Sermon for Epiphany 3A

 

 

The Text: Matthew 4:12-23

 

MATTHEW 4:12
Jesus, having heard that John had been imprisoned, withdrew into Galilee. 13And having left Nazareth He went and lived in Capernaum by the seaside in the region of Zebulun and Naphtali, 14in order that it may be fulfilled what had been said through Isaiah the prophet:

          15Land of Zebulun and land of Naphtali,

          way of the sea across from the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles—

          16The people dwelling in darkness and gloom have seen a great light

          And among those dwelling in the field of the shadow of death

          A light has risen for them

17From then Jesus began to preach and to say, “Repent! For the Kingdom of Heaven is near.” 18Then walking beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon called Peter and Andrew, his brother, casting a large fish net into the sea, for they were fishermen. 19And Jesus said to them ‘Come, follow me and I will make you fishers of people.’ 20And they immediately left their nets and followed Him. 21And moving on from there He saw two other brothers, James the son of Zebedee and John his brother, in the boat with their father Zebedee, repairing their nets, and Jesus called them. 22And they immediately left the boat and their father and followed Him. 23And Jesus went throughout all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and preaching the Good News of the Kingdom and healing every sickness and every infirmity among the people.

Apparently, as seen from space, Las Vegas is the brightest city in the world. In New York City, Times Square is home to the ABC ‘SuperSign’ a whopping 3,685-square foot screen with wavy LED ribbons. The Eiffel Tower in France is illuminated by 20,000 bulbs. Closer to home the light towers of the MCG have a total of 844 2000 Watt lamps. Each have an individual angle that is computer generated to provide maximum coverage of the arena without any shadowed areas or dark spots. A few years ago, Sydney’s cloudy night sky was seemingly turned into bright day when the city ushered in the New Year with 7 tonnes of fireworks including 1000 that were launched from the Opera House sails, as well as glittering waterfalls of fire that cascaded over the harbour. This paled into insignificance when compared to Dubai’s Guinness World Record effort in which over half a million fireworks were used spanning 94 kilometres of the Dubai Coast, costing nearly $7 million.

All this light in the world – it is not true light. The world is still in darkness—the darkness of greed, selfishness, broken homes, violence, theft, destruction, substance abuse, injustice and exploitation…and everything else that comes with worshipping the self as number 1. And so these man-made lights are a symbol of the extravagance and decadence that place the self on a pedestal to be served with whatever society wants to be served with.

A few years ago it was questioned by one mainstream newspaper why millions habitually flock to parties and what they actually celebrate when the same selfishness characterised by injustice and violence and family and social breakdown continues and calamity and strife surround us on a daily basis. Really isn’t this the picture we hear of from the prophet Isaiah cited by Matthew today?

The people of the Land of Zebulun and Naphtali are dwelling in darkness and gloom—God’s chosen people, the Jews, as well as Gentiles, were in darkness, error, unrighteousness—that 3 letter ‘s’ word that dare not be mentioned: sin. The people are ‘living’—that is, barely existing—in the state of sin, and therefore dwelling in the field of the shadow of death. That was the situation of the human race during the time of Isaiah’s prophecy. It was the situation when Matthew wrote…we see that with the opening verse of our text: John the Baptist had been imprisoned by Herod because John was faithful to God’s Word and reproved Herod for unlawfully taking Herodias, the wife of his brother Herod Philip I. On Herod’s birthday, Herodias’s daughter Salome danced before the king and his guests. Her dancing pleased Herod so much that in his drunkenness he promised to give her anything she desired. Prompted by her mother, she asked for the head of John the Baptist on a platter. Although Herod was appalled by the request, he reluctantly agreed and had John beheaded in prison. What had John the Baptist done? Faithfully proclaimed God’s Word.

As our nation celebrates its greatness and the achievements of its people today, how much room will be made for public thanksgiving to God for His blessings? For all our greatness as a nation, the Australia I see is the land and the people Isaiah and Matthew spoke of centuries ago—a country that is desperately in need of the light of Christ. A country that rejects God’s Word—lost, stumbling, consumed with the decadence and self-worship of the Western world that will do away with anything that stands in the way—even God Himself.

