Not quite Christmas



 Today is a strange Sunday in many ways. Christmas is nearly here – most of the shopping has been done and most of the cards delivered, and you may well have attended carol services or Christmas plays, but in the church calendar we’re not quite there. And our readings today call us to spend a little more time in Advent, a time to reflect again on what it’s all about. 


In the Old Testament we heard from the prophet Micah (5:2-5a) with the incredible promise that it was in this town of Bethlehem that the Saviour would be born. Much of the Book of Micah is a book about injustice, even judgement. It’s about people who claimed to believe in God but whose lives didn’t show any evidence of it making a difference. 


But from Bethlehem God would reveal once again his incredible power with a child born to change the world. God didn’t need grand palaces, he didn’t need to use political power or wealth. He simply showed his love in offering a relationship. 


So often it’s easy for us to be distracted in doing what we hope will be great things for God, when actually God really wants us – our trust and our commitment… Bethlehem was a plain and simple town, and Mary was chosen as an ordinary woman, but both remind us that God uses places and people powerfully… 


The writer to the Hebrews (10:5-10) adds to our thoughts as he describes the futility of living by the system of sacrifices. Of course, many of the Old Testament rules seemed centred around this system of making sacrifices to God – but what happened was that the sacrifices had simply became routine and ritualistic… 


Jesus came not to demand sacrifices of others, he would make the ultimate sacrifice for us all – his offering of himself is all that we will ever need to enter into a relationship with God. St Athanasius of Alexandria, who was a Bishop in the early 4th century wonderfully said, ‘He (meaning Jesus) became what we are that he might make us what he is’. 


Sometimes we try to do things for God and we do them with the best of intentions. We work hard, we try hard, we perhaps put resources into things, but sometimes they don’t work and we wonder why… And then we take a closer look and we realise that we forgot to put God in those things at all… 


In a study group I was involved in quite a while ago, we spent an evening thinking about good and bad worship. We thought about the things that help to make worship really valuable for people and we came up with lots of ideas, many of them I think pretty good, and then one man in the group sat back and said, ‘we’ve not talked a lot about the Holy Spirit tonight’… 


Suddenly it was a jolt, because he was dead right – for all of our discussions and plans we’d ignored the only thing that really mattered – the involvement of God in our work. 


And as the writer wrote this letter to the Hebrews, I suspect it wasn’t written totally to people whose hearts were in the wrong place. It wasn’t written to people who were just doing things for show, but it was written to people who had lost their focus on what matters. 


And our gospel reading, I think, calls us back and calls us to focus again on God (Luke 1:39-45)…. Mary discovered she was to give birth to Jesus and went off to her cousin Elizabeth out in the hill country. We don’t know why she went – maybe it was to get away from the scandal of her pregnancy, but whatever the reason she received an incredible welcome from Elizabeth – a welcome extended even by Elizabeth’s unborn child who we are told leapt in his mother’s womb. 


We don’t know what discussions took place afterwards but nothing could hide the delight of Elizabeth as she saw Mary and recognised the task for which she had been chosen. Two ordinary women called to do extraordinary things for God... 


And in the moments of the greeting we all learn an incredibly valuable lesson and that is to celebrate with joy our relationship with Jesus. In that moment there was nothing more important and that can be true for us all today…. 


Some time ago I heard a quotation which said, ‘We carve our suffering in stone, but we write our blessings in sand.’ Isn’t that true ? Suffering of any kind is hard, and it lingers, whilst thanksgiving is so often easily pushed aside, and this is really relevant in the world today I think. It’s easy to see pain and let it linger but we are called to be people of good news – not people of silly smiles raising false hopes, but people who have something to say about joy, hope, peace and love…. 


As St Athanasius said, Jesus became what we are in order that we might be what he is – the embodiment of those qualities… 


As we approach the end of advent we’re perhaps ready for Christmas, for some, ready for the new year and to get it done, but in the midst of the busyness or the times of reflection, as well as in the times of celebration, make time for Jesus…


Advent represents the beginning of the new Christian year, and it is a chance for a new beginning as we prepare for the celebration of the birth of Christ. They can represent a point of new beginning and moving forward… 


Advent and Christmas lived and celebrated in isolation are pointless, as pointless as the empty ritualistic sacrifices of the Old Testament, or worship conducted on however grand a scale without God being the absolute central person in that worship…. 


And whether we worship in the greatest and grandest cathedral or in a tiny rural church, what is living in our worship must be Jesus… back again to St Athanasius, ‘Jesus became what we are that he might make us what he is…’


We’re ready for Christmas, but we wait a little longer, not just in anticipation, but with the knowledge that the light that came into the world on that first Christmas will conquer any darkness. 


And as we wait, we have a challenge to examine ourselves and our church… And perhaps we can measure them against the words so often associated with Advent – Hope, Peace, Joy and Love… 


What hope are we offering to those who don’t know Jesus ? What hope are we offering to those living in sadness or suffering ? What does the hope of Jesus mean for us ?


And what about peace in a world where there is so much conflict ? Where is the peace in our own lives and how do we share that peace ?


What about joy – Bishop Leslie Newbigin said, ‘The local church is called to be an explosion of joy in the community’. As advent has come and will soon go, what have we reflected and revealed about joy – and how we can continue to share that joy widely and wonderfully and confidently ?


And then there’s love – the most fundamental principle of Christianity... Jesus was born because God loves us, every one of us, regardless of who we are or what we might have done – the gospel isn’t exclusive, it is meant for all… 


Christmas is for all people because it started a new relationship between God and his people, a relationship that transforms… God’s light has shone into whatever darkness there may be in the world or in our lives, and that light will overcome any darkness… 


Jesus didn’t come blazing in glory – he was born in Bethlehem and God chose just a star to signify his birth… but that star heralded the arrival of a Saviour, the light of the world had come, and the world would never be the same… 


And we’re invited to never be the same, so, let’s celebrate advent and commit to Christmas by getting to know Jesus better, and by pledging to try and do everything to live out those qualities of hope, peace, joy and love…. AMEN 


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