Luke 2:8-20 · The Shepherds and the Angels
Advent 1: Let Us Go Over To Bethlehem And Find The Faith of Christmas
Luke 2:15-20
Sermon
by James W. Moore
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This sermon is based on Luke 2:15-20: You may not remember Tom Southerland but you know his story. Several years ago Shiite Muslims in the Middle East held Tom Sutherland captive for four years… much of his time was spent solitary confinement. In his speech after his captivity he asked an unforgettable question. He asked, “Do you know what it’s like to be in prison? To be held hostage? To be a captive? It’s very lonely and you worry that people will forget you. I felt abandoned. I didn’t think anybody even knew I was in prison.”

During his imprisonment, Tom Southerland could hear a radio that the guards had. It was tuned into the BBC channel… and every day Tom Southerland would listen intently to the newscast… hoping and praying that he might hear his name… hoping and praying that the newscaster would talk about him on the air and tell the story of his imprisonment and his innocence. But his name was never mentioned so he assumed that nobody in the United States even knew that he was being held hostage. Finally, after 4 years of captivity, Tom Southerland was released. Our government flew his wife, Jean, to the area so they could be reunited. They were so excited to see each other. A few days later, they flew home together to San Francisco. As they were getting off the plan back home in the United States, Tom Southerland was amazed to see that there were lights and television cameras, reporters and people holding signs… and a huge crowd at the airport. Tom turned to his wife and said, “Jean, look at all these people. There must be a celebrity on the plane with us. Look around and see if you can spot who it is.” And Jean said, “Honey, they are all here for you! It’s you! This is all for you!”

When his wife told him that, Tom Southerland started crying and he couldn’t stop. He sobbed like a little boy. He couldn’t believe it. He said, “I thought everybody had forgotten about me. I didn’t think anybody knew I was in captivity. I felt completely abandoned. I didn’t think anybody cared. Thank God I was wrong.”

The shepherds at the first Christmas must have felt something like that. Society had cast them out and pushed them down to one of the lowest rungs on the social ladder. They were considered unclean physically and spiritually… and they must have felt abandoned and forgotten. They must have felt like nobody really cared about them. But then they found out on that first Christmas night that, thank God, they were wrong. Somebody did care! The One who counts the most did care! He was there for them! Of all the people on the face of the earth, the Angel of the Lord appeared to them. And as they made their way to Bethlehem to see the Miracle of Christmas, they discovered in the process: three great gifts that Christmas gives to us; 3 great gifts that money can’t buy; 3 great gifts available now to you and me. Let’s take a look at these together.

I. First of All, There is the Gift of Acceptance.

The Shepherds found the gift of acceptance. When Terry Bowden was in his first year as head coach of Auburn (1993) he won the Bear Bryant Coach of the Year Award. What made the story so amusing is his father Bobby Bowden was nominated for the same award. He was at Florida State. There was a lot of good-natured joking and teasing at the banquet about this father and son being considered for the same prestigious award… and of course when Terry Bowden won… nobody in the room was happier or prouder than his dad.

In his acceptance speech Terry Bowden thanked his team, his fellow coaches, Auburn University, and then he thanked his family.

“I owe so much to my parents,” he said. “Many of you in this room know my mother and you know how special she is, but let me tell you about my father. My parents always took us 5 kids to church. Even when we were on a trip, they took us to church. Once while on vacation, we went to this church that was a little more emotional than we were used to. The minister was shouting and pounding the pulpit… and he began to look around the congregation for someone to single out… and he spotted my father.

“Mom and Dad had marched us down to the front pew. Mom was on one end, Dad on the other end with the 5 kids squeezed in between to be sure we would behave in church. The preacher pointed dramatically to my Dad and this conversation took place…

‘You there… Do you have faith?’

‘Yes, I have faith,’ Dad answered.

The preacher said, ‘If I put a 2 x 4 board down there on the floor, do you have enough faith to walk across it?’

‘Yes, I could do that.’

‘But,’ said the preacher, ‘what if I took that same 2 x 4 board and placed it across the top of the two tallest building in New York City… would you have enough faith to walk across it then?’

‘No, I don’t have that much faith,’ Dad answered.

‘But what if somebody were standing on the other end,’ said the preacher, ‘and dangling one of your children off the side… would you cross the board then?’”

Terry Bowden said his father turned and looked down the pew at his 5 kids, and said, “Which one?”

Now, of course, Terry Bowden was just kidding around because the Bowdens are a very close-knit, loving family… but the point I want to make is this: Our Father God does not say, “Which one?” He doesn’t say, “Which one should I lay my life on the line for?” God so love the world… He wants to bring us all into the circle.

He comes with the open arms of acceptance for all of us. To each one of us, he says, “You are valued. You are included. You are wanted. You are precious to me. This is for you.”

