes sure that those grandchildren are fed and clothed and educated.” “Look for a man in a small Pennsylvania town who helps to staff the volunteer fire department every single holiday. He wants the younger volunteers to be able to spend the holidays with their families.” “Look for a young girl in Phoenix who insists on giving away her own Christmas gifts to the family down the street who just lost everything they own in a fire. She doesn’t want anyone to be without at Christmas.” Those are the signs that Emmanuel is here; but we usually miss them because they are so ordinary. They don’t look special at all – but neither did the baby who was born in a barn and laid in a manger. They all show Emmanuel, God-with-us. The spirit of God that fills them is the source of our joy. They bring the good news that is for everyone in the world.

“Fear not! For behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be to all people. For to you is born this day in the city of David a savior, who is Christ the Lord. And this will be a sign for you. You will find a baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and singing, “Glory to God in the highest; and on earth peace, goodwill to all people.” That joyful song is our song, too! Sing it with everything you’ve got! Sing your lungs out! And as you are singing, give thanks that the signs of God-with-us are all around. We just have to look for them.

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