Psalm 85:1-13 · Psalm 85
The Ultimate Christmas Gift
Psalm 85:1-13, Ephesians 2:11-22
Sermon
by Erskine White
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"The Lord will speak ... to His people." (Psalm 85:8)

As we consider the wide variety of gifts we might receive this Christmas, we could probably place those gifts in one of several categories.

First and least importantly, there are those entirely frivolous items which we do not need and never intend to use. How many of us, for example, have received things like automatic toothpick dispensers or electric yarn untanglers which now sit forgotten on some closet shelf collecting dust? Then again, there is no accounting for taste. Years ago, I received a necktie which looked exactly like a piece of bacon, complete with brown stripes to represent the meat and yellow stripes to represent the fat. I am certain the person who gave it to me never intended I wear it, but I liked that "bacon tie" and wore it for several years, until one day an embarrassed girlfriend yanked it off my neck and ritualistically burned it, declaring it utterly "gross," disgusting and unfit for human haberdashery.

Then there are the more serious gifts we appreciate receiving but could easily have acquired for ourselves: a best-selling book we have always wanted to read, for example, or a nice necktie that doesn’t look like a piece of bacon. Ranked even higher than that on our hierarchy of gifts might be those things we want or need but could not have bought ourselves, such as a teenager receiving a new car from her parents, or a retired couple receiving a trip around the world from their children.

Finally, there are those Christmas gifts others give us which cannot be purchased in any store. A long-estranged family member visits for the holidays and buries the hatchet. A much-dreaded medical test comes back on the day before Christmas, and it is "negative." All of your children and grandchildren come home for Christmas, making it the first time everyone has been together in fifteen years. Surely, these emotional gifts mean more than all the material gifts piled up under the tree, and we might well think they are the highest category of gift we can receive at Christmas.

But what about an even greater, more glorious gift than that? Imagine receiving the ultimate Christmas gift, a gift so awesome and wondrous that even as you hold it in your hands, you do not believe it is yours? You tell other people about this gift and they do not believe you either, because it is a gift which cannot be purchased for any price or obtained by even the most strenuous of human effort. It is a gift so far removed from our experience, so far beyond our grasp and abilities that we have not even dared to dream we might some day receive it.

Yet receive this gift we did on a silent, holy night so long ago in Bethlehem. It was announced by a choir of angels who came upon the midnight clear. "Glory to God in the highest," the angels sang, "and on earth, peace, goodwill among all people" (Luke 2:14). This was God’s clear message to humankind and God’s explicit intention for us with the birth of His Son, spelled out in heavenly harmonies for all the world to hear.

We do not understand this because we do not see it in the world around us, but the ultimate Christmas gift is peace! Not just peace of mind or eternal peace beyond the grave, but peace and goodwill in this world, in the "here and now!" This is so basic to the meaning of Advent that we cannot neglect it without trivializing the season. Beyond the gifts and family reunions we like to think about, and even beyond the birth of the baby Jesus, no season of Advent worship can be complete without at least one serious attempt to wrestle with the problem and promise of peace.

Understand that I am not talking today about any particular crisis or hot spot in the world which may command our attention at the moment. There are wars and rumors of wars all around us, while words like aggression and national interest, freedom and tyranny are tossed about in every part of the world with self-serving regularity. So the news headlines remind us daily.

As dangerous and serious as these situations are (and some are much closer to home than we realize), to the Christian they are still symptoms of a deeper rebellion and more profound spiritual disorder. We say even in this violent, war-torn world that Advent brings the gift of peace on earth, but only in a biblical sense can we know what this gift means and how it is realized in the world.

When most people speak of peace, they mean the absence of war, and even the Bible occasionally uses the word in that sense. Two kings sign a treaty and so they make peace (e.g. 1 Kings 5:12). But far more common in scripture is the more positive view of peace as shalom, a wholistic condition of universal compatibility and prosperity, unity and abundance. More than the mere absence of war, shalom is a harmonious state of being which is shared by all, to the point where war is not only impossible but even unthinkable.

When most people speak of peace, they think of it as something to be won or created through treaties, alliances and so on. The Bible says quite the opposite: that all peace comes from God and comes only as a gift from God. "God will speak to His people," our text from Psalms says, and God has, indeed, spoken peace to us consistently through the ages, teaching us what Jesus called "the things that make for peace" (Luke 19:42).