It’s a chilling thought, but we too have inherited that condition—the condition that has the potential for us to be the next tyrant who we are sickened by. The condition that makes us all enemies of God because it shows itself in all the ways we know of or deny that are contrary to God’s will expressed in His Word. We were among the people of Zebulun and Naphtali who sat in gloom and darkness, even in the very shadow of death, needing rescue. So behold, the gospel, for you this day:

Land of Zebulun and land of Naphtali,

          way of the sea across from the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles—

          The people dwelling in darkness and gloom have seen a great light

          And among those dwelling in the field of the shadow of death

          A light has risen for them

That light is Jesus and His Gospel. The first words Jesus proclaims in our text is: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near.” Jesus is talking in a geographical sense. In the person of Christ, heaven has come to earth. Wherever Jesus is, God’s kingdom is present and at work. Every other religion requires us to ascend to God through our good works. God shows his grace in that even though the world is darkened by sin and in bondage to it, blind to the true God and unable to free itself, God came down with love in the person of Christ, to bring freedom from the bondage of sin and dare I say it—ourselves. He came to trample over death with His own and make a mockery of the demonic realm of darkness with His redeeming work on the Cross.

Matthew tells us today that this Christ went throughout all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and preaching the Good News of the Kingdom and healing every sickness and every infirmity among the people. This is the light that has risen for the people. These healings are a witness that Jesus is indeed the Son of God with all authority over the created order, over sin, death and Satan, and the authority to forgive sins. The forgiveness of sins which is the greatest of blessings even in the depths of our brokenness and despair because it is only through forgiveness that we enter into God’s presence as His holy children and have peace and life with Him forever.

All of this is an undeserved gift to a people helpless to help themselves. So repentance is the only appropriate response to such lavish love; a love that none of us deserve but a love that is given without condition, a love that does not count our wrongs against us but counts them against the Christ who was crucified in our place to take our sin from us and exchange it with His holiness and righteousness. A love that welcomes the least into the family of God through His Son to be co-heirs with Him. Entry is through faith alone in the promise that there is a righteousness apart from the Law; the righteousness that comes through faith in this Messiah, Christ the light of the world.

Jesus says to us today: “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is near.” Where is the Kingdom of Heaven? Wherever Jesus is, the Kingdom of Heaven is present—God’s gracious rule. Where is Jesus? In His holy word and sacraments. Just as He taught in the synagogues, preaching the Good News of the Kingdom, Jesus is truly present again today, preaching and enacting the gospel through the readings, the liturgy, this sermon. Preaching the Gospel to you that will not return to Him empty but accomplish everything He desires it to do. He is the host of the holy meal we are about to receive, speaking His word that does what it says, making ordinary wafers and wine His true body and blood that He places in your hands, so that as you eat and drink there is no mistaking that the forgiveness and redemption that He won for the world He gives to you and you receive personally through faith in His promise: given and shed for you, for the forgiveness of sins.

You too have seen this great light shining in the darkness. It is not spectacular in the way the world understands spectacular, but it is far more powerful for this light has freed you so that you are no longer captive to your sinful nature but captive to Christ, who made you His very own in the waters of holy baptism. What a gracious God we have to come into our world and give us these holy gifts to bring us into personal relationship with Him! And in these waters, you too were called by our Lord to be His followers in your daily life and work. Just as Jesus called Simon Peter and Andrew, James and John who immediately follow Jesus, not because they have a better faith or greater willpower or have sinned less than others, or for any quality within themselves. They are able to follow Jesus because He calls them to do so. The words that Jesus, God Himself utters: “Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of people” are not just words, but words that do what they say they will do…because what Jesus says, happens. We are reminded of God’s words in the creation of the universe: “Let there be light…and it was so; let there be…and it was so; let there be…and it was so.” Here in our text the Lord of creation brings about a re-creation in these fishermen through His speech: “Come, follow me”—the same re-creation He works in your life.

Not only has Jesus won forgiveness and salvation for undeserving sinners, but in His task of building His church, chooses to use them in this work, leading and guiding them in the harvest of souls. And so the people you live and work with see a great light when they see how you live God’s word in your life. Just before our text today was Matthew’s account of the devil’s temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. Without food for forty days Jesus is hungry. The devil knows Jesus has the power to turn the stones around Him into loaves of bread and tempts Him to do it. But Jesus answers: ‘Man does not live by bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.

