Luke 2:21-40 · Jesus Presented in the Temple
Making Christmas Last
Luke 2:21-40
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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A cartoon in the New Yorker magazine said it all. In the middle of the floor is a dried up, withered, Christmas tree. The calendar on the wall reads December 26. Dad is sitting in his chair with an ice pack on his head. Mom is in a bathrobe and her hair in rollers. The floor is a virtual mountain of torn wrappings, boxes, and bows. Junior is reaching in his stocking to be sure that there is no more candy. In the background we see a table with a thoroughly picked turkey still sitting there. The caption on the cartoon reads simply: The morning after.

Well, perhaps we feel a little that way. Perhaps we felt somewhat let down. If you feel that way it is quite understandable. Over the past weeks our emotions have been wound tighter than a toy doll. Our festivities have led up to near fever pitch. And then, suddenly, it is all over. Is it any wonder that it is somewhat of a let down. Psychiatrist even have a word for it. They call it Christmas-slump.

A number of years ago, when Lou Holtz was at the University of Arkansas, he was taking his team to play a bowl game in Tempe, Arizona. The game was to be played on Christmas day. He was asked how he felt about playing a game on Christmas, rather than being with his family. The coach answered candidly: "I would rather be in Tempe. After all, once you have been to church, had Christmas dinner, and opened the presents, Christmas is the most boring day of the year."

Is it possible to lose the spirit of Christmas that quickly? Let us be candid that as we take down the decorations for another year, there is a sinking emptiness and an emotional let down. My Mom long ago gave up live Christmas trees in favor of artificial. I remember trying as a child trying all the tricks to keep it alive. We put aspirin in the water, then we would try sugar, but regardless of the solutions the tree would always wither. Why? because it had been cut off from its roots.

May be that is our problem this morning. Maybe we have trouble making Christmas last because we have become cut off from our roots. Or, to put it another way, maybe our celebration of Christmas is not deeply rooted enough.

How do we deeply root our celebration of Christmas so it will last. This morning, I would like to propose two ways.

I

First, we need to be Serious about our Tradition. Sometimes it’s hard to be serious about Christmas. I mean our culture just doesn’t allow it. How many of you drive yourselves crazy every year trying to have a Martha Stewart’s Christmas? You know who you are. And you know as hard as you try you’re never able to achieve it. It always turns out to be an Erma Bombeck Christmas doesn’t it?

I have a letter here that Martha Stewart sent to Erma Bombeck.

Hi Erma,

This perfectly delightful note is being sent on paper I made myself to tell you what I have been up to. Since it snowed last night, I got up early and made a sled with old barn wood and a glue gun. I hand painted it in gold leaf, got out my loom, and made a blanket in peaches and mauves. Then to make the sled complete, I made a white horse to pull it, from DNA molecules that I had just sitting around in my craft room.

By then, it was time to start making the place mats and napkins for my 20 breakfast guests. I'm serving the old standard Stewart twelve-course breakfast, but I'll let you in on a little secret: I didn't have time to make the tables and chairs this morning, so I used the ones I had on hand.

Before I moved the table into the dining room, I decided to add just a touch of the holidays. So I repainted the room in pinks and stenciled gold stars on the ceiling. Then, while the homemade bread was rising, I took antique candle molds and made the dishes (exactly the same shade of pink) to use for breakfast. These were made from Hungarian clay, which you can get at almost any Hungarian craft store.

Well, I must run. I need to finish the buttonholes on the dress I'm wearing for breakfast. I'll get out the sled and drive this note to the post office as soon as the glue dries on the envelope I'll be making. Hope my breakfast guests don't stay too long, I have 40,000 cranberries to string with bay leaves before my speaking engagement at noon.

Love, Martha Stewart

P.S. When I made the ribbon for this typewriter, I used 1/8-inch gold gauze. I soaked the gauze in a mixture of white grapes and blackberries which I grew, picked, and crushed last week just for fun.