After all these years, are "the things that make for peace" still a mystery to us? "Do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with your God" (Micah 6:8). Do not "oppress the poor" (Amos 4:1) or "answer roughly the entreaties of the needy," (Proverbs 18:23) and do not let some acquire so much of God’s earth for themselves that others are left without (cf. Isaiah 5:8), for this brings not peace and prosperity, but resentment and rebellion.

Jesus put it in words so simple they have never been tried! Let people and nations make friends of their enemies by treating others as they themselves would be treated (cf. Luke 6:31). Let those who have much realize their common destiny with those who have little. Let world leaders and treaty negotiators create a lasting peace by paying as much attention to their adversaries’ needs and interests as they do their own. The biblical maxim, "Love your neighbor as yourself," is political as well as personal wisdom, for whether it be in a nearby inner city or a faraway Third World village, in the long run, there can be peace for no one without justice for everyone.

Then, says our Psalm, "steadfast love and faithfulness shall meet." Valleys of injustice and squalid deprivation shall be lifted up, and mountains of excess and inequity shall be made low. The uneven ground which selfish greed has fashioned shall become level and the rough places of disadvantage shall become smooth (cf. Isaiah 40:4). Then, says our Psalm, "faithfulness shall spring up from the ground and righteousness look down from the sky," and the gift of God’s peace "shall dwell in the land."

The prophet Jeremiah spoke for all God’s faithful in every age when he railed against those who "Cry ‘peace, peace’ when there is no peace" (6:14). He railed against those who are stifled in the straitjacket of the status quo, believing that the bellicosity which led to war in the past will somehow lead to peace in the future. God alone gives peace, and He uproots and rearranges our moral geography in order to do it. Only a spiritual revolution, a moral about face, a righteousness born of obedience to God’s Word can make us ready to receive God’s precious gift of peace.

Of course, human history is the tragic story of our turning to ourselves and not to God for the peace we so ardently need and seek. Indeed, we have yearned so desperately but so misguidedly for peace through the years that we have vainly tried to create it in many different ways.

Some have tried peace through conquest and have actually managed to eliminate war for a time, but festering resentments among those who are conquered only lead to war and rebellion again.

Some have tried peace through strength and intimidation, hoping that peace will come from the threat of war, but the same human pride which causes one side to issue the threat usually causes the other side to resist the threat, leaving both sides locked arm in arm and sliding inexorably down a slippery slope into moral and then economic bankruptcy, or even into war itself.

Some have tried peace through appeasement, hoping to delay war by placating an enemy, and some have tried peace through poverty, hoping to avoid war by ridding themselves of anything an enemy might want. Still others have tried using overwhelming force, hoping to gain peace by ending war quickly, but when they inevitably inflict mass destruction upon innocent civilians as well as enemy soldiers, they find that while they have won the war, they have lost the values they were fighting to defend in the first place. All of these and many other approaches have filled the sad pages of human history, and none has produced peace on any scale for any length of time.1

God saw and knew all this down through the years, through bloody century after bloody century, until finally, as the prophets had promised He would, God did a new thing (Isaiah 43:18). Rather than leaving peace as a philosophy or a strategy, or even a standard of righteousness which humanity in history has never attained, God made peace a person. He sent us His only Son, who is our "Prince of Peace" (Isaiah 9:6). "God spoke peace," and the Word God spoke "became flesh and lived among us" (John 1:14).

Peace became a person. "For He is our peace," declares Paul of Jesus Christ in our text from Ephesians. In His flesh, Christ has broken down the barriers of hostility between us, making peace between all people, and peace between all people and God. "Before we had no hope" because we were "without God in the world," Paul says, but now God is in the world in the person of Jesus Christ, and because He is, we now have hope. We now have peace.

However, we will not receive this peace which God has given us until we understand that it must first be realized at a profoundly spiritual level before it can be realized corporally in our homes, our communities or the world. There is simply no other way.

Peace cannot be imposed from the "top down," as myriad emperors, kings, dictators and presidents have amply demonstrated throughout the annals of recorded history. Nor can peace be imposed from the "bottom up," because revolutions and rebellions, even when motivated by the desire to create justice, inevitably replace one form of violence with another. No, peace cannot come from the "top down" or the "bottom up" - it can only come from the "inside out." It must begin in the human heart and find expression in lives which are subordinated to the spirit of the person who is our peace, the baby who is born in Bethlehem.

