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Today is the fourth Sunday of Advent, and we are working our way around the various candles of the Advent Wreath.
The traditional reading for the third Sunday of Advent comes from Philippians 4:4 which says: “Rejoice in the Lord always!
I will say it again, rejoice!”
Our youth and children did an amazing job this morning presenting JOY!
And now we will look at a number of Scriptures this morning relating to Christmas and joy, but we will begin with these verses from Luke 2.
Victoria read it already but here is the reference Luke 2:8-12.
One of the things people love about Christmas is that it truly is a joyful season.
All season long we celebrate with music and song and lights and decorations.
We celebrate by getting together with family and friends and by exchanging gifts.
It is a joyful time of year.
But I can’t help feeling that sometimes the world hijacks their joy in the season from the true joy at the center of Christmas.
Because when you come right down to it, the real joy at Christmas comes not from the lights and the decorations and the music but from the meaning of Christmas.
At the heart of Christmas is the astoundingly good news that Jesus Christ was born as a Savior into this world.
From beginning to end the Christmas story is punctuated with various outbursts and moments of joy, and they all center around the birth of Christ.
You can’t get away from it.
You can’t get around it.
You can’t spell Christmas without Christ, and you can’t enter into the true joy of the season without Jesus.
This morning I want us to consider three truths about joy at Christmas.
1) Jesus brings the joy of salvation.
2) Joy leads to proclamation.
3) Joy leads to praise.
All three of these truths are found right in the very Scripture passages which tell us the Christmas story, and so all three of these truths together capture the true meaning of joy at Christmas.
Jesus brings the joy of salvation
The joy of salvation.
Now Jesus brings joy in so many areas of life, but the joy that is especially associated with Christ’s birth is the joy of salvation.
Last week we saw that Jesus’ very name means salvation, and this week I want us to see the connection that the Bible makes between salvation and joy.
For example, we read David’s prayer to the Lord
David wrote this Psalm after committing adultery with Bathsheba.
David had sinned greatly against God, but he still understood the connection between salvation and joy.
He repented of his sin.
He asked God’s forgiveness and asked God to restore to him the joy of his salvation.
We find the same connection between salvation and joy in Isaiah 12:3 where Isaiah writes:
What a beautiful image!
In this passage Isaiah is prophesying about the second coming of Christ, which as we have seen is a large part of the focus of the Advent.
Advent not only reminds us of Christ’s first coming, but also helps us as we anticipate Christ’s second coming.
There is no true joy without salvation, and there is no true salvation without joy.
The two go together, and they especially go together in those Scriptures which tell us the Christmas story.
For example, we read in the gospel of Luke how when Mary was pregnant with Jesus she went to visit her cousin Elizabeth.
Elizabeth was also pregnant at this time with John the Baptist.
We read in Luke 1:39-45.
I know you remember this passage.
I love this scene.
Mary enters the house, and John the Baptist, who was filled with the Holy Spirit from the womb, starts jumping for joy! Why?
Because as Elizabeth put it, Mary was the mother of her Lord!
Jesus is Lord, Mary was Jesus’ mother, and John was in close proximity with Jesus who had come to bring salvation for his people.
And so John begins jumping with joy in his mother’s womb.
How is that possible, you may wonder?
Well, it’s because he was filled with the Holy Spirit.
You have two of the members of the Trinity here in one house.
You have God the Spirit filling John the Baptist in Elizabeth’s womb and God the Son growing as a child in Mary’s womb.
Now the Holy Spirit’s role is to glorify Jesus as Savior.
That’s what the Holy Spirit does.
The Holy Spirit’s job is to get excited about Jesus!
And so when Jesus enters the house in Mary’s womb, John the Baptist who is filled with the Holy Spirit gets excited about Jesus because the Savior has come.
Salvation and joy belong together, and joy and Christmas belong together, because Jesus came at Christmas to bring us joy, especially the joy of salvation.
So that’s our first point this morning.
Jesus brings the joy of salvation.
Joy leads to proclamation
Secondly, joy leads to proclamation.
Jesus brings the joy of salvation, and that joy leads us to share the good news of Jesus with others.
We find this truth demonstrated for us in the story of the angels and the shepherds.
For example, we read in
Notice the news about Jesus’ birth is not only news, it is good news!
And it is not only good news, it is good news of joy!
And it is not only good news of joy, it is good news of great joy!
And it is not only good news of great joy, it is good news of great joy for all the people!
But how will all the people know about this good news of great joy unless we share it with them?
We share good news with each other all the time.
When something good happens, we talk about it with our friends at work or at school.
We post it on Facebook.
When the good news is the birth of a baby, we especially share it with others, don’t we?
We take pictures and send out birth announcements.
We are filled with joy at the birth of a child, and that joy naturally leads to proclamation.
We want everyone to know and share in our joy.
Well, if we tell everyone about the birth of our own babies, how much more should we proclaim the birth of God’s Son!
Good news is for sharing, and there is no better news than the news the angels shared with the shepherds that first Christmas Eve:
So what did the shepherds do after they received this good news of great joy that was for all the people?
Let’s find out!
Picking up the story in
When the shepherds heard this good news of great joy that was for all the people, first they checked it out for themselves and found everything just as the angel had told them.
And after they had checked it out for themselves, what did they do?
They spread the word to others.
Why?
Because good news is for sharing!
This was good news of great joy for all the people, and it would have been wrong for them to keep it to themselves.
Joy leads to proclamation.
Joy leads to praise
1) Jesus brings the joy of salvation.
2) Joy leads to proclamation.
And then thirdly:
3) Joy leads to praise.
We find this truth demonstrated for us in two examples from the Christmas story.
The first example is Mary after she hears the words of prophecy from Elizabeth that we looked at earlier in the message.
Mary was filled with joy and wonder as her cousin Elizabeth spoke words of blessing and favor over her and the child she carried in her womb.
Her joy could not be contained, and so then she burst out in a song of praise.
We often call this “Mary’s Song” as Mary magnifies or glorifies the Lord for choosing her to be the mother of Jesus.
And notice that this joy still has to do with salvation.
Mary rejoices in God her Savior.
She is filled with joy at God’s goodness to her, and her joy bubbles over into praise.
And then we find this same pattern also with the shepherds when they returned from sharing the good news of Jesus with the people in the town.
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