Now we have to do our part. We have to accept his acceptance. We have to receive this gracious gift. We have to welcome him into our hearts and lives with faith, but this Christmas present of acceptance is offered to us from God, and when we receive it and live in that spirit and pass that gift on to others then we are giving them a Christmas present wrapped in heaven… the gift of acceptance.

If you want to give something special to someone for Christmas this year – to your children, your parents, your neighbors, your co-workers, your friends, just say to them, “You are valued, you are included, you are wanted and needed. You are precious to me.” However you want to say it… express that… and you will give them a Christmas present… the gift of acceptance.

II. Second, There is the Gift of Forgiveness.

Steven Spielberg’s movie, “Schindler’s List,” is a graphic, shocking, unflinching depiction of the 20th century’s most staggering horror – the methodical, brutal extermination of millions of human beings in those Nazi death camps of World War II. Oskar Schindler was a most unlikely hero… but through the efforts of this one man, some 1200 persons were saved from certain death. He put them to work in his factory where he could protect them.

One of the most powerful moments in the movie is when Oskar Schindler is in conversation with the commander of the labor camp in Krakow, Poland. They are talking about power, and the commander (in his swaggering way) brags about the authority he has over these people. A man comes before him and he has the absolute authority to kill that man, exterminate that man, if he so chooses… and the commander has been in the habit of doing just that… killing people brutally right and left with no conscience at all. But Oskar Schindler says, “Oh no, Commander, you are wrong. That is not power. Anyone could do that. But to have a man come before you and to say, ‘I could take your life if I so choose but no… instead I pardon you! I pardon you!’ That, Commander, is power!”

Indeed. Power…real power is found in forgiveness… and that’s the Christmas gift God offers us.

Martin Luther once became so frustrated with the evil he saw going on around him that he shouted, “If I were God and saw people acting the way they do, I would smash the world to bits!” Luther might have, but not so with God. God comes into the world offering the gift of forgiveness… “I pardon you. I forgive you. I want to reclaim you.” That’s the gift he offers, but we have to do our part. We have to accept the gift in faith. And when we accept forgiveness and offer forgiveness to others, and live in the spirit of forgiveness, then we are doing a God-like thing. We are offering a Christmas present wrapped in Heaven… the gift of forgiveness. There is the gift of acceptance, the gift of forgiveness and…

III. Third and Finally, There is the Gift of Christ.

That’s really what it’s all about, isn’t it? A little boy named Paul, who is 4 ½ years old now, said to his mother, “Momma, I love Christmas almost as much as I love you.” His mom said, “Well, tell me Paul, what you love about Christmas.” And Paul answered, “I love the lights. I love the presents, and Mom, there’s one more thing and are going to like this best… most of all I love the Baby Jesus.”

Paul was right. His mom did like that best, because she has taught him that Jesus is the reason for the season. Indeed so! He is God’s gift to the world… the gift of the Savior… a gift money can’t buy.

Did you know that Socrates taught for 40 years, Plato for 50, Aristotle for 40, and Jesus for only 3. Yet the influence of Christ’s 3-year ministry infinitely transcends the impact left by the combined 130 years of teaching of these greatest philosophers of all antiquity.

Jesus painted no pictures, yet the finest painting of Raphael, Michelangelo, and Leonardo da Vinci received their inspiration from Him.

Jesus wrote no poetry, but Dante, Milton, and scores of the world’s greatest poets were inspired by Him.

Jesus composed no music; still Haydn, Handel, Beethoven, Bach, and Mendelssohn reached their highest perfection of melody in the hymns, symphonies, and oratorios they composed in his praise.

Every sphere of human greatness has been enriched by this humble carpenter of Nazareth.

Precisely! The gift of Christ… no question about it… that is the best Christmas gift of all. Patrick Henry understood that and he expressed it in the way he closed his will. He said, “I have now disposed of all my property to my family. There is one more thing that I wish I could give them and that is Jesus Christ… If they had Christ… and I had not given them one shilling, they would be rich indeed; and if, they had not Christ… and I had given them all the world, they would be poor.”

Remember at the start of this sermon how Tom Southerland thought he had been forgotten and that nobody cared, and his plane landed in San Francisco and he saw all the people and the lights and the cameras… and he thought there was a celebrity on board the plane… and his wife said to him, “It’s you! This is all for you.” Well, that’s what I want to say to you this morning about Christmas… it’s all for you! The Christmas Gift of Acceptance, the Christmas Gift of Forgiveness, and the Christmas Gift of Christ… they are all for you!


NOTE: This sermon series on Advent is currently a publication of Abingdon for Bible Study during Advent. Jim Moore has granted this series to eSermons users to use in preparation of their Advent sermons. The material may be used in oral presentation in services of worship. It has been adapted here for the use.

ChristianGlobe Network, eSermons.com Sermons, by James W. Moore