Jesus isn’t talking about simply existing. He doesn’t say ‘Man does not exist on bread alone, but live on bread alone; real living. And so when you live—really live—meeting with Jesus Himself through His word, receiving the Holy Spirit He sends through the Scriptures, you have peace and contentment and strength no matter what your situation is because the Spirit is at work bearing His fruit. People see that in your life and they know there’s something different about these ‘churchy people’ as we’re often referred to. They see the light of Christ at work because you are a little Christ, to borrow Luther’s terms, in the darkness of the world around. When others see how you say grace at Maccas because you want Christ to be present and bless the food for you, when others see you come to church on a Sunday instead of sport or sitting on the header or sleeping in, when others see how you interact in a patient and forgiving way to those who have wronged you, when others see how you care for others, when others see how you respect authority, when others see how you cherish God’s name rather than using it habitually, when others see how you handle a crisis or live in integrity, when others see you feasting on the Word of God to really live, they see Christ the light of the world, living in and building His church among you.

It is not because of any effort on our part, but this only happens because Jesus has first preached the good news to you, and as he continues to preach to you and teach you through the scriptures, he continues to inspire and enable you to serve others and witness to him. Again today, He is in this church right here and He sends forth His gospel to make you everything He wants you to be, so that even as we live in the shadow of the valley of death of this life, His eternal light lights our way and—by his work in us and through us—shows the world a glimpse of the incredible love of its Saviour. Amen.

 

Brought to Christ

The Text: John 1:29-42

If you were told there is a treasure chest buried in the sand of a beach on the west side of an island, and if you find it you can have it, would you sign up? 

It is the same with God. We can search for God in a hundred different ways, and go through all kinds of odd and even dangerous experiences and never find Him. In fact, those who search for God, not knowing who He is, usually never find Him. They endlessly chase after false gods. What those searching for God need is someone who knows God to bring them to Him.

The reality is that we find God when He finds us. We find God when He speaks to us. His voice usually comes from a family member or friend who tells us about Jesus. Someone who knows the love of God, who has been changed by His compassion and grace. One whom God has made His very own, and they want others to know Him also. In most cases it is believers who bring their children, their family, and their friends to Jesus to hear Him speak with truth and with power.

That’s the pattern we see in the Bible. A Jewish servant girl tells Naaman about the prophet of the Lord who could heal him, and he was cleansed of his skin disease (2 Kings 5). Four friends carry their crippled mate on a mattress to Jesus, and he was cured and made whole (Mk 2:1-12). Philip speaks with the Ethiopian about Jesus, and he was baptised (Acts 8:26-39). Believers bring those needing God’s grace to Jesus, and He heals, and raises up and gives life.

The Gospel reading for today tells a similar story. One day John the Baptist was standing with two of his disciples and Jesus walks by. John points out the Messiah to them saying, “Behold, the Lamb of God!” John brought them to Jesus by showing them who Jesus is and immediately they left John and became disciples of Christ.

This was not the first time they had heard of Jesus. John’s ministry was to reveal Christ to the nation of Israel. The willingness of John’s disciples to leave him and follow Jesus shows how well he did his work. Having heard of Christ’s coming they believed in Him who they had not seen, and at the first opportunity they leave everything to follow Him.

Christ turned to His new disciples and asked them what they were seeking. What they were searching for was the Messiah, and the opportunity to sit at the great Teacher’s feet, and learn more about the kingdom of God. They didn’t just want to know who Jesus is, they want to know all about Him, and how He was going to fulfil the Scriptures and bring God’s promises to fulfilment. They were hungry to hear His words. If He is the Son of God and Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world, then they want Him to take away their sins and give them His life.

Jesus invites them saying, “Come and you will see.” Has a greater invitation ever been given? Jesus grants an open invitation to join Him, to stay with Him and learn from Him. This is the best “access all areas” invitation ever issued. And so, the two disciples left John and followed Jesus.

The day was late, about 4pm, and the two men should have gone home, but they cannot stop listening to Jesus. They soak up His every word, until late in the evening and probably stayed the night with Him. After hearing Christ’s words of life and grace, one of the disciples, Andrew, raced out early the next morning to tell his brother about Jesus. Andrew wants his brother to know that the One they had been searching for, has come to them and invited them to stay with Him. He says to his brother, “We have found the Messiah”… and He brought [his brother] to Jesus. Jesus looked at him and said, “So you are Simon the son of John? You shall be called Cephas” (which means Peter).