Here is Erma Bombeck’s reply: Dear Martha, I'm writing this on the back of an old shopping list, pay no attention to the coffee and jelly stains. I'm 20 minutes late getting my daughter up for school, packing a lunch with one hand, and holding the phone with the other. I’m on hold with the dog pound, seems old Ruff needs bailing out again. Burnt my arm on the curling iron when I was trying to make those cute curly fries, HOW do they do that? Still can't find the scissors to cut out some snowflakes, tried using an old disposable razor...trashed the tablecloth. Tried that cranberry thing, frozen cranberries mashed up after I defrosted them in the microwave. Oh, and don't use Fruity Pebbles as a substitute in that Rice Krispie snowball recipe, unless you happen to like a disgusting shade that resembles puke! The smoke alarm is going off, talk to ya’ later.

Love, Erma

Who here is not guilty of trying to have a Martha Stewart Christmas? None of us. “Chestnuts roasting on an open fire,” who of us has ever roasted Chestnuts on an open fire? “Dashing through the snow, on a one horse open sleigh.” I was 27 years old before I understood they were singing “One horse open sleigh.” Up till then I had mumbled those words. We don’t have sleighs in Memphis. Last sleigh I owned I was 10 years old. I remember using it once and it came to a grinding halt every ten feet due to the exposure of asphalt.

So much of what we do during this season, if you read the scriptures with more than a cursory glance, is strikingly foreign to that first Christmas. Who of us is not warmly moved when we hear the famous birth narrative. It occurs in the Gospel of Luke just before the text we just read. The events and characters are so familiar:

  • Caesar Augustus and the census,
  • Mary and Joseph’s delicate situation of a child outside of wedlock.
  • A very pregnant Mary riding a donkey on a three days journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem to fulfill a government edict,
  • The birth in the cattle cave because there was no lodging.
  • The Shepherds who are keeping watch over their flocks by night.
  • The Angels announcing to them the birth of Israel’s King. And then they begin to sing, Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth, Peace, good will toward men.”

But this is where the tradition breaks with the facts. For the Angels do not say “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth, peace, good will toward men.” That is the way I had always heard it. That is the way we would like it to read. It produced in me a romantic notion of Jesus’ Birth. But here is what the Angels actually say: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men, with whom he is pleased.”

It is one thing to believe in a God who comes to earth to bring peace for all mankind. None of us would object to God doing that. It is quite another to have faith in a God who gives peace only to those whom he chooses, or those he is happy with. But, my dear friends, here is the Christmas that will last. Here is the eternal Christmas. A Christmas about a King who sits on the throne of his father David, who reigns over the house of Jacob forever, whose kingdom shall know no end. Here is a kingdom of salvation, yes, but also of judgment.

Simeon was not fooled by an innocent looking child. When he takes the baby Jesus in arms he sees something more, and this is what he says, “This child is destined to cause the rising and the falling of many in Israel, and he will be a sign that will be spoken against, so that the hearts of many will be revealed.”

There are two well-known pictures, each with the same title, "The Shadow of the Cross." One by Holeman Hunt depicts the interior of a carpenter's shop, with Joseph and the Boy Jesus at work. Mary is also present. The Boy Jesus pauses in his work, and as he stretches his arms the shadow of the cross is formed on the wall.

The other picture is a popular engraving which depicts the Infant Jesus running with outstretched arms to his mother, the shadow of the cross being cast on the ground by his form as he runs. Both pictures are fanciful in form, but their underlying message is true. If we read the Gospels just as they stand, it is clear that the death of Jesus Christ was really in view almost from the outset of his earthly appearance. At first sight there seems little in them about his death, but as we look deeper we see more. It was part of the divine purpose and plan for him from the first, and very early we have a hint of the cross in the words of the aged Simeon to the mother of our Lord: "A sword shall pierce through thine own heart also."

