A sermon about receiving God's gift of grace upon grace at Christmas.
Ephesians 3: 1-12 Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
John 1: 10-18 January 5, 2025
“From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace. The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.”
Prayer: May we have a deep Epiphany, O God. Please help us see your light in our lives and let it shine from us today and all through the new year. Amen.
Well, today is day number 12 of the Twelve Days of Christmas, right? And the 12th day’s gift is 12 drummers drumming. You know, according to USA Today, if you were to buy each of the 12 gifts, the cost would be $49,263. That’s a 5.4% over last year. And if you were to buy the gifts repeatedly, like how you would sing the song with each line repeated, the total cost this year would be $209,272! (“Inflation hits the ‘12 Days of Christmas’ in 2024: A Visual Guide, USAToday.com, retrieved January 3, 2025). Mind blown! Obviously, none of us would go to such an extreme. But in conversation someone will likely ask you, “What’dya get for Christmas?” And especially little kids, like our grand kids, they are quick to show and tell you what cool gifts they got. And how you have to help them put those gifts together. Which is what makes Christmas special.
Of course, giving gifts is a tradition throughout the 12 days of Christmas. Even the Magi brought the 2-year-old Jesus gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. To which Mary probably said, “Um, thanks guys, but we sure could use some more big boy pants!” Despite what little kids will say, despite the material gifts which are given, that is not the point. Because Paul and the gospel writers are not interested in worldly gifts. They are interested in what God gives the world. Because God is the original gift giver. The original Source of all gift-giving.
Which makes me think it’s important to distinguish between what is the Source and what reflects the Source.
It’s like when you look up into the night sky and you see the moon. It’s a beautiful sight. And on a clear night with a full moon, there is an astonishing amount of light at night. I used to love it when at Hartman Center, I could go on a night hike without a flashlight because of the full moon.
But you know, the moon only reflects the light of the sun. No one would say that the moon itself is a source of light. Because it doesn’t generate light at all. If there is no sunlight shining on it, the moon would look like a big, dark hole in the night sky. The sun is the source of light, and the moon merely reflects that light which is what we see.
Same sort of idea with Paul. Paul was like a moon. He was emphatic that even though he was the worst among Jesus’ followers, but as a converted apostle, he still only reflected light of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the main source of spiritual enlightenment. When he shared the gospel message to the newly converted Gentiles in Ephesus, he knew he was not the Source. God in Christ was the Source.
Same thing with John the Baptist, John the Baptist was like a moon. He reflected the light of God.
The gospel of John clearly states that John the Baptist was not the true Source of Light. Instead he came to testify to the Light coming into the world. His ministry was great, but it reflected the God’s light.
So, I wonder if we would do well to remember that whenever we give gifts to each other. We are reflecting the true Source of gift-giving—God gifting us and the rest of the world. Maybe that’s an epiphany moment?
Now in all fairness, God started out by giving the Hebrew people, the Israelites a law and a land through Moses. That was a covenantal agreement. The law through Moses was supposed to lead and guide people to a healthy relationship with God, and to a compassionate and just society. A role model nation for other nations to look at and follow. For all time.
But, the people were confounded by their idols and lies, and their worship of false gods. They couldn’t keep their part of the Covenant. So, God put together a new Covenant in Jesus Christ, one that didn’t replace the old, but instead fulfilled the old covenant.
And Paul, and Peter, and other apostle’s great insight into all this was that the new covenant was not just for the Hebrew people, but for Gentiles, too. All the non-Jewish people of the world! It’s like this new covenant made everyone a part of the body of Christ.
So, in other words, the law from Moses was like a moon. It reflected God, the Source, the sun! It partially shone lights for the way. The true new Covenant fulfilled in Jesus Christ is like the sun, or the Son! And this new covenant was God giving light to the world that previously was like a mystery. So now, at Christmastime, we affirm that God is gifting the world! And so, I’m here to ask all of us the question—What did you get for Christmas? —and to remind us and myself of the answer: we get grace upon grace. We get grace and truth that enlightens the heart and mind. Grace that gives us bold access to God, something even following the law precisely could not do.
Grace and truth that helps us see what the plan of God is—that the Word became flesh and lived among us, and preached forgiveness of sins and also fed the hungry and healed the sick and raised the dead.
Pastor Nadia Bolz Weber wrote that the Word of God in human form showed us “what God looks like, not in some ethereal alternate spiritual plane, but right here in the midst of our physical, embodied earthling reality. Jesus said here’s what being born of water and spirit looks like… it looks like not worrying about what we’re to eat or drink; it looks like loving other people who, like us, will die; it looks like touching human flesh as if it’s holy instead of worrying that it’s unclean, and it looks like what we are about to do: like breaking bread and drinking wine with all the wrong people [and all the right ones, too, italics mine]” (“In The Beginning”: A Sermon On The Occasion Of Paula’s Baptism | Nadia Bolz Weber, retrieved January 3, 2025). God is for the world.
I take this to mean that there is grace in knowing that our missteps and mistakes do not define us. And there is truth in that we are defined as children of God.
There is grace in knowing that we are not held accountable for our inherent ability to make something, anything, especially ourselves more important than God in our lives. The new covenantal truth of grace says we are forgiven for that ability and are born anew by the will of God, held accountable by each other to live a new life. We are, as Jesus told the woman who was spared from being stoned, to go and sin no more.
There is grace in knowing that God is accessible to all. As I was writing this sermon, I looked outside and saw that it was snowing pretty much. And it occurred to me there is grace in believing that the love of Christ is not dolled out in small amounts, like a small piece of bread only to sinners. Because the truth is that the love of God is shed broadly, like the snowflakes falling everywhere, or like the seeds the Sower sows extravagantly, or like the manna from heaven that fell and provided food for everyone.
These are spiritual gifts God gives each of us. This is what God gives the world. I think this is really what we got for Christmas, and what we continue to receive well past Christmas.
And maybe that’s the best news of all... that you and I are the receivers of such grace and truths!
So, the next question is: Can we be God’s agents of what we got or Christmas? God’s agent of grace, mercy, forgiveness, and love? Can we be like the moon that reflects the light of the Son?
So I encourage us—as God’s agents, let’s keep on giving God’s Christmas gifts. On the 12th day. Into Epiphany, and beyond. What a great way to start the new year. Amen.
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