An encounter with Jesus is life changing. For John the Baptist it meant the Son of God had descended and taken on human flesh to be the sacrifice for all sins. For Andrew, meeting Christ meant the long-promised Messiah had come. For Simon it meant a change of name and a change of life direction.

Jesus’ three new disciples – Andrew, Peter and the third is probably John the Gospel writer – did not find God by their own efforts, they were brought to Him by those who knew Him. Before they met Jesus, they had heard His words from the lips of a close friend that prepared their hearts to meet Him, and trust in Him as their Lord and Saviour.

Many of us come to know Jesus through our parents. We hear the words of the Bible and their prayers, even in the womb. Then they bring us to the place where He is found, where His Word works with power. They bring us to Baptism to meet with Jesus and hear His gracious words.

Children are brought to Jesus because Christian parents know that no matter how cute their baby is, every child is born a sinner. They know that without bringing their child to God they will never find Him on their own. The sinful nature we are born with, sometimes called the Old Adam, leads us away from God. The Old Adam rejects God and leads us away from His love and into sin and on to death.

Godly parents know the little ones God has blessed them with will one day die and have to stand before the judgement seat of God, and no matter how good they have lived their life, they will never have God’s approval without the forgiveness and pardon of Jesus upon them.

The psalm for today describes the life of the sinner without God as, a miry bog, a pit of destruction, from which we cannot escape (Ps 40:2). But we have a rescuer who has drawn us up from the pit of sin, death and hell, and set out feet upon a rock (Ps 40:2). Our rescuer is Jesus. He bled to save us. The forgiveness He won on the cross is what God gives in Baptism. Christ’s perfect righteousness is placed on us as a gift. This is why Christ commands us all, “Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven” (Mt 19:14). 

We encounter Jesus in the Sacrament of Holy Baptism through water and His Word. Christ speaks to forgive sins, to cleanse sinners, to grant His Holy Spirit, to make us holy and alive in Him, to adopt us into God’s family and grant us the certain promise of salvation.

In Baptism, you were born again a child of God. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come (2 Cor 5:17). Your identity and your life is found in Christ. You are now disciples of Jesus, followers of Him who has overcome sin by His dying and defeated death by rising on the third day. You confess the name of the true God in whose name you were baptised into: The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Our Triune God gives us peace that lasts even in the hardest of times. Only Christ on the cross takes away your sin and guilt. Only Christ raised from the dead to never die again gives us hope for the future. Real joy is found in knowing that Christ went through death to win salvation for you, and He gives it to us as a free gift. No charge or payment required. Simply trust in Him who you have been brought to and who has shown Himself to be our Rock, your life and our salvation.

John the Baptist came to reveal Christ and His salvation to Israel. John told two of his disciples about Jesus and they became His disciples. One of those disciples was Andrew, who brought his brother Simon Peter to Jesus. And so, through human history we see the Church grow by believers bringing others to Jesus, by inviting them to come and meet the Saviour. The best evangelism happens one on one when a child of God shares the joy they have from knowing God’s grace and compassion in Christ, with those who seek His blessings.

I want to leave you with a couple of question to ponder. 1) Who, among those you have brought to Jesus can you encourage in their faith walk this week? And who can you bring to Jesus in prayer, as well as in your loving words and actions, so they can one day meet their Saviour and Lord? 

Even before saying a word about the love God has for all people, we can bring others to Jesus in prayer. This prepares us to speak the Gospel to them and prepares their heart to trust in Christ as their Lord and Saviour. Amen

Let’s pray. Gracious Father, You have poured into our hearts the true Light of the World. Grant that the light of Christ would shine forth from our lives into the lives of those around us, that they too may know Your saving love. Amen.

The peace of God that passes all understanding, keep our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

 

Baptism Makes a New Person

The Texts: Isaiah 42:1-9, Acts 10:34-43, Matthew 3:13-17

 John the Baptist is known as a preacher of repentance. Proclaiming the Law of God he accused the people and convicted them of being sinners. Then, John’s cousin Jesus entered the waters of the Jordan and asked John to baptise him. In the presence of perfection, John felt the accusation of the Law. He needed cleansing from his sins and tells Jesus, “I need to be baptised by You, and do you come to me?”

John not only knew Jesus was holy and righteous, but that He come to remove sins. Early, John saw Christ on the banks of the river and confessed, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world” (Jn 1:29). John is the sinner needing forgiveness, and yet Christ asks a sinner to baptise Him, the Holy One of God.

What a surprise this was for John. What a surprise this is for us! What is going on here? Why did Jesus seek John’s baptism? Our Lord answers John’s protests, saying, “Let it be so now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfil all righteousness.” Only the God/man Jesus could fulfil God’s requirements to be our Saviour. That is why He was sent. Christ alone is holy and sinless and only He can keep God’s Law to perfection. Not you or me or anyone else.

We miserably fail God’s test for righteousness. First of all, we are born a sinner. Before we have had the chance to act in sinful ways we are marked as a transgressor of the Law. The older we get the more we sin. Despite our best efforts to improve we cannot save ourselves. Our words and actions do not recommend us; they condemn us. Eternal death is what we all deserve from birth.

Not Jesus. He is righteous from eternity. He is the Word made flesh (Jn 1:14). The only Son of God (Jn 3:16). Everything Jesus did and everything He went through was done for our salvation. At His circumcision He first bled to fulfil the Law for us. In the temple as a boy Jesus worshipped the heavenly Father, showing us what true devotion to God’s preached Word looks like, a Word He would one day fulfil in His cross and rising again.

According to the requirements of the Law Jesus was without sin. He had no need of a baptism of repentance. Yet He chose to identify Himself with the sinners He came to save. He didn’t put Himself above us, although He could have. He entered the Jordan in the place of you and me. Christ repented on behalf of us all, that we might turn to the Father, seek His mercy and be saved.

Standing with us in the Jordan, Christ placed Himself under the Father’s judgment. He is baptised by John and the Father’s verdict is clear, “This is My beloved Son, with who I am well pleased.”

The Holy Spirit descended on Him in the form of a dove. Not that Christ was ever without the Spirit. He is eternally one with the Spirit and the Father. But the Spirit’s descent reveals to the world Jesus is anointed by God to be the Messiah, because He is from God. Christ is an Epiphany. He is God among us to save us.

At Jesus’ baptism, the Father’s approving words and the Spirit’s descent upon Him marked the beginning of His earthly ministry. He preached and taught about the kingdom of God, called all people to repentance, and performed many miracles, showing Himself again to be the Saviour He was born and anointed to be. 

Jesus was not transformed by His baptism; it only revealed Him to be the long-promised Messiah. By His baptism He transformed the waters of Baptism, so that everyone baptised in His name is washed clean of their sins and born again a child of God with the hope of heaven. Jesus didn’t need His sins washed away. He made the waters of Baptism a washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit (Ti 3:5).

Baptism transforms us. It makes us a new creation, the old has passed away, behold the new has come (2 Cor 5:17). Baptism takes away the old Adam, drowning him and all sins that lead us away from God and into death. Then by the grace of God we are made alive, re-born a new creature, a child of God. We are born again as saints, with the Spirit of God living in us to lead us to keep the Law, to do good works and finally to bring us to life everlasting.

Baptism is the Gospel. It is a physical acting out of the Good News. It is a means of grace so that we would not rely on our faith or our decision to know that we are saved. Rather, we are to trust in God’s Word spoken and poured over us to know that we are the beloved children of God.

As Jesus stood in the waters of the River Jordan in the place of all people, so He is present in the waters of Baptism to transform us from objects of wrath to the holy ones of God. He is there by the power of His Word that commands Baptism and grants the gifts of forgiveness, adoption and life.

At Jesus’ baptism the three persons of the Holy Trinity are present: Father, Son and Spirit. God is present in all His holiness at your Baptism too. He is not there as a bystander to watch the proceedings, but to work through water and Word to give you new birth. Christ pours the benefits of His death and resurrection over you, the Spirit opens your ears to hear the Word of the Gospel, and the Father declares for heaven and earth to hear “You are now My beloved child; with you I am well pleased.”

