Dec 20 2015
Readings: Psalm 80 Luke 1: 46-55
One of the great theologians and renowned author of our
time, Karl Barth, was asked to be a guest lecturer at the University of Chicago
Divinity School. Dr. Barth being quite
elderly, not well and quite tired, sat quietly after his arrival. The organizers for the lecture thought after
speaking Dr. Barth shouldn't be expected to handle the strain of the many
question that were expected from students.
It was decided that the presider would ask one general question for
all. He turned to the renowned
theologian and asked, "Of all the theological insights you have ever had,
which do you consider to be the greatest of them all? It seemed the perfect question for a man
who had written literally tens of thousands of pages of some of the most
sophisticated theology ever put into print.
The students held pencils right up against their writing pads, ready to
note down the great insights of one of the greatest theologian of their
time. Dr. Barth closed his tired eyes,
and he thought for a minute, and then he half smiled, opened his eyes, and said
to those young theology students, "The greatest theological insight that I
have ever had is this: "Jesus loves
me, this I know, for the bible tells me so”
Karl is right
folks, for the Gospel of Jesus Christ is the greatest love story ever written! If it weren't for Christmas we might never
have known the intensity of the love that God has for each and every one of us.
Mary and Joseph, far from home because of imperial rule, a
peasant mother giving birth in unsanitary substandard conditions... There was
no fanfare, no religious delegation and no royalty in attendance. They just gently laid their newborn in that
manger, amazed at the miracle of new birth, gauzing in joyful celebration as
they looked at his little face, just
like every new parent does. But
this child would be different for He was to be the sign of God’s true
unconditional love for the world to see and to know personally.
True love accepts us for who we really are; God chooses to
love us precisely because we are all His and because we are all subjected to
the human condition... Let us set aside the myth that we are loved only if we
are good, for if that were true, none would be loved. Let us also set aside the myth that if we are
bad we are not loved, for if that were true none would be loved. How
come the same? Mary and Joseph had nothing to offer but their
obedience to a calling beyond themselves and that is precisely all we have to
offer, a calling beyond ourselves. It is
an invitation to trust and surrender our lives over to the care and control of
something greater than ourselves.
Jesus was to be the Son, the true Son of God so patiently
waited for, and now to be born into our world.
This child would be the ONE, the
one who was willing to finally embody God’s unconditional love for all to see
and experience. Not just some of the
time, not when it was convenient, but in every waking, breathing minute of
every single day... It is the birth of that love into our world that we
celebrate at Christmas. It’s not about being bad or good folks. It’s about a love so unconditional that its
power transcends good and bad. Who
would have ever guessed that this crossing of paths, this intersection of the
divine and the human, would take place in the remote village of Bethlehem ? That a child would be born into our world,
who would fill his life so much with the love of God, that in him , thousands
upon thousands would be moved to make the incredible claim that they had
actually met their God in person. On
Christmas night God would sent out a love letter of cosmic proportions. This
was the moment, in that little town of Bethlehem
when God and humanity were joined as a bride and groom on their wedding
day. As Jesus grew and went out into the
world, so our understanding of just how much God loves us also grew. We find in Jesus that God's love doesn't
demand perfection, that forgiveness isn't given away sparingly but recklessly
and indiscriminately, that unconditional really means unconditional, and that
God's love is completely and thoroughly inclusive. Why was and still is, this profound truth so hard for the religious and non-religious to grasp and hold on to? We find that even the likes of us gathered
here this morning fall within the embrace of that love, and that neither death,
nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to
come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation,
will be able to separate us from the love of God found in Christ Jesus. But I also know this folks,…. that.without
Christmas my life would be positively unbearable! ---
that for me, the baby in the manger is the light of my world, even when
my world is in shambles...For in that baby the Divine and the human
miraculously cross paths. The infant
Jesus is our living, breathing sign of the immeasurable love that God has had for all of us from the very
beginning.
Christmas is the living promise that we are never ever
alone. No matter where we are in life,
no matter in what condition we find ourselves, no matter how far we might stray
away, or how unfaithful we are, God, the supreme lover, will pursue us in love
for eternity! It's a love that never
stops shining.
May God bless each of you and those you love
this Christmas. Bonny M sings Mary's Boy Child
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