Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Insignificant but not Ignored

4th Sunday of Advent
December 20, 2015
Micah 5:2-5a; Luke 1:47-55

(Or watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkAdmc7x5WA&feature=em-upload_owner )

            In 1843, Charles Dickens published a book you may have heard of, called “A Christmas Carol.”  Before the mid-1800’s, Christmas was only a very minor holiday, and certainly nothing like what it is today.  John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist movement, for example, never mentioned Christmas in any of his journal entries, even those dated December 25th (and he wrote in his journal every day for years during the 1700’s).  Yet the middle of the 1800’s saw not only a book written about Christmas, it was also when Christmas cards were first exchanged and Christmas trees were first trimmed.  The singing of Christmas carols also dates to this time period, and if you read the fine print in the hymnal below the Christmas hymns, you can see that many of them were written then, too.  So, if you ever wonder how Christmas got to be how it is today, most historians pinpoint the middle of the nineteenth century.  Since then, Christmas gradually became a much more sentimental holiday and much more romanticized, glossing over the uglier aspects, like the atmosphere in Bethlehem when Jesus was born. 
Two thousand years ago, the town of Bethlehem that we just sang about, was part of the Roman Empire.   However, as the Roman Empire started in Rome, Italy, Bethlehem, which is in the Middle East and some 1,400 miles away across the Mediterranean Sea, was on the edge of the Empire.  It was not a city, it was not even a decent-sized town.  As we read in Micah, it was one of the smallest towns in the country of Judah, which was occupied by Roman soldiers.  So we have a small town on the edge of the Roman Empire, full of people who are angry at being occupied and the soldiers are probably upset at being assigned to this post so far from Rome!  Among the first words Jesus heard may well have been curse words.  And did you ever think about what a scratch-n-sniff manger scene would actually smell like??  Jesus was out there with the animals, which makes for a nice children’s story for me to read to my kids, but, uh, when you get close to them, in person, inside a farm structure, they stink.  So.  Got the scene in your head?  Now, that’s where God chose for his son to be born.  In that mess.[1] 
            That verse from Micah says, “As for you, Bethlehem, though you are the least significant of Judah’s forces, one who is to be a ruler in Israel on my behalf will come out from you.”[2]  This small town, with a military occupation, on the edge of the Empire, out in the barn with the animals, this is where Jesus was born.  Not in a big city, or somewhere famous, but the littlest town from the smallest tribe of Judah, whose people have returned from exile but are not in charge of their own land.  That’s where God picked, and the smells God picked, and the sounds God picked.  Tells us something about God, doesn’t it? 
            As Mary says in the Magnificat, our responsive reading this morning, God has remembered and looked with favor on his lowly servant.[3]  God looks with favor on the lowly.  Whether it’s a struggling small town or a pregnant teenager, as Mary says, God has done great things for me.[4]  God chose Bethlehem, of all places, to honor with his son’s birth.  God chose Mary, a virtual nobody, to be Jesus’ mother.  The Bible is full of insignificant people God chose to be part of his people, part of his work of salvation.  You could take Miriam, Moses’ sister, who advised a princess on the care of her brother.  Or David, the youngest brother who became king, and that’s not supposed to happen to younger brothers.  Esther was the pretty teenager who saved her people from a ruthless oppressor.  And then there’s the scruffy, ragtag bunch Jesus chose as his friends and disciples.  God turns things upside down and thinks highly of those the world does not think highly of.  If you remember from other Scripture readings, in the kingdom of God the first will be last and the last shall be first.[5]  Those who think they are insignificant are actually not.  Jesus wasn’t born in the capital of Rome or even in the big city of Jerusalem.  He was born in the little town of Bethlehem.  So know that no matter how insignificant you may feel, you are not insignificant to God.  This church is not insignificant to God.  You are not forgotten and you are not alone.  You may feel forgotten, but you are not.  Feelings can be misleading, like feeling alone in a crowd.  You may feel alone, but you are not.  You may feel overlooked, but you are not.  God notices you, and remembers you, has done great things for you and will do great things for you. Promise.  He doesn’t care if you were the last picked for a ball game as a kid.  You are not last in his book, and his is really the only opinion that matters.
