John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
He Pitched His Tent Among Us
John 1:1-18
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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What is the central fact of Christianity - the very heart of this faith which we celebrate today? What is the wonder of wonders in this all-wonderful gospel of Jesus Christ? What would you venture to suggest as the heart and soul of this faith that has changed the course of human history, the face of civilization, and the personal lives of innumerable souls?

Think!

Is it “the fatherhood of God” which Jesus himself stressed so forcefully?

Is it the gracious movement of the Holy Spirit making real the living Christ as Comforter, Power-Giver, Guide?

Or, is it the cross? The outpouring of sacrificial love, the living out to the ultimate of Jesus’ own claim: “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for a friend.”

For the Christian Church in the West, this has been the central fact - the cross. Calvary is our Holy of Holies. Around the cross is where we feel nearest to God, more conscious of His Presence, pierced to the heart by His sacrificial love poured out for sinners such as we are.

But consider another possibility, and let me pose it with a word from Dr. Charles Allen. Charlie Allen, as he is affectionately called, has been the Pastor of the largest United Methodist Church in the United States-First Church, Houston. Dr. Allen is a Georgia boy, and has been one of the most popular preachers in the United States during the past 25 years. We’re hoping to have him for a preaching mission here at Christ Church next fall. I heard him not long ago, and he was at his best. In his inimitable way, Georgia drawl and all, he stated a profound truth simply. Listen to him. “I live around the corner from a man who walked on the moon. When I see him, I experience a bit of awe until I remember that the greatest event in human history is not when a man walked on the moon, humanity’s greatest event was when God walked on earth.”

This is the first Sunday of Advent and from now until Christmas, we’re going to focus on humanity’s greatest event - or God’s greatest event - the coming of God to us in our guise, as a human being, flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone.

The Eastern church, unlike the West, has focused on Bethlehem rather than Calvary, as the central place, as the Holy of Holies. In that branch of Christendom, “It has always been beside the manger that hearts have grown stillest and most awed; there that the mystery of divine grace staggers men most. There is much to be said for that – this event in Bethlehem being the central fact of Christianity.

Consider the possibility? Before Bethlehem life for many was a desperate affair. For multitudes, it was a grim holding out and little more. And there was nothing to hope for on ahead. Life was full of pain and problems past our understanding, and sorrow upon sorrow, every kind of terrifying thing. And they were facing it alone. For God was out of it. That was the privilege, and the prerogative, that a God possessed, that He was out of it. He was untouched by the cold shadows that still over Maeterlinck once imagined he saw God on a mountainside, high above the fog of things, down unconcernedly upon his troubled world, no more disturbed by it and its dark problems than we are by a set of puppies tumbling over each other. Then it happened. Men found that they were not alone. There was someone beside them and that someone was God; not out of it, but in it, at the raw sore heart of it; touched with a feeling of their infirmities, afflicted in all their afflictions, and always there; so that, in the loneliest, toughest situation or experience, there are two of us - our own frail, foolish, frightened heart, and the all-sufficient God upon whom it can lean. (Interpreter’s Bible Volume 8, pages 473,475)

So let’s live with the truth of it as we examine Scripture. Our lesson today, which we read earlier, is John 1:1-14, the almost breath taking prologue to John’s gospel. In this passage, there’s a whole series of staggering assertions that sweep us along, allowing no breaths to be taken, no pauses for reflection, and reaching the most staggering of all assertions in the fourteenth verse: “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of Grace and Truth; we have beheld His Glory, Glory as of the only son from the Father.”

But this is no isolated concept in John. To be sure, no where else is it more magnificently stated - but it had its beginning in the beginning - and was expressed forcibly and clearly during the Exodus. Get that story in mind, you’ll find it in the 29th Chapter of Exodus.

