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St. Mark's Lutheran Church

 

  2008

 Sermons



Dez 28 - The Costly Gift

Dez 24 - The Whole Story

Dez 21 - Disrupted!

Dez 21 - Blessed be God, anyway

Dez 14 - Signpost People

Dez 7 - Turn Around!

Nov 30 - Lament

Nov 23 - Seeing Jesus

Nov 16 - Treasure

Nov 9 - Good News, or Bad?

Okt 12 - Now We Join in Celebration

Okt 5 - Is All Lost?

Sep 27 - No reason to brag

Sep 21 - At the Right Time

Sep 14 - The Holy Cross of Christ has set us free!

Sep 7 - Responsibility for One Another?

Aug 31 - Extreme?

Aug 24 - Questions

Aug 17 - Inside, Outside, Upside Down

Aug 10 - Against Giants

Aug 3 - You Are What You Eat

Jul 27 - Whose Treasure?

Jul 20 - ...and the Harvest

Jul 13 - God, Seed, Growth, Harvest

Jul 6 - Burden and Yoke

Jun 29 - The Big Question

Jun 22 - Death and Life

Jun 15 - Priestly and Holy

Jun 8 - Lord, Have Mercy

Jun 1 - And it will be hard

Mai 25 - Just One More....

Mai 18 - Good...very good!

Mai 11 - Transformed!

Mai 4 - It's a battle..............

Apr 27 - In the conversation

Apr 20 - We are...we will be....

Apr 13 - Worship and Life

Apr 6 - Just Talking

Mrz 30 - Resurrection of the Body

Mrz 23 - This New Day

Mrz 22 - Blessed be God!

Mrz 21 - It is finished!

Mrz 21 - Died, For Me!

Mrz 20 - This Do!

Mrz 16 - Good News for those who flunk the test

Mrz 9 - To Laugh, Yes, To Laugh!

Mrz 2 - Together in Christ - Glenn Lunger

Mrz 2 - Why?

Feb 24 - Bigger than we thought

Feb 17 - Abraham the Player, Nicodemus the Spectator

Feb 10 - Saying NO

Feb 6 - In deep conversation with the Father

Feb 3 - How close to God?

Jan 27 - What? Who? Where? When?

Jan 20 - Behold, the Lamb who takes....

Jan 13 - It Just Might Happen

Jan 6 - The Gift of You


2009 Sermons    

      2007 Sermons

The Costly Gift

 

Holy Innocents - December 28, 2008

The Rev. Kenneth R. Elkin

 

One grumpy observer said:

“I like Christmas.

I like Christmas with lots of sweetness.

I like Christmas for one day.”

 

Why is that?

Now that Christmas is finally here, why are we so anxious to get on to something else?

Could it be that we really don't want to take time to think a bit more deeply about the gift of Christmas because we might discover just how costly a gift it is --

--costly for God to give.

--costly for us to receive,

-- costly in another way for us to refuse.

 

In the next few minutes, let's take up the challenge to ponder more deeply the mystery of God's gifts and our reactions to those gifts.

 

The text of hymn 74 goes like this:

A stable lamp is lighted

            whose glow shall wake the sky.

The stars shall lend their voices

            and every stone shall cry.

Yet he shall be forsaken

            and yielded up to die.

The sky shall groan and darken

            and every stone shall cry.

And every stone shall cry

            for stony hearts of men;

God's blood upon the spearhead,

            God's love refused again.

 

That last line catches it well:

God's love, so freely and wonderfully given in Christ at Bethlehem is refused again and again.

The 12 days of celebration at Christmas are marred by the NO of rejection.

And that is what we are especially remembering on this 4th day of Christmas.

 

The death of the children of Bethlehem points an accusing finger not only at king Herod, but also at all who violently try to exterminate God's Good News.

As we listen to this story there are three things that are hard for us to take.

 

(1) As always, the weak bear the sins of the strong.

That is certainly the case with these children.

They had never done anything deserving violent death.

They were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time, and Herod's anger was vented on them.

There was a saying in those days,

“It is better to be Herod's pig than Herod's son.”

The meaning is this:

            A pig might be safe if Herod was trying to keep kosher law but any  person within range, even in Herod's own household, might not be safe from his wrath.

He slaughtered 3 of his own sons, several wives, court officials, hundreds of Pharisees and other leaders, and thousands of ordinary people; anyone whom his deranged mind thought might represent a threat to him.

It is quite within the realm of possibility that Herod could order the youth of an entire village to be killed.

Are we shocked and surprised?

There are so many other instances.

I remember seeing on every street corner in the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem posters which remind the few remaining Christians in the city never to forget the slaughter of untold thousands of Armenian Christians in Turkey that began on April 24, 1915 while the rest of the world was engaged and distracted by WWI.

