Luke 2:41-52 · The Boy Jesus at the Temple
Wherever You Are, You Are Always at Home
Luke 2:41-52
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
Loading...

In just a few days we will all be faced with the annual challenge: learning to write a new year date on all our important papers, letters, checks.

'07 will become '08.

I don't know about you, but my neurons are still not comfortable with whole "0" thing. Every now and again I have a brain fritz (as opposed to an ice induced brain freeze) and find myself writing 1996 or 1987 or some other decade-deleting date. Its as if occasionally my mind simply cannot fathom the incredibly swift passage of time that marks the span of our lifetimes.

But there's something even more difficult than having to wrap our minds around yet another New Year. It is coming to terms with how the passage of time affects those we love. Every parent here can testify how much of a difference one year makes on a child.

In one year a child can shoot up with 4 or 5 inches of new growth, act up with new emotions and new energies, speak up with a new voice and sit up with new insights and knowledge. As kids enter adolescence, one short year can transform a child into a young man or a young woman in body, mind and spirit.

There is something absolutely entrancing about this week's gospel lesson. It is a sneak peak into Jesus' childhood and our only up-close and personal view of Jesus as a boy not a baby, as a child not a messiah. Let commentators disagree on where Luke got this story or what purpose it was meant to serve. We all connect with the emotions experienced by Mary and Joseph in today's text.

Ever turn your back on your child, only not to have him or her there when you re-turned? Traveling together in the safety of a family caravan, at the end of the first day's travel back towards Nazareth, Jesus' parents are horrified to discover that their son is not among them. Immediately Joseph and Mary turn around and travel back to Jerusalem, frantically searching for Jesus.

Think of all the possible scenarios, some comforting, other chilling, that must have taunted the panicked parents on that return trip to Jerusalem.

Maybe Jesus had fallen in with another family caravan leaving Jerusalem after the Passover festival. Or maybe Jesus had fallen among the many packs of thieves and hoodlums that dogged the heels of such caravans, looking for easy prey. Maybe Jesus was already ahead of them, anxiously waiting for them to catch up to him. Or maybe Jesus had been lured by the attractive sights and sounds of the big city and didn't want his parents to find him at all. Maybe their son was with good people who would care for him. Or maybe their son was all alone, hungry, cold, and frightened.

When the text says Joseph and Mary finally found Jesus after three days, most commentators count the first day as their journey towards Nazareth, the second day as their worried trip back to Jerusalem, and make the third day actually their first day of looking for Jesus in the city. It seems likely that the temple would have been one of the first places pious parents would have checked for their son. The temple was the center of activity for all Jewish learning and prayer.

Who among us cannot identify with the words Mary utters when she finally sees her lost child, calmly sitting in the temple, absorbed in learning at the feet of his elders?

Ever had a spouse forget to call and check in after a long trip? Ever had a parent mysteriously not show up for a meal? Ever lose track of a child in the shopping mall?

Haven't you shouted at them when all you really wanted to do was hug them? Haven't you scolded the found one when all you really wanted to do was utter a prayer of thanksgiving? Haven't you guilted a clueless one for worrying you when all you really felt was relief flooding through you? Jesus' response to his mother's furious outburst is a classic example of the wholly divine/wholly human nature of this one who is still the Christ-child. On one hand the first words the young Jesus utters immediately establish the unique intimacy of his relationship with God. Even at the tender age of twelve; even before he was legally considered responsible for keeping ritual observances and the laws of the Torah: Jesus felt the embrace of divine love, the special closeness of God the Father. It is self-evident to this young Jesus that he must be "in my Father's house." There, in the midst of the holy temple, Jesus felt God's presence most fully and as a result felt completely at home.

On the other hand, the twelve year-old Jesus' response is also full of the self-absorption so typical of all adolescents. Adolescence is when we stop being defined as our parents' children and we start the struggle to find and be our own selves. There is a refreshing (if aggravating to parents) adolescent candor about Jesus' first response back to his mother: "Why were you searching for me?" (verse 49).

DUH?!

Although later, as a grown man engaged in public ministry, Jesus will again cause his family pain and confusion as they fail to understand his mission, today it is the gut-wrenching fear for a lost child that had caused Joseph and Mary pain, and which Jesus did not grasp. Jesus the child does not yet understand how desperate and scared human love can become.

Parents of teenagers look at the Genesis story of creation as convincing evidence of God's wisdom and omniscience. The Lord God created Adam and Eve as fully grown people. The God of Genesis didn't have to put up with any teenagers. But the incarnated God of the gospels actually chose to go through adolescence Experiencing first-hand the wonder and weirdness of it all.

The twelve year-old Jesus revels in the relationship that he feels between himself and his divine Father. His time in the temple, learning and debating with the elders there, fills him with a sense of pleasure and belonging that he recognizes as uniquely his.

Yet despite Jesus' words, despite the sense of rightness he felt in the temple, Jesus left the temple with his parents and "was obedient to them" (verse 51). If Mary was able to treasure this incident in her heart, it would seem evident that this experience must have made an impact on the young Jesus as well. Although in today's text the twelve year old child could not fathom his parents' frantic search for him, the adult Jesus surely understood how powerfully their love for him had driven them.

Let's try a little experiment, shall we? Let's read Jesus' story of the lost sheep, keeping this temple experience in mind.

So he told them this parable: "Which one of you, having a hundred sheep and losing one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the wilderness and go after the one that is lost until he finds it? When he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders and rejoices. And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and neighbors, saying to them 'Rejoice, with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.'" (Luke 15:3-6)

Jesus' human parents taught him how hard love will search for the lost. As an adult, Jesus took the knowledge of this intimate, unbreakable bond between himself and the Father on the road.

While he may have declared that "Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head" (Luke 9:58), Jesus was never truly homeless. God the Father was always in residence in Jesus' heart. After his twelve-year old truant-trip to the temple, Jesus learned to take his Father's house with him wherever he went. Jesus could never be lost or alone: Even as he argued with the scribes and pharisees he used to learn from. Even as he endured the denseness of his uncomprehending disciples. Even as he separated himself from his confused and doubting family. Even as he felt the heat of the political power's anger. Even as he faced his betrayal by those he loved most. Even as he hung on the cross at Golgotha.

Always and everywhere Jesus was at home with God's presence and love. Want another reason why Jesus was not truly homeless?

Everywhere he went was home. Everyone was family.

And this same Jesus wants to make his home in us in you and in me.

Will you enter this New Year with wonder and excitement?

Or will you enter '08 with fear and trembling? Whether you turn 16, or 60, or 100 this new year, '08 is the perfect year to inaugurate a fresh journey in your own unique relationship with God. The life and death and resurrection of Jesus the Christ took down the barrier of sin that keeps us separated from God. Christ makes it possible for all of us to experience that same immediacy, that same intimacy, with the Divine as Jesus himself did throughout his life.

Travel boldly through 2008, then. For wherever you may journey - through adolescence or Afghanistan, into your first home or into your last apartment, on wilderness walks or urban commutes God goes along with you. Jesus says to you, "I will make your life my temple." Jesus' last words to you, "I will never leave you or forsake you."

But wherever you go . . . don't forget to tell your family where you're going!

ChristianGlobe Networks, Collected Sermons, by Leonard Sweet