Isaiah 63: 7-9
Matthew 2: 13-23
January 1, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“...an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, ‘Get up, take the child and his mother...”
Prayer: O God of new birth and new life, may we be granted both as we hear and ponder your word to us today. Amen.
Dreams. All of us dream. Some of us can’t remember our dreams at all the next morning. Some of us have dreams that are so vivid that it’s like the dream was for real. Some of our dreams are crazy weird, right?. Because you know, in your dreams you can do anything . Meet anybody.
I remember one of the homebound members at home at Community Church in Reading. 96-year-old Herman Landis. Herman used to tell me about the famous people he met in his dreams. He met Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter. He met Queen Elizabeth. Muhammed Ali. All in his dreams.
Evidently, some people meet God’s angels in their dreams. The Bible has numerous dream stories where God speaks in the dream or an angel of God speaks on God’s behalf. The Christmas Nativity story has Zachariah meeting the angel Gabriel who said that Elizabeth would give birth to John the Baptist. And Gabriel, of course, also came to Mary and announced the birth of Jesus. There’s also the magi who were told in a dream by an angel to go home by another way so that they would avoid telling King Herod where the baby Jesus was born. Which infuriated Herod.
And of course, there’s Joseph. Like his namesake thousand years before him, Joseph was a dreamer. First he dreams an angel told him not to be alarmed that Mary, his fiancé, was pregnant and not by him, which is alarming all by itself. And, he was to marry her anyway! If that was me, I think when I woke up in the morning I’d be like, “Whew! Thank God that was only a dream!” But, it wasn’t.
Then, in today’s reading, Joseph experiences not one, not two, but three dreams where angels tell him what to do and what not to do!
I love the way Matthew describes how Joseph responded. He didn’t go to his brother or his friends the next morning saying, “Whoa! I had the weirdest dream last night…” Nope. Matthew’s story says simply, “Then Joseph got up.” The dream was vivid enough. Real enough that he got up. He discerned it’s importance. He felt the urgency. He responded. He got up right away and took the child and Mary and got out of Dodge by night and went to Egypt.
Then after being in Egypt for a while, when the monster Herod died, and the threat to toddler Jesus’ life was over, another angelic dream takes place. And Matthew again simply says, “Then Joseph got up… took the child and his mother and went to the land of Israel.” And later, when Joseph is afraid that Herod’s son is now in power and is just as much of a threat, Joseph was warned in the third dream not to go near Jerusalem but to Nazareth in Galilee. And Matthew says, “He went… to the district of Galilee.”
In response to his dreams, Joseph got up. Joseph went. There was very little debate, it appears. Very little second guessing. Just a lot of trust and faith and discernment. Joseph was willing to bet everything that God’s word was right. There was no time to talk; only time to get up. Only time to act.
So, here’s what I think is important for us as we celebrate Christ’s birth and as we begin 2023. I feel like we have to have a lot of faith, trust, and discernment. And be willing to get up. Be willing to act.
Because God’s energy is constantly and abundantly present in our lives. We’ve affirmed that Christ is born as our Emmanuel, our God with us, right? Well, as such, God is always speaking to us, providing hints and clues as to God’s Presence, offering revelations and dreams that sometimes invites us to protect God’s interest, and other times are visions that help us see into God’s heart. I think God is doing this all the time.
Like Bryan Sirchio’s song that we’ve sung several times (I wish I would’ve had us sing it today…) These lyrics of Dream God’s Dream, give us a glimpse of God’s heart of a world where there is justice, and where everyone is free to build and grow and love and to simply have enough; the world will change when we dream God’s dream. Remember that? That’s a view of God’s heart.
Or how about the Christmas song I only heard a couple of times this year, My Grown Up Christmas List by David Foster (music) and Linda Thompson-Jenner (lyrics) where the lyrics envision God’s dreamworld ahead of time… no more lives torn apart, then wars would never start, and time would heal all hearts. And everyone would have a friend, and right will always win and love would never end. This is my grown-up Christmas list.
Don’t think for one second that God wasn’t intertwined in the hearts and minds of those composers when they were composing those songs. These are pictures of God’s heart, I believe. I think God’s energy was flowing through them whether they knew it or not.
God’s energy is flowing through all things all the time. It’s flowing through us. It’s flowing through our church. It’s intertwined in the things we’re involved with. It inspires us to praise God, to see and hear God’s wisdom being spoken.
And God’s flowing energy shares God’s dream, this vision ahead of time, of what our world is supposed to be like. Not only a world of justice and peace, but also a world of God’s salvation, where God and each one of us, and each one of everybody are connected with God and each other, where God and sinner are reconciled, as the carol sings. God’s clues to this are always there!
The question is do we notice? Perhaps we have to train our senses to discern the dream that God is sharing with us?
And then can we be a dream responder?
Kind of like being a first responder. First responders are trained to act immediately to crisis situations. Being a dream responder means acting immediately not just to crises but to any situation—in prayer, in thought, word, and deed. Asking how is God’s energy flowing through my current circumstances? Like if I receive an end of the year bonus, how might I be a dream responder and act to help make God’s dream a reality? Or, if I’m facing a personal crisis, or a stressful situation, how can I be a dream responder that reflects God’s dream of health and wholeness through me?
So, in order to be a dream responder, we have to have trust and faith and discernment. And then get up. And act.
And yeah, I get that there is evil in the world. I, too, question about how God can be intertwined in all things, even the destructive things. I believe God is Present, yes, but the powers that be are strongly resistant to God’s vision.
Even still, we have to be the ones to get up. With trust in God, faith and discernment in believing in and knowing God’s dream, we can act. We are the dream responders working in partnership with God’s Presence.
The powers that be do not want either a prophet or Christ/Messiah, whose message threatens their power. For people addicted to power, nothing has changed from the time of Herod sacrificing hundreds of children. Because the powers that be are always trying to have the most power for themselves, and at all costs, will try to stop any threat. Even now millions are being sacrificed to maintain the status quo as powerful countries think about barring the door to refugees, for example. Still, God is at work. Through us. People of faith. By acting. By opening our doors and hearts and welcoming everyone, and making every part of our ministry inclusive and accessible to everyone.
Isaiah speaks of a new age in which salvation will come through the presence of God’s Beloved who became our Savior. Presence and relationship—the touch of God—will save the people. Yes, we must mend our ways, but our hope is not solely in our own efforts but also in the wondrous grace of God who dwells with us and within us and brings forth marvels out of the messiness of our lives. There is hope because God is working to make God’s dream a reality on earth, good will to all, and salvation lived by all.
Whaddya say we get up, and act, and help make God’s dream become a reality in this new year? Amen.
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