The tensions exacerbated in eastern  Turkey continue to this day.

 

The nation of Sudan has been torn by civil war for the last 20 years in which Christians in the south have been systematically starved and tortured by Muslims from the north.

It is partly religious and partly economic and political, but it is completely real and deadly.

Again, the young suffer greatly because of things over which they have no control.

 

Out of sheer hate, Hindu mobs in India have been torching whole villages and churches that have been Christian for generations.

Week after week in the past few years,  we have been remembering one or more of these situations in the Prayer of the Church.

It would be much easier on us all to simply omit that and keep everything nice and sweet, but it is a part of human life in our times just as it has always been.

Jeremiah hears Rachel screaming from the grave for the children of Israel taken into exile, most of them never to return and many of them dying enroute.

Matthew hears the same cry when Herod kills the children of Bethlehem.

It echoes in our ears as well when we hear of situation after situation around the world in our days.

 

(2) The second thing that we notice is that even in dismal circumstances, the tiniest bit of light gleams like a lighthouse.

 

Christ was not extinguished by the entire armed might of Herod, and he escapes to grow up.

Even when the government of Pilate seems to finally destroy Jesus with his crucifixion, the light of Resurrection morning signals a very different outcome.

 

We have learned that the Lutheran churches in Siberia survived 70 years of official oppression.

It was a long nightmare of fear and intimidation during which the rest of the world heard nothing of their lives and struggles,

but now we know that it was the grandmothers who kept the faith and passed it on quietly until the day finally came when it could be shown openly again, when the people could gather publicly for worship, and even a seminary could be re-established.

 

During Advent, we remembered St. Lucy, whose name means “light” and whose brave example has never been forgotten across 17 centuries.

 

We have heard of resolute Christians in our own day, ordinary persons and leaders alike, who have continued to bear witness to Jesus at great personal cost, but with joy nonetheless.

Their example shall not be forgotten, because the source of their confidence is not in themselves, but in the Lord Jesus who lives in spite of death.

 

(3) The third marvel from our Gospel story today is that God does not forget even those whom the world labels as insignificant.

 

Some scholars have gone through Roman records looking for evidence that would support Matthew's accounts of the slaughter of the Innocents and the flight of Mary and Joseph with the child Jesus to Egypt.

They cannot find any documentary evidence, and thus conclude that it didn't happen.

Their conclusion may be too quick.

It may be just as likely that the story which Matthew has given us is the only one written about these things because the early Christians were the only ones who cared enough to write them down and remember them.

This kind of capricious murder was just so common a kind of thing.

After all, what are a few kids knocked off compared with the great king like Herod?

Quite a lot, says Matthew!

 

The Herod-type people of our world spend much time on themselves, and in rejecting God's presence.

But the Lord spends his time lavishly on others:  the weak, the powerless, and the unloved.

“Let the little children come to me,” Jesus says, ”for of such is the kingdom of heaven.”

As inconvenient as some think it to be, I cannot hear these stories without thinking of those tiny children who never get a chance at life because of the government-approved and socially sanctioned extermination of abortion.

 

It is profoundly embarrassing to me that  our  church-provided medical plan has the nerve to call that “health care” instead of the sanctioned homicide that I believe it to be.

 

And surely Rachel weeps for them as well.

 

The song of the angels to the shepherds only a few verses earlier is notoriously difficult to translate,

but whichever way it gets translated, it concerns the peace, the wholeness, brought by the birth of this Jesus, God's coming  to us enfleshed, for the sake of those whom he favors.

We know from other passages in the Gospels that his favor is upon those who are the most vulnerable, those receiving the least regard, those with no one to speak for them.

Surely the victims of the Bethlehem slaughter are joined by the born and unborn victims of our days  as ones in this category marked by Jesus' special  interest and care.

And if they are in God's special care, shouldn't they be in ours as well?

 

We did say that it is a costly gift, didn't we?

Costly for the Lord God who gives, and costly also for those who would share that gift with a hostile world.

And it is Good News that the Lord spends his time lavishly on the weak, the powerless, and the unlovely, and that includes you and me:

--He supports the weak who bear the sins of the strong,

--He is the light which shines through the lives of the persecuted,

--He remembers those whom the world would throw away.

And He will have the last word about all of this life that we live.

 

This is not the sugary part of the Christmas message, but it is an important part of it.

May we learn that the angels' song is the truest song of all: Glory to God.  Amen.

 

Please note: The preceding sermon is provided as a resource for the thought, prayer, and meditation of the members and friends of St. Mark's. It is the residue of a verbal event, and thus it does not have academic footnotes and other details that would be expected in a written document. The writer gladly acknowledges the prior thought and work of many Christians before him.