Thursday, January 1, 2009

December 24, 2008 - "The Gift of God's Self - The Gift of Your Self"

Crescent Hill Baptist Church
Louisville, Kentucky
Christmas Eve
December 24, 2008
W. Gregory Pope

Series: Re-Gifting God’s Gifts
THE GIFT OF GOD’S SELF - THE GIFT OF YOUR SELF

Isaiah 9:2-7; Psalm 96-98; Titus 2:11-14; Hebrews 1:1-4; Luke 2:1-20; John 1:1-14


This Advent season we have been Re-Gifting God’s Gifts.

When we think of re-gifting we usually think of giving to someone else those gifts we were given that we either did not care for or have more of than we need.

Just for curiosity’s sake: How many of you are re-gifting this year? Raise your hand. I know your family may be sitting beside you and you can’t tell them you’re re-gifting an old gift, but you may just want to raise your hand to make them wonder about their gift.

This season we’ve been talking about Re-Gifting God’s Gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love - not as gifts we do not care for or have too much of, but as gifts we simply cannot keep to ourselves.

We’ve been asking ourselves two questions each week:

One: Where have you found God’s hope, peace, joy, love?
and
Two: How can we re-gift God’s gifts to others and to the world?

God’s gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love can never be too plentiful and are gifts we care for deeply. And the wonderful thing about re-gifting God’s gifts is that you can share them and keep them at the same time.

Tonight as we remember and celebrate the gift of God’s self to us in Jesus Christ, let us also consider how we can re-gift by giving our selves to God, to others, and to the world.

The Gift of God’s Self

The gift of God’s self. In the Christ of Bethlehem, God entered the world in a way God had never done before.

Since the first light of creation and eternity past, the Spirit of God has covered the cosmos - every particle, every black hole, every galaxy. God has been present at the birth of every new star and gives us eyes to see and minds to learn of God’s ever-expanding universe. There is no place in the whole creation where God is not present.

God has walked through garden and wilderness, smiled in birthing rooms and wept in fields of war. There has never been a moment when God did not cradle the whole world in beloved hands. That includes your life and mine.

On this precious speck of dust called earth, God has made God’s self known to us.

The book of Hebrews recounts for us how in times past God has spoken through creation and prophets, but now in Christ God speaks through a Son.

“A child has been born, a son is given. He is Wonderful Counselor, Prince of Prince, Everlasting Father, Mighty God.”

In the mystery of Incarnation, the Word God has been speaking since Day One, the Word through whom God created the world, that Word has become flesh. The Mighty God has taken on skin and bone, blood and human limitation and come to live among us. The Mighty God has come to save us, to be the light in our darkness.

In the New Testament letter of Titus, we read that the scope of this act is universal in its redemption: God’s grace has appeared in Christ bringing salvation to all.

If your mind cannot wrap itself around this miracle of Incarnation, that means you understand. In humility and wonder, you stand under the great mystery and the generous love that is beyond all telling.

The Re-Gifting of Ourselves

But you know what? The miracle of Incarnation continues with you and me and every stranger you meet. Every human face - old and young, brown and white, male and female - bears the face of God in Christ.

Sometimes it takes the tiny face of a Harley Grace to see the miracle of Christmas. Maybe that is why, without our fully knowing, we say Christmas is about children.

Just this week I read a BBC news story with the headline “Child bishop takes on church role.” The story reports that in the southern English county of Hampshire, a nine-year-old girl named Ophelia Wells is serving as bishop at an Anglican cathedral during most of December.

She is preaching every Sunday. And she has made some new rules, including one allowing children to ring the church bells, and another declaring that a free glass of wine will be given to those who go to church for two weeks in a row.

Ophelia is very pleased to occupy the position. She said, “It’s going to be fun. Because I get to boss people around.”

Ophelia’s not the only one. Children have also been appointed bishops at cathedrals in Hereford and Winchester and who knows where else. Each of them is serving from December 6 to December 28.

It’s the revival of a tradition that goes back to the Middle Ages, and it has to do with St. Nicholas. He lived in the 4th century in Turkey, and was himself a bishop. He is the patron saint of sailors and, more famously, of children. His feast day is December 6, and he has been known in some parts of the world to bring presents to children on that day.

As part of the celebration of his feast day, medieval English cathedrals and some of the parish churches would appoint a child, the smallest singer in the choir, to act as bishop for the rest of the month. Other children joined in taking charge. The clergy were dismissed and the kids took over. When the Reformation came, the practice was ended; but now in some quarters it is making a happy comeback. Sounds like fun.

There is a text often read in Advent from the prophet Isaiah that says, “a little child shall lead them.” It is read in this season because we gather around a manger to adore a child who is Emmanuel, God-with-us.

What I want us to see tonight is that you and I are the child-bishop, God’s priest, called not to boss other people around, but called to embody the holy presence of Christ to the world. To continue the Incarnation, to be God’s Word made flesh, led by Bethlehem’s Child.

In particular, it is the church, those bound together in the baptized following of Jesus, who are the Body of Christ, the hands and feet and face of Christ to one another and to the world.

God has come to us in Christ. Christ gave himself up for us all. So we give ourselves to one another, to the world, and to God.

Like the shepherds we tell what we have seen and heard - how the presence of God has come near to us in Jesus Christ, sharing the hope and peace and joy and love of God.

You may not have been able this year to afford the gifts you wanted for those you love. So why don’t you just give the gift of your precious self.

Conclusion

The greatest gift of all awaits us this night in a stable under a cross-shaped star. It is the gift of new life wrapped in blankets of hope and peace, joy and love. It is Emmanuel, God-with-us. The gift of God’s very self is offered you this night. Open your hands, open your heart, and take into yourself eternal life.

And then, in light of God’s generous love and grace, offer yourself back to God in holy living, compassionate generosity, grateful worship, and sacrificial love.

We give ourselves to God by taking care of this world God has made and all who live within it. Giving ourselves for the well-being of others. Giving ourselves as Christ to the world with abandon and great love.

Welcome the Christ. Be the Christ. Give the Christ away.

God has come to live among us.

December 21, 2008 - "Re-gifting Love"

Crescent Hill Baptist Church
Louisville, Kentucky
The Fourth Sunday of Advent
December 21, 2008
W. Gregory Pope

Series: Re-Gifting God’s Gifts

RE-GIFTING LOVE
A Pastoral Meditation

2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16; Luke 1:47-55; Romans 16:25-27; Luke 1:26-38


This Advent season we are re-gifting. We are opening our hearts to receive God’s gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love and then re-gifting them to the world around us.

Today we take a moment to ponder the gift of love.

God’s Love For Us

The psalmist says, “I will sing of your steadfast love, O Lord.”

God’s love for each us is forever faithful.

Though our specific calling is different than that of Mary’s, God would want us to hear the same words Mary heard from the angel: “You have found favor with God.” God’s love and grace are here for each of us to receive.

For God so loved the world God gave us Jesus Christ, God’s only Son, through whom we receive the gift of eternal life. For God so loved the world, God gave.

Giving is what love does. Giving is how love expresses itself. The heart of love is giving, therefore giving is at the heart of God.

What we learn about God at Christmas is that God is not a taker, but a giver.

The biblical story teaches us that God has been giving from the very beginning.

The God of scripture is a God who creates with beauty and generosity and creativity.

In the book of James we are told that every good and perfect gift comes from above, from the Father of light.

In the book of Lamentations the writer proclaims of God: “Your mercies are new every morning. Great is your faithfulness.” Every morning God is saying, “Did you like that sunrise yesterday? Here’s another one. Here is food for your body. Here is air for your lungs. Here is beauty for your eyes. Here is music for your ears. Here is strength for your needs. Here are friends for your heart. Here is a purpose for your day. God is giving and giving and giving all the time.

And that first Christmas, God finally got to give the best gift of all. It’s like God had been giving and giving since the beginning of creation, but he had this one gift he had been saving up all these years. For God so loved the world he gave his only Son so that you and I might know once and for all that we are God’s Beloved, that God’s love is forever ours.

The Re-gifting of Our Love to God and God’s Love to the World

We are all of us called to receive God’s love and then re-gift that love to God and to the world.

God has loved us and is faithful toward us, therefore, we love God and others and embody God’s faithfulness for the world to see.

We re-gift love to God like Mary - in obedience and in the willingness to do what God asks of us.

And what does God ask of us? To love one another and to share God’s love in acts of compassion.

Who do you know in need of God’s love this Christmas season?

What gift of love can you share?

As we ponder the gift of God’s love to us this Christmas, may we also consider how that love can be re-gifted through us.