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1st SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS

Here are the lessons for the first Sunday after Christmas with a thumbnail sketch of their context:

Isaiah 61:10-62:3-O Sing For Joy to God our Strength

The prophet is overjoyed as he peers into God’s future for Israel and also for the nations. The images of an exquisitely dressed groom and that of a bride convey the sense of the prophet’s joy. God’s justice will come to the nations to the extent that God’s righteous acts will resemble a garden in the early rainy season with sprouts springing up and tendrils running everywhere. Thus overjoyed with such visions of sugar plums dancing in his head, the prophet will not cease to pray for Jerusalem until vision becomes reality. When such a convergence occurs even the nations remote from Israel will not fail to be dazzled by God’s glory. So renewed and transformed will Israel be, that God will give cup Jerusalem in hand and give her a new name.

Galatians 4:4-7-The Rest of the Story

The lectionary committees have selected this passage for the first Sunday after Christmas no doubt to remind worshipers of the theological ramifications of what we’ve just celebrated on the 25th. Christmas is exhausting! But in view of the larger theological significance of incarnation, the birth of Jesus is but a blip on the cosmic screen. Even while we’re still putting the wrapping paper away, Scripture reminds us that the rest of the story-the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ-promises us a rescue from slavery in all its forms and adoption into God’s global family. "And since you are his child," Paul says, "everything he has belongs to you."

Luke 2:22-40-Normalcy Around The Extraordinary

In other years, a portion of this passage shows up during Epiphany where Simeon attests to Jesus as being the promised one as well as that of Anna’s prophecy. Our lesson, however, begins earlier with the parents of Jesus doing pretty much normal activities like having Jesus circumcised and named, Mary purified, and Jesus dedicated to the God. Following Simeon’s and Anna’s epiphany of who Jesus was destined to grow into, the lesson ends with reactions-Jesus’ parents must have had to work through such portentous words! But they conclude their otherwise "normal" activities and return home. Yet, the narrator whispers to us that though back in routine place and time and sameness, this child was already beginning to grow up in all ways under the special favor of the divine.