12/14/14-Advent Week 3-Luke 1-Love: God’s Greatest Gift

Well, it is Christmas season, and we always want to remember the less well-off.

-Then I began to wonder, ”those whom we help, the less well-off, they are a great deal like Mary, Jesus’ mom.” Mary was a young woman, poor, and she might not be my first choice as far as who God can use, but remember, man looks at the outside, God looks at the heart.

She had these characteristics, yet God did indeed use her, and when she receives the news that she will be carrying this Christ child, she was no doubt scared, maybe a bit confused, yet her love for her Lord gave her the strength and will to say, “yes”.

We read in Luke’s gospel, Mary gets the announcement, goes and visits her relative Elizabeth, and then John the Baptist is born, and we don’t see Mary again until Jesus is born. Mary visits Elizabeth when Mary is only 3 months pregnant and right after that it is the story of going to Bethlehem for Jesus’ birth. So right there we have all these months not mentioned.

What was Mary going through during those 6 months before the birth? Because being an unwed teenage mother back then was huge taboo. Forbidden. Now, it is a bit less surprising, but then, oh boy! When Mary said yes to God, that was risky.

What was her family going to think, what was her friends going to think, what was Joseph, her fiancé going to think? You think Mary had to endure whispers behind her back, maybe people shunning her.

Mary was doing God’s will, but that does not mean it is easy. In fact, when she sang this song that we read in the second set of verses, we see this teenager thanking God for his justice of all things.

We see her giving praise to God who brings down the proud and uplifts the humble. The One who sends the rich away empty and yet fills the hungry with good things

-God is faithful to those who fear him, exalting low, bringing down high.

In Mary’s song, God is pictured as the champion of the outcast, the oppressed.

Mary is praising God for His justice. Now what does justice have to do with love. We think of love and justice as polar opposites.

We think of love as something done for the sake of the innocent, and justice as something done to the guilty. Yet justice, at least from what the Bible speaks about, is not simply about dishing out punishment. Rather, it is about harmony, it is about putting things right. God judges yes, but remember He judges with mercy.

Justice is about completeness-This same Mary has to trust that God is a god of both justice and love. We have all faced situations in our life where our hearts ache and cry out, “God where are you in this situation?”

God we want you to make it right. We want you to show your love and your justice and right the wrong”

In this little baby soon to arrive. In this precious child, God does exactly that.

In Jesus, we have God’s divine reversal. God lowered Himself to raise us. He came down from paradise to lift us from the muddy pits of sin. In Jesus Christ, God suffers injustice, in order to bring about true justice. He suffers the brokenness, to give us the wholeness.

In this reversal, God became what we are (human) so that we might be what He is (eternal and perfect). It is a divine reversal, like the King who takes the torn, shredded rags of clothing from us and gives us his beautiful robes to now wear.

At a crime, you can punish the guilty, you can help the innocent, but until you can match those perfectly, you don’t have true justice.

God did just that. At the cross, God’s justice and God’s love met. When we look at the cross, we see God’s justice and love, are one & same.

God was reconciling the world to Himself, and He was not only forgiving our sins, but He shows that in His kingdom, we have the strength to love one another in true brotherhood, experiencing forgiveness when we have been wronged.

God is love. Let love, true-gospel defined love be the motivation for everything you do. God’s love is power, it is the life of the church.

Friends, have courage when doing the work God has called you to do. Mary’s life was not easy, and likewise you may be called to obey God and take up something that will not be easy either, but there is a reason we are still talking about Mary 2,000 years later.

Through her love for God, our Savior entered the world, and saved us all.

When we put our trust in this Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit transforms us, and gives us the love that we did not have as unsaved people.

Let love be your foundation. Love in action, in good deeds. Let love become a habit to you. Intentionally seek to practice it, prove your Christian faith by your love this Christmas season. Love as God loves, and love who God loves…and that is everybody, even the sinner…especially the sinner.

Here it is in a nutshell…Love God and do whatever you want!…because by loving God, you will eventually find yourself desiring the things God desires.

He is the great equalizer, the merciful judge, and found in a manager in Bethlehem so long ago this token of His love is the proof of his justice.

To have God’s justice and love is one and the same, to desire one is to desire the other. When you act in love toward God and toward others, you become a witness to His kingdom.

And in this kingdom, there is a mission of redemption, and You become a co-rescuer. Let love be your driving force. Amen

2014-Advent Week 2-Luke 2:14-Give Peace a Chance

Peace, a dream of mankind ever since Cain looked sideways at Abel. For some, it is but a fantasy, a fancy abstract concept, reserved for rulers and dreamers alike.

Yet, for the Christian, peace is as concrete and real as the pew upon which you are sitting.

This is not some head-in-the-clouds escape from reality, but rather is the reality.

A lifestyle that should characterize the life of a believer, and to others, be as obvious in our lives as the clothes we wear.

Because now, it is possible for God’s peace to be felt by you and me as people: God’s peace is available to us!

God’s rescue mission in giving us Himself is to clear the way so that nothing stops us from experiencing the peace.

Anyone can have it, regardless of your past or what you have done. “Craig, but what about me?” you may ask, “I still struggle and I am not perfect, so what peace does God have to offer me?”

Well, if you look at this story, God picked shepherds, the most unlikeliest of characters to receive this announcement!

Do not think God cannot use you wherever you are at in your life, no matter the age or life situation. You may be in a rut, but God can still use you! He has cleared the way and invites us to be a part of that Kingdom of His, that Kingdom of Heaven, that Kingdom of peace.

When the Bible talks about peace, it means it in a relational sense. This is often deeper than what we think of when we hear the word.

To us, peace often conjures up the idea of a cease-fire between warring parties, or perhaps it makes you think of tranquility in a noisy world.

But the true peace the Scriptures talk about, the true peace that is to be found in Jesus Christ, the true peace that the angels sing to these bewildered shepherds is what is known as ShalomWholeness, completeness

Our blessed Savior to be born soon, is not only the great physician telling us about our sickness, but offers us the treatment, and even greater than that, the cure!

1 Timothy says, “godliness with contentment is great gain”

This shalom, this wholeness, is offered to us in the person of Jesus Christ. Through Him, we have

Peace with God

Peace with Neighbor

Peace with Self

When we take this babe in a manger and make Him king in our lives, He gives us forgiveness from sin, purpose, healing, and new life and peace. This King provides us with great love and compassion, and it is this love He has shown us most fully in Himself.

This is the foundation for peace between us and God.

It is as if God has granted us this great peace, and now we want to share with others. This peace should be a way of life for the believer.

The Bible says in Ephesians 2 that God has already broken down the dividing walls of hostility and created a place where true is to be found. And do you know where this place is to be? The Church!

Here is where God has made it possible for all of us who may be different to be one people.

A New Humanity in the World

The way to have peace with your fellow man is to remember three truths.

First, God made both you and them in His image, and He cares for you and for them too

Two, we are all broken by this blight known as sin, so you or I, we are no better than anyone outside of Jesus Christ.

Three, The same merciful hands that reached out to you and I while we were drowning in our sea of sin and selfishness, those same hands are reaching out to your fellow man to bring them also into God’s kingdom.

I think we need to see ourselves the way our Savior sees us…a beloved mess. Beloved, yet a mess. A mess, yet beloved.

Are you struggling with not liking who you are? Understand that God has forged you with loving yet strong hands, and He loves you even when you feel like no one else on earth ever could. Forgive yourself as God has forgiven you.

Just like the Psalmist said, “the Lord is my shepherd, and with Him I lack nothing.”

We have a new life, a new wholeness, a new Shalom, a new peace.