The water of Baptism has power to do all this because God Himself enters that water by His Word, making it a life-giving water, rich in grace, and a washing of the new birth in the Holy Spirit (Small Catechism, Baptism, Third Part). This is why Baptism takes away sin, destroys death and every evil and opens the gates of heaven for us.

Jesus gives us His identity in Baptism so that we are re-made like Him: blessed, righteous and innocent. Baptism sanctifies us; it makes us holy and pleasing to the Father as if we had always been His first born. The opening of heaven at Jesus’ baptism means that it will forever be open to all those who enter the healing waters and trust in the power of God’s Word to cleanse and save, to make us holy and give us a future with Him.

Later in His life Jesus would face a baptism of a different kind. He said to His disciples, “I have a baptism to be baptised with, and how great is my distress until it is accomplished” (Lk 12:50). The baptism He refers to is the baptism of suffering and death on the cross of Golgotha.

Like His circumcision and baptism, Christ didn’t die for His own sins. He died for ours. By the wood of the cross Jesus bought our salvation. His Holy blood transformed a symbol of torture for the Roman Empire, into the symbol of grace and peace in the kingdom of God. The nails of crucifixion become the keys by which the gates of heaven are opened. His wounds the price of forgiveness; His cries to the Father were His intercessions for us; His dying the death we deserve; His resurrection our assurance for life after death. 

The forgiveness, the life, the peace and the grace Christ earned on the cross and by His resurrection are given to you in Baptism. God transforms you in Baptism through the power of His Word and Spirit. Jesus’ words spoken in Baptism transform ordinary water that could be used in the garden or kitchen, into a cleansing water that takes away sins and gives life and salvation. God’s grace is given in full to all who are touched by those healing waters, but it is only of benefit to those trust God’s Word.

Jesus’ baptism announced the beginning of His earthly ministry. Your Baptism has begun your journey of faith in Christ from the font of salvation to your heavenly home. Your Baptism transformed you from nobody to a child of God. Never despise it, but look on it as the new beginning, as the most wonderful day in your life. The day you were saved. The day you were born again to eternal life. The day when you were made part of God’s holy family.

Go and live out your Baptism and the grace you were given that day. Let the words of God spoken over you that day never leave your heart. Never forget who God has transformed you to be and give Him thanks and praise Him for the gift of forgiveness and salvation made yours in Baptism. Praise Him by doing good works in His name that the world may know God’s saving grace: earned by Christ on the cross and granted to sinners in the waters of Baptism. Amen.

Let’s pray. Heavenly Father, as You revealed Jesus to be Your Son at His baptism, so You have made us Your children in our Baptism. Keep us trusting in Your Word that we may daily turn to our Baptism, see the grace You have poured into our lives and praise You for saving us. Amen.

The peace of God that passes all understanding, keep our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.

The Best Gift of All

The Text: John 1:11-18

Were you glad to welcome the New Year? Or are you suffering from some post-Christmas fatigue and weariness? Many people think “If only we could extend the joy of Christmas for a couple more months…!” So what can help? What enables us to tackle the tasks of another year with renewed enthusiasm? The Christmas message, according to St. John, helps us do just that. In today’s Gospel, St John probes deeply into the awesome meaning and significance of what happened at Christmas and in the life of Christ after Christmas, and its never-ending significance for us. 

The early Christians treasured immensely the incredible message of verse14 and saw it as the most important verse in the New Testament: “The Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen His glory, the glory of a Father’s only Son, full of grace and truth.” For the Greek and Roman world of that time, this was an utterly revolutionary and subversive truth. They could never imagine God taking on human flesh and blood, to live a fully human life in our midst. “Flesh” refers to our vulnerable and precarious existence, our mortal life with all its limitations and human needs of food, drink, companionship and sleep.

Into an unwelcoming world, the Creator of all manifests the greatest love in the universe. The infinite God becomes finite in Mary‘s child; the eternal Creator takes on a temporal existence with us and for us. This would have to be the most amazing news ever! Jesus defines what God is like for us: “God is Christlike and in God there is nothing un-Christlike.” God is no longer all mystery. Our sins made God into the kind of mystery God was never meant to be. “Your sins have hidden God’s face from you”, it says in Isaiah 59:2.

