"This Thing That Has Happened "
The Nativity of Our Lord
Christmas Eve
December 24, 2011
Luke 2:1-20

The shepherds talk in a very Lukan way. They talk about something that
has happened. That’s one of the main things Luke sets out to do in
writing his Gospel account. See, there were these things that happened
and Luke set out to research them, to get the facts down on paper, to
make them known to the world. The shepherds in the fields weren’t
interested in that sort of thing. They were taking care of their
sheep. But when something extraordinary happens, well, that gets their
attention. And then they start doing a Lukan thing; talking about what
happened. Going over to research it. Okay, for them it was more just
simply seeing the thing that had happened. And then they did another
Lukan thing and started telling people about what they had seen. And
even that, that’s just a natural thing we do when we see something
extraordinary.

You and I are here this evening because something happened.
Specifically, this thing happened that everybody knows about but not
everybody believes. Indeed, some of you here this evening may not even
believe it but you’re here because one of the things people do at
Christmas is go to church. Have you ever thought about those
shepherds? Do you think all of them believed in God? Did the angels
only appear to God-believing shepherds? Or did they just go to any old
shepherds that were out watching their flocks by night? We can’t know
for sure so there’s no need to speculate. But it doesn’t talk about
their belief or unbelief. It does talk about their reaction to the
news. Let’s go see it! Afterward there was definitely belief there. In
seeing the little baby in that manger they had come into the presence
of the Living God. They believed and glorified and praised God for all
they had heard and seen. Luke then tells us the reason for this, it
was just as it had been told them.

Now you and I are here tonight. We don’t see God wiggling around or
cooing in a manger. It’s a very real temptation for us to say that we
have not seen God. Apart from a relatively few people in history who
lived at the time Jesus walked the earth for thirty odd years, no one
can say they saw Jesus in the flesh, as a human being who walked and
talked on this earth. What is it that we have to hold on to that is
just as certain as what those shepherds had? Since we cannot see what
they saw, can we believe with the same certainty they did? Can we
praise and glorify God to the extent that they did even though we have
not seen what they saw?

May I suggest to you that what we have to hold on to that is just as
certain as what those shepherds did is the reason Luke gives. It had
been told them and then they found it to be exactly as it had been
told them. What is it we have? Well, we actually have something they
didn’t. We have the Word of God in its fullness. We not only have the
Old Testament, as they did, but we also have the New Testament, which
they did not have at that time.

We have something that is along the lines of the angels making known
to the shepherds what had happened. What we have is the Bible telling
us something that has happened, and when we see it, we experience the
same thing the shepherds did. We come into the presence of the Living
God, Jesus in the flesh. What has happened is not just one event and
they are not just one-time events. Jesus being born was a one-time
event that made quite an impact on those shepherds. What happened to
those shepherds afterward? Very likely they returned to the vocation
of shepherding their sheep.

Did they continue to believe? Did they continue to partake of the
riches of the grace of God by the regular hearing of the Word of God
in worship? We don’t know, but it’s worth thinking about those
shepherds and what they saw as the reason they believed. They saw the
Living God in the flesh, it was exactly as it had been told them by
the angels. But what was the reason they continued to believe? It
could only be by the grace of God. They didn’t keep showing up to the
home of Mary and Joseph so they could get another look at the cute
little baby Jesus. It would only be by being in the Word of God and
His grace that comes through the Word of God.

This gives us the perspective we need to see where we’re at and what
it is that we can see that we have that gives us the same certainty
they had. What is it the Word of God tells us that happened? First, it
tells us exactly what we heard it say in the Gospel reading: Jesus was
born. God came in the flesh. He was born of a woman and was raised in
a family with Joseph and Mary His parents. He was born as we were
born. He took on human flesh as we have human flesh. He did this
because our being born in human flesh is being born into sin. He is
God and without sin but has taken on our human flesh so that He could
take on our sin. What the Bible tells us is that He has taken our sin
onto Himself in suffering God’s punishment of sinners. It tells us
this happened. Jesus took the place of every person in His suffering
and death on the cross.

This is the Good News. It’s the greatest and most important event in
history. It’s why Jesus was born and why we celebrate Christmas. But
we haven’t yet looked at what exactly it is that the Bible tells us
that has happened that we ourselves have seen and where we ourselves
come into the presence of God in the flesh. It’s in Baptism and the
Lord’s Supper. When you have experienced these things you have
experienced what those shepherds did when they were in the presence of
Jesus lying in a manger.

In fact, what you have experienced is of even more consequence. This
is not to take away the amazing event of being in the presence of
Jesus as the shepherds had. It’s just taking the Word of God at its
word. Peter says an amazing thing about us in distinction to the
shepherds and everyone else who saw Jesus walking around: “we have the
prophetic word more fully confirmed.” We don’t need to see Jesus lying
in a manger. It’s not incumbent upon Jesus to show us Himself before
our eyes healing someone or preaching the Word. What we need is what
we see. We witness God in Baptism. We come face to face with Him in
His Holy  Supper. We are in the presence of the Living God when we are
making use of His Gospel in the Sacraments, Baptism and the Lord’s
Supper. It’s through those things that we believe and in turn rejoice
as the shepherds did.

This thing happened. Jesus was born. God came in the flesh. He lived
and took our place on the cross. These things happened, although you
and I never saw them. But we don’t believe because we have or haven’t
seen them. We believe because that same Lord has come to us in the
proclamation of His Gospel and in Baptism and in His Holy Supper. And
just like the shepherds we can do a very Lukan thing and tell others
what we have seen and heard and received.

Have you ever noticed how Luke concludes his Christmas Gospel account?
He tells us that the “shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God
for all they had heard and seen.” This isn’t just an informational bit
simply because it happened. It tells us about life. It tells us about
who we are as Christians. It shows us that when God makes Himself
known to you you have reason to rejoice, to glorify God and praise
Him. And how do you do that? By living out your vocation, in all the
many ways that manifests itself. As a father, as a mother. As husband,
as a wife. As a neighbor, as an accountant, who knows, there may even
a shepherd among us tonight. As a friend, as a teacher, as brother, as
a sister, as a son, as a daughter. Simply, as one God has called to
serve in many ways.

Just as it was with those shepherds, it is with you. They returned to
serving God because what they had heard and seen was “as it had been
told them.” It is with you as well. Amen.


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
_______________________________________________
Sermons mailing list
[email protected]
http://cat41.org/mailman/listinfo/sermons

Reply via email to