Preparing for
the Child
a sermon based on Matthew 3:1-12
by Rev. Randy Quinn
Last week, many
people were here to decorate the sanctuary and make it a more
festive. And I suspect that many of you have also started decorating
your homes for Christmas, complete with trees and lights and holly
and poinsettias. It won't be long and there will be presents wrapped
up to add to the decorations. And then . . . the parties step up the
action—office parties, school parties, church parties, family
parties. What with all the festivities its easy to get lost in the
shuffle, to miss the season altogether.
A friend of mine told me that last week she asked her
congregation how many hours they spent preparing for Christmas --
including the decorating and the cooking and baking and shopping and
partying -- and then asked them how that compared to the amount of
time they spend preparing for Christ?
Good question, I thought. How much time do we spend preparing for
Christ? Do we make room for him in our homes? Do we make room for
him in our Church? Do we make room for him in our society?
John the Baptist asks similar questions, though not quite as
clearly as Michele raises them. He asks people HOW they are
preparing for the Messiah. He reminds them that the prophets told
them about the coming King; he reminds us that the scriptures make
it clear that preparations must be made for him to come, including
making the roads straight.
So John suggests that one of the marks of the people of God is a
people who are making a path for the Messiah to walk -- a path in
their society as well as in their own lives. His message is a
startling warning that we have not prepared for Christ as we have
prepared for Christmas. We haven't left any room in the Inn with all
of our busyness. We are too busy making plans and having parties and
singing songs to think about how ready we are for Christ.
Last year Ronda and I had a wonderful surprise happen, a surprise
that we are still enjoying. Last October we received a phone call
asking us if we could take a newborn infant as a foster child. There
was the possibility of adoption in mind, but the more pressing
question at the moment was: can we take a newborn foster child into
our home? We had two days to prepare for Melissa.
I thought about that again this fall as she celebrated her first
birthday with us and as I watched Tonya and Ed prepare their lives
and their home for Keith. What a difference! Tonya and Ed had
furniture and clothes and bottles and diapers and diaper bags and
toys. They even had a crib and a room for Keith when he came home
from the Hospital.
We had nothing for Melissa.
Tonya and Ed attended Lamaze classes and learned about the
birthing process and began to talk about some of the things to
expect in their lives after the baby was born. Ed took a few days
off from work to be at home with Keith when he was born, and I
suspect that had Tonya been employed she would have taken maternity
leave. Ronda and I had to be at work the next morning. We had two
days to find a baby sitter who could take a newborn and we were off
and running.
What a difference, I thought, as I have watched Tonya and Ed make
room for Keith in their lives and I remembered those first few days
with Melissa in our home. I didn't even realize how much we had
missed until I saw it happen to someone else.
But I also realize that we do the same thing with the Christ
child at Christmas. We don't allow for a time of pregnancy. We rush
into the birthing room and have a baby before we have made room for
it in our lives, in our world, in our church. We induce labor if we
don't have time to meet with family at the correct time. We spend so
much time preparing for Christmas that we forget the baby is coming.
And what is more tragic is that with the Christ child we tend to
forget about the child after his birth. Any parent will tell you
that parenthood only begins at birth. It never ends.
John the Baptist tells us that we need to prepare for Christ --
the fully grown Christ who will change our lives (not just a baby)
-- and that the preparations will require some life-style changes.
He tells us we will need to change the way we are living, we must
repent of our busy-ness and find time in our busy schedules for God.
John suggests that Advent is the time of preparing for the birth in
the same manner as Tonya and Ed made room for Keith during the
pregnancy.
We must realize that the Christ child will demand some of our
energy after birth and that we must continue to nurture our faith
throughout our lives, not just at Christmas, not just at the time of
our acceptance of Jesus as Lord and Savior, not just on Sunday
morning.
All of life will be affected by Christ.
The Sadducees and Pharisees were the respected religious leaders
of John's day. They were the pastors and bishops, the deacons and
elders, the Sunday School teachers and Church officers of the Jewish
synagogue. They did not always agree with one another in their
theology and their understanding of faith, but they were the ones
that people respected. They were not much different than most of us.
To them, to us, John sends a special warning.
"Don't think that just because you are a member of the church
that you are exempt. Don't think that just because you have been
baptized that you are above reproach. Don't think that just because
you attend church regularly that God will honor you."
The real question is not how you live your lives, but who lives
within you. Is there room for Christ in your life? Is there room for
God in your lifestyle? Do you honor God in all that you do?
I must confess that all-too-often I fail to make room in my
schedule and in my life for Christ. All-too-often my life is wrapped
up in preparing for church, preparing for worship, preparing for
Christmas -- so much so that I miss Christ. That I forget God. So I,
too, am warned by John.
And I suspect that in many ways you are like me. I suspect that
you are also so busy preparing for Christmas that you forget about
Christ. And to us John the Baptist says, "Repent. Change the way you
are living."
Perhaps we could use Advent as a time of preparation. We could
use this month as a time to reorganize our lives so that with the
coming year we will be able to make commitments to God that we will
be able to keep.
In our last Newsletter, there was a page listing the various
activities that we have planned in our church this month that relate
to Advent and Christmas. With it was a note of caution that I feel
was important then and important to repeat.
Do what is important to you as you prepare for Christmas.
Do not get so spread out that you don't have room for Christ. At the
same time, if you need an additional place to worship so that you
can more effectively prepare for Christ, then come and join us.
Together we can all prepare for Christ as we prepare for
Christmas. Together we can make preparations for the birth of the
Christ child in our world and in our lives.
Amen.