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The Gift of Christmas

Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, 2017

All Saints Episcopal Church

The Rev. Holladay Sanderson

I am not sure where you have landed in your gift-giving.

Perhaps some of you

have already opened your gifts.

Others of you, like me, wait until tomorrow morning…

or perhaps later to accommodate special family gatherings.

Maybe some of you still have gifts to wrap.

All in all, we DO know this is the season for giving.

We have shopped til we dropped.

The stores have raked in the cash and credit.

It has been fun and frustrating and festive – all this giving.

I personally have not been able to shop

as I normally would this year.

Because of my broken wing,

I have had to rely on the computer for online giving

in addition to the one trip I was able to make

to Barnes and Noble for my eight great-nieces

just before the accident.

Even so, I have experienced the great Christmas gift of giving

one hundredfold from you, the people of All Saints

along with many in the Diocese.

You have showered me

with love, care, food, rides, visits, texts, calls,

assistance, lugging this and that,

prescription shots for anti-clotting,

opening jars, bottles and cans…

One discovers all kinds of things

that require TWO hands

when one hand goes out of commission.

Even this sermon is the product of a gift.

Michael Case knew of a neutral typewriter that

looks like a U with each ½ of the keyboard

making the upright sides of the U

so that I could use both hands

to touch type my sermon

instead of hunting and pecking with one hand!

My hand is learning more and more each day

but for tonight, I am grateful…

for the shower of gifts I have received…

all filled with great love.

All of that is the truth of Christmas…

the season of gifts and of giving.

The theme of gifts is found throughout our lessons this evening.

Titus reminds us that

Jesus is the ultimate gift for humanity…

the One who gives himself for us

for our redemption.

His gift of himself gives us hope

for the fullness of life in Christ

as he teaches us throughout his life

as it was shared in our Gospels.

Tonight’s gospel itself is all about

the origin of our great gift,

first given to humanity so long ago.

We know the story of Mary

receiving the gift of motherhood and tonight,

she gives birth to the Savior of us all.

This message is so great that

God’s love continues to overflow

from the gift of this child of Love and

out to the hillsides

where the angel choir shouts “Glory!”

to those surprised shepherds.

They are so excited by God’s gift that

they come down from the hillsides

to see the promised child, the tine Messiah.

They come down from the hills

to see for themselves this gift of good news at last,

just as the angels, God’s messengers, promised.

In the quiet in Bethlehem,

they all share in the amazing events and visions and promises.

As the shepherds leave,

the new mother has many new things…

events, thoughts, wonder…

to ponder in her heart.

Now that he has arrived, she wonders

what the future holds for her, for him, for us all.

In Isaiah’s prophecy,

we are given a view of the enormity of tonight’s gift.

We think too narrowly

if we confine the gift to the time of Jesus’ birth or

even 500 years earlier

when Isaiah spoke the original prophecy.

Certainly we can think of God’s gift

in terms of ending the Roman boot.

But there is so much more

to hear in the prophet’s words.

God’s light has shone on us all and

revealed the extent of God’s love for the world

as if to say “Here is this gift.

We can be in this together. Come!”

“The People who walked in darkness have seen a a great light…

on them the LIGHT has shined.”

Amen!

With the light shining,

we can see the gift more and more clearly.

Our joy is increased

because we can see things in a new way

with the coming of the Christ child.

Why?

Because the burdens we have been feeling

have been broken,

just as it was in the days

when Gideon was fighting off

the enormous army of Midianites

in the Book of Judges.

Just think about what Isaiah is saying.

All fear of war will be ended.

No more warriors and battles and fear and power over

in whatever form.

Power and the threat of power is no more

because the presence of God With Us

is promised to be so much stronger than all of that.

The misuse of authority is ended

because this child, the Messiah, the Prince of Peace, the Mighty God

IS the one in whom TRUE authority rests, thanks be to God.

The gift we have been given is

authority that rests solidly

in justice and righteousness

instead of in raw power, greed, and exclusion.

Isaiah says to us,

“He will establish and uphold God’s peace

with justice and with righteousness

from this time onward and forevermore.

The Lord of hosts WILL do this!”

How can we doubt such a Christmas gift?

When times are darkest,

our God reminds us that the light never leaves.

And THIS night, the birth of the baby Jesus reminds us that the gift given so long ago

continues to be given to us today.

God’s gift never ends and

we, as God’s grateful recipients,

are invited to share this gift with the world.

Jesus continually calls us to live lives filled with God’s love…

lives that brim full of justice and peace.

Then, just like God’s love overflows to us,

our own lives overflow into the world,

reminding the world that

the darkness is no more.

There is a light ever shining

in the midst of the darkness: Jesus the Christ.

Through Him, we learn the true meaning of gift…

opening ourselves to others

so that God’s love can clearly shine through

into a hurting world…

so that God’s love can shine into a hurting world

and show just what hope can bring…

just what hope in God looks like…

show how life in God’s love

can transform the world.

All of that...

All of that

from one tiny, stunning, unimaginable, and grace-filled gift.

Gloria in excelsis Deo!

Jesus Christ is born.

AMEN