Sermon Luke 2:21-40 Christmas 1 December 27, 2015
Song of Simeon
Christmas Eve we spoke of ordinary people and ordinary
places. We spent time learning about how God appeared to the most unsuspecting
people in places of insignificance. We were left to consider who else like Mary
has God used to fulfill God’s promises of love? Has it been you? Or me?, Your
neighbor? Or perhaps the stranger down the street?
We learned about the ordinary insignificant towns of
Nazareth and Bethlehem and were left to consider how are we, in our community
the source of goodness and wonder for those around us? How are we aware of the
power of the ordinary in our midst?
Friends, we are all returning to the ordinary of our
routines and back to the grind of life. We have much to consider about the
power of God among us as we go forth. God’s presence is always in the ordinary.
As we read these stories from Scripture we discover more and more about how God
is present always in the ordinary. It is our challenge to
discover God in these moments.
God’s promises were fulfilled
within the ordinary rituals of the practice of life. God continued to be
revealed through the faithful journey of Mary and Joseph as they continued
their routines of living out their faith rituals.
We might ask ourselves, what
rituals we have that we are faithful to?
How are we living our faith journey
beyond the season of Advent and Christmas? How will we keep the sentiment of
the Christ child in our hearts throughout the whole year?
May I suggest keeping the ritual of coming here to this
place each week over the past month, may the ritual of your presence here spill
over into the New Year and all year long. Your presence has made a difference
for all of us. We have felt united in faith and in our story of life, and
in our shared relationships.
You see, Mary and Joseph did the same, they continued the
pattern of their life faithfully and that allowed for the promises of God to
shape their current and future relationships.
Mary had already learned through the voices of angels,
shepherds, and wise men, that words are powerful.
Words are powerful enough to curse or to bless.
Words carry with them either curse or promise.
Words are powerful enough to harm for life. They
carry much weight, enough that wars have been built on the words of others.
Words are used by the powerful to diminish and denigrate
the weak.
Words are used by the mighty to slay the even the
purest, to keep them lowly.
And in the midst of this the power words spoken by
prophets of old and of today break through with words that
sting and sing with strength and courage for the weak and the lowly.
How, we say?
They break through-By listening to those who step forth
by the power of the Spirit to speak the truth when the truth must be
heard.
And so Simeon, a beloved faithful man who had been waiting
his whole life for a glimpse of the promise of the Messiah, scans the crowd at
the Temple that day, and behold!,
He sees them,
the couple carrying the child,
stand out,
and he rushes to them
knowing that this IS the Child!
The promised one,
come to save the world.
An old man comes forward and takes the baby in his arms and
begins to sing a song.
He praises God for this child. He comes and holds this baby
because the Spirit of God has come upon him. Three times Luke affirms that he
has been led to this baby by the Spirit. It is clear that we are to hear that
Simeon has been called by God to claim this child.
As we listen to his song it’s not just about praising God
for this child who brings salvation to the world,
but it’s the
prophecy,
the forward telling about the conflict that even
salvation brings.
This child will cause the rise and falling of many.
There will be people who will be confronted with their own
frailties, their own injustices and their own corruption.
People for generations into the future will be faced with
decisions about who this child is and whether to follow and believe he is from
God bringing salvation and new life to all.
Words MATTER! Where are we in this generation,
as the forward telling of the conflict salvation brings enters into our
lives?
How are we seeking to proclaim love, justice, peace among
one another, in the community, and in our world?
Simeon and his story of holding on to a promise his whole
life, a promise he lived out by being active in his ordinary world, a promise
he chose to allow to guide him in all his ways, a promise based on love,
the fulfillment of God’s love for him and for the world would appear to him.
As I shared on Christmas Eve, the story of Christmas
is the story of love. It’s the story of a people lost in darkness
seeking to find a way home. It is the story of a people seeking comfort from
their pain and their struggles, their brokenness and their suffering. The story
of Christmas is the love story of God made complete through the clashing of
heaven with earth as God became flesh and dwelt among us.
The story of Christmas is NOT over. The love story of
God lives on in us. The love story of God is how God’s Word
goes forth.
Words matter, friends!
How will the words of our mouth be acceptable in God’s
sight as we live the rituals of our faith in our ordinary ways?
Mary treasured all these words she received along the way in
her heart, they sustained her and gave her strength.
Jesus as he grew gave us the Beatitudes, the Lord’s Prayer,
so many other words of power to grant us what we needed to go
forth as his followers for generations to come.
Hear these words I say every year as Howard Thurman speaks
When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:
To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among people,
To make music in the heart.
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:
To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among people,
To make music in the heart.
Don't ask yourself what the world needs.
Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then
go do that.
Because what the world needs is people
who have come alive!!