This is the sermon I gave on December 23, 2012. It's short, and I think it says something important.
Who Are We Waiting For? Part 4
Emmanuel, God With Us
Rev. Tom Sorenson, Pastor
December 23, 2012
Scripture: Matthew 1:18-24
Let us pray: May the words of my
mouth and the meditations of all of our hearts be acceptable in your sight O
God, our strength and our redeemer.
Amen.
It has been a dark week.
Christmas is only two days away, but it has been a dark week. Just over one week ago a disturbed young man
first killed his mother, then drove to a school where he killed twenty children
and six adults; then, apparently, he killed himself. Twenty-eight deaths, all but one of them
innocent. Some of them heroic. Twenty children and six adults at a public
school. As of yesterday, since the
tragedy in Connecticut, there had been more than 100 deaths from guns in our
country and no doubt others from other kinds of violence. It’s beyond comprehension. I can’t speak for you, but as for me my mind
can acknowledge that it happened but my soul can’t comprehend it. My heart can’t get around it. I can’t understand it. I can only weep and mourn and ache for
hurting humanity, ache for all of us mere humans among whom something like this
can happen. Is the human psyche really
so fragile that it can snap and cause someone to do such an unspeakable thing as
shoot another human being? Apparently
so. Apparently so. It has been a dark week indeed.
Yet somehow, some way, life goes on.
Tomorrow evening we will gather here for our annual Christmas Eve
service. Then the next day is Christmas,
the celebration of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus the Christ. Christmas is supposed to be a time of joy;
and for many people it will be. It will
be a time of family and gift giving, of children and parents and grandparents
gathered together in love and joy. I pray
that it will be all that for you. On
Wednesday morning it will be all that for Jane and me as we gather with my son
and daughter, their spouses, and our grandchildren.
It will be good, It will be very
good, yet how can we forget the events of December 14 in Newtown, Connecticut? How can we forget all the other violence in
our country and in our world? We
can’t. We won’t, and because we can’t
forget and because we won’t forget, we must ask ourselves: In the face of such tragedy does Christmas
make any sense at all? Is it possible to
celebrate at all in the face of such horror?
Can we make any sense out of it?
Or are we left only with family traditions that have had all of their
religious foundation blown out from under them by countless gunshots that took
twenty-seven innocent lives just a few days ago? It would be easy to say no, Christmas makes
no sense. To say no, we cannot
celebrate. To say that there is nothing to celebrate. To say yes, the religious foundation of our
traditions has been blown away by this senseless act of violence. By all of the senseless acts of violence that
so mark human existence of which Newtown is only a recent, shocking example.
It would be easy to say all that, but here’s the thing. Those negative things about Christmas that it
is so easy for us to feel whether we say them or not aren’t true. They just simply aren’t. The truth is different. The truth is different, but it isn’t
easy. The truth brings comfort, but it
isn’t an easy comfort. The truth
connects us with God, but it isn’t an easy connection or an easy God. The truth isn’t easy, but it is still true;
and we see that truth in Matthew’s story of the Annunciation to Joseph of the
Good News of the coming of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew that we just heard.
In that reading an angel appears to Joseph in a dream. The angel tells Joseph that his betrothed
one, Mary, will have a child by the Holy Spirit though Joseph and Mary are not
yet married. God tells Joseph that this
child will save the people from their sins.
Matthew then comments that this took place to fulfill a passage from Hebrew
scripture, from the book of the prophet Isaiah actually, where it says that a
child will be born, “and they shall name him Emmanuel.” Now of course they didn’t name Jesus
Emmanuel. They named him Jesus, which the
angel tells Joseph to do a few lines before the Emmanuel quote, but never
mind. Matthew still tells us that this
child, this Jesus who is coming, will be Emmanuel. And that, my friends, is very Good News indeed. It is very Good News even, or rather
especially, in dark times like the ones we have lived this last week, like the
ones we live every week. It is very Good
News indeed because of what Emmanuel means.
It’s a Hebrew name, and it has a precise meaning. It means “God is with us.” Matthew tells us as much, and he’s
right. This child, this Jesus who is
coming, is Emmanuel. He is God with us.
This is the central confession of the Christian faith, that on that
first Christmas day God came to be with us as one of us in the person of the
baby boy Jesus of Nazareth. In Jesus God
is with us, and God has a very specific reason for being with us in Jesus. In Jesus God is with us to show us God’s
love, God’s grace, God’s compassion for us and for all of humanity. In Jesus as Emmanuel God is with us to bring
us consolation, to bring us hope, to bring us peace. All of those blessings we have in Jesus
Christ when we see him as Emmanuel, as God with us. In Jesus as Emmanuel, as God with us, we see
God holding all of humanity in endless arms of love; and we see God doing that
come what may. We see God holding us in
love in good times, yes., In good times
too. But much more importantly in Jesus
as Emmanuel, as God with us, we see God doing that, holding us in God’s
everlasting arms, in the bad times. In
Jesus as Emmanuel we see that God doesn’t flee from us when things are
bad. In Jesus we see God entering into
the bad times, into the worst that humans can do to other humans. In Jesus we see God suffer with us. In Jesus we see God even die with us. Then we see God bring new life out of the
suffering and out of the death. In Jesus
as Emmanuel we see God enter into human suffering and into human death, bear them
with us, then triumph over them.
The power of that most basic Christian story, the story of the life,
death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, comes precisely from the truth that
Jesus Christ isn’t just another human being like us. He is like us, but he is more than us. He is Emmanuel, God with us. And as God with us he experiences all of
human life, the bad—indeed the very bad—as well as the good.
And so it is no surprise that Christmas comes at this time that feels
so dark to us. In Jesus God comes to us,
God is with us, not because of some need God has but because of the need we
have. Friends, we all know, even if we
don’t want to admit it, that human life is often a very dark place. It is a place of fear as well as of joy. It is a place of despair as well as of
hope. It is a place of death, including
violent, unjust death, as well as of life.
God is with is in joy and in life.
More importantly, God is with us in fear, despair, and death too. God comes to be with us in all of life, in
the bad as well as in the good.
So neither the tragedy of nine days ago in Connecticut nor any of the
other human tragedies that we hear of or that are part of our own lives should
keep us from celebrating Christmas.
Why? Well, just who are we
waiting for at Christmas? Who is it that
comes to us at Christmas? Jesus Christ
of course, the one Matthew names Emmanuel, God with us. In Jesus God comes to us as one of us, and in
dark days like these we need God to come to us so badly. We need to see God come to us as a human
being like us. And as more than
that. As God come to us. As God with us. We need to see the one named “God is with us”
bring us God’s love, God’s hope, God’s peace.
And come he will. The day after
tomorrow he will come again to bring us that love, that hope, and peace.
So this year let us truly celebrate Christmas. The good feelings of family and friends, yes;
but more than that. Let us not forget,
but let us celebrate. Let us celebrate
Emmanuel, God with us, God coming to us to meet our need, to give us the gift
that God wants all of us to have, in the good times but especially in the bad
times, the gift that is no less than God, that is no less than Emmanuel, that
is no less than God with us. That is the
truth of Christmas. God is with us once
again. God brings light in the darkness
once again. And that more than anything
else in all creation and even in times much darker than these is worth
celebrating. Christ is coming! Let all the world rejoice! Let us and all the world celebrate. Amen.
but I didn't recognize any particular one. I, too, am going through the most hardest time of my life, not physical but financial. This one thing I know, God is able to deliver us from all things, not some but all. As I set hear with tear filled eyes from your story; I am encouraged by your cloud of witnesses Read more
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