Thus, the path to peace lies in emulating the Man that baby became. In personal and in political terms, peace is no longer an abstract idea but an embodied ideal which is available to everyone because it is found in the love, forgiveness, service and sacrifice which are the essence of Christian spirituality. We look in vain to our own devices and are misled by secular wisdoms; true peace has come to us at last in the person of Jesus Christ.2

Is this not what God has done by sending His own Son to our hostile, warring world? So long as Christ lives in our midst, there is peace in Him who is our peace. So long as He lives among us, He unites in love all who are living for Him. He is shalom in the world - God’s ultimate Christmas gift which fills our hearts this Advent season and which someday shall fill the earth. Today, we rejoice in His coming and seek to live in His ways, for in Him, our God has spoken, and the word God has spoken is peace. Amen.

Pastoral Prayer

O Holy and Righteous God, who spoke first the Word of creation and then the Word of peace, we pray today that all the empty and aching corners of our hearts will be filled with the peace of Christ which passes all understanding. Let His peace within us govern our relationships with family and friends, that we may be as patient and forbearing with our loved ones as we truly want to be. Let Christ’s peace within lift us above the pressures and traumas we face, that we may be more than conquerors through him who loves us, living gracefully and victoriously through all of life’s changing circumstances. And let His peace within us remove all fear as we face the uncertainties of life, even the greater uncertainty of death, that we may be lifted on wings of faith above every doubt, certain in our hearts that the jet streams which carry us onward are leading us to Your promise.

O Gracious God, who speaks the Advent word of peace on earth and goodwill to all people, we pray as well that all the world shall be filled with the peace of this child whose birth we await in Bethlehem. Let rulers of nations everywhere join in sweet anthems of peace, and let the rough words of war pass from their lips no more. Make all of us instruments of Your peace, O God, sowing harmony and understanding where there is enmity and hatred, sowing justice and charity where there is deprivation and want, being peacemakers in the manner and spirit of our Savior, whose word is peace and who is our peace, even Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.

1. One other significant approach to peace was the attempt to limit the way wars were conducted. Building upon ideas which originated in classical philosophy, Augustine and others in the medieval church proscribed rules for initiating and conducting a "just war" - the war must be fought for a just cause, the war must be declared by a legitimate authority, civilians are not to be attacked, the force used must be proportionate to the need, and so on. The hope was that restraint in war would cause less hardship and breed less resentment, thereby making peace more likely once the war was over.

Most historians agree that the American Civil War marked the end of the limited or just war era. As our Civil War began, civilian families streamed out of Washington, D.C. to enjoy picnics on the surrounding hillsides while watching the Battle of Bull Run. By the time the Civil War ended, General Sherman was scorching the earth on his way to Atlanta, and the idea of a limited war which restricted the use of force and spared civilians was gone forever.

Today, of course, modern technology has removed all restraints from the conduct of war. Because nations at war feel obliged to win the war as quickly as possible, they use (even non-nuclear) weapons of mass destruction which blur all distinctions between civilian and military casualties - a means of conducting war which has been "universally condemned since the Dark Ages." (Fred Ikle)

2. I am aware that the Christian realism of Reinhold Niebuhr and others insists that individuals are far more able to embody ideals like love, justice and peace than are societies and nations. Niebuhr expounded this thesis most persuasively in his classic work, Moral Man and Immoral Society. Nevertheless, while principles of peace can readily be applied in personal living, they can also be translated into political terms and approximated on a social scale. Earlier in this sermon, for example, mention was made of creating a lasting peace by negotiating with the adversary’s interests in mind as much as one’s own. Political theorists relate such an approach to what they call "double loop learning;" it represents a secularized approximation of a Christian principle. (See, for example, Stanley Harakas, "The N.C.C.B. Pastoral Letter, The Challenge of Peace: An Eastern Orthodox Response," in Peace in a Nuclear Age, Charles Reid, ed., Catholic University of America Press, Washington, D.C., 1986, pp. 268-272.)

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., More Urgent Season, A, by Erskine White