Numbers 6:22-27
Galatians 4:4-7
Rev. Fa Lane
December 31, 2023
Prayer: O God of ancient blessing, your servant Mary pondered in her heart the treasured words spoken about her Son, our Savior Jesus Christ. Prepare our hearts to receive his Spirit, that our tongues may confess him Lord. Amen.
It is still the Christmas season. We are done waiting for the baby to arrive in the manger, so, Good Christian folk, Rejoice, Christ is born.
The light of the world which we desperately need has come to shine upon those who walk in darkness and that’s good news.
In the carol that we just sang, that God has opened heaven’s door and we are blessed for ever more. That’s good news to speak about.
In the Luke passage for today, we learn of two old wise people, Simeon and Anna, who speak words of insight about Jesus foretelling what they see in him. It was important that they spoke the words of truth into his life. We would all benefit from hearing what others see in us, our strengths and qualities given by God. These can be good news too.
The talent and character within us, if we were to let our lives speak, share God’s good news to the world. Can we enter the invitation that Oriah Mountain Dream writes of to share our hearts’ longing, to declare through actions what god-given dreams we have for fulfilling lives. Can we confess what makes our hearts swell with joy and pride without cautioning ourselves to be realistic or careful lest we are judged.
Can we find the words to speak of our faith with candor and humility, with curiosity for the other person and without judgement or fear that our listener may have a different experience and our’s might somehow be ‘wrong’?
We’ve just celebrated that God has come to us with wonderful Christmas eve services. Now, we find ourselves at that awkward time in the year, today being News Year’s Eve. We hardly really know what day it is with time off from school and work, and the store hours have been different. Next week, we’ll have the procession of the Kings, those Magi from the area we now called Turkey.
But this week, Mary and Joseph are taking Jesus to the Temple for the rite of purification (for the mother) and presentation (of the baby). They were looking to the future, as are we on the brink of a new year. The tender young boy will be circumcised as was expected of all Jewish boys in the Abrahamic tradition. This was one of the ways that the Jews identified themselves as God’s people. I wonder what resolutions we might tonight that will help identify us as God’s people.
As in the poem we sent out this week in the newsletter, how do we live out the Christmas story of good news?
Can you imagine being Mary or Joseph, regular people, who did not have wealth, but were tending to all that was expected of them under the law. They were actually under two kinds of law; the law of Moses which required them to take their eight-day old baby boy from Bethlehem to the temple in Jerusalem. And, remember why they were in Bethlehem, because the law of Rome had required them to travel from Nazareth to Bethlehem to be registered as citizens.
The lectionary readings for today include Luke’s continuation of the birth story; but there is also a reading from Galatians where Paul makes an argument that Gentile followers of Jesus are adopted, similar to how minor children were adopted and cared for, and through this adoption the Gentiles become heirs of God’s blessings. This is good news.
But, how were they to be identified as believers of this Jewish Messiah if not to follow Jewish law? That must have been the question in Luke’s day as we recall Jesus came to the Jews first and the Law of Moses is what they knew to establish their identity as God’s people.
As Christians we celebrate the nativity story where God comes to us in the form of a baby and is a gift to all. That’s what the angels said, the babe will be a savior for all. We speak of this gift with wonder and amazement. Lest there is any doubt, Paul speaks of the gift of adoption where we are receivers of the Abrahamic promise too.
The gift of God’s grace liberates us to be fully a child of God. God is with us, within us, and surrounding us at all times. There is nothing we can do to separate ourselves from the love of God. This is good news to speak about.
This week’s Sunday is often thought of as a low “Sunday, But, hear this good news: Paul reminds us that we are all covered by the grace of God. No one is overlooked, deterred or denied. We rejoice that Christ who would be our savior, our teacher and who would sacrifice his life for us, was God who came to be with us. Let us give thanks for God claiming us Gentiles in an adoption through grace.
The question remains about how we identify as God’s people without following Jewish Law? Can we live a life of devotion as seen in Simeon who longed to see the Lord’s Messiah before he died? Or live like Anna, the prophet who never left the temple but worshipped there day and night? No, probably not.
When you believe that God has claimed you, is within you, informing and transforming you for the better. When you feel connected to the source of Light, the power that innervates all things, you are compelled to witness to the light of Christ in our world which is often a dark and scary place for some of us.
If you accept this gift of God’s grace, God redemption, will you demonstrate your adoption through Christ in the way you live? As Parker Palmer has titled his book “Let Your Life Speak”. Listen to the voice of vocation within you, let it direct you to the places you serve and share God’s love.
God sends a son to be with us, so we don’t have to journey alone. Simeon and Anna spoke about this baby Jesus as though they already knew him; God had revealed it to them. It is such a blessing to have people like Simeon and Anna in your life. People who see gifts in you that you may be unaware of. People who can share light where you may only see a void of darkness. And, you may be a ‘seer’ for someone else.
I encourage you to speak into someone’s life the God given gifts that you see in them. Help them to be seen for who they are, not labeled by cultural norms but seen with a deeper gaze into their God given talents and purpose. Enlighten them to their belovedness.
Simeon and Anna did this for Jesus and his parents. They met him as an infant and foretold of his greatness. If you have this gift of seeing, share it with a loving and generous heart. The world needs for each of us to hear words of blessing and promise, so please speak them whenever you can.
Paul wrote to the church in Galatia to say, people don’t have to assimilate to another law or culture. You don’t have to follow others’ customs or expectations. There is no nationality, or gender, nor age or physical challenge that can separate us from God. We are God’s people because we believe in God who calls us.
God draws you in and places a call upon your life to action, to pastoral care, to advocacy, to ministry. Who are we to place limitations on one another? Female clergy have heard God’s call for generations and been denied leadership in the church for centuries. African Americans and the LGBTQIA community and people who are differently abled have also experienced discrimination limiting their God given gifts.
I am grateful to the Rev. Yvonne Delk — a renowned leader within the UCC who traces her heritage through the Afro-Christian Convention, the fifth stream of the UCC. She was the first Black female ordained in the UCC for the witness she gave of God in her life.
Sadly, many denominations have barred or spurned gay people from gaining access to the church and even more discrimination when seeking ecclesiastical ordination. But, what they might not have seen is that we have denied tremendous gifts and leadership in the Church because cultural norms set the limits with disregard for God’s call on someone’s life.
But Paul reminds us of the grounds for spiritual freedom and equality among God’s people. God is the Redeemer. No human can deny you what God gives you freely.
We are encouraged to live with a new birth in our spirit at Christmas. Listen for God in your life just as a newborn becomes familiar with her parents’ voices and trusts their guiding words. Listen for the prophecies spoken into your life, by the wizened Simeons and Annas of our time.
We are at liberty to commune with God and be called by God to bear the fruit of the Spirit in our work among thes people on earth. We have the continuous task of extending a gracious invitation of acceptance and freedom to the ones who might be considered as outsiders, unacceptable, or impure. Let us not establish barriers or criterion that would keep anyone from knowing that God loves them. Rather, treat them as siblings, adopted into the family of God. The only criteria to meet is to accept this Divine grace and live as if in the image of Gods’ love.
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