Sermon Luke 2:8-20
December 4, 2016 Advent 2A
Live Like a Shepherd
The first thing that comes to mind when we hear the word
shepherd (esp in church) is an image of Jesus as the Good Shepherd. We recall
the parable of the lost sheep, the words of Psalm 23, The Lord is my Shepherd,
or the phrases, sheep without a shepherd are like those gone astray from God.
We are familiar with shepherd language because the Bible is filled with it.
And for good reason.
Sheep were the most important domesticated animal in
Palestine. Sheep were used for more than sacrificial purposes. They provided
wool, food, milk, fat, skins and horns all important to the textile industry
and the food market. Not only were sheep important to the people of Palestine
they were important through the then known world. It only makes sense then that
the Bible is filled with sheep and shepherd images. If the Bible were to be
written today, can you imagine the images the authors would use to be relevant
to a vast majority of people? I think it would be using technology instead of
sheep, or perhaps, dogs, cats, and other home domesticated animals…who knows.
Yet, as we learn the context of the times and the people,
the language of the Bible is as relevant today as it ever has been.
But, today we turn our focus away from the images for a
moment and look to the manger scenes;
the crèche where we find all those characters
gathered around the infant king.
We’ve learned about the angels and the power of their
presence and the presence of God through them.
What can we learn from these shepherds kneeling at the
manger?
Literally shepherds were hard working men, boys, women and
girls. They worked in the plains and in the hill country both day and night.
They were responsible for small and large flocks of sheep. Sheep are rather
docile creatures. They are subject to the elements around them and are quite
inadequate of self-defense. They easily wander away and get lost. The shepherd
was responsible for maintaining food and water and to move the sheep from one
grazing area to another.
One might assume that the work of a shepherd was rather
boring.
But it required a great deal of endurance as well as
diligence.
It also required an ability to live with simple means.
There were no fast food restaurants close by so they had to
rely on their own ability to pack a lunch.
They had to be willing to sleep on hard ground and to travel
distances away from home. Two of the tools at the disposal of a shepherd were a
staff and a rod. A staff was used to herd the flock and keep them together. A
rod was used to ward off enemies. They also carried a sling (as we know from
the shepherd king David).
While studying a little bit about shepherds I became aware
of the value of looking at their way of life as an example of how we could live
our lives today.
1. 1. Live with
courageous awareness. A shepherd must live alert. It is impossible to do
the job without being fully aware of the surroundings in which a shepherd works
and lives. Not only does a shepherd need to be aware of dangers, despair, and
disasters, but a shepherd must know the sounds and sights of his/her flock. A
shepherd needs to have the patience to listen and know the voices of the flock,
to learn of new places and safe places to gather the flock. A shepherd must
have enough fear and awe to respond appropriately to the signs around him/her.
If we have our noses in an iphone we’ll never know the sounds or sights of
those around us and we’ll be completely unaware of danger or wonder if it
happens right in front of us.
Courageous
awareness gives us the ability to hear sounds and to discern whether they
are sounds that bring joy or terror or both. Courageous awareness keeps us from running away but allows us to
face what is before us and make an informed decision on how to respond.
Think of people who hunt or fish or paint
or sculpt. They cannot do what they do well if they are not willing to sit
still, observe, listen, be a little scared, and have the ability to be in awe.
2. 2. To live like a shepherd is to live with faithful
curiosity. “let us go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken
place that the Lord has made known to us. So they went in haste.”
Imagine having enough courage to hear the
angels and then the discernment to go and check out everything they had been
told?
The shepherds had just enough faith to realize they had heard the words of God
through the angels. They had just enough
curiosity to run and see and witness what they had been told.
If we are not curious about all that is
before we will never leave our safe space to go and discover the wonders of
God.
If it had not been for the faithful
curiosity of the likes of Madam Curie or George Washington Carver we would not
have received the healing powers of medicine and the ability of the peanut to
create dyes, plastics and gasoline.
We can and we must be people of faith to be encouraged to live with the curiosity to discover the wonders around
us.
We must be willing to run to seek out what
is new,
have the enthusiasm to rejoice in what is
different
and to always desire to be open to God sending
us beyond our safe places.
3. 3. Finally, to live like a shepherd live with
Holy Boldness. “The shepherds returned glorifying and praising God for
all they had heard and seen.” These are the words used often by my predecessor
(Robert Close). A Holy Boldness is
what these shepherds had.
They unabashedly
proclaimed God as they returned to their flocks.
They didn’t stay at the feet of Jesus and
live their lives on their knees.
They went back to work with a new
perspective.
They returned to their lives with a boldness
to speak out.
They went back to their sheep and could
share the power of God present with them as Emmanuel.
They had the audacity to speak the truth of what they saw without any
hesitation and without any worries of what people would think of them.
Perhaps, this is the message of living like
a shepherd that means so much to me.
These fellas didn’t decide they had to go
and become something else.
They didn’t change their jobs after their
encounter with Jesus.
What they did was to receive the power of God to continue in their own backyard the message
of God and God’s love with a holy boldness.
Let us go from this day of kneeling at the
manger and live like a shepherd with courageous awareness, faithful curiosity and
holy boldness. Amen.
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