Luke 1:26-38 · The Birth of Jesus Foretold
What Kind of Name Is That?
Luke 1:26-31
Sermon
by Mark Trotter
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It is always interesting to discover the origin of names. I suppose most of you were named for a relative. Some are named for saints, or heroes, and some just bear the names that were chosen because they sound distinguished.

Some names are unfortunate. I heard about a man who joined the Navy. His name was Tonsillitis Jackson. The Navy couldn't believe it, so they did a check on him, and discovered that indeed his name really was Tonsillitis Jackson. What's more, he had brothers and sisters who were named: Meningitis, Appendicitis, Peritonitis, and Laryngitis (but you can call me Larry).

Sometimes names are changed in order to signify a transformation in the life of the person. That is a biblical precedent. We all know about the famous incident of Saul on the Damascus Road, met by Christ in a vision, and changed his life around. He changed his name to Paul. And Simon, the first disciple, who at Caesarea Philippi confessed, "Jesus, you are the Christ." Jesus said, "Your name is now Peter, the rock on which I will build my church."

I know a man whose life was changed drastically. He felt that it was important to start afresh with a new name. So he changed his name to Seth Loring. He explained it to me. He told me about what had happened to him and why he had chosen this name. He pointed out that Seth was Adam and Eve's third son, born after Cain slew Abel. Seth represented new life coming after a tragedy. He chose the name Loring because it was a French word that means learner, or teacher, or pilgrim. Thus this new man, he said, is learning about life all over again, learning lessons that he was deaf to before. So he named himself Seth Loring, to mark the beginning of a new life.

Names can also be a kind of ordination, conferring of destiny upon somebody. I heard a wonderful story about Joseph Haroutunian, who was a Presbyterian theologian at McCormick Seminary in Chicago for many years. He was an Armenian immigrant to this country. When he arrived people sometimes told him that he ought to change his name to an English sounding name, like Harold, or Harwell, or something like that. He said, "What's wrong with my name?" They said, "Well, Americans are going to have trouble spelling and pronouncing it. You ought to change your name to something like Harwell. They can spell that." He said, "What does Harwell mean?" They said, "It doesn't mean anything. It's just easy to spell." Haroutunian said, "Back in Armenia my grandfather was baptized with the name Haroutun, which means `Resurrection.' My father was baptized with the name, Haroutunian, which means `Son of Resurrection.' My name also means `Son of Resurrection.' I am Joseph Haroutunian, and I will be a son of the Resurrection all my days."

A sense of identity, a sense of destiny, comes with the conferring of a name. And that is the kind of name that was given to Jesus. It was conferred upon him a destiny, a vocation that he was to fulfill for us.

His name was given in the event that is called The Annunciation. There are two versions of it: one in Luke, that annunciation is given to Mary, and there is one in Matthew, that is given to Joseph. This morning we heard the annunciation to Mary: "Behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus."

Last Sunday, reading in the Gospel of Matthew, we heard about an angel who came to Joseph in a dream. He said, "You shall name him Jesus," then added this explicit designation of what he was to do, his vocation, "You shall name him Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins."

So Jesus is a savior. That's what his name means. He is the one who has come to save us. But what does it mean to save us?

About the only time you hear people talking about Jesus saving us is in language that I personally cannot relate to very well. They talk as if Jesus can't save anybody unless they are totally lost and sunk in sin. Well some have been there, but I imagine that most of us have not. We are all sinners, that is true. We have to accept that fact about our nature as human beings. But not all of us are sunk in it. I suggest that the language that we use about sin is the language that has come out of what is called "The Revival" in America. It began in the early 19th century. Out of that revival movement has come a formula for conversion.

Conversion is necessary for Christian life, but it will vary according to the life you are living, according to the kind of personality that you have. But the temptation of the evangelists of the revival was to treat everybody the same, and make everybody conform to a formula of conversion. Sunk in sin, you must confess your sin, receive grace, and then you will live happily ever after.

It doesn't often happen that way. In fact, it rarely happens that way. But that is the kind of language we use in America when you talk about conversion. Therefore, that is the impression that most people have about what it means to be saved. Once I was miserable, but now I am blissfully happy. Once everything was going wrong, but now everything is wonderful. "Once I was blind, but now I see."

