12-24-20 Grace-Vail & Benson Sermon

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December 24, 2020. Luke 2:1-20 Sermon. Grace-Vail and Grace-Benson Sometimes the good gets in the way of the best. Christmas is an example. If Christmas is a time to enjoy family and gifts and food, that’s good. If Christmas is a time to get away from the challenges of the past year, that’s good. If Christmas is a time of general goodwill and peacefulness, that’s good. But what if there’s something far better? What if Christmas is more about what God has done for people than what people can do for themselves? That’s better. Luke 2 gives us far more reason for optimism, enjoyment of relationships, goodwill and peace than any of our own customs and traditions, as good as they are. Christmas is about a birth. Any birth has some planned and some unplanned parts. Today more than any time in human history, moms and dads can plan lots of details of a birth. They can plan the doctors and midwives involved. They prepare the crib and the car carrier. They can get all kinds of advice from friends and family. At times, they even get to schedule the baby’s birthday with medical interventions. And yet there still are unexpected and unique parts of every birth. Each birth story is unique. I think it’s safe to say that of all the planning that’s ever happened for a birth, of all the advice ever given to a new mom or dad; no one has ever planned to give birth in a place where farm animals stay. No one plans on putting their newborn baby in the animal’s feedbox; clearing out a spot, hoping it’s not too dirty or musty, and putting their new baby there. Yet with Jesus, that’s what happened. Mary and Joseph didn’t plan for the birth to happen that way; they reacted to the situation as it happened. Compelled to travel to Bethlehem because Caesar ordered a census. Not able to find a better place to stay in crowded Bethlehem. The time came for the baby to be born. There’s every reason to believe this meant contractions for Mary; blood, sweat, and tears of birthing pains leading up to delivery. When the baby came, they found themselves in a stable. Like any parent they figured things out. On the job training, they used the manger as a crib for their newborn baby. They didn’t plan this detail of his birth. Yet it’d be wrong to say the manger was totally unplanned. God knew about the manger. He knew about all the details of this birth. None of it happened by accident. God knew that in a real place, in real time, his Son who had become human would be born. God knew Caesar would decree the census that would get Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem, the place predicted by the prophet Micah so many years earlier as the arrival spot of a ruler for God’s people. God knew that a son of Eve would be born as a champion to undo the damage done by her disobedience in the garden. We’re even told in Ephesians 1, “God chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world, so that we would be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ.” The manger was a surprise to Mary and Joseph, but not to God. That really applies not just to Jesus’ birth, but to all of our entrances into this world. Even if your birth was unplanned, or unexpected things happened when you were born, God planned you to exist and to live. Even if details of your childhood were undesired and thrown onto you; God knew


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