Journey of Life in Christ

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It comes as no surprise to anyone that today is known as the 1st Sunday after Christmas.            A day that has become known as one of the “Low Sundays”

                        The Sunday after Christmas and after Easter are the two “Low                                            Sundays” of the year

                                    With all the excitement that the high holidays bring

                                                - the follow up to that, is a naturally a let down

                                                            - a time of recuperation

            This year with both Christmas and New Years Eve day landing on Sunday

                        (Something that hasn’t happened since the year 2000)

                                    The build up and the excitement was magnified

                        Here at St. Luke’s in a 26 hour period there were 7 services

                                    It is certainly understandable that the Sunday following that will be                                    a low Sunday

            But it is precisely at these “low days” of the year where how you live out your life             in faith really characterize your “relationship with Christ” - our Lord and Saviour

                       

                        These are the days of character building

                       

                                    It reminds me of a billboard that I pass by most days that says:

                                                6am practices lead to 7pm games

 

                                                Now we are not involved in “competing” where what we                                                     do results in a trophy

            But we are training

                        We are conditioning

                                    We are journeying along a path with a goal in vision

            That goal is a “life in Christ”

                        And the vision is for both the journey and the outcome

                                    As it is written in the Lord’s prayer

                                    “on earth - as it is in heaven”

The readings for the day are ideal for this particular day and this time of the year

            The last day of the year - marking an ending

                        But also the first Sunday after we celebrate the incarnation - God coming                           as Emmanual - God with us

            Time when we think about Beginnings and endings

                        - and how we will live…

                                    “all the life in the middle”

It is also a day where I will have the incredible privilege of baptizing my Son - Matthew

This too is remarkably timed

Now, it might appear that Kelly and I are really clever in choosing the day for Matthew’s baptism once you consider the ‘readings for the day’ - and the time of the year

            But originally we choose this day; because the holidays brought family in town

The Old Testament reading tells of Samuel who was a miracle baby

            His mother Hannah was one of two wives of Elkanah, and she was unable to get   pregnant

                        One year on the annual pilgrimage to the Temple, she prayed to God that                           if she became pregnant that she would dedicate the child to God

                                    God bless her with Samuel and after being weaned he was                                                  dedicated to God and raised in the temple by Eli the priest

(Hannah’s devotion of offering her first born is an incredible witness of faith - which one can easily see this principal back to the beginnings of the Bible where Abel and how he offered the firstlings of his flock - which God had regard for)

            Samuel became an incredible figure in Ancient Jewish and Christian history

                        As the last of the “Judges” that ruled Israel

                                    The one that choose (guided by God) both their first King - Saul                                         and their greatest King - David

                                                King David who is the patriarch of the messianic line

                                                            And of course ancestor of Jesus

Our OT reading today closes with

            Now the boy Samuel continued to grow both in stature and in favor with the Lord and with the people.

 

Our Gospel reading from Luke today tells part of the story of the greatest gift the world has ever seen

            The miracle baby - Jesus - born of a virgin

                        Tells the story of how Mary and Joseph made an annual pilgrimage - as                               usual

                                    This time with a 12 year old Jesus who stays behind and

After three days (in great anxiety) they found him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions. And all who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his answers

 

Our reading today closes with

            Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in divine and human favor

In both stories we have:

            A miracle baby - a gift from God

            A devoted religious yet humble family

            An annual pilgrimage

            A child in the temple

                        - in service for others

            being discipled - trained - conditioned - growing

                        both in stature and in favor with the Lord and with the people.

Samuel, one of the greatest figures of Christian history was taught

            And grew in faith

Jesus, God in the flesh was taught

            And grew in wisdom and stature

God, through the writers of scriptures, sends us a clear message

            All creation is on a journey

                        We are all in need of being taught - being discipled

                                    Even the giants of our faith were once discipled

What an incredible message for a time of Beginnings and endings

-          But most importantly for how we will live “all the life in the middle”

-          and what a great message for a baptism

Because in baptism not only is a child brought into the church

            - but parents - Godparents and the whole congregation present

                        make significant promises for “a life in faith” - “A life in Christ”

It has been said that “it takes a community to raise a child”

            And the church is the special community in which God “is the author”

                        We are all on a journey

                                    A journey discipled in community

John tells the gospel story focusing on different areas and has Jesus going back and forth

            But the entire book of Luke is structured as a journey,

                        as Jesus travels from Galilee to Jerusalem in important stages in his life

                                    as a Baby - then young adult - finally His adult ministry

Luke arranged the material to communicate his message.