As metaphors, I suppose, that kind of language can work for all of us. But as literal descriptions of what happens to us, or what needs to happen to us, that just doesn't happen. The danger is, that because that doesn't conform to your life, your experience, you say, I don't need a savior.

I can say that I have never felt lost. Nor have I ever been tempted to gross immorality. If I were to confess my sins to you, you'd go to sleep. You are just going to have to take my word for that.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a great Christian martyr in Germany in the last war, reflected on the meaning of the Christian life and the way it is proclaimed to people in the 20th century, as he sat in prison. He wrote down provocative thoughts, often on fragments of paper which were smuggled out of the prison. They were collected and published later in a little book called, Letters and Notes from Prison.

In one passage he talked about the unseemly methods that Christians use in evangelism. He said that they assume that everybody has a weakness, so they search for that weakness, the way a lion searches for the jugular. Once they have found it, they don't let go until the person confesses their weakness. Bonhoeffer said what that's like is like finding people who are happy, convincing them that they are miserable, so that you can make them happy again. He said, in the first place, it is unseemly. In the second place, it is unethical. In the third place, and most important, it is unChristian.

Because when Jesus called somebody, he didn't appeal to their weakness, he appealed to their strength. Oh, he went to the weak, to the people who needed comfort, and offered to them comfortable words, "Come unto me all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." He went to the sick and healed them. He went to lepers and cleansed them. He went to outcasts and joined with them, stood by them. He went to people who were labeled as sinners by that society, and he forgave them. That is the way he dealt with people who had to live with some weakness in their life.

But he "called" disciples. He called them not with comfortable words, but with hard words. He often just said, "Follow me." That's all. Just, "Follow me." Sometimes he said, "If you be my disciple, you must take up a cross." But he never said "repent" to any of them. Not to any of them. Which doesn't mean that they don't have to turn around. It doesn't mean that they don't have to change some things in their life. It means that the past, and the way that they were living before they met Jesus, wasn't nearly as important as the future, and the way they must live their lives now that they know Jesus. The past is no longer important. It is the future, and what you are going to do with your life, that is important.

The way conversion is described in the revival does not follow the way discipleship is described in the New Testament. In the revival the emphasis is often on "me," me, me, me, and my past, rehearsing it over and over again. In the New Testament the emphasis is on Jesus and his Kingdom, and what it would mean for us if we were to walk with him into that future.

You can see that in his name. That is the importance of his name. The angel says, "You shall call him Jesus." "Jesus" is the Greek translation of the Hebrew name, "Joshua." So his name is really Joshua. His mommy and his daddy called him Joshua. And because names are significant, if you want to know who Jesus really was, if you want to know what Jesus means for us, if you want to know what it means for us to call Jesus our Savior, then look up Joshua, and you can see that Joshua is the one who led the Jews into the Promised Land.

You remember Joshua took over after Moses had died. Incidentally the gospel writers tell the story of Jesus with these parallels to Jewish history as a way of saying, even in the structure of the story, that Jesus is the Messiah, the one you people have been waiting for. So Jesus recapitulates in his life the story, the history, of Israel. So if you want to know who Jesus is, look to Joshua. Then you can see what kind of Messiah he is.

Joshua took over for Moses after Moses died. Jesus took over for John the Baptist when John the Baptist died.

Moses led the Jews out of slavery in Egypt into the desert wilderness for forty years, which period in their history they interpreted as preparation for entering into the Promised Land. John the Baptist is introduced in all the gospels in the desert where he is preparing the people for the coming of the Messiah, who will lead us into the new Promised Land, which he called the Kingdom of God. You shall call his name Joshua. The one who, by following him, will lead us into a better life.

In George Will's column this past week, he wrote about the popularity of Christmas. He began the article by quoting an English skeptic who said that there ought to be a sign above the door of every church that says, "This is important, if it is true."

Then he went on to talk about how Christmas reflects a spirit of good will to everybody, that is shared by all, that is attractive to people who are believers and nonbelievers, Christians and secularists alike, it doesn't matter. Everybody is attracted to what is called the spirit of Christmas. He attributed that to Charles Dickens, and Dickens's story, The Christmas Carol, which he said has shaped the way we celebrate Christmas in the English-speaking world.

