#CHRISTISNOWHERE: Can You See Jesus As Your King This Christmas? [First Sermon of Advent]

Christians around the world today are beginning their preparation for Christmas by observing the First Sunday of Advent. Enjoy this sermon series called CHRISTISNOWHERE – a reminder of the difficulty but possibility to see the presence and work of Jesus in our world, not just at Christmas, but everyday.

What is Christmas really all about?

Sometimes we can become so familiar with a story that we forget or forgo the details of the story, which is what originally made it so compelling and transformative.

And that’s what the Advent season is for in the church calendar.

There is wisdom in the church taking a few weeks to prepare for our Christmas celebration. And if you think that odd or overkill, then that may be a sign that you’ve become unfamiliar with some of the key elements that make the Christmas story so enduring.

What is Christmas?

It’s the story of Jesus coming to fulfill the story of Israel in the most radical and unexpected way possible: their God will become their king!

He will personally deliver Israel from exile and place his Word in their heart, that they might become the nation they were called and created to be: a blessing and light to the world.

Thus, God emerges into the world through the infant Jesus, born into scandal and poverty, into a diminished, oppressed, and powerless family of royal descent.

But: Why does Israel need a savior? Where is their king? Why are they in exile? Where has God been? Why has he been absent?

In the days of Caesar Augustus, the people of Israel were enduring their fourth empire, and it seemed to them that God was no where.

So when the angels announce in the birth of Jesus the Christ (the anointed King) that God is now here, it was good news indeed!

And yet – the arrival of God was not like they had expected, nor did it initiate the rescue they had prayed for.

In our day, the church is the new Israel, we are the people of God, those who pledge allegiance to Jesus as King, our Lord, Savior and Christ.

We are into our 21st century since the ascension of Jesus to his throne at the right hand of God the Father, and though God the Father and Jesus the Son sent the Holy Spirit to be in us, it still feels at times like Christ is no where.

Christ the King of Israel came unexpectedly and saved his people in an unexpected way.

And now we who yearn for Christ to return can begin to empathize with the waiting of Israel as they waited for God to rescue them.

They had no idea how much longer it would be until God came to save them. We have no idea how much longer it will be until Christ returns to set the world right.

Do you ever get tired of waiting for God?

Do you ever lose hope about all that is wrong in our world? In your life?

Do you ever grow weary of waiting for Christ to show up and save you from your troubles?

You and the children of Israel both.

The season of Advent is a time of preparation for Christmas.

What is preparation? Active waiting: you work while you wait, you prepare as you anticipate.

And our four weeks of preparation and anticipation are to be a picture of what our larger life is to be like as we wait and work for Christ to come again.

When it seems like Christ is no where, that’s when faith becomes crucial and you choose to believe that Christ is now here.

We can all be like Thomas, and refuse to trust that Christ is here; and yet like Thomas, we need to hear the words of Jesus to him: you believed because you could see, blessed are those who do not see and yet believe.

I don’t know what you’re waiting on this Christmas.

I don’t know what you are waiting on God to do for you this Christmas.

I don’t know what what you are praying and pleading Christ to fix for you.

Maybe it’s health, or your job, or family, friends, your habits, your heart?

Maybe you want Christ to do something about the loneliness of Christmas, the grief and sadness of Christmas, the hassle and hustle of Christmas, the unfulfilled hopes and expectations of Christmas, the stress and busyness of Christmas, the commercialism and shopping of Christmas, the pain and suffering of Christmas?

To prepare properly for Christmas is to be honestly aware of what you want rescued from in your life.

For Christmas to be a proper preparation for our anticipation of Christ’s return, we must be clear on why we yearn for Christ to come back now and not later.

The people of Israel had a word that was both a cry of suffering and a cry of hope: Hosanna! Lord save us!

It’s a word you pray, it can be a word you shout, it was a word on Israel’s lips and hearts as they labored and lived under the oppressive cruelty of the empires – Rome, Greece, Persia, Babylon, Assyria.

The early Christians had a word for that pain and yearning: Maranatha. Come Lord!

It’s the perfect word for Christians at Christmas.

Depending on how you see and say the word, you can say it Marana tha: Come Lord Jesus! Or you can say it Mara natha: Our Lord has come!

The first Christians looked back to Christmas and declared: Mara antha: Our Lord has come!

And then they would look ahead and declare: Marana tha: Come Lord Jesus.

For you, when you begin to feel like Christ is no where, you can cry out like Israel, Hosanna, Lord save me! You can cry out like the early Christians, Marana tha: Come Lord Jesus!

And when you have been reminded that Christ is now here, you can declare with faith, hope and love: Mara anatha: Our Lord has come!

And this begins to get at the heart of what it means to see Jesus as your king this Christmas.

It means understanding his story and the story of Israel so that you can grasp the first story of Christmas.

By delving into this original story of Christmas, you begin to remember what Christmas is all about, and thus you can prepare and anticipate properly.

Christmas is not about celebrating a day, but an event.

But more than that, it’s celebrating and remembering the one who caused the event, and the one about whom the event is about: the God of Israel who becomes King through Jesus – the Christ of the masses.

Christmas is the beginning of the reign of God through Jesus in the world.

That’s what we are celebrating: the genesis of the kingdom of God where Jesus becomes Lord and Christ and establishes the church through whom he will be present in the world.

No wonder we need words like Hosanna and Maranatha at Christmas.

If God became present in the world through Jesus, and now God and Jesus are present in the world through the Spirit, and if God, Jesus and the Spirit are present in the world through the Church, which is the body of Christ, no wonder we despair and feel like Christ is no where.

It’s easy to see how the church has failed God and humanity and us in so many ways.

But we must remember that our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against dark powers and evil forces throughout the heavens and the earth.

The church is the one people on earth where God chooses to dwell by the Spirit of Christ to demonstrate his redeeming love.

God’s design for the church is that they be a people on earth through whom he can bless all the peoples of the earth.

The church is to be a light to the world of what the kingdom of God can look like – a community where righteous justice prevails alongside humble mercy.

The church is the one people on earth that calls on Christ as their Lord, learning to be led by him, learning to serve him, and be his servants of blessing and rescue from evil.

When the church fails, and it seems Christ is no where, we cry out Hosanna, God save us!

When the the church gets it right, and it seems like Christ is now here with us, we can cry out Maranatha, Our Lord has come!

When we lose our way, we can look back to Christmas and remember where our story begins, but then we can also look ahead and remember where our story goes.

Just as God came once through Jesus to renew the kingdom of God through the church, so God will come again with Jesus to fully establish the kingdom of God on earth, and finally justice and peace will kiss.

(Sermon based on 2014 Lectionary Reading for the First Sunday of Advent: Isaiah 64, Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19, 1Cor 1:3-9, Mark 13:24-37)

How To Be Joy To The World

I’ve got a few favorite Christmas carols. How about you? (And no, Jingle Bells, Frosty the Snowman, and Here Comes Santa Claus does NOT count! haha!) One of my favorites is O Holy Night– I really love belting out the second verse:

“Truly He taught us to love one another
His law is love and His gospel is peace
Chains shall He break, for the slave is our brother
And in His name, all oppression shall cease
Sweet hymns of joy in grateful chorus raise we
Let all within us praise His holy name.”

I also really like O Little Town of Bethlehem (this version by Kari Jobe) and Hark the Herald Angels Sing (especially by Charlie Brown and Friends). My second favorite carol, though, is Joy to the World especially the opening lines:

“Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King;
Let every heart prepare Him room,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven, and Heaven, and nature sing.”

Here we are, the third week of Advent, remembering that Christ will come again someday to break our chains, and that all creation will sing sweet hymns of joy – even heaven and nature will sing with us! We don’t realize how potent, powerful and real are the lyrics we’re singing! All that is glorious and beautiful about Christmas will be fulfilled when Christ comes again –  it’s what we work towards everyday. Merry Christmas indeed!

To use an agricultural metaphor, we might think of Christmas as a perennial kind of plant, the ones that come back year after year. But it seems to me that Christmas is more like an annual, a flower that has to be replanted every year in our hearts. We change so much from year to year – so much happens in those twelve months that at least for me, I need to replant the seeds of Christmas inside, again.

Jesus tells a parable in the gospel according to Mark about a farmer who went out into his field to sow seed. Some of the seed falls on the hard ground, where birds come and snatch it away; some of the seed falls in rocky ledges, where it grows but with shallow roots, such that it can’t withstand the heat of the sun.

Some (seeds of Christmas) fall in among thorny ground, and the worries of this life, deceitfulness of wealth, and the desires for other things come in and choke it out. But some of the seed falls on good soil, and it produces a bountiful crop of joy and peace for all.

For some of us we hear the Christmas songs and they go in one cynical ear and out the other. Some of us listen to the carols, but once the season is over, we forget about them until next year.

Others sing the songs with gusto, but then when suffering strikes, we sadly wonder – are the lyrics rooted in reality? But some hear the carols with a trusting heart, and then work to live them out in this world as it really is, all year round. Who are we this Christmas?

How to be joy to the world? Believe what you sing! Live what you sing! Hear Christ’s word to you in these Christmas hymns. Join in song and soul with others who hear these words of joy, accepting them as true, and become open to a heaven and nature that sings!

What’s a Christmas hymn that you could really pay attention to this season? One that you could let the gospel of Christmas get sown into your soul? What’s one carol that you could dwell in, inspiring you to work Christmas joy into your everyday life?

How to be joy to the world? Make room in your heart for joy- even if it’s space for a seed – for the poetic, lyrical, beautiful words of Christ Jesus the Lord, by which he teaches us to love one another.

“Joy to the world, the Savior reigns!
Let men their songs employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat, the sounding joy.”

United We Stand, Divided We Fall

In this Advent season of peace, let’s be the ones to light the way, let’s stand with people and cultivate as much common ground as we can. It’s easy to focus on our differences, it can be darkly energizing to polarize our positions – but that will be our downfall.

What can the lights of peace look like in our world? Does peace mean the absence of violence? If so, can there ever be peace on earth? But what if we can choose a Christmas peace that illuminates and unites amidst the dark turbulence in our homes, our hearts, our nation?

What if being at peace was less about naively ignoring what is destructive around us, and instead, staring it straight in the face, trusting instead of despairing that even now the Jesus of Christmas is working for peace to prevail among us?

dont-give-up-quote-1As we walk through the gospel of Jesus Christ according to Mark in the New Testament, we read a fascinating story where Jesus is misunderstood by his own family– his actions of peacemaking are interpreted as causing dark demonic chaos. Just when you think you’ve struggled with being misunderstood!

In this story Jesus has once again entered a home with his disciples to share a meal together with the host. When the crowds realized he is in town, they swarm the home such that no one could dine. Jesus adjusts, stands, and turns the chaotic moment into a teachable one about the way God works in the world.

But Jesus’ family, and the teachers of the law from Jerusalem believe that Jesus must be filled with a divisive, impure spirit, maybe even a demon – possibly Satan himself! How else to account for the chaos Jesus causes when he comes into town? It’s interesting isn’t it, tragic even, how we can choose to interpret stuff.

If Jesus is really filled by an impure spirit, what advantage would he gain by casting other impure spirits into the abyss? Jesus calls the misunderstanders in close and then uses logic to dismantle their slanderous accusations.  He teaches, “If a house is divided against itself, that house cannot stand. And if Satan opposes himself and is divided, he cannot stand; his end has come. In fact, no one can enter a strong man’s house without first tying him up. Then he can plunder the strong man’s house.”

Christmas reminds us of Jesus coming to tie up the evil one who was dividing and plundering the people of Israel. The season of Advent reminds us that Jesus will come again to finish what he started with the evil one in the world: Satan’s end will come.

dont-give-up-1So don’t give up on peacemaking. Despair divides.

Christmas teaches us that peacemaking is difficult, it means standing up to evil, not running away from it, it means forging unity among those who misunderstand, and it means patiently explaining yourself and proving yourself through your actions.

To make peace we will need to forgive all those who sin against us and every slander they’ve ever uttered, like Christ will do for us when he returns. Bitterness divides.

When Jesus comes again, there will be those who will see the just and merciful peacemaking work he’s done and accuse him of chaos-making, of causing dark evil, to be in league with the devil. There is nothing Jesus can do for them – if they see the Holy Spirit in him and call it demonic, they don’t want Jesus’ terms of peace. Yet….

Jesus mother, brothers and sisters eventually came to recognize him as the Lord of Israel and the whole world. It took awhile though for them to see the light and join God’s will to make peace. Reconciliation takes patience, persevering kindness, healing honesty, and sacrificial grace.

don't give up final posterSo if you’re feeling misunderstood, if it seems like chaos is creeping in on your life, if this season of your life isn’t turning out how you thought, don’t give up on being a peacemaker. Keep cultivating more common ground!

Stand by the power of Christmas: that same spirit of Jesus comes still to light our way and unite us, so don’t give up on him, others, or yourself.