            You know why you’re important to God?  It’s because God actually seeks out the least, the last, and the lost.  God goes looking for places and people who are lowly, by the world’s standards.  The rest of the Gospel of Luke is full of examples of God seeking out the least, the last, and the lost, and actually preferring them!  There’s the parable Jesus tells about the lost sheep, where the shepherd leaves the other 99 sheep to go find the one missing.  And the woman who thoroughly searches her entire house in order to find one lost coin.  The parable of the prodigal son, with the runaway son, who doesn’t think he’s worth much, before he comes to his senses and comes home.  Or the parable about the wedding banquet, where Jesus actually advises guests to take a low seat, rather than a seat of honor.  In Luke is where we meet Zaccheus, the cheating tax collector.  Talked about being picked last for a team, I’m sure “wee little” Zaccheus could identify with that, and that’s whose house Jesus wanted to go to!  The end of that story ends with Jesus saying, “The Son of Man came to seek out and to save the lost.”[6]  God comes looking for those who are overlooked, for those who are ignored, for those whose voices aren’t heard, for those who are hurting and suffering, those who are small, those who don’t feel noticed or cared for by others.  God comes looking for you.  He’s not waiting for us to find him, he’s out there looking for us and waiting for us, right where he always said he would be.  God seeks us out.  I’ve been asked twice recently about how I became a pastor, and the short answer I gave both times is “God.”  This wasn’t my idea.  God sought me out, planted me on my butt, and called me to leave an old calling and enter a new calling.  It wasn’t my idea; I was happy where I was.  I’m sure Mary would never have chosen to become pregnant before marriage in that day and age.  When Joseph found out, he planned to divorce her quietly, because her condition was so socially unacceptable.  Mary wouldn’t have chosen it, but God sought her out. 
            And the important thing here, for us, is her response.  We read it responsively this morning instead of a psalm.  And what I want you to notice is that Mary’s response wasn’t all about her.  She was not focused on herself.  Instead, her response praises God.  Mary says, “the Mighty One has done great things for me, and holy is his name.”  She doesn’t say, “God has done great things for me, I’m awesome!”  Or, “God has looked with favor on me because I deserve it.”  No, the focus stays on God.  God did this for me; God is holy.  God shows mercy.  God has a strong arm.  God lifts up the lowly.  God fills the hungry with good things.  God remembers his promise.  God comes to help.  Not because we deserve it.  Not because of anything we’ve done or who we’ve made ourselves.  That’s why the response stays about God.  It’s not about us.  The faithful response is about God.  That’s why we come to church.  Not for ourselves or to feel good about ourselves or to get something out of it.  Worship isn’t for you or about you.  It’s for God.  We sing about God.  We pray to God.  What we do here is for and about God, because it is our faithful response to what God has done, is doing, and will do in our lives.  He has looked with favor on us.  He has heard our prayers. 
We may be in a small (but growing!) town on the edge of the Chesapeake, but God has not overlooked us.  We may be small, but we are not insignificant.  Because the thing is, God’s goal for us is not to be the biggest, the best, or the most.  His goal for us is to be faithful.  Our opening hymn this morning was “O Come, All Ye Faithful.”  The goal for our church is to be faithful, and our church is big enough to do that.  If God blesses us by sending more people to us, great.  If he blesses us in other ways, great.  Either way, we can be faithful to what he has called us to do and who he has called us to be.  I read a Christianity Today article last month called “Your Church Is Big Enough;” as you may have guessed, it was the title that caught my eye.  And the author wrote that “Every church is called to worship, disciple, fellowship, minister and evangelize with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. And leave the results in Jesus’ hands.  No matter what size your church is, you can do those things. All of them. And you can do them well… It’s time to stop worrying about getting bigger, and start doing what we can do now. At your current size. In your current location. With your current budget.  Your church is big enough. Because our God is big enough.”[7]  Our God, who came in the form of a tiny baby.  Our God, who turns things upside down by seeking out seemingly insignificant people in unimportant places.  Our God does not overlook or ignore us.  He simply calls us to be faithful with what he has given us.





[1] Much of this paragraph is from my class notes, February 12, 2010, LTS 78, Dr. Moore, Duke Divinity School
[2] Micah 5:2
[3] Luke 1:48
[4] Luke 1:49
[5] Matthew 20:16, among other places
[6] Luke 19:10

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