Sermons:
______________________________________________________________
No Longer a Baby
based on Luke 2:41-52
Rev. Randy Quinn
It
was the week after Christmas when he came to visit me in my office. I don’t
remember his name, but I remember who he was. His mother was active in the
church I was serving, and he had come home for Christmas to visit.
What brought him to my office was
an almost vicious attack on my preaching. He was adamant that I was leading the
church astray. (More important to him was his mother, I realize in hindsight,
but he never said that.)
In particular, he was concerned
because I said – or had implied – that Jesus came as a baby to save us. He knew
Jesus saved us on the cross, not in the manger; he was afraid that what I had
said the Sunday before Christmas and on Christmas Eve was misleading and flat
out wrong.
His visit and his voice still echo
in my mind 20 some years later.
It echoes in my mind because in many ways he is right. Jesus was born in a
manger and was given a name that means “God saves us” (Mt. 1:21); but it was his
death and resurrection that brought us salvation. And yet some people would
prefer to spend the rest of their lives celebrating Christmas, singing the
carols that we all love so well, and avoiding the tragic tale of the passion
because of its violent nature.
He was right to be concerned
because some people only want to hear about the precious baby Jesus.
In other ways, though, his concern
misses the point of the Christmas story. God came to us in human form; God came
as a vulnerable baby; God took a great risk by coming to us in the manger.
There is an important part of the gospel that Christmas helps us know.
Like so many half-truths, the real
problem is with the other half. Part of the reason we have a church year is to
celebrate various portions of the story at different times of the year – thus
avoiding the possibility of only hearing one part of it, making it harder to
preach half truths as the full gospel story is told over time.
The concerns of that young man
prevented him from hearing the good news that the story of Christmas tells, and
nothing I could say that day was going to open his ears to that part of the
story.
Our text today brings that all to
mind again, because it feels like we are moving way too fast on the church
calendar from Jesus’ birth on Friday to his Bar Mitzvah on Sunday and his
crucifixion in a few months! Most of us would prefer to spend time with the
baby. We want to hold the baby. We want to watch him learn to recognize faces
and smile and laugh. We want to watch him learn to crawl and play games.
Some of us are frustrated because
no one is singing Christmas carols anymore! We want to reclaim the tradition of
the “twelve days of Christmas” that begin on December 25th and end on
Epiphany, January 6th.
We want to keep Jesus in the
manger – and while we may have good excuses for it, I wonder if it’s because we
don’t want to hear the story of his violent death. We don’t want him to grow up
because we know what’s in store for him. We want to let him be a baby for a
little while longer – even if we face the ire of people like that young man who
met me in my office the week after Christmas.
Our text for today may seem to be
racing us along from one end of the story to the other, taking us away from the
manger before we are ready to leave, but I don’t think that’s what Luke is
suggesting. In my understanding of Luke’s telling of the story, anyway, this
story is placed here as a reminder that our faith needs to grow up as we
mature. Not only does Jesus “increase in wisdom,” we are invited to increase in
ours as well (Lk. 2:52).
Too many of us are like Mary and
Joseph who have heard the angels singing and met the wise men; but twelve years
later they seem to have forgotten that God has a plan in mind. The angel spoke
to Mary and then to Joseph. But here in the temple, it’s as if they have
forgotten who Jesus is. God spoke to the shepherds and the magi and Mary “hid
these things” in her heart – where they still seem to be hiding. God spoke to
Anna and then to Simeon when they brought Jesus to be dedicated, but that was
too long ago to remember. Each person in the story seemed to understand who
Jesus was at the time; each made their own profession of faith in way or
another.
But none seem
to have been changed by that news – [continue]
|