2 Samuel 7: 1-11, 16
Luke 1: 26-38
December 24, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“And now, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David.”
Prayer: Holy Most High God, we are anticipating the birth of your Son once again. May your promise be born in us. In the name of the Christ-child we pray, Amen.
You may recall, I have a workshop in the basement of our house. Last week, I finished a toy chest for our one grandson Hayden who lives in Pittsburgh. But, try as I might, every time I work on a project, I cannot, for the life of me, keep the dust from getting everywhere! I used to think, well, dust comes with the territory. It’s a workshop. It’s a basement.
But, Barb has spoken… when you finish this toy chest, before you do another project, you must build walls to enclose your workshop. I know. I need to do it. So, I made a promise to Barb and myself. I will get it done. Sometime. Walls will be built because of the dirt and dust. And, in the midst of the dirt and dust.
So I started designing. Making plans. Envisioning where the walls would go. Where the doors will be. Do I need a window? What about lighting? Must I update the electrical? What about the space on the other side of the workshop? Walls? I need to consider that for potentially finishing the basement altogether in the future. Holy schmoly! It’s a lot! And, it’s going to take a long time! But, I can picture it. I promised it. And someday, it will be done, God-willing.
My basement promise reminded me of our Bible passages for this morning. From 2 Samuel we read that instead of David promising to build God a physical house, which God doesn’t need at all, God instead promised to make David into a figurative house, which means a dynasty, or a realm that would “last forever.” In other words, God promised that a king from David’s bloodline would eventually rule forever.
And back in those days, kings were “anointed” with oil in a sacred ceremony. Which is echoed even today when King Charles was anointed with oil as King of England last May in a sacred ceremony that’s part of the coronation, but is not aired on public television.
Anyway, sadly, not too many kings following David were good kings like David was. David was considered a good king, because he was after the heart of God. Most of his bloodline descendants as kings, however, failed miserably in the God department. And, when Israel was conquered by Assyria three centuries later, and Judah later was conquered by Babylon almost 135 years after Israel fell, no king ruled over Israel or Judah after that.
So, for the next 570 years, generation after generation, people held on to the hope that God’s promised “Anointed One” would come. And watch this—the word for “anointed one” in Hebrew is “Messiah.” In Greek, it is “Christ.”
And while I’m on translations, the name “Jesus” or “Yeshua” in Hebrew translates into English as “One who saves.” So, connecting the dots, when we say Jesus Christ, or Jesus Messiah, we are saying that Jesus is God’s promised Anointed One, the One who saves us spiritually. The One who can make all things new in our hearts.
So, on the one hand, when Jesus was born, God was birthing a long ago promise that a bloodline descendant from the house of David would someday rule God’s realm.
We have that in Jesus. And on the other hand, in Jesus, God was also birthing another promise that Jesus, the Anointed One, would reveal the spiritual saving grace of God that has no end. This is the new realm of God. This is the house of Davide that lasts forever. This is our unending new reality. It’s is the water we swim in. It’s the air we breathe in. And the love we share.
So, as we’ve been anticipating a new birth in our lives this Christmas, I’ve been thinking about how this reality of unending saving grace that we live in … this reality of redemption, is a powerful force that is birthing God’s promise right now. How things that can keep us from getting at God can be forgiven, or reconciled, or removed right now. And if they can’t be forgiven just yet, or reconciled or removed right away, how God gives birth to the promise that there will be strength to face each day, each hour, each minute as we live with those things, waiting for the day when they are not a burden on our hearts anymore. That day will come. That’s so God.
The reality where Jesus, as God’s Anointed, invites everyone to be part of God’s spiritual family, if desired. In this redeemed reality, everyone can find that God is engaged with us every step of the way in our lives. God is our Emmanuel—God with us. That’s so God.
If the way that God seems to favor prostitutes, or tax collectors, or the lowly who have faith, like Mary, or the outcast like the Samaritans, or the blind, deaf, or lame is any indication, then God welcomes each of us. With all of our imperfections. With our hangups. With all our mistakes and missteps. God’s grace is the promise that is birthed. That’s so God.
All of that is amazing. But what struck me so deeply this week was how Gabriel said that Mary will conceive in her womb and bear a son named ‘the One who saves.’ Because here’s what I believe. I believe God promises to conceive and give birth in the barest of places of our lives, in the womb of humanity’s brokenness, in the muck of our human existence, in the accumulating dirt and dust of our lives, the One who saves you and me. The Son of the Most High. God wants to be born mostly in those kinds of places in our lives, I think. The promise of the One who saves can be born in any one of our trouble spots, for nothing will be impossible with God. That’s so God.
So, as we get ready for tonight’s celebration of Jesus’ birth, I invite you to anticipate a new birth. Can you picture it? The birth of God’s promise to have the One who saves be born in you right now. And celebrate it tonight. And may we, like Mary say, “Let it be with me according to your word.” Amen.
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