“Moses had led Israel out of Egypt and through the parted waters of the Red Sea. Safe at last from the Egyptian Army, this unruly horde of humanity - 600,000 men accompanied by women and children - camped out at the foot of Mt. Sinai. There, God called Moses to the mountaintop and instructed him in the laws by which his chosen people were now to live. These laws ranged from the all encompassing Ten Commandments to such detailed ordinances as the means of restitution for stolen animals.

“When the Israelites accepted God’s Covenant with the words, Everything the Lord has said we will do. . .we will obey, God again called Moses to the mountaintop where he made one of the most remarkable promises in the Bible: “I will consecrate the tent of meeting and the altar and.. .1 will dwell among the Israelites.” (Exodus 29:44—45 NIV). What a staggering thought! The sovereign God of the universe promised to pitch his tent among us actually to dwell in the midst of his chosen people (Colson, LOVING GOD, pages 127— 128)

So this is our theme today for this first Sunday of Advent. He pitched his tent among us. This remarkable promise Cod made to Moses - that he would pitch his tent in the midst of his chosen people - is a central theme of Scripture. It reached its Mt. Everest peak in this mighty assertion of our text: “And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us.” This is the sentence for the sake of which John wrote the entire fourth gospel. The Greek word used here for “dwelt” is derived from the noun for tent, so connection with the tabernacle in the wilderness where the Lord dwelt with Israel. In Christ, God has pitched his tent among us.

And do you remember that word of John near the close of the Book of Revelation where he describes his vision of the new heaven and the new earth. Listen to it: “And I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea. And I John saw the Holy City, New Jerusalem, coming down from Cod out of Heaven prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a great voice out of heaven, saying, “Behold, the Tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God.” (Revelation21:1—4 KJV).

Again, the word “dwell” is literally translated to “pitch a tent”. Thus, from Exodus to Revelation, we find the identical imagery, a Holy God “pitching his tent” among his people; first in the tabernacle, then in the wilderness, and ultimately in His Kingdom, when he comes again to establish a new heaven and a new earth.

Now I don’t want to labor this too long; but I don’t want you to miss the depth of it, either. God has pitched his tent among us. Is there a more heartening message in the Bible than that? Dietrich Rischl thinks not. He wrote about the feeling that came over him one December night in 1944 during a bomb attack:

“Many thousands of people died that night, and after the worse was over, I found myself lying with my head on a suitcase in a waiting room of the Railroad Station. The roof was cracked and I saw the flames leaping up, and my eyes caught the inscription on the ceiling, a quotation from the poet Schiller: ‘Beyond the stars there must live a gracious Father. ‘And I shook my fist at the sky saying “I don’t want that kind of God, who hovers above the clouds and does not care. I want a God who is with us when the bombs fall, where the Iron Curtains are, where all courage and confidence and strength are gone, I want God there and no where else.”

And he is! Rischl concluded, He mixes with us, he’s one of us. Even before He speaks, even before He demands anything of us, he comes and is with us. He was in the terror of that night. He was in the rubble and the screams. He was with those who suffered and with those who called on His Name as they died.” (quoted by Don Shelby, The Language of His Coming December 14, 1980).

That’s the gospel faith - Jesus is Immanuel “God with us.” Was it last Sunday that I told you of the young man, not yet 30, diagnosed with leukemia? The word that I had to that point was that it was acute. We had talked long together, prayed together. Well, he was in church when I was talking about him. He greeted me after the service with joy; something had happened. His wife says it’s miraculous. And of course, we are continuing to pray for the best; but here is the word, my friends, the very best exceeds the best or the worst where that disease is concerned - for the very best is “God is with us!” He has pitched his tent among us joy and jeopardy. In success and sickness, in pleasure and pain, in tragedy and triumph, in life and death - he has pitched his tent among us.

Therefore we are never alone. We do not have to move and do in our own power. And there is nothing – absolutely nothing – that can separate us from the law in Christ Jesus.

I began by asking the question – What is the central fact of Christianity? What is the wonder of all wonders in this all-wonderful Gospel of Jesus Christ? This may not be this unique wonder – but it is one of the thrilling wonders.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam