Luke 1:26-38 · The Birth of Jesus Foretold
Son of Man; Son of God
Luke 1:26-38
Sermon
by King Duncan
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There was a news story a couple years back in The Associated Press about a novel experiment by the University of Minnesota to foil Christmas tree thieves. It seems that the year before the university lost seven evergreens to poachers. So the university began spraying balsam fir, Scotch pine and anything that could pass for a holiday tree with skunk scent. Yes, I said skunk scent. For years, according to this report, Christmas tree thieves have been sawing down trees in the middle of the night. But in 2002 they lopped the tops off 18-foot trees that were more than 20 years old. The trees probably are permanently disfigured. So the university decided to take action. So, why skunk? “Can you think of something worse? “ asked grounds superintendent Les Potts. Cold weather masks the smell. But warm, indoor air releases it. “We’ll probably still lose some trees,” Potts said, “but I have some satisfaction in knowing that it’s not going to work out the way the thief thinks it will.” However, he did admit wondering what the campus would smell like when warm weather hits in the spring.

How do you change human behavior? Make the consequences so unpleasant that people never want to have such an experience again? Then why do so many people released from prison commit crimes again? Can you imagine anything more unpleasant than being locked up in a prison? Obviously something more than punishment is needed.

On this fourth Sunday of Advent we are getting to the heart of Christmas. We’ve looked at the grandeur of God and the righteousness of God, and we noted how critical these are to understanding Advent. Then last week we focused on the person of Jesus. He is the reason for the season. Now we move deeper in understanding the person of Jesus. We move deeper to the most amazing part of the Christmas story--the Incarnation. God became human flesh.

In the sixth month, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to a virgin pledged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David. The virgin’s name was Mary. The angel went to her and said, “Greetings, you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you.” Mary was greatly troubled at his words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. But the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, you have found favor with God. You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; his kingdom will never end.” “How will this be,” Mary asked the angel, “since I am a virgin?” The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God. Even Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child in her old age, and she who was said to be barren is in her sixth month. For nothing is impossible with God.” “I am the Lord’s servant,” Mary answered. “May it be to me as you have said.” (NIV)

What an amazing story! The God of all creation became human flesh in the babe of Bethlehem. But why? Why did God come down to where we are? And why take the form of a helpless babe? This was God’s way of changing the heart of humanity.

Remember the objective is not to overwhelm humanity, lest you rob humanity of the freedom to choose. The object is to win the hearts and souls of human beings in order to fashion a new creation. How would God accomplish this? God would become one of us.

This is not so mysterious as it sounds. Look at it this way. Leaders in today’s companies are continually looking for ways to motivate their employees. They want people to enjoy their work enough that they will stay self-motivated. The problem is, how can they get rid of the image that they are pressuring people to perform?

One way is to meet them where they are. Get rid of your own vestments of power so that your presence no longer intimidates. Here’s how some have accomplished that objective: A bank manager in Norfolk removed his name from the most coveted parking spot and replaced it with a sign, “Employee of the month.” Meanwhile he parked with the rest of the staff. A guidance counselor at a middle school in Jacksonville decided to walk the halls and playgrounds two hours every day, engaging students in informal conversations. The head honcho of a computer software company in Palo Alto, California, halted the practice of eating lunch with his top people in the private executive dining room. Instead, he ate in the company cafeteria--making certain he sat at a different table each time. In Cleveland, Ohio the president of a wholesale paper company turned his office into an employee lounge and created an open office space for himself in the middle of the warehouse. (1)

In his book, The Regis Touch, marketing expert Regis McKenna tells a story about Max Poll, CEO of Barnes Hospital in St. Louis. Poll, disguised as a patient, has someone wheel him around the hospital on a Gurney in order to develop a feel for what it’s like to be a patient at Barnes. He says he doesn’t see much except for the ceiling, but what he hears sensitizes him to the level of service the hospital provides. (2) (I wonder if he wears one of those hospital gowns that are open at the back so he can really see what it’s like.) These executives are but copying what God did when God came into our world in the babe of Bethlehem. God came down to where we are. Evidently there was no other way to lift us up than for God to come down.

God emptied Himself. That’s the significance of the babe in the manger. God, who was all powerful, made his appearance not in strength, but in absolute weakness. Who’s more helpless than a baby?

At a reception honoring musician Sir Robert Mayer on his 100th birthday, elderly British socialite Lady Diana Cooper fell into conversation with a friendly woman who seemed to know her well. Lady Diana’s failing eyesight prevented her from recognizing her fellow guest until she peered more closely at the woman’s magnificent diamonds and realized she was talking to Queen Elizabeth! Overcome with embarrassment, Lady Diana curtsied and stammered, “Ma’am, oh, ma’am, I’m sorry, ma’am. I didn’t recognize you without your crown!” (3) Without her crown the queen looks just like everyone else. In the manger of Bethlehem, God looked just like everyone else. Oh, a few star-struck shepherds happened on the secret and three astrologers from the East, but most people were totally oblivious to what was happening. Be careful when you judge by appearances alone. You may get a surprise.

This past May one of the most remarkable men in the world died. Maybe you saw the announcement. He was a native of Cape Town, South Africa. His name was Hamilton Naki. Naki was 78. He should have enjoyed worldwide fame. Unfortunately, because he was a black man living under apartheid, very few people knew the story of this extraordinary man.

Hamilton Naki was a former gardener who left high school because his family couldn’t afford the fees. He took his first job at the age of 14, cutting grass at the University of Cape Town. In 1954 he was promoted to helping care for laboratory animals. Soon he progressed from cleaning cages to more advanced lab work. After a professor at the university noticed that Hamilton Naki was a gifted individual, he asked him to help anesthetize animals used to train students in surgery. “He has skills I don’t have,” Dr. Christiaan Barnard said in 1993. “If Hamilton had had the opportunity to perform, he would have probably become a brilliant surgeon.” Barnard asked Mr. Naki to be on the backup team in what became the world’s first successful heart transplant, in December 1967. That violated the country’s laws on racial segregation, which dictated that blacks should not be given medical training, nor have contact with white patients. So very few people knew of Naki’s natural brilliance.  Mr. Naki taught medical students to perform intricate liver transplants on pigs, a procedure said to be more complicated than human heart transplants. Doctors who observed Mr. Naki’s work used to describe how he managed to join minute blood vessels with amazing delicacy and accuracy, and finish operations the students had started. Ralph Kirsch, head of the Liver Research Center, described him as “one of those remarkable men who really come around once in a long time.” By the time he retired from the university in 1991, Hamilton Naki had only made it to the level of laboratory assistant. And, even though he had performed work that we pay other brilliant souls hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to performed, he had to be content with the meager pension of a gardener, since his more skilled work had never been made public. Mr. Naki once told an interviewer: “Those days you had to accept what they said as there was no other way you could go because it was the law of the land.” It was only after the demise of apartheid in 1994 that Mr. Naki’s contributions became known. In 2002, President Thabo Mbeki gave him the country’s highest order for his years of public service.

Mr. Naki said he hoped to set an example to young people to benefit from opportunities in the new multiracial South Africa that he was denied. “I would like it a lot if the young generation could find inspiration in my work. Our country needs more doctors, especially from the disadvantaged community,” he once said. “Look at me.” he continued. “It can happen!” (4)

Who would have thought that the school gardener assisted Christiaan Barnard in his world-shaking heart surgeries? Who would have thought that a baby born in a stable with donkeys and cows and sheep would be the hope of the world?

God emptied himself and became a human being. Eugene Peterson, author of The Message, paraphrased the wonderful passage in Philippians 2:6-8 that speaks of Christ coming into the world like this, “When the time came, he set aside the privileges of deity and took on the status of a slave, became human! Having become human, he stayed human. It was an incredibly humbling process. He didn’t claim special privileges. Instead, he lived a selfless, obedient life and then died a selfless, obedient death--and the worst kind of death at that: a crucifixion.”

God became human flesh. God emptied himself and became a helpless babe. GOD CAME DOWN TO LIFT US UP. That is what Christmas is all about. And there was only one purpose: God desires to make a change in our hearts. This is the heart of Christmas. It was all for the purpose of making us into a new creation.

Dr. John Rosen, a psychiatrist in New York City, is well known for his work with catatonic schizophrenics. Normally doctors remain separate and aloof from their patients. But Dr. Rosen moves into the ward with them. He places his bed among their beds. He lives the life they must live. Day to day, he shares their world. He loves them. If they don’t talk, he doesn’t talk either. It is as if he understands what is happening in their minds, in their hearts. His being there, being with them, communicates something that they haven’t experienced in years--somebody understands.

But then he does something else. He puts his arms around them and hugs them. He holds these unattractive, unlovable, sometimes incontinent persons, and loves them back into life. Often, the first words they speak are simply, “Thank you.”

This is what Christ did for us at Christmas. He moved into the ward with us. He placed his bed among our beds. Those who were there, those who saw him, those who touched him and were, in turn, touched by him were restored to life. The first word they had to say was “thank you.” Christmas is our time to say “Thank you.” (5)

So, how would you go about changing human nature without robbing humanity of its freedom to choose life or death? God did it the only way possible. God came down where we are. He emptied Himself completely in our behalf so that we would respond in love. Wouldn’t this be a good time to open yourself to let the love of Christmas fill your heart?


1. Neil Eskelin in Neil Eskelin’s Daily Jump Start(tm), Copyright (c) 2004, http://www.neileskelin.com.

2. Second to None by Charles Garfield, Business One Irwin, Homewood, IL, 1992, p. 202.

3. “The Crown,” Today in the Word, November 16, 1995, p. 23.

4. Clare Nullis (The Associated Press) in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Monday, June 13, 2005, p. 9B.

5. Mark Berg in Donald L. Deffner, Seasonal Illustrations, Resource, 1992, p. 21.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan