CHRISTMAS ANGELS: THE NAMING ANGEL
A Sermon by
Matthew 1
8Now
the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had
been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be
with child from the Holy Spirit. 19Her husband Joseph, being a
righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to
dismiss her quietly. 20But just when he had resolved to do this, an
angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph, son of David,
do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is
from the Holy Spirit. 21She will bear a son, and you are to name him
Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.” 22All this took
place to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet:
23 “Look, the virgin
shall conceive and bear a son,
and they shall name him
Emmanuel,”
which means, “God is
with us.” 24When Joseph awoke from sleep, he did as the angel of the
Lord commanded him; he took her as his wife, 25but had no marital
relations with her until she had borne a son; and he named him Jesus.
Christmas Angels have been on our minds and in our sermons since
the first Sunday of December. Maybe it’s
time now to turn to some experts and let the children tell us exactly who and
what angels are. These quotes came by
way of the Internet, but that’s not a plea for all of you to start forwarding
Internet stories to me!
Gregory,
5, says “I only know the names of two angels.
Hark and Harold.”
Olive,
9, complains, “Everybody's got it all wrong. Angels don't wear halos anymore. I
forget why but scientists are working on it.”
Matthew,
9, claims, “It's not easy to become an angel! First, you die. Then you go to
heaven, then there's still the flight training to go through. And then you got
to agree to wear those angel clothes.”
Mitchell,
7, believes “Angels work for God and watch over kids when God has to go do
something else.” Hard to imagine that
there would be time for anything else!
Henry,
8, says, “My guardian angel helps me with math, but he's not much good for
science.”
Daniel,
9, shares his knowledge, “Angels talk all the way while they're flying you up
to heaven. The main subject is where you
went wrong before you got dead.”
Reagan,
10, knows the fearsomeness of angels, explaining, “When an angel gets mad, he
takes a deep breath and counts to ten. And
when he lets out his breath, somewhere there's a tornado.”
Sara,
6, shares these angel facts, “Angels have a lot to do and they keep very busy.
If you lose a tooth, an angel comes in through your window and leaves money
under your pillow. Then when it gets cold, angels fly south for the winter.”
And
But what I don’t get is--what was the angel telling Joseph
to name Mary’s baby? Was he to name the
baby Jesus or Emmanuel? Maybe it was supposed
to be a double name like when my
I read about a grandfather who found his grandson jumping up
and down in his playpen, crying at the top of his voice. When the boy saw his grandfather, he reached
up his chubby little hands and cried, “Out, Gramps, out!” It was only natural for the grandfather to
reach down to lift him out, but the mother of the child said, “No, Son, you are
being punished, so you must stay in there.”
The grandfather was at a loss to know what to do. The child’s tears and hands reached deep into
his heart. But the mother’s firmness in
correcting her son was not to be taken lightly.
Here was a problem of love versus law.
But love found a way. The
grandfather could not take the grandson out of the playpen…so he climbed in
with him. And that is what the angel is
announcing. In Jesus, God has climbed in
with us. Climbed into our earthly
struggles, into the routine of our days, climbed into the midst of our
humanity, stepped onto dirt and pavement, into homes and hovels, amid the commonness
of mortal existence. When you need God,
God is here. Even if you don’t believe
in God, God is here. The truth is in the
name. Jesus/Emmanuel brought God to live
with us.
As for the name “Jesus,” Matthew is the only New Testament
writer who applies a meaning to the name.
"What is your Christmas wish?" I asked
her. She sadly replied, "My wish is
for it to be over." I knew what she
was talking about. Many people have said
similar things to me through the years. Some are too sad over the loss of loved ones
who had made Christmases past happen for them.
To them Christmas can’t be Christmas without those lost loved ones. Others cannot identify with the "happy
family" image that commercial Christmas sells us. The huge home, gaily decorated with expensive
ornaments. Parents giving new cars to
their teenagers. Dad giving Mom a
diamond necklace. Mom giving Dad socks
and a necktie (some things are always true)!
And everyone cuddling warmly in front of a blazing hearth. That picture doesn't fit a lot of the
families I know. Broken or strained
relationships between spouses or between parents and children make it hard to watch
that Merry Christmas image. Empty
wallets and tight budgets often cause more guilt than joy in gift-giving. Just this week a young man came by the
church, begging food to stock his family’s fridge. As we made plans for that, he poured out to
me the guilt he felt because his son had just turned 17 and he wasn’t able to
buy the boy a car. He couldn’t even keep
the family in food, but somehow society had convinced him that he was supposed
to provide a car for a 17 year old. "My wish is for it to be over," the
woman had said. I know what she
meant. I wish I had said to her
then: "My wish is that you will
discover the real Christmas."
Jesus came to save, to heal our broken relationships with God and with
each other. His magnetic love can save
us by drawing the bitterness out of our hearts and minds. His healing touch can save us from our fears,
and from society’s demands, and can calm our souls. Jesus is the real gift at Christmas--the only
one that really matters.
But Jesus does enable us to give some really neat
gifts to others. He gives us love for
others that we can share just for the cost of a phone call or a little paper
and ink. Ask any adult what was the greatest
Christmas gift that they have ever received.
The majority will say a special note or letter, a day or evening with
loved ones, a bit of paste and glue and paper put together by a child. All a far cry from the $350 slacks I saw at
the men’s store this week. Three hundred
and fifty dollars for a pair of pants!
No offense meant to those of you out there wearing those slacks
today! My prayer for all of us is that
we may find the ultimate thrill by unwrapping this gift from God named
Jesus. Nothing that society can produce
will make Christmas or life mean more.
The poet Francis
Thompson wrote, “The angels keep their ancient places; turn but a stone and
start a wing.” I hope you will take time
this season to listen for the angels.
Perhaps they might even have a new name for you: Faithful Believer,
Trusted Servant, Child of God. Merry
Christmas.