Sunday, December 31, 2017

Behold, The Child


Rev. Debra Cato
Luke 2:22-40 – The Message
First Sunday of Christmas
Normandy Park UCC

December 31, 2017 - The First Sunday of Christmas


Behold, The Child


Even though it was 30 years ago, I can still feel the awe; the wonder; the overwhelming love I felt that first time I held my child, the pain of childbirth instantly gone. I still feel the goosebumps when I looked at that perfect face; held those tiny fingers; kissed that forehead.  The relief I felt when I counted her fingers and toes; when I knew she was healthy!  I couldn’t take my eyes off her!  What a gift from God she was.

I remember when I was pregnant with Tracy – my second daughter.  I was so afraid I could not love another child as much as I loved Jessica.  And then she was born.  And there it was.  That feeling of awe and overwhelming love.  The goosebumps when I saw that beautiful, perfect face, touched those tiny fingers, and kissed that forehead.  The relief when I counted her fingers and toes; when I knew she was healthy.  I didn’t want to put her down!  Such amazing love. So overpowering.

Admit it.  When I was talking with the children about the birth of my daughters; when I was sharing with them the joy of being a new mother and discovering how in love I was with my babies; how many of you did your own walk down memory lane and thought about the birth of your own children?  Perhaps you adopted and remember that first miraculous look at your treasured child.  Perhaps you remembered the birth of nephews or nieces or cousins or friends’ children. 

But I must admit that as much as I loved my babies, this new 24/7 job I had
accepted was exhausting.  Neither of my daughters thought much of sleeping and I quickly learned that sleep deprivation turns life upside down.  This 
thing called motherhood required a lot of feedings and diaper and clothing changes and just when they finally fell asleep and I had picked up the house and laid down, the sound of my head hitting the pillow would wake them up.  The irony is, when they would sleep, I would worry something was wrong and jump up and check!  Being a Mom is the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done but also the hardest.  Anyone agree?

Mary was a 14-year old virgin and she was forced to travel over 900 miles from Nazareth to Bethlehem on a donkey when she was 9 months pregnant because a Roman dictator ordered everyone to report for a census.  When they arrive in Bethlehem, perhaps because they were impoverished, perhaps because it was true, there was no place for them to stay so they were forced to sleep in a barn.  That night, Mary went into labor, gave birth alone with her husband in a dirty barn and the only place to put her baby – whom she wrapped in rags was in the feeding trough.  I can only imagine Mary’s exhaustion; her pain; and her fear. 

Yes.  The manger scene we imagine in our nativity scenes and in our songs, is beautiful and romantic but the humanness of the birth of Jesus cannot be forgotten.  Birth is hard and messy in the best of circumstances and I’m not sure giving birth in a barn, 900 miles from home, is the best of circumstances. 

After Mary gave birth to her baby, she must have felt the awe; the wonder; the overwhelming love I felt that first time I held my child.  Do you think the pain
and discomfort from giving birth disappeared when she looked at his face?  Did she get goosebumps when she held those tiny fingers; when she kissed his
forehead?  Did she sigh deeply when she counted his fingers and toes; when
she knew he was healthy?  Was Mary able to take her eyes off him? 

As Luke tells it, on that intimate night of Jesus’ birth, Angels sang, shepherds visited, and stars shone on that scene in the barn.  Mary took all this in – in fact we are told that Mary “treasured all these things in her heart.”  But as a mother myself, I’m making an informed guess that Mary was mostly focused on her newborn son.  This perfect baby that she found herself madly in love with; this gift from God.  She would have remembered what the angel had told her nine months prior – that she was chosen to give birth to the Son of God but that night, this baby looked like any other human baby only more perfect, more beautiful – because he was her son and she was deeply in love. 

Mary gave birth to a human baby, no different than my babies.  No different than yours.  Except of course, Mary’s baby is the Son of God.  But for now, he’s a helpless, human infant.  Totally dependent on his mother.  And no different than ours, Mary’s baby cried, and got hungry, and dirtied his diapers, and demanded attention – 24/7.  And just like us, Mary must have functioned from a state of exhaustion.  

In today’s account from Luke, it is forty days since Jesus was born.  According to Jewish law, Jesus was circumcised and named when he was eight days old.  Now, 32 days later, at 40 days old, it’s time for Jesus’ parents to perform their duty as pious Jews by returning to the Temple.  They are to offer a sacrifice and consecrate or dedicate their child to the Lord. 

Simeon was an old man, filled with the Holy Spirit. He was a faithful servant of God, having spent many years in the temple, waiting to see the promised Messiah.  He wandered into the temple when Mary and Joseph brought the baby in to be consecrated according to Jewish custom. 

Simeon didn’t see any miracles.  He didn’t see any signs.  He didn’t see any wonders.  He simply saw a baby and after all those years; he knew.  He held the baby in his arms and he said; “Lord, now let your servant go in peace; for your word has been fulfilled. My eyes have seen your salvation which has been prepared for all people.”[1]  

No miracles.  No signs.  No wonders.  Simeon just sees the child and knows he is the Messiah.  He believes and that is enough.  By holding the baby in his hands, Simeon is confident in God’s promised salvation. [2] 

Then there’s Anna.  She was by now a very old woman. She had been married seven years and a widow for eighty-four[3] so if we do the math, she is well over 100 years old.  She too spent her years in the temple, serving the Lord day and night; believing and waiting for the promised Messiah.  There were no miracles.  No signs.  No wonders.  Like Simeon, Anna simply saw the child and she believed.[4] 

Luke’s description of the birth of Christ is my favorite Scripture for Christmas Eve.  It’s a romantic story of the birth of Jesus that we can all imagine.  We’ve
seen it lived out by children year after year in Christmas programs – perhaps like me, you were even in some yourself. 

The idea that God became flesh in a baby born to a teen-age virgin gives us
hope for the future.  In today’s passage, we can picture, this poor couple with their baby, walking into the temple to dedicate their son to God – their son  
who is God Himself.  Two devout, faithful people stand at the temple steps with them, praising God for the arrival of his long-awaited promise of salvation.  Simeon and Anna know that the arrival of this helpless baby brings the arrival of the change agent for the world.

I love the way Eugene Peterson transliterates John 1:14:  “The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood.”  God chose to save us through a helpless, human baby – totally dependent on his mother for every single need.  God had promised a Savior, a Messiah, hundreds of years before and faithful servants like Simeon and Anna held onto that belief and were blessed by the opportunity to see and touch and feel God’s promise, the promise that God will be with us and for us forever, the promise announced in the birth of that innocent baby.  The same promise God grants to us.

Perhaps more so this year that in many past years, we cannot afford to miss the irony of the way God came to us. Rev. Andrew Scales said:

 “Today I’m joining billions of people in worshiping a person
of color who grew up as a refugee, lived in poverty his whole
life, and ended up a death row convict by the justice system of
the most powerful country in the world. 


When Jesus was born in Bethlehem, it was the first sign that
 empires fall from prophetic demands for justice, love for one’s
enemies, and hope in God’s promise of life. 


Jesus didn’t come to make Rome great again; he turned the thing
inside out so that the last will be first, and the first will be last in his Kingdom. It’s Good News for all people.” - Rev. Andrew Scales


This is what Christmas is about.  From the very beginning. God used ordinary
means and ordinary people to share his message of salvation.  Christ comes to us as a real, live human baby.  Two old, ordinary but faithful individuals – one of them a woman, recognized Christ in a 40-day old baby brought to the temple by poor parents. [5]

Christmas is infused by God’s promise of his presence and peace so that we
can leave worship today, and go out into the world with confidence; neither denying the harsh realities of this life nor deterred by the by them, but rather facing whatever comes our way with courage.  For you are God’s beloved child and it was for your sake that Christ was born![6]

Jesus birth was good news over 2,000 years ago and it is good news today.  Merry Christmas!  


[1] Markquart, Edward F.  Sermons from Seattle.  www.sermonsfromseattle.com/series_b_simeons_and_anaa.html
[2] Lose, David.  The Working Preacher.  Sunday, December 25, 2011.  www.workingpreacher.org/craft.aspx?post=1510.
[3] Luke 2:36
[4] Markquart.
[5] Markquart.
[6] Lose.