Series A
The Birth of Christ and the
Birth of Christmas
Advent 4, A, B, C Luke
1:39-55, Matthew 1:18-25
(This sermon can be used on the first or last Sunday of
Advent.)
Do you know that
you have only eleven shopping days before Christmas? Do you know
that you only have eleven more days to spend eleven billion dollars?
Do you know that during the twenty-five days of Christmas that we
Americans will spend twenty-five billion dollars? Do you know that
this is the biggest spending binge of the year for the American
economy? Do you know that many corporations make fifty percent of
their profits during the lucrative Christmas shopping season? Have
you hear the advertisements bark out the commercials:
“Christmas toys on sale. Christmas toys on sale.
How can you have a bright shinny Christmas unless you have a
bright shinny new car? Hurry,
hurry, hurry, down to the mall of your choice where there is plenty
of parking. To the
South Center Mall. To
the Federal Way Mall. To
the Super Mall. There
is plenty of parking and plenty of places to spend plenty of cash.
Hurry, hurry, hurry. You
have only eleven more days to spend eleven billion dollars.”
Yes, we are in the
middle of Christmas mania, aren’t we?
It is that time of year when we are so very busy and there is
so much to do. We are
all doing similar things at this time of year.
Let me see, how many of you have purchased your Christmas
tree? Hands?
Some of you went out to a tree farm; others of you stayed in
town to buy them from Joe’s or your favorite spot. Others of you
pulled your tree out of the box and assembled the branches.
Still others of you simply pulled your fully decorated tree
out from storage, still wrapped in that old sheet from last year.
And then it’s time to decorate.
How many of you have put your lights on your Christmas trees?
Hands? First go on the lights, then the balls, then all the sacred
ornaments. … So how
many of you put up lights for Christmas, either inside the house or
outside? Hands? Yes, a whole bunch of you.
We put ours up early again this Christmas.
I have a contest with my neighbor Palmer to see who gets his
lights up first. Gotta do it immediately after Thanksgiving Day to win.
.... Who sends Christmas letters or Christmas cards? Hands?
I’m sure most of you do.
When a two-paged single space Christmas letter arrives from a
long-lost friend, do you really slowly read the whole thing?
Hands? So many of you do! Have you noticed how perfect all
the families are in these Christmas letters?
My family is always perfect in our Christmas letter; you
wouldn’t recognize us. … Let’s see, who makes lists of
presents you need to buy? Do
you have a present-list? I
do. As you know from
past years, I normally buy my wife some romantic present down at the
Coast to Coast hardware store, but this year I bought here a really
nice present on a trip in September, but I can’t remember where I
put it. O well.
... Let’s see, how many of you baked some kind of Christmas
cookies for the holiday? How many different kinds of cookies should you make?
How many dozen? ...And, how many events do you go to during the Christmas
season. The Sunday
School program? The
church choir concert? The
high school Christmas program?
... How many of you are totally exhausted when Christmas
actually arrives and you collapse with tiredness and financial
despair when it is all over? Yes,
we all pretty much join in this Christmas madness.
About this time,
some spoil sport will chime in:
“Let’s put Christ back into Christmas.
Jesus is the reason for the season.
Let’s get back to the original meaning of Christmas.”
But the original meaning of Christmas was a fun loving pagan
holiday in Rome.
Today, I would like
to talk with you about the birth of Christ and the birth of
Christmas. Christmas was born 300 years after the birth of Christ.
The birth of Christ and the birth of Christmas were separated by 300
years.
First, let’s talk
about the birth of Christ. We know that the birth of Christ occurred
in about the years 6-4 BCE. That
is, Herod the Great died in the year 4 BCE.
That’s a simple historic fact.
Take your search engine, Google, and type in Herod the Great
and see how many websites about Herod the Great are on your
computer. My computer calculated 153,000 websites on Herod the Great
and almost all the websites agree that he died in the year 4 BCE.
From the Bible, we know that Herod slaughtered the baby boys in his
region, two years old and younger; so we estimate that Christ was
born somewhere between 6-4 BC.
Also, there was an
unusual conjunction of the planets Jupiter and Saturn in 7 BC.
You can see a replica of the Christmas sky at many
planetariums during this time of the year and at a planetarium, you
will see this unusual movement between Jupiter and Saturn that many
people think may have been the star of the magi. So, Christ was born
in about 7-4 BC. If you
type in “Jupiter, Saturn and the birth of Christ” in the Google
search engine, you will find more than 10,000 sites dedicated to
this astronomical research for the star of Bethlehem.
But no one
celebrated Jesus’ birth for three hundred years.
So how was
Christmas born? How did
the season of Christmas come about? Let me briefly explain.
In the land of
Persia, today Iran and Iraq, there were astrologers.
Astrologers were the scientists of that era of history, and
they were the scientists of the sky.
They studied the stars and understood their movements.
Now, the astrologers from Persia believed that the world
was conceived on March 25th; they didn’t say which year; but that
the world was conceived on March 25th.
For them, that was a fact.
So...when was the world born?
Yes, of course, on December 25th, nine months later.
Now, a second
stream of thought occurs in North Africa, in the city of Carthage.
In Carthage, there was a man by the name of Hippolyitus,
living in about the year 220 CE.
He was the father of confirmation; that is, he originated a
three-year study program after which people could be baptized.
Well, Hippolytus, a great theologian, believed that Christ
died on March 25th, in the year 29 CE.
He believed he had knowledge of that fact.
He also believed that Jesus was conceived on the same day he
died, that is, on March 25th. So
if Jesus was conceived on March 25th, he was born on ...December
25th. In other words,
the Savior of the world was born on the same day that the world
itself was born. That
made good sense to Hippolytus.
Now, a third
tradition has to do with the Roman Saturnalia.
First Persia, then North Africa, and then Rome, Italy.
The Roman world celebrated a festival in midwinter.
Now, you all tell me exactly the shortest day of the year.
What is the shortest day of the year? You know. It is
December … 2lst. Yes,
of course. The days
start to get longer on the 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 25th.
So in the Roman saturnalia, they celebrated the victory of
light over darkness, of the day over the night, of the sun over the
moon. ... How many of
you children have vacation from school during late December? Yes,
you all do. Did this
begin with America? Of
course not. It was part
of the Roman Saturnalia. The
kids all got off from school as part of their festival.
How many of you men and women get some vacation time during
late December? Is your mid-winter vacation caused by some strong labor union
victories in the 1930s? Of
course not. The Roman
Saturnalia gave people vacation from work during their holiday.
That tradition has existed for centuries. How many of you
exchange cookies with each other during late December?
And why? You
guessed it. How many of you exchange presents with family members
during late December? And
why? You guessed it. It
was part of the Roman festival.
If you add together
the Persian astrologers belief in the birth of the world on December
25th and Hippolytus belief that the Savior of the world was born on
December 25th and the Roman Saturnalia holiday in late December
which celebrates the victory of light over darkness, you gradually
understand how Christmas was born in about the year 350 CE.
If you add a few parties and “Christmas toys on sale,
Christmas toys on sale,” visit a few malls and spend a few billion
dollars, you have the makings of an American Saturnalia.
So, what is
Christmas really all about? Christmas
is about the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem. Christmas is about the
Lord God becoming a full human being, the Lord God becoming bone of
our bone and flesh of our flesh. Christmas is about God coming to
earth in human form. According to the Bible, Jesus was sent by God.
But to do what? What was Jesus sent to do? To save us human beings
from our sinfulness and selfishness. Also to fill us with love, love
for God and love for our neighbors. In other words, Jesus was sent
by God to earth to give us what we really needed: to free us from
our selfishness and fill our hearts with love. When our hearts are
filled with love, we give from the fullness of our hearts to those
in need.
Christmas is about
giving, giving from the fullness of our hearts, giving to people who
need the gifts. Like the three Wise Men, bringing their gold,
frankincense and myrrh to the Christ child. Their hearts were filled
with love, and out of love, the wise men gave gifts to the infant
Jesus who was in need of those gifts.
Like the littlest angel bringing a monarch butterfly wing and
a blue robin’s egg to the baby Jesus.
The littlest angel’s heart was filled with love and the
littlest angel gave his most previous possessions to the infant
Jesus. Like Amahl in AMAHL AND THE NIGHT VISITORS bringing his
crutch to give to the child born to be king.
Christmas is a story about a special kind heart filled with
love and giving gifts of love to those who need them.
That same theme of
God giving a special gift to those in need continued in the
tradition of “Jolly old St. Nicholas, lend your ear this way.
Don’t you tell a single soul, what I’m going to say.”