Jesus’ birth, life and death is God’s decisive unveiling of Himself. Jesus is the brilliant focal point of God’s saving work. He shows us how God would have us live. God no longer speaks to us only as an invisible voice or vision. He now addresses us through the life, words and actions of His Son Jesus Christ. God’s will for us is no longer just on two stone tablets, the Ten Commandments. In Christ, we most clearly see God’s will for us.

We read in Hebrews that ‘In the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe (1:1-2). In Christ, we can hear, see and know God like never before.

Jesus was the most approachable Teacher of the first century. He didn’t teach in the desert or on a mountain top, but was constantly in the public sphere, surrounded by all kinds of people. Celsus, a major critic of Christianity, complained, “All other great teachers appeal to the wise and noble to come to them; Jesus, however, appealed to the scum of society.” The so-called “scum of society” were so grateful that Jesus came to them. The more shameful the people’s pasts had been, the more they felt at ease around Jesus. Wherever Jesus went, he was in the centre of everyday life with good news for daily living. There, those with the eyes of faith saw His glory, as did His disciples at the wedding of Cana. “Jesus did this, the first of His signs, in Cana of Galilee, and revealed His glory, and His disciples believed in Him (John 2:11).”

“We have seen His glory” is the confession of all Christians throughout the ages. Jesus is the glory of God in human form, in a way that’s no longer terrifying, but warm and inviting. All who accepted Jesus and welcomed Him into their lives saw inviting glimpses of His glory, from His Baptism to Easter. His glory is cause for endless praise and wonder. His glory shines forth most fully in His actions of love and grace. His glory is greatest in His time of humiliation and all that He sacrificed for our salvation. That’s why the New Testament praises our Saviour’s humility and obedience more than His miracles.

The greatest aspect of His glory is His gift of grace, costly grace, to us. “From His fullness we have all received grace upon grace (v16).” Because of what Jesus has done for all of us, something wondrously new has happened. God treats us infinitely better than we deserve. Grace is God’s unmerited favour and goodwill to us, without any strings attached. The Law points us to Christ and His inexhaustible fount of grace for us. Grace for the writers of the New Testament was such an unexpected act of mercy that they could never take it for granted, and were endlessly grateful for it.

They found it staggering that there should be such an unsurpassed gift as grace at all. It led them to a new style of letter-writing, beginning and ending with the blessing of grace, instead of the words “hail” and “farewell”. No wonder those who felt unworthy to receive it treasured it so much. Grace is both the gift of a new life in Christ, and a transforming power, that enables us to live like Jesus, to love like Jesus, and to forgive each other as Jesus has forgiven us. Grace means that my Lord Jesus still wants me despite my lack of patience, my lack of fervency in prayer and other faults and failures. Grace enables us to rejoice over how Jesus treats all the other people in our lives better than they too deserve.

Everywhere we look in the four Gospels, we see how Jesus treated folk like us so much better than they could ever deserve. His parables are illustrations of how grace works in daily life, rather than stories that tell us that we have to be “good”. The heroes in His parables are the recipients of grace. We’ve all received the grace of Christ more, much more, than we realise.

Our life in Christ is based on grace from beginning to end. The gift of life itself is a gift of grace. By grace, we were incorporated into the family of God through Baptism. By grace, many of us were raised in Christian households. By grace, many of us have a Christian spouse, for whom we can never thank God enough. By grace, many of us are blessed with children or grandchildren or other extended family who enrich our lives.  

The more we plead for grace and mercy, the more we receive it and see how much more we need it. We are to treat each other with grace as long as we live, as our traditional marriage vows say, “for better, for worse, in sickness and in health…” Grace enables me to see that in a relationship conflict, I can take blame. I can forgive. I can avoid false accusations.  What a priceless and indispensable expression of grace forgiveness in the home is!

Grace demolishes our destructive self-righteousness and increases our level of compassion for one another so that love can grow. Grace keeps the lamps lit and the door open for the homecoming of prodigal family members.  Grace enables us to love real people just as they are, confident that love will work miracles.

To believe in Jesus is to let ourselves be possessed by Him and changed by his grace, so that He can make it easier for us to love others and others to love us. The better we know Jesus, the more wonderful He becomes and the more we see how much we need Him each and every day. “My grace is sufficient for you”, Jesus says. Thank God for that. Amen.