Wednesday, December 25, 2019

The Nativity of Our Lord - Christmas Day: "Born of God"


+ The Nativity of Our Lord – December 25th, 2019 +

Christmas Day

Series A: Isaiah 52:7-10; Hebrews 1:1-6; John 1:1-14

Beautiful Savior Lutheran

Milton, WA







In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. 



Some hospitals, like the one Jonah was born in, play a little music whenever a baby is born. And even though it was O-dark thirty, I’ll never forget the moment the nurse wheeled Natasha down the hallway; she pushed that tiny, red button and cued a little lullaby for all the hospital to hear. 



I’ve heard that, or similar music, played many times since, in several hospitals, and often when I’m on my way to or from visiting someone. I heard it again recently while walking to the elevator. A song of joy, hope, and new life in a place of illness, pain, and death.



This is what God does for us at Christmas, in the birth of Jesus. God himself descends into our world of illness, pain, suffering, and death as an infant. Here is joy, hope, and life in newborn flesh. Very God of very God and yet flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone. From conception into all eternity, God is man. He shares our DNA. He is human, like you. Born for you. 



In Christ’s birth, a new song is sung. A new day dawns. New life begins. 

In Christ’s birth, God becomes a child. He who made man in the beginning, is made man to save you.

In Christ’s birth, we are given new birth. His birthday becomes our new birthday. We are born again in Jesus who was born for us. 



For, St. John writes, “as many as received Him, to those who believed in His name, to them He gave the right to become children of God: who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.”



John chapter 1 is God’s wonderful and gracious birth announcement. It’s a boy! And he’s born for you. John delivers a birthday card of divine creation, announcing Jesus’ birth and our new birth in him. This good news is written from all eternity, yet made known in time for you. We marvel and rejoice in the mystery and the love of God come down to us in Jesus’ birth. It’s all wrapped up a single, miraculous, mysterious, marvelous sentence:



The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. 



We could spend the next twelve days of Christmas diving into this mystery, and still not reach the bottom. The Son of God, eternally Begotten, not made, is born of woman for you. “The Word of the Father, by Whom all time was created, was made flesh and was born in time for us” (Augustine). The firstborn of all creation is Mary’s firstborn Son. The Uncreated became a creature. The Infinite God became finite. The eternal Word was born in the fullness of time for you. The one who formed man from the dust of the earth has come with eyebrows, ears, and eyes. How beautiful are those little feet that bear good news. 



As St. Augustine once wrote, “The Maker of man became Man that He, Ruler of the stars, might be nourished at His mother’s breast; that He, the Bread, might hunger; that He, the Fountain, might thirst; that He, the Light, might sleep; that He, the Way, might be wearied by the journey; that He, the Truth, might be accused by false witnesses; that He, the Judge of the living and the dead, might be brought to trial by a mortal judge; that He, Justice, might be condemned by the unjust; that He, Discipline, might be scourged with whips; that He, the Foundation, might be suspended upon a cross; that Courage might be weakened; that Healer might be wounded; that Life might die.”



As profound as this mystery is, it is also historical. It’s true, all of it. Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection happened, St. Luke says, not once upon a time or in a galaxy far, far away, but in the days of Caesar Augustus and Quirinius. Jesus is crucified under Pontius Pilate. 



So, if you want to know what God looks like, look down into the manger. Behold, the face of God. And behold, the face of the first man of a new humanity. Jesus’ birthday becomes our new birthday. We are born again in him.

The Word became flesh because we are flesh. The Second Adam is born for all of us, sons of Adam and daughters of Eve. Jesus is born under the Law to redeem us who are under the Law. For us, children of wrath, conceived and born in sin, God becomes a child. 

The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. In Jesus, God has hair. Fingers. And tiny hands that reach out to his mother, merciful hands that touch leprous skin, sacrificial hands that bleed from nails, and loving hands that baptize us and feed us week after week at the altar. 



For us, “The Master took on the form of a servant. For he became Son of man, who was God’s own Son, in order that he might make the sons of men to be children of God. (Chrysostom). Jesus’ birth is one small step for God, one giant leap for mankind. A fresh start for humanity. New birth. New life. The Son of God became human to be what we are, and being what we are without our sin, He came to save us. Jesus is born as a child to we might become children of God. In a world of pain, suffering, sin, and death, Jesus is, as the old carol goes, “born to raise us sons of earth, born to give us second birth.” That makes the waters of your Holy Baptism your very own Christmas, where you are born again. Born from above in Jesus who was born for you. 



For us, The one who made the wheat and vine comes in bread and wine to you this very day. The Word who became flesh for you gives his flesh and blood to you.



Today, the one who gave us earthly life has come to give us new birth and new life in his life. Today, Jesus’ birthday is your new birthday. Today we are born again in him who was born for us. 





A merry Christmas and a happy new birthday to each of you…



In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. 






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