      This suggests that the journey in Luke is more than just a physical journey,

            and the setting is more than geographical.

The reading tells us that Mary and Joseph made an annual pilgrimage

      but it is in the 13th year of Jesus life that we have the only glimpse into his upbringing              in Jewish culture during the 13th year a child went through a Bar Mitzvah and                                   was considered an adult for the purposes of      accountability and responsibility                                under the law

                        As now, as legal adult, we see him learning and answering questions

An aside that was an incredible discovery for me during my study this week

      (that a male became a full member of the community at age 30)

            this is next time that we see Jesus

                        he starts serving out his adult ministry once he is recognized as a full                                         member of the community

Luke also plays with the word father

      For the first time Joseph is referred to by Luke as father not Joseph

            This is done because I believe he wants to show the contrast and the power of                               Jesus’s statement

                        “I must be about my Father’s business”

This is a radical call ‘for all of us followers of Jesus’ to discipleship that unfolds from being "about our Father’s business"

·         Let us be about our Father’s business! 

I know from an early age that all I wanted to be was a Dad - a parent

o        The reason for that I am sure is complicated but the simplest way I understand it is that I wanted to share Love and to be loved

·         You see I had a great role model in my parents

·         Their greatest gift, after their Love, was seeing and teaching the truth

·         My mother would always call a spade a spade not a dame shovel

·         And I remember a friend of my dad telling me that he had never met a more honest man than my dad – and I believe that to be true

·         So to be a father was my greatest ambition

·         Now because I am ordained priest in the Anglican church, a title that I may be called is: father

·         But it truly matters most from my kids

·         And today we as a congregation are going to welcome a new one into the church

·         Today I will be the one baptizing one of my own flesh

·         Matthew

·         What God has called me to be and what I have always longed to be - come together

o        The greatest gift the world has ever seen - is the gift from God our Father to all of humanity when he gave of himself – his one and only Son into the world to be our saviour

·         Today as dad and “father” I get to baptize my flesh into that gift

·         From Father (point upward) to Son to dad to son

·         I will be baptizing Mathew (which means gift from God - by the way) and will be doing "our Father’s business"

·         We will be doing our Father’s business in the promises that we make as a Church - a Community to help raise Matthew both in stature and in favor with the Lord and with the people

·         To bring him into new life in Christ

And what is that “life in Christ”

            What will Matthew be baptized into

                        What we will as a congregation be reclaiming in our baptismal vows

           

We look to Colossians - our New Testament book for that answer

                        It is set up earlier in the letter and I will read from Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase “The Message” which I believe captures it beautifully and powerfully

           

From Colossians 1

      We look at this Son and see the God who cannot be seen.

            We look at this Son and see God's original purpose in everything created.

                        For everything, absolutely everything, above and below, visible and                              invisible, rank after rank after rank of angels

                                    --everything got started in him and finds its purpose in him.

                                                He was there before any of it came into existence

                                                            and holds it all together right up to this moment.

 

Not only that, but all the broken and dislocated pieces of the universe-

      -people and things, animals and atoms-

            -get properly fixed and fit together in vibrant harmonies,

                        all because of his death,

                                    his blood that poured down from the Cross.

 

You don't walk away from a gift like that!

      You stay grounded and steady in that bond of trust,

            constantly tuned in to the Message,

                        careful not to be distracted or diverted.

                                    There is no other Message-

                                                -just this one.

                                    Every creature under heaven gets this same Message.

And I will close with God instructions for us on how to live a “new life in Christ” from today’s Colossian’s passage also from the “the Message”

            - let it soak in and penetrate your soul

So, chosen by God for this new life of love,

      dress in the wardrobe God picked out for you:

            compassion,

            kindness,

            humility,

            quiet strength,

            discipline.

Be even-tempered,

      content with second place,

            quick to forgive an offense.

                        Forgive as quickly and completely as the Master forgave you.

And regardless of what else you put on,

      wear love.

            It's your basic, all-purpose garment.

                        Never be without it.

Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune with each other,

      in step with each other.

            None of this going off and doing your own thing.

                        And cultivate thankfulness.

Let the Word of Christ

      --the Message--

            have the run of the house.

                        Give it plenty of room in your lives.

                                    Instruct and direct one another using good common sense.

                                                And sing,

                                                            sing your hearts out to God!

Let every detail in your lives

            --words,

            actions,

            whatever

                        --be done in the name of the Master,

                                    Jesus,

                                                thanking God the Father every step of the way.

It is that

            That we are to teach

                        To disciple others into

            It is that

                        That we are baptized into

let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in the one body. And be thankful - Amen

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