Now, Jolly Old St. Nicholas was not some fat bellied, red
suited, white bearded old man who appeared in every department store
to have children sit on his lap nor did he land on every rooftop
with eight reindeer. Rather,
St. Nicholas originally was a bishop in the church in a land called
Smyrna, now the area of Turkey.
He didn’t go around giving gifts to all the kids on all the
streets and all the cul de sacs. No. His giving was specific and to
the specific needs of particular children:
shoes for those children who had no shoes; clothes for those
children who had no clothes; food for those children who had no
food. The special
giving of St. Nicholas was to meet the special need of those around
him. The heart of St. Nicholas was filled with love and he gave
gifts of love to those who needed them.
This same theme of
God giving people hearts of love and those loving hearts giving
special gifts to those in need is repeated by many Christians today
at Christmas time. The
giving of the Roman or American Saturnalia is to exchange gifts with
family and special friends; but the giving Christmas is to those in
need. To illustrate, I
know several families who have a budget for their Christmas
spending. These people
are giving the same amount that they have budgeted for exchanging
presents to the Lutheran Compass Center in downtown Seattle or the
Des Moines Food Bank. They
match dollars, for the American Saturnalia and for Christmas giving
to those in need.
Still others of you
give your time and money by serving in one of the downtown shelters
during this season or at our homeless shelter in our church.
Still others of you
are taking angels off the Angel Tree in the narthex and you purchase
two specific gifts for a child whose mother or father is in prison.
The list goes on. But
we sense within ourselves that merely exchanging presents with each
other doesn’t really honor the birth of the Son of God.
I found a poem the
other day that seems to fit:
“When Jesus
called that Christmas week I wasn’t at my best;
And the house was much too
cluttered to entertain a guest.
He seemed to notice everything, the card still unaddressed,
The gifts piled high awaiting wraps, the baking and the rest.
He eyes fell on the evergreen and the presents ‘neath the tree,
It’s my birthday that you celebrate--what are you giving me?
‘What am I giving him?’ I thought; ashamed no words I found.
So many costly things I’d bought, he looked at me and frowned.
I prayed he’d let the question pass, but when he did persist,
I blurted out the truth at last, you were not on my list.”
Louise Teisberg
Is Jesus on your
list this Christmas? ...
Honestly? It’s
Christmas. ...What special gift are you giving to Jesus this
Christmas? ...
We all know the pleasure of finding the right present for our
husband and wife, for our children, a good friend, a parent. We know the pleasure of our American Saturnalia.
But the question persists. What special gift are you giving
to Jesus this year to honor his birth?
My life has been
enormously blessed in so many ways. One of the blessings of my life
is to serve on the Board of Lutheran World Relief, and that means I
have been able to encounter some of the people and places around the
globe where Lutheran World Relief works.
One time, I was in Arusha, Tanzania, and there I visited a
home of a woman who received a cow from Heifer Project
International. Let me
explain. If a person such as this woman is willing to learn how to
care for a cow and do the fencing, plant the needed grass, and learn
how to care for an animal, she
is given a cow from Heifer ... with the expectation that she will
give the first calf to the next person in line at Heifer.
This lady, after several years, had a small herd of cattle.
She had become quite prosperous from that first gift.
In my conversation with her, I told her that many people in
our church gave money to Lutheran World Relief and Heifer Project,
and that she was a wonderful example of this ministry working at its
best. She spoke words
that I will never forget. She said: “Jesus
gave me this cow, by first giving you and your people a heart of
love.” Surprised, I
asked her to repeat herself and she said, “Jesus gave me this
cow by first giving you and your people a heart of love.”
That is what Christ
is all about. That God sent Jesus from heaven to earth to give us
human beings what we really needed most in life: hearts filled with
love. That is what you and I need from God this Christmas. A heart
filled with love. O
yes, we have tons of wants. We
are like children with a catalogue before Christmas, circling all
our wants by the dozens. But
we have one essential need: a
heart filled with love. God wants to give you a heart filled with
love on this Christmas and every day of your life
“Christmas toys
on sale. Christmas toys
on sale. How can you
have a bright shinny Christmas unless you have a bright shinny new
car? Twenty-five days
to spend twenty-five billion dollars. A billion dollars a day keeps
up happy and gay. Eleven
more days to spend eleven billion dollars.
What will you get your wife for Christmas? Your husband for
Christmas? What special gift? For
you child? Your children? Your
grandchildren? Your
friend? What
special gift is out there?
And ... and ... what you getting for Jesus this Christmas?
What special gift are you giving to those in need?
Amen.
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