John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
When The Word Became Flesh
John 1:1-18
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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Here we are in the heart of the Advent season. Most churches are preparing for Christmas pageants of various kinds. Usually children are involved, and therefore things don't always go according to script. In one pageant I heard about, the innkeeper of Bethlehem was played by a boy named Ralph. He had very much wanted to play the part of Joseph, but that part was given to someone else. Ralph decided to take some revenge. On the day of the play, the fellowship hall was filled to capacity. Mary and Joseph knocked on the door of the inn. Ralph opened the door and they asked if he had a room. With a big smile he said, "Come on in. We've got plenty of room."

The audience, especially Ralph's mother and the director, gasped. Joseph and Mary were stunned. But the young man playing Joseph was equal to the occasion. He looked around and said, "Hey, this place is a dump. We'd rather stay in a stable!"

The world into which Jesus was born was a dump in the worst sense. Slaves outnumbered free people. A human life, particularly if poor or female, was dirt cheap. Fidelity in marriage was rare. The practice of homosexuality was common. So, why did Jesus come? That's the first question to be addressed. Then, secondly, how should we respond to his coming. With the Old Testament prophet Isaiah and the gospel writer John as our guides, let us seek some answers.

THE FIRST ADVENT QUESTION IS: WHY DID JESUS COME?

There are several answers. First, sin had to be confronted and defeated. Sin is the awful cancer wrecking God's creation. It is the spiritual virus within each of us which, if not cured, is terminal. Isaiah predicted that the coming Messiah would take on the forces of evil. He wrote, "His mouth shall be a rod to strike down the ruthless, and with a word he shall slay the wicked." Remember, Isaiah was describing judicial acts of the coming Messiah based not on force but on spiritual power. We still battle against awesome forces of evil. Only with the power of Christ can we hope to prevail. Education alone will not defeat racism. Reason alone will not eliminate casinos in Tunica or sexually oriented businesses in Memphis, because money is involved. Money causes people to justify almost anything.

Will power alone cannot stand up against red-hot lust or greed or prejudice or resentment. Only be being Christ-transformed and Holy Spirit-filled can we hope to prevail. According to a story I heard, there was a Jewish lady named Mrs. Rosenberg who some years ago tried to get a room at a fashionable hotel on Cape Cod. The desk clerk said, "Sorry, we're booked up." "But," she said, "your sign out front says that you have vacancies." The clerk stammered a bit and then said curtly, "We do not accept Jewish persons. I'll be happy to suggest another place for you." Mrs. Rosenberg stiffened noticeably and said, "It may interest you to know that I have converted to the Christian religion." The desk clerk said, "Oh yeah? Well then, let me give you a little test. How was Jesus born?" Mrs. Rosenberg said, "He was born to a virgin named Mary in a village called Bethlehem." "Very good," said the desk clerk. "Tell me more." "He was born in a stable," she said. "That's right," said the desk clerk. "Why was he born in a stable." Mrs. Rosenberg replied rather loudly, "Because a jerk like you wouldn't give a

Jewish lady a room for the night." This is still a sinful world, a world in which some country clubs still discriminate on the basis of race, where nations engage in ethnic cleansing, where God's name is profaned more often than it is reverenced, where here in Memphis drugs and sex are sold behind a facade of topless dancing and these immoral cesspools are advertised daily in a supposedly respectable newspaper.

Into this kind of world, Jesus Christ came because no one less than he could break the power of sin. And the only way Jesus could do it involved a cross. There was a second reason Jesus came: It was to show us that God is love. This was a hard sell. People are always inclined to see God as stern Judge, cosmic cop, wrathful Ruler. But not as loving Lord. Jesus came to wrap God's loving arms around this hurting world.

I often stop at a certain restaurant in town which has a first-class aquarium. It contains a glorious assortment of tropical fish with colors so extraordinary that only God's personal coloring set could have decorated them. It takes a lot of work to run an aquarium. The owner monitors the oxygen and nitrate levels and the ammonia content. The water is filtered. Vitamins, antibiotics and sulfa drugs must be pumped in. The fish have to be fed regularly. Now with all that care and attention, you would think that the fish would adore the owner. But they don't. Anytime he comes around, they dart away in fear. The owner is like a god to those fish, too big to comprehend, too frightening to love. The only way to change that would be for the owner to somehow become a fish and communicate the true message. Similarly, God had to become a person to communicate with us. "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth."

