Matthew 2:19-23 · The Return to Nazareth
A Pep Talk for a New Year
Matthew 2:13-23
Sermon
by King Duncan & Angela Akers
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I’d like to start this morning by wishing everyone a very Happy New Year. I can’t think of a better way to start this New Year than gathering with other believers and worshiping God. Most of us try to go into the New Year with a positive attitude. Sometimes it helps if we get a little encouragement, maybe a “pep talk” to get us in the right mindset.

If so, we’re in luck. There is a kindergarten class in Healdsburg, California, that runs their own free hotline which they call “Peptoc,” P-E-P-T-O-C. The number, in case you’re interested, is 707-998-8410, and it’s a great way to get inspired by the enthusiasm of children.

The teachers who created Peptoc said they were inspired to do so after witnessing how their young students kept a positive attitude in the face of hard times. After all, over the past couple of years, these kids had been through the COVID-19 pandemic, California wildfires, changes in their family’s circumstances. And yet, they remained hopeful, positive, energetic. The teachers thought more people needed to learn from these kids. That’s how Peptoc was created. (1)

If you call Peptoc, you will hear the following options: “If you're feeling mad, frustrated or nervous, press 1. If you need words of encouragement and life advice, press 2. If you need a pep talk from kindergartners, press 3.” Pressing option 3 will connect you to recordings of positive, encouraging messages recorded by the kindergartners themselves. Some examples of their pep talks are, “Bro, you look great!” or “If you are nervous, go get your wallet and spend it on ice cream and shoes. You’ll feel better.”

If you need to hear kids laughing with delight, press 4. For encouragement in Spanish, press 5.” Within days of launching the hotline, these kids were receiving hundreds of calls per day. (2)

It’s a great idea to start the New Year with advice from children because they often see things with fresh eyes. A few years ago, Men’s Health magazine celebrated the New Year by publishing a list of advice from kids. Gavriella, age 7, had this advice for folks who wanted to get in good shape: “Run around the backyard like the dog does. He seems like he’s in pretty good shape.” For men who want to improve their relationship with their wife or girlfriend, Charlie, age 5, had this humorous advice, “Don’t put a glue stick in her hair. It sounds like it’s funny, but she never thinks so.”

And for those who want to have more money in the New Year, Aki, age five, says, “Buy more things that give you back more change. If you have a lot of coins, your pockets will be heavy and you’ll think, ‘I’m rich!’ It’s all about heavy pockets.” (3)

So what about you? I hope that in this New Year you will have heavy pockets and a light heart. But none of us can predict what events this year will hold for us. When we look back at this past year, some of us experienced unexpected joys; some of us experienced unexpected challenges or heartbreaks. And because of these, we are not the same people we were 365 days ago.

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March 2020, it seemed like the whole world shut down. Airlines all over the world grounded their flights. It was scary; no one knew how bad the pandemic would get or when it would be over.

On March 23, 2020, First Officer Chris Dennis, a pilot for Delta Airlines, was told to park his airplane in the Delta storage lot at a remote airport facility in the California desert. No one knew when they would be flying again. Before he completed his duties on the plane, First Officer Dennis wrote a note of hope for whoever found this plane in the future.

It read like this; “Hey pilots – It's March 23rd and we just arrived from Minneapolis-St. Paul. Very chilling to see so much of our fleet here in the desert. If you are here to pick [this plane] up, then the light must be at the end of the tunnel. Amazing how fast it changed. Have a safe flight bringing it out of storage!”

This pilot couldn’t have known—no one could have known—that the COVID-19 virus would spread around the world and kill more than 6 million people. He couldn’t have known when, or if, he would ever fly again. But he trusted that the pandemic would end, and that he and his fellow pilots would fly again, so he left this note to encourage whoever had the job of bringing his plane out of storage.

Thankfully, things did get better. On June 21, 2021—435 days since First Officer Dennis stored ship 3009 in the desert—First Officer Nick Perez was assigned the job of bringing that jet out of storage. As he went through the pre-flight checklists, his mechanic Tom Trenda, suggested he check the tray table on the flight deck. And that’s where First Officer Perez found the letter left behind by First Officer Dennis.

Looking back at that moment, Perez said, “I kept thinking about my mindset now compared to his when he left this note. (Back then) we were getting good at landing empty airplanes, now we’re going in the right direction. I’m in good spirits. I’m very optimistic.” (4)

 And that brings me to our Bible story for the day. It opens just after the Magi from the East have come to worship the child Jesus. After the Magi left, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, “Get up, take the child and his mother and escape to Egypt. Stay there until I tell you, for Herod is going to search for the child to kill him.” And the scriptures say that Joseph planned their escape immediately.

Tragically, when Herod realized that the Magi were not going to lead him to Jesus, “he was furious, and he gave orders to kill all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under . . .”

Can you imagine a world where a powerful king can do something so evil just to hang on to his power? The first thing we notice from this story is that, because of his journey in human flesh, God understands that our lives are sometimes affected by circumstances beyond our control. Disasters, tragedies, injustices—none of us are immune to them. There are frightening circumstances beyond our control. There are powerful forces that shape our society, our world, that are beyond our control. And how we view this truth, how we let it shape our lives, is the only thing we do have under our control.

Rebecca Stott is the author of the book The Days of Rain, which tells the true story of her upbringing in a group called The Exclusive Brethren, a doomsday cult whose leaders believed that the world was run by Satan. As a result, they cut off all contact with the outside world. No one in The Exclusive Brethren was allowed to read newspapers or own radios or televisions. Stott says that one of the key lessons she learned from growing up in the cult was that she “became an expert at being afraid.” (5)

Sadly, that’s how many of us respond to a world of tragedy. We become experts at being afraid. And fear turns to anger or giving up or withdrawing from the world. And all three responses keep us from seeing how God is working out His plan for creation: His plan to redeem all things through Jesus Christ and establish the Kingdom of God. And that’s tragic because even though today’s Bible story is a sad commentary on human nature, it is also full of hope.

The second thing we notice in this story is that God is always working out His plans and promises even in the worst circumstances.

Let me tell you about a woman named Elizabeth who struggled for a long time with drug addiction. When she recovered, she wanted to help others who had made the same mistakes that she had made. So she started writing anonymous notes of encouragement and tucking them under car windshield wipers and taping them to utility poles in parks. One of her notes concluded with these words: “Much love. Hope sent.” (6)

Can you think of a time when you needed a message of hope? In these eleven verses of our Bible passage today, Matthew tucks three notes of encouragement. He reminds us three times of God’s plans for His people, and of God’s promises to His people. In this sad, sad story, he is reminding the people of Israel to never lose hope in the Lord.

Notice that three times in these verses, Matthew writes some variation of, “And so was fulfilled what the Lord had said through the prophet . . .” The Holy Family’s escape to Egypt was prophesied by Hosea more than 750 years earlier. The tragedy of Herod ordering the death of the children was prophesied by Jeremiah more than 600 year earlier. And numerous prophets declared that the Messiah would come from a humble, lowly place like Nazareth. Every time Matthew points to a prophecy, he is saying, “Remember, God is always faithful to fulfill His promises. Always. Not one of God’s promises will fail.” In tragedies, in injustices, in circumstances beyond our control, we can find hope in this: God is always working out His plans and His promises for humanity.

And that brings me to the final insight from today’s Bible story: we can move forward in faith and confidence no matter how difficult our circumstances look because God is with us. Notice how Joseph responded each time an angel of the Lord came to him. He obeyed immediately. Even when he was afraid. Even when God’s plans didn’t seem to make sense. He still obeyed God immediately. He acted in faith no matter how difficult his circumstances appeared. That says to me that you and I can move forward in the same spirit of faith and confidence when we know that God is with us.

In November 2019, a woman named Beth Pottle signed up to run a very difficult, multiday relay race out in the California desert. Beth was 58 years old at the time. She had only started running a few years earlier. All her teammates on this relay race were much younger and were much more experienced runners. Beth was nervous about completing the race and afraid that she might fail her team. One neighbor who saw Beth training in the North Carolina heat offered to add her name to a text prayer chain so other women in their small town could pray for her race.

On race day as Beth and her team gathered near the starting line, Beth’s phone suddenly pinged. Her teammates stared at her. They were in a remote desert region that had no cell phone service. The ping was a text from the neighborhood prayer chain back in North Carolina. Beth read it aloud to her team. It was Isaiah 41:10, a promise from God to the nation of Israel, “So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”

The runners ran up and down steep mountain slopes; some of the running even took place at night. After the first night’s run, Beth was so exhausted that she began to walk the trail rather than run. Then she heard that verse from Isaiah 41 in her head. And she picked up her feet and ran again. God was with her. All she had to do was keep moving forward. Beth and her teammates successfully finished the race. As they headed back into San Diego from the desert, all their phones began pinging them constantly with messages of support from their family and friends back home. But only one message had gotten through when they were in the desert--the message reminding them of the promise of God’s love. (7)

I don’t know what this New Year holds for you. And I don’t expect pep talks will work in our most difficult circumstances. But I do know that God’s plans and promises never fail. And because of that, I know that we can keep moving forward in faith no matter what this next year throws at us. I pray that you would take these truths to heart and let them shape your attitude and your faith as you begin this New Year.


1. “Press 3 for a pep talk from kindergartners. A new hotline gives you options for joy,” Weekend Edition Sunday by Adrian Florido, NPR, March 6, 2022. Hiba Ahmad and Hadeel Al-Shalchi produced and edited this story for broadcast. Emma Bowman produced the story for the web. Https://www.npr.org/2022/03/06/1084800784/peptoc-hotline-kindergarteners.

2.“Benefield: “Need an immediate pick-me-up? Call this number to hear advice from Healdsburg students” by Kerry Benefield, The Press Democrat, March 3, 2022,  https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/benefield-need-an-immediate-pick-me-up-call-this-number/.

3. “27 Life Tips From Kids That Are Smarter Than Us” by Eric Spitznagel, Men's Health, January 10, 2017. https://www.menshealth.com/trending-news/a19536383/advice-from-kids/.

4. “Parked for 435 days: First Officer leaves letter in A321 in March 2020 to serve as pandemic time capsule,” Staff Writer Jun 4, 2021. https://news.delta.com/parked-435-days-first-officer-leaves-letter-a321-march-2020-serve-pandemic-time-capsule.

5. "How to Survive a Doomsday Cult" Slate interview by David Epstein with Hannah Stott and Michael Slate.com March 4, 2021, https://slate.com/transcripts/VmtWczRQTTgwYXdIZVNWOFJaM2lJN3JUYTU4bTgzK3dDbGJSeWt4NjcxTT0. In the Days of Rain book review, The Guardian. June 27, 2017 by Miranda Doyle, https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/jun/27/in-days-of-rain-daughter-father-cult-rebecca-stott-book-untruths-miranda-doyle-review.

6. Anne Cetas, Faith, Hope, Love: 365 Daily Devotions from Our Daily Bread, Discovery House. Kindle Edition.

7. “A Heaven-Sent Text Message Gave Her a Second Wind” by Beth Pottle, from Guideposts, Posted in Stories of Faith, Nov 25, 2021, https://www.guideposts.org/inspiration/inspiring-stories/stories-of-faith/a-heaven-sent-text-message-gave-her-a-second-wind.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons for the First Quarter, by King Duncan & Angela Akers