Wednesday, 23 December 2015

Christmas 1 – 27 December 2015 – Year C

Christmas 1 – 27 December 2015 – Year C

Grace to you and peace from our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen

The text for this meditation is written in the 2nd Chapter of the Gospel according to St Luke: Verses 41 - 52

Every year his parents went to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover.  When he was twelve years old, they went up to the Feast, according to the custom. After the Feast was over, while his parents were returning home, the boy Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem, but they were unaware of it. Thinking he was in their company, they traveled on for a day. Then they began looking for him among their relatives and friends. When they did not find him, they went back to Jerusalem to look for him.  After three days they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions. Everyone who heard him was amazed at his understanding and his answers.  When his parents saw him, they were astonished. His mother said to him, “Son, why have you treated us like this? Your father and I have been anxiously searching for you.”
 “Why were you searching for me?” he asked. “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” But they did not understand what he was saying to them.
 Then he went down to Nazareth with them and was obedient to them. But his mother treasured all these things in her heart. And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.

It’s interesting that the most important person in history has such a meagre biography.  He walked the earth for thirty-three years.  Four books record those events.  Of the 89 chapters of those books, only four devote themselves to the first 12 years of Jesus life.  Now, to be fair, the most important part of Jesus’ life were those years of His public ministry, suffering, death, burial, resurrection, and ascension; but, still we it would be interesting to know more about Jesus’ early years.  I guess it’s because of our interest in Jesus’ teens that all kinds of books and shows, some more fictional than others, have been published to try to fill in the gaps.  Those gaps, however, won’t be filled in until we see Jesus with our own eyes in heaven. Until then, we must satisfy ourselves with what the Holy Spirit provides in His inspired account as written in the Biblical text. 

Today, we have before us, everything we know about Jesus teenage years; but what we have is incredible.  In these verses Jesus reminds us who He is.  He reminds us that He is – already at age 12, and since the moment of His conception – the perfect God-Man.  He reminds us that He is the perfect God-Man because He is our perfect substitute.

Most of us are reasonably familiar with this account.  Jesus’ parents, Joseph and Mary, take Him to Jerusalem for the Passover.  This is a significant trip that Luke writes about.  At this time Jesus was not yet experienced His bar mitzvah, (the Jewish equivalent of Christian confirmation), he was in the final legs of his ‘catechetical’ instruction.  He would have been going to Saturday School for some time now, learning the Scriptures, getting ready for His Bar Mitzvah.
At the end of the festival, Mary and Joseph head back to Nazareth with the caravan of travellers who had come for the festival.  During these journeys through the desert animals and people all walked together; the women usually in groups chatting as did the men; the young people all gathered together and talked and played together. Mary and Joseph assumed Jesus was with the other boys and they didn’t worry about Him until nightfall.  When they could not find him they panicked, they looked everywhere, finally after three days of frantic searching they found him back at the Temple, sitting at the feet of the Rabbis, listening, asking questions, and replying. 

As all Mums would know, Mary is angered and confused by His behaviour; she demands, “How could you do this to us son!?!?!?”  Jesus He replied, “Mum, didn’t you know that this is what I’d be doing, what I have to do; going about my Father’s business?”  Jesus He went home with them, the perfect little boy, for the next eighteen years.

Friends this is spectacular story of enlightening truths.  We see the boy who is God.  This is not a boy “learning to be God” or “discovering that He’s something special” or wondering “Why do I know these things?”  Teenager Jesus knows who He is and here reminds us why Christmas – Word and flesh becoming one – is such a big deal.

Jesus shows us His eagerness to be as one with His Father’s Word.  Jesus stayed behind, not to hang out with friends, not to wander the streets of Jerusalem, not to see that event or sight Mom and Dad said there wasn’t time to see.  He stayed behind to get into the Word.  He stayed behind to sit at the feet of Rabbis and teachers.  If your son or daughter went missing, how many of you would assume that they were with Christian minister talking theology?  How many confirmed teens are even eager to be in church much longer than they have to be?  Willing and eager to be in the Word, about His Father’s things, Jesus is the perfect graduate who was at the same time is the very God who understood it perfectly.  He mystified the crowds with the insight His questions displayed and the knowledge His answers imparted.  Jesus didn’t take over the class, but He was a participant extraordinaire.  The Scriptures He was taught were the Scriptures that He, through the Holy Spirit, inspired the prophets to write.  Jesus makes use of His divine nature on this occasion, perhaps to lead these Rabbis to a deeper understanding of the Scriptures and to help them focus their eyes rightly on Him as the Christ.

Whilst Jesus understood the Fifth Commandment, His earthly time on earth had its priority in the First Commandment and doing His Father’s will for all peoples.  He was the perfect child.  When Mary and Joseph find Him, He doesn’t make a scene.  He doesn’t roll His eyes at Mum and Dad.  He doesn’t mock them sarcastically.  Yet, He does rebuke them for forgetfulness – after all, angels told them that He was the Son of God, the Saviour of the world.  For this child, they’d gone into exile in Egypt.  Had their memories faded?  Were they taking His divine nature for granted?  Were they so used to His obeying the Fourth Commandment that they forgot about His divine mission having priority?  Jesus reminds them, “This is what I have to do first; this is why I took on flesh.”
And yet, when His parents came.  He went home obediently.  God in the flesh joyfully went home to Nazareth.  He obeyed them in everything.  He isn’t suddenly the boss.  What a radical reversal of our usual response?  We look forward to those moments when we can rub failure into the faces of our superiors – whether it’s Mums or Dads, pastors or teachers, or bosses.  Rather than quietly put ourselves under their leadership, our sinful nature desires to remind them of their failings whenever we can.  Jesus demonstrates that this is not the way for God in the flesh and in so doing reminds us that it is not the way for us either.

Friends in Christ, this is much more than just a good Biblical story. Through his text today St Luke is reminding us today that Jesus is the perfect God-Man.  We must remember that even at this time, this perfect teen was aware of His fate, to be the perfect substitute to die on a cross for our sins.  The story beginning at Christmas – the being born, the growing up, the gaining of wisdom, the obedience to all the commandments – was for our sake; for our eternal forgiveness and salvation. 

This child / man Jesus demonstrated that He is a member of our family, sharing our humanity.  He subjected Himself to all these things for one purpose, to bring all people salvation, to destroy the power of devil, to free us from the slavery of our sins and our fear of death.  He subjected Himself to these things so that at the cross He could be the perfect and faithful High Priest we needed, offering the sacrifice of Himself as atonement for our sins. This teenage boy in our text became all these things, and His sacrifice paid the price.  It did the job.  It redeemed us.  It ended the power of the devil.  It ended the hold that death has over us.  Because Jesus did what He had to do.  He is perfectly God and perfectly man in one Person.  That is what makes the Christmas season so special and joyful for all humankind. How blessed we are!  Amen


The love and peace and grace of our great Triune God that is beyond all human understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen

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