Please join me in prayer…
Lord God, may your peace and Holy Spirit fill this place. Open your scriptures to us, and may I clearly communicate that which you intend us to receive. May your Word take root and flourish within each and every one of us. Through it may we be strengthened and transformed by your unconditional, living, and limitless love for all of your Creation.
In Jesus Name, Amen.
I’ll begin with a quote I heard in Seminary. But, I’ve been unable to find the source or exact wording. So, I’m quoting from memory … plagiarizing and paraphrasing, all at the same time! What a Jewish scholar said (more or less) was, “Christianity did what Judaism never has. It envisioned God in an infant. This is an amazing thing.”
For me, his words are helpful in this era of darkness and uncertainty. Especially now, at the start of Advent. Itself a season of darkness in which we prepare ourselves for the days when hope is reborn, the hope that Jeremiah spoke of.
Infants can do nothing for themselves. For a newborn, that first breath (or any bodily function or sensation) is often a traumatic event. It’s all new, all unknown, it’s scary. They need help, they need comforting, they need nurturing. They need us.
So, why did God begin Jesus’ ministry in a position of absolute vulnerability? Jesus had no choice but to rely entirely upon others, upon us, for everything. Why did the Savior begin his earthly ministry as a helpless, fragile, infant?
Well, since I’m the one preaching this morning, I’ll tell you. … At least I’ll tell you what I think! But first, let’s step back a bit and consider the context of this birth to come.
Continue reading “Sermon: Out of Darkness”