John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
The Chief Miracle of Christmas
John 1:1-18
Sermon
by Daniel G. Mueller
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Three little boys were playing together one day. In the course of their play they began to speak about their fathers. Actually, they began to brag about their fathers, each trying to make his father bigger and better than any other father in the whole world. They bragged about a number of things until they came, finally, to brag about the most important thing of all (in their eyes): how much money their fathers made. The first little boy, whose father was a lawyer, boasted, "My Daddy makes so much money that we get to buy a new car every year." The second little boy, the son of a doctor, replied, "Oh, yeah? Well, my Daddy makes so much money that he’s always telling my Mommy that she can’t spend it fast enough." The third little boy was the son of a preacher. He was quiet for a moment as he thought and thought about how he could win this discussion. As his two friends looked to him for his rebuttal, he said, "You know, my Daddy makes so much money every Sunday that it takes four grown men to carry it all to him."

Sometimes children do like to brag about their parents. As much as they like to put on airs, however, what children treasure more than anything else is closeness with their parents. A twelve-year-old boy, the son of a missionary in Africa, was sent by his parents to school in the United States. His parents wanted to provide him with every opportunity to have a good education and were willing to endure family separation in order to do what they thought was best for their son. When Christmas came, the parents were in Africa and their son was in school in the United States. Most of the boy’s classmates at the boarding school went home for the holidays, but there was no way that he could go home. It was too far and too costly. As he sat in his room, lonely, his housemother happened to walk by. She noticed his loneliness and tried to show him some kindness. She sat down with him on his bed and spoke to him about general things. Then she asked him what he wanted for Christmas. She expected to hear the usual list of things like toys and clothes and money. But the boy surprised her. He stepped over to his dresser, took a picture of his Mom and Dad into his hands and softly said, "I wish My Mom and Dad could step out of this picture and be here with me right now; that’s what I want for Christmas." Touched by his sadness, the two of them cried together.

When we confess our faith in our Savior Jesus Christ, it’s a kind of boasting we do about him. To confess means to declare the wonderful deeds of him who called us out of darkness into his marvelous light. To confess means to give witness to all the great things that Jesus has done for us and still keeps on doing. There is much that we can brag about when we talk about Jesus, but the most wonderful boast of all is his closeness to us, and because of him, God’s closeness to us.

At the beginning of his Gospel, Saint John confessed his faith in Jesus. He boasted about his God and Savior. John had much to say about the Lord. Jesus the Savior is God, he declares. "In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God." He is eternal, John tells us, without beginning and without end. Everything was made by him so that not even one single thing came into existence without him. In him was life and light. Like a light shining brilliantly in a dark place, he came shining into the darkness of life, the darkness of sin, death and hell, the darkness of all that is evil. He conquered all the darkness, for the darkness had no power over his light. John confessed the Kingdom, power and the glory of our Savior. But then, saving the very best for last, he confessed the Savior’s closeness. "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us," John wrote.

For Luther, this was the chief miracle of Christmas and it is for us as well. God became human and came to be one with us. "His name shall be called Emmanuel, which means ‘God with us,’ " the angel told Joseph. This is the good news of the season. "To us a Child is born, to us a Son is given." The most important words in that scripture are the words "to us." For us, to be with us, God came in the flesh. In his beautiful hymn, "From Heaven Above To Earth I Come," Luther gave lyrical confession to this great miracle. He wrote, "Ah Lord, who has created all, how weak art thou, how poor and small ... Who is this Child, so young and fair? The Blessed Christ Child lieth there ... Thou com’st to share my misery; what thanks shall I return to thee?"

If it had not been for the birth of Jesus, we would never sing another song we like so well: "What A Friend We Have In Jesus!" If Jesus had not been born, if God had not come in the flesh, there would be no great Friend for us. God would still be a fearsome power, far above us, out of sight, out of touch, and frightening. But in Christ Jesus, God is with us, close to us, one with us, a Friend.

There is a fine old film that makes an appearance on the late show just about every Christmas. The film is titled "Miracle of 42nd Street." It’s the story of how good old St. Nick made a little girl’s Christmas wishes all come true. The story is charming enough, but there is a problem with it: it shows how little we expect from Christmas. All that people want from Christmas is for their wishes to be granted. We are satisfied with the "miracles" of "peace on earth," of friendship, of gifts and all the other "stuff" of Christmas. In the process, the true miracle of Christmas doesn’t do anything for us. What Christmas is really all about is that God in Christ Jesus is with us.

Jesus is one with us in every experience of life, from birth to death. We have not a Savior who is unable to sympathize with us in our weaknesses, scripture tells us, but one who in every respect has experienced all of life, even being tempted to sin as we are, yet without sinning (Hebrews 4:14). Jesus is one with us. He knows all about life: hunger, thirst, exhaustion, loneliness, rejection, pain, grief, sorrow, sadness, joy. He knows all about life because he lived it for about thirty years. Not only did he experience it, however; he transformed it. "I came that you might have life," he said, "and that you might have it more abundantly." He also died, not just to go through it, but through his own death to conquer death and bring life and immortality to light through the gospel.

Saint Paul liked to brag about Jesus as much as did Saint John. "If I must boast," Paul wrote, "I will boast of the Lord." Listen to Saint Paul’s witness about the Babe of Bethlehem, "He is the image of the invisible God, the first-born of all creation; for in him all things were created in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones for dominions or principalities or authorities - all things were created through him and for him. He is before all things and in him all things hold together ... For in him all the fulness of God was pleased to dwell" (Colossians 1:15-19). As wonderful as all those things are, however, for Paul, as for John, what counted most of all was that Jesus is God with us. And so he also made the confession, "When the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem all those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons (heirs) of God" (Galatians 4:4-5). For Paul, what really mattered was that, because of Jesus, in Christ Jesus, nothing can ever separate us from the love of God (Romans 8:39).

God with us! "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us." This is the true wonder of Christmas. Sadly, however, John tells us the world does not know this good news; the world does not know him. He came; he is here; but the world does not receive him. What John wrote so long ago we see to be true in the way most people celebrate Christmas: they rejoice in everything but Jesus Christ. Sometimes one gets the feeling that Christmas is still a pagan holiday.

December 25th used to be a pagan holiday, you know. This is the date of the Roman Saturnalia, a bawdy celebration of the return of the sun. To "Christianize" this date and to remove the pagan customs, Pope Liberius, in the year 354, declared this day the birthday of our Lord. Many of the customs we still practice were borrowed from pagan sources: giving and receiving presents, evergreens, holly, ivy, mistletoe ... These things were pagan first and then given Christian significance. One gets the feeling that paganism has reclaimed them. We need to Christianize Christmas all over again.

The world may not know Jesus and the world may not receive him. But to all who do receive him, to all who do believe in him, to you and to me, Jesus gives power to become the children of God, born of God. All who believe in him who is "God with us" he makes to be one with God. Jesus prayed, for us, "As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, let those who believe in me be in us ..." (John 17:20-21).

And so we are. God is in us and we are in God because of the greatest-ever wonder, the chief miracle of Christmas: That the eternal God was clothed in flesh and blood. Amen

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Just Follow The Signs, by Daniel G. Mueller