While there certainly is cause to be joyful at Christmas and the need to bring family together to celebrate our Savior’s birth, I fear as a culture we have once for all closed the book on the tragic chapter which places the Galgothic Cross ominously over the Bethlehem cradle. In the words of those two paintings over the Bethlehem cradle there is the “Shadow of the Cross.” Going in debt to buy Christmas presents and innocuous carols Chestnuts Roasting on an open fire just do not go over well when the story of Christmas is joined with a Savior bleeding and crucified for our sins. For this reason we need to be ever more vigilant. Our society has striped the Cross from Christmas so that all that is left is the tame story of Jesus’ birth. And, this brings me to my second point.

II

While we must be serious about our Christmas tradition we must be vigilant, also. Look at what Luke says about the old man Simeon and the very old woman Anna. They had two things in common. The first was they were very late in years. They probably did not live long enough to see what became of the child who was the realization of their dreams. The second thing they had in common was they dedicated themselves to prayer, fasting, and temple worship. In other words they were vigilant. And because they were vigilant they knew there was great peril in Jesus’ appearance upon this earth.

Simeon and Anna stood on the threshold of two ages. We stand now on the threshold of two ages. This second millennium has closed and a new has begun and it is not the war on terror or the threat to our nation’s security that worries me. What scares me is the flippant regard we have one for another, the disrespect of authority, and the casual observance of traditions.

Perhaps some of you remember Time Magazines 20th century polls conducted in 1999. These polls were conducted on the internet with Millions of people participating. Here is who the world choose as the most influential persons of the 20th century at that time [just tell the top three and the three surprises—Lennon and Madonna and Elvis as number 1]:

# Person % Tally

  1. *Elvis Presley - 13.88 - 623966
  2. Yitzhak Rabin - 13.29 - 597737
  3. Adolf Hitler - 11.48 - 516155
  4. Billy Graham - 10.46 - 470307
  5. Albert Einstein - 9.85 - 443079
  6. Martin Luther King - 8.48 - 381284
  7. Pope John Paul II - 8.27 - 371899
  8. Gordon B. Hinckley - 5.66 - 254665
  9. Mohandas Gandhi - 3.63 - 163555
  10. Ronald Reagan - 1.79 - 80890
  11. *John Lennon - 1.42 - 64043
  12. Henry Ford - 1.23 - 55489
  13. Mother Teresa - 1.11 - 50178
  14. *Madonna - 0.85 - 38510
  15. Winston Churchill - 0.83 - 37551
  16. Linus Torvalds - 0.53 - 24084
  17. American GI - 0.52 - 23809
  18. Nelson Mandela - 0.47 - 21422
  19. Princess Diana - 0.36 - 16309
  20. Pope Paul VI - 0.35 - 15795


Here is what the world chose as the most influential events of the 20th century [Again do the top three and the three surprises with asterisk]:

# Event - % - Tally

  1. *Elvis teaches American teens to rock 'n' roll (1954) - 13.27 - 49816
  2. First landing on the moon (1969) - 11.27 - 42313
  3. Gandhi opposes Britain with civil disobedience (1915) - 11.01 - 41345
  4. World War II (1939) - 7.79 - 29262
  5. U.S. civil rights movement (1964) - 7.44 - 27948
  6. The Holocaust (1933-1945) - 6.69 - 25135
  7. Invention of the microchip (1958) - 5.35 - 20085
  8. *Internet created (1969) - 5.34 - 20059
  9. Model T Ford introduced (1908) - 4.26 - 16014
  10. Theory of relativity presented (1916) - 4.19 - 15744
  11. First atomic bomb dropped (1945) - 3.58 - 13454
  12. World War I (1914) - 2.93 - 11013
  13. *First electronic computer unveiled (1946) - 2.21 - 8326
  14. First radio signal broadcast (1901) - 2.11 - 7942
  15. Berlin Wall falls (1989) - 1.86 - 6988
  16. Invention of the airplane (1903) - 1.65 - 6220
  17. Invention of the transistor (1947) - 1.28 - 4833
  18. Russian Revolution (1917) - 1.13 - 4262
  19. First nuclear chain reaction (1942) - 0.93 - 3502
  20. The Soviet Union dissolves (1991) - 0.82 - 3081


If I were to choose the most important events of the 20th century here is what I would say are the top events of each decade [Please chose your own top events in each decade, including some from the 21st century. I have put an asterisk by my choices. Keep your picks brief—one or two at the most for each decade].

  • *1903 Orville and Wilbur Wright fly a powered airplane at Kitty Hawk
  • 1904 Deaf and blind Helen Keller graduates from Radcliffe College
  • 1910 The "week-end" becomes popular in the U.S.
  • 1912 The S.S. Titanic sinks
  • 1914 World War I begins
  • 1915 Albert Einstein formulates his General Theory of Relativity
  • 1918 Ex-Czar Nicholas II executed; Air-mail service established in the United States
  • *1919 Versailles Peace Conference;
  • 1920 The 19th Amendment gives American women the vote; Mahatma Gandhi emerges as India's leader in its struggle for independence
  • 1922 Mussolini's March on Rome; Formation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
  • 1925 The Scopes Monkey Trial is held in Dayton, Tennessee
  • *1927 Charles Lindbergh flies the "Spirit of St. Louis" from New York to Paris
  • *1934 Adolf Hitler is elected Fuhrer
  • 1936 Spanish Civil War
  • 1939 World War II begins
  • 1940 Winston Churchill is named British Prime Minister
  • 1941 Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor; U.S. declares war on Germany and Italy
  • 1942 Mahatma Gandhi arrested for demanding independence for India
  • 1944 D-Day
  • *1945 V.E. Day ends war in Europe; U.S. drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; Japan surrenders
  • 1948 The Jewish state of Israel comes into existence
  • 1951 Color television is first introduced
  • 1954 Brown versus Board of Education decision requires desegregation of the public schools in the U.S.
  • *1956 Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" is a hit; The Polio Vaccine is discovered. Here the emphasis is on the vaccine not Elvis.
  • 1961 Yuri Gagarin and Alan Shepard make the first space flights
  • *1963 U.S. President John F. Kennedy is assassinated
  • 1967 Six-Day War between Israel and Arab nations; Thurgood Marshall is the first black person appointed to the Supreme Court of the United States.
  • 1968 The Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated
  • *1969 Neil Armstrong walks on the moon
  • 1973 End of the U.S. involvement in the war in Indochina; Energy Crisis
  • *1974 President Nixon resigns for Watergate and cover-up
  • 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear incident
  • 1981 IBM announces the personal computer;
  • 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident
  • *1989 Berlin Wall comes down; Chinese dissidents massacred in Tiananmen Square
  • 1991 The Soviet Union officially ceases to exist; Persian Gulf War
  • *1994 End of apartheid in South Africa, Nelson Mandela is elected President
  • *1995 Federal Building in Oklahoma City bombed; Yitzak Rabin, the Prime Minister of Israel, assassinated; HIV/AIDs epidemic estimated to infect 14 million people worldwide; In "The Trial of the Century," former football star and actor O.J. Simpson is found "not guilty" of murdering his ex-wife and a friend
  • *1996 The use of Internet tools such as e-mail and the World Wide Web grows dramatically.


What incredible times we have lived in. I do not know what this new century will bring, no doubt we are off to a very rocky start. It most certainly will not be world peace. And yet, that is exactly what I fear the world thinks of itself. The earth can know peace. But not through military power or peaceful protest. Peace is found in the arms of an aged old man named Simeon in an ancient town called Bethlehem. Peace is found in Christ. And it only comes to those who are serious about this child and who are vigilantly waiting for his return. Even so, come Lord Jesus. Amen.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc, Making Christmas Last, by Brett Blair