Actually I think the attraction to Christmas is much deeper than Charles Dickens, but his point is well taken. Dickens demonstrated what peace on earth, good will among all people would look like this in 19th century England, where the Industrial Revolution was creating the poverty class that was flooding to the city, living in misery, in unfettered capitalist days. He said the way the spirit of good will toward all people would be manifested in that world would be for people who have wealth to be concerned about the poor. Scrooges will be generous if you take Christmas seriously.

That is still true today. If capitalists call themselves Christians, then they better be generous. And they better be concerned for the poor and their welfare, or they cannot call themselves Christians. That is true. But the Kingdom to which Jesus has called us, the Kingdom into which he is leading us, is bigger than Dickens interpretation of peace on earth, good will to all people. You can see it in Jesus' parables.

Incidentally, Jesus told a parable that is similar to what Dickens said in The Christmas Carol. It's the parable of The Rich Man and Lazarus. The rich man had a poor man sitting on his doorstep. Everyday as the rich man entered his house he stepped over the poor man, didn't even see him. That is the story of Scrooge.

But Jesus told other parables. For instance, parables when fathers and sons are reconciled, and presumably mothers and daughters as well. So reconciliation with those from whom we are separated is a characteristic of the life into which Jesus has called us. If we are going to be Christians, then we ought to be reconcilers.

There is the parable of The Good Samaritan, which says that in the Kingdom you treat your enemy as if he were your neighbor. So if you are Christian, you are going to be a peacemaker.

And there is the parable about The Talents, that says in the Kingdom risks will be taken, not only in the investment of capital to gain wealth, but also in the investment in persons and projects that will make the world a better place. So if you are a Christian, you are concerned about society as a whole, and investing in it in a way that will make it better.

There is a parable about The Wheat and the Tares, and the parable about the log that's in your eye and the splinter in somebody else, that teach that instead of judging other's behavior, you should turn inward to see first if there is not something in your life that is not exemplary. Therefore to be Christian means you cannot be self-righteous.

And most of all, if we take Jesus' parables seriously, you take most seriously the last parable he told, the summary parable, in the Gospel of Matthew. If we take that seriously, then we will feed the hungry. We will give water to the thirsty. We will welcome the stranger. We will clothe the naked. And we will visit the sick and the prisoner.

That is the teaching of Jesus, this new Joshua, about the kind of world that he will lead us into. That is what his Kingdom looks like. It is manifested in his teachings. To call him Savior, we look at his name. His name is Joshua, the one who will lead us into a better world.

Back in 1972, you remember, there was a plane that crashed in the Andes. There was a very popular book written about it called, Alive. It seems that the members of a rugby team were flying from Uruguay to Chile, over the Andes. Bad weather had grounded them the first day. But the second day they couldn't wait any longer. They took off, and as so often happen in high mountains, they met unpredicted weather. They crashed into the mountain, slid down a glacier, and came to rest just short of a precipice. There were sixty people in the plane. A lot of people were killed on impact. Some died later because of their injuries. But sixteen people survived the crash, and existed for two months high up in the Andes.

The story of their ordeal is not a very pleasant one. But toward the end of that two-month period, three of them volunteered to see if they could find a way out. They started walking at 15,000 feet elevation, in rugged terrain, in ice and snow. One of them finally turned back. Two others kept going.

They walked for ten days until they came to a swollen river that they couldn't cross. They camped there for the night. The next morning they saw a man standing on the other side of the river. They stood up, waved their arms, and yelled at him. He just stared back at them. Then he turned and walked away.

The next morning he was back again. Once again they yelled and waved their arms. This time the man took a piece of paper out of his pocket, tied it to a stone, and threw it across the river. They rushed over to where it had landed, opened it up, and read the words, "There is a man coming that I told to come." Then the man took a chunk of bread out of his pocket, and he threw that over the river. One of the survivors held the chunk of bread in his hand as if it were a sign, a sacrament, that said, someone has heard our cries, and cares, someone knows about us, and will come and lead us out of here. He turned to his companion, and said, "We are saved!"

"You shall call his name Jesus, for he will come and save you." He will come and lead us into a better life.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mark Trotter