Why did Jesus come? Because sin had to be confronted and defeated. And, God had to find a way to show us that He is love.

NOW LET’S MOVE ON TO OUR SECOND QUESTION: HOW SHOULD WE RESPOND TO HIS COMING?

First, out of gratitude we should crown him as our personal King of Kings and Lord of Lords. How do we do that? By making this sincere declaration: "Lord, I'm a sinner who needs a Savior. I believe you visited this earth and died on a cross for people like me. From this day forward I will trust you as Savior and follow you as Lord." Note in John 1:12 that no one is a child of God just by being born. Every person is a creature of God, but not a child of God. How does one become a child of God? Look at verse 12: "But to all who received Jesus, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God."

Years ago I visited an elderly couple one day who had recently moved into our community. The wife had visited our church and had expressed a desire to join. The husband was not able to attend because of poor health. So, I went to the home and discussed with them what it means to be Christians and church members. I asked them several questions, including this one: Have you made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ as your Savior and Lord? The questions were answered satisfactorily; so, on the following Sunday she stood before the altar and joined, and he joined in absentia.

Within a month he died. Later his wife sent a note to me which included the following: "How thankful I am that you came to our home and asked Bob the questions of faith. Not that I would have worried about him had you not, but it gives me such a secure feeling. You see, never once did we discuss his dying. And he was very private about matters of faith. I feel so confident about where he is now and that we shall meet again." You can sing "Joy to the World, the Lord is come" until you are blue in the face, but he has not really come for you until you welcome him as your personal Savior and Lord.

There is a second way you can respond to the coming of the Christ. You can join the struggle for one of Christ's causes. Jesus opposes anything on earth that dehumanizes people. Jesus favors anything that promotes justice, mercy, reconciliation, and

righteousness. Jesus taught us to pray and work for a time when God's kingdom

will be as real on earth as it is in heaven. Isaiah envisioned an earth where "They will not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea." There are many arenas in this holy struggle. Some Memphis Christians are contributing money to fund the legal struggle to shut down sexually oriented businesses in our community. Others are helping young women get out of those dens of iniquity and start a new life. Some Christians are helping our city and county work as partners rather than antagonists, building bridges across racial and economic barriers.

Some battle to stop the spread of AIDS, not by passing out needles to drug addicts or distributing condoms on street corners. These Christians begin by telling the plain, unvarnished, politically incorrect truth about AIDS. It is for the most part a preventable disease. AIDS flies on the wings of immoral behavior. Stop the immoral behavior and you stop the plague in its tracks. But these Christians do more than just tell the truth about AIDS. They tend to the victims of AIDS. When someone is sick, you don't ask first how he got sick. You simply try to help.

Other Memphis Christians hammer nails on the weekend so that a family in Binghampton will for the first time know the privilege of home ownership. Others play basketball and share the gospel with inner-city kids who may never have related to a responsible male adult. Still other christians immerse the church and its ministries in prayer.

There are countless arenas in the struggle to bring the Kingdom nearer. There is a task for everybody. Jesus said, "pick up your cross and follow me." What is your duty station?

Let me close with a favorite Christmas story. On Christmas Eve, 1980, a certain lady was busy wrapping packages. The family was going to a Christmas Eve service that evening. There was a young boy in the family who was absolutely hyper with Christmas waiting and expectation. His mother, trying to keep him occupied, asked him to practice a newly acquired skill. She asked him to polish her shoes which were scuffed up a bit. He jumped right to that project and before long presented the shiny shoes for inspection. His mother was so pleased that she gave him a dollar bill. That evening as she put on her shoes she noticed that something was in one of them. She took off the shoe and found a dollar bill with a note attached to it written in a childish scrawl. It said, "I done it for love."

The greatest gift that earth has ever seen was wrapped in swaddling clothes. God's motive behind the gift was exactly that of the little boy: "I done it for love." "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son..."

Have you received that gift? Is it making a difference in your life?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight