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Grace Episcopal Church on Martha's Vineyard

Woodlawn Avenue & William Street
P.O. Box 1197
Vineyard Haven, MA 02568

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Advent I (C)

November 29, 2009
Grace Church
Rev. Robert E. Hensley

Jeremiah 33:14-16; Psalm 25:1-9; 1 Thessalonians 3:9-13; Luke 21:25-36

      Let us pray.  Holy God, we enter this sacred space and time filled with expectations – expectation of your coming, expectation of hearing you speak to us a word for our lives that is new and renewing, expectation of being challenged and changed. We put aside any expectation of being entertained, of being made comfortable, of being served rather than serving others. Your kingdom is near, and you have entrusted to us, your church, the responsibility of exemplifying the love, forgiveness, justice, compassion and peace that are signs of it. We pray that we may embody your kingdom with faithfulness and joy.  Come Lord Jesus. Amen

      The season of Advent invites us to consider sprucing up our inner selves and souls along with our homes and offices and churches – interior decorations that will go along with all our exterior decorations. 

      For many people, the season of Advent is a decoration season. In fact, quite a few churches designate a decoration day called "Hanging of the Greens" or some such title, where the congregation gathers for this special occasion to decorate the church. During Advent many of us spend a great deal of time decorating – we decorate our shops, streets, homes, trees, and sometimes even ourselves with an upbeat mood, an unusual spring in our step and even an unfamiliar smile to strangers. 

      There are two things that we should all remember about these decorations. First and foremost, they are temporary. The tinsel, the trinkets, the lights come down and are stored away by Epiphany until next year. All too often with the dismantling of the holiday decorations goes the smile, the singing, the bouncy step. Second, these decorations are exterior decorations – things seen, not unseen; things outside, not inside; things visible, superficial and artificial, not things of the spirit. 

      The exterior decorations we rely on now to get us in the "Christmas spirit" often do remarkably little to alter the barren landscape of our souls. Red-nosed reindeer, spray-on snow and stockings hung on the mantelpiece reveal very little about our hearts.  As a matter of fact, they themselves can contribute to a culture filled with people without insides – all exterior, all appearance, all image. In direct contrast, God's exteriors always point in a substantive way to an interior reality. Luke's Gospel that we begin our new church year with today reminds us that there will be signs "in the sun, the moon, and the stars, and on the earth ..." (21:25) – that all of creation will reflect the stirrings of its Creator's intentions.

      On a more simple level Jesus points to a single fig tree (21:29) which is capable of rightly expressing interior changes. Deep in its roots and heart, the rising sap of spring brings forth sprouts and leaves, decorating the tree with the lush greenery of new life. Jeremiah also uses this language of exterior regeneration to symbolize interior changes when he describes the new branch which will "spring up" from David's line (33:15). 

      What kind of ornamentation can we choose this season which can decorate our inner as well as our outer "living rooms?" Four Christmas ornaments we might select to beautify our souls come to us as gifts from the first Christmas family and witnesses: 

  1. The Gift of Mary – Faith
  2. The Gift of Joseph – Justice
  3. The Gift of the Shepherds - Wonder and Joy
  4. The Gift of the Wise Men – Service

      First, the Gift of Mary.  In a certain sense there is a fifth gospel – The Gospel According to Mary, and we see this most prominently in Luke. Only from Mary could the first editors of the Christmas narrative draw their information. The greatness and gift of Mary is an unparalleled life of faith. For when the angel called her the "favored one," this is the form God's favor would take – she would soon discover herself repugnant and pregnant, and even more embarrassing and shameful, pregnant during her engagement period. 

      She would be forced to travel on a weary journey during the last month of her pregnancy. She would give birth in a strange place with no family to support her and no midwife to assist her. For a delivery room she had a cave cut out of a mountain, and for her baby's first cradle, a "slobber trough" manger. The son God had "favored" her with had a death sentence on his head shortly after he was born, so Mary was forced to flee to Egypt with Joseph. Then this same son that God "favored" her with ran away from home when he was twelve, and when he was 33 was executed as a political criminal. Mary discovered that finding favor with God is not being given ease and enjoyment, but rather it is being given a great mission in life, and receiving the faith to accomplish it. 

      Second, if we would take Joseph's gift of justice out of the Christmas story, here's how the ending might well have turned out: 

      When Mary was espoused to Joseph, before they came together, she was found with child of the Holy Spirit. Joseph, her husband, when he found out her condition, being a man of the law and of high pride, went to the judges as the Deuteronomic code dictated and denounced his betrothed for her betrayal of their marriage compact. Mary, being a woman and without a voice in the court, could say nothing in her defense about an angelic appearance and a divine mission. So the judges, as prescribed by the Law of Moses, dragged her to the door of her father's house, and there some of Nazareth's leading citizens stoned her until dead.   

      That was in fact the punishment the law dictated. 

      A "just" person is not the same as a "law-abiding" citizen. "Justice" is not the same thing as "law and order." 

      Some years ago a politician was seeking election to the highest office in the land. He gave a famous speech which helped him win the election. Here is a brief excerpt of what he said: 

      "The streets of our country are in turmoil. The universities are filled with rebelling, rioting students. Communists are seeking to destroy our country; Russia is threatening us with her might. The republic is in danger from within and without. Without Law and Order, our nation cannot survive. We shall restore law and order." 

      If you had voted for this politician running on the law-and-order ticket, you would have voted for Adolph Hitler in 1933. One of the greatest mistakes going is the notion that just because something is legal it is moral, or that just because something is immoral, it should be illegal. Joseph broke the religious law in not turning in Mary. What he did was illegal; but what he did was just. Justice is not, nor has it ever been, the same thing as legality. 

      It is perhaps not too speculative to suppose that when Jesus stepped in to intercede for the woman who was found in an illicit relationship and was about to be stoned, that Jesus flashed back in his mind to the fact that this woman about to be executed might well have been his mother – except for the "justice" of his father. 

      Third, shepherds were renowned storytellers. Out on the Judean hills, they had little else to do but sit around a fire and spin yarns, and they were known as antiquities' greatest raconteurs. This particular story that the shepherds announced took a lot of believing. It told of angel appearances: How many of us have seen angels? It told of a moving star: How many astronomers attest to stars that move? It told of royal astrologers: Isn't astrology today the science of the gullible, and, some would say, not well educated? It told of a king cradled in a cattle stall. Clearly the shepherds outdid themselves this time. 

      This story violates our cool, calculating, computer-like logic. That is why Christmas is a time to go beyond intellectual curiosity into spiritual curiosity – to say with John Donne "For God's sake hold your tongue, and let me wonder." This is a season we need to approach with an attitude and atmosphere of wonder, openness, and awe. Shed your super-sophistication, your skepticism, your coolness, and return to a childlike stance and recapture your sense of wonder and mystery. 

      Coupled with the acceptance of the miraculous, wonderful news of the Messiah's birth, the shepherds suggest the presence of a spirit of joyful celebration at Jesus' birth. Biblical joy is not simply a barrel of laughs or jolly “ho-ho-ho’s”. It is more than good will, neighborly kindness and Christmas cookies baked for carolers. Advent joy goes down deep, right to the very foundations of the Christian faith. 

      Christianity has forgotten the concept of joy perhaps more consistently than any other aspect of Jesus' life and ministry. Our fiercely devout New England Puritan ancestors were once described as people who are going to have a bad time if there is a bad time to be had. We all know people who could have a bad time in the Bahamas. A party is only as good as its guests. Perhaps, in part, this is why it was story-telling, stargazing, rough-and-tumble-living shepherds who were among those invited to attend Jesus' birthday party. 

      Author Elizabeth A. Johnson has reminded us that "Jesus was perceived as someone who made merry, and his meals were considered a bit uproarious, very joyful, a foretaste of the joy of the kingdom in its fullness. Theologian Edward Schillebeecks, who deals at length with these suppers, makes an interesting point:  ‘At these meals, being sad in Jesus' presence is an existential impossibility. You just could not keep your own sadness in that kind of company. '"  (Elizabeth A. Johnson, Consider Jesus [1990], 55-56.) 

      Finally, The Gift of the Wise Men – Service. The Magi are among the most misplaced and misunderstood characters in Scripture. We are constantly confused about who they were (kings, mystics, astrologers, counselors?) and what they thought they were doing (on a spying mission for Herod or following a divine summons?). And in Western Christianity, at least, we knowingly conflate their arrival with the same night as Jesus' birth – so that we may combine the celebration of the Messiah's birthday with our own frenzied exchange of gifts. It is in fact, perhaps a yet unproclaimed miracle that Epiphany Sunday has not been appropriated by shopkeepers eager to expunge last year's inventory from their shelves. 

      While the simple shepherds responded with spontaneous open-mouthed wonder and joy at the angel's message and the tiny baby's presence, the Magi were more deliberate in their response. These were educated men – learned in the lore of the numerous expectations surrounding a long awaited Messiah. They knew that the lustrous singular star they followed was a portent of great hope and promise. Unlike the impoverished shepherds, the wise men came prepared with some of the most extravagant gifts of their age. They knew, at least in theory, what they were heading toward as they approached the city of David.

      And yet, despite their wealth, their knowledge and their positions, the Magi presented themselves humbly on their knees before the Christ child. They did not attempt to impress others with their presence or their insights – they came simply to worship and to serve. In service they offered themselves and their gifts as both interior and exterior decorations at that dingy little cave which was Jesus' first nursery and Christianity's first church. As servants of the Lord, these strangers traveled long distances both to and from the site of Jesus' birth without demanding anything in return. (They not only followed the star to Bethlehem but they followed the advice of the angel to depart and return by a different path.) The Magi served God not as royal message-bearers, but as witnesses to the miraculous event that had taken place. Their extravagant gifts, opulent in sight and smell, served to heighten the human sensibilities to God's presence with them in that cave and in the child. The exotic nature of the wise men's very being provided a powerful visual aid to the truth of the child, reminding each and every one of us that all of humanity is called to recognize the continuing miracle of Christ's presence among us.  Amen.