The Power and the Kings

 

A sermon on Matthew 2:1-12; Isaiah 60:1-6 & Ephesians 3:1-12 by Nathan Nettleton

© LaughingBird.net


Message

Though we get caught up in violent rivalries like Herod, God breaks through with the promise of a new kingdom where all are honoured.


Sermon


Epiphany

The revelation

The unveiling of something long hidden

The moment when the lights go on

The moment we finally see what we couldn’t see before

The “ah ha” moment

The Apostle describes it as the revealing of the mystery not made known to us in previous generations

Epiphany


As the prophet said, Arise! Shine!

The light has come.

Darkness covered the earth

Thick darkness hung over the peoples

But the Lord has risen

His star has shone forth

His glory lights up what was previous hidden in mystery


Lift up your eyes and look around

Everyone is gathering, coming to you

Your sons shall come from far away,

and your daughters shall be carried on their nurses’ arms.

Then you shall see and be radiant;

your heart shall thrill and rejoice


You shall see and be radiant

Your heart will thrill and rejoice

Won’t it, King Herod?

Won’t it?


Do you know what it is like to see the Epiphany through Herod’s eyes?

I reckon you do

I know I do

Herod’s story is our story too, though we don’t like to face it


You lift up your eyes and look around

Everyone is gathering, coming your way

People are arriving from far away

Something is up

Something is going on

Strangers from far off lands arrive asking questions

They seem to know that something is going on

They’re not nobodies either

These are people of stature and learning, of position and influence

They seem to know that something is going on

Something right under your nose

How come you’re always the last to know?

Somebody is failing to do their job if you haven’t been informed

How dare they keep you in the dark?

Someone has been planning something behind your back

How dare they?


Your eyes narrow and your ears prick up

No one’s going to get anything past you

What did they say they were looking for?

The new favourite?

The new number one?

The new go-to man?

Some new upstart who thinks they’re going to rule the roost?

Not bloody likely

You’re not about to take early retirement

You’re not about to be pushed down the pecking order

You’re not about to let someone else steal your limelight

Credit where credit is due

You’ve worked hard for what you’ve achieved

You deserve the credit and honour that has come your way

There can be no harmony or stability if the hierarchy is not clearcut and respected

Your authority must be maintained

The good order of things depends on it, doesn’t it?

Your eyes narrow and your ears prick up

No one’s going to muscle in on your rightful turf

You’ll make sure this upstart, whoever he turns out to be, amounts to nothing

You’ll make sure of it

You’re staying right where you are


Part one of the Epiphany is like that

It’s not a pretty picture

It tell us things abut ourselves that we’d rather not hear

Epiphanies are always like that

When the lights suddenly go on in a dark place,

    you can see things scurrying for cover in all directions

Unpleasant things. Nasty things

Things whose natural habitat is the darkness

Things that can’t bear exposure to the light

Things that are a whole lot more true than we’d like to admit

There are sides of ourselves we always try to keep facing the other way

Away from the light

When the light suddenly comes from an unexpected direction,

    Epiphany strips us naked


But Epiphany doesn’t leave us there,

    exposed, afraid, wounded and dangerous

Epiphany invites us to step back and take a wider look at what the light reveals

Epiphany invites us to see ourselves through God’s eyes

not just through Herod’s eyes

Epiphany invites us to see what’s going on through joyous laughing eyes

And perhaps it is only joy and laughter

    that could ever break through the snarling defensiveness of our Herod sides


There is something of a divine cosmic joke going on here

It’s not that it is not a serious matter

There are harsh political realities at play here

There is an angry ruthless king, death squads, secret inquisitions

There are religious experts colluding with a totalitarian regime

There is a new born baby whose life is on the line

There is no end of reason for caution, for fear,

for feeling joyless and weighed down


But in the midst of it all, God seems to be skipping around like a divine trickster

Singing, dancing, joking

Eyes twinkling

Constantly chuckling


Here is a whole nation who have been waiting and yearning for their messiah for centuries

And when he finally arrives, who notices?

Some blokes in far off Iraq

Anyone closer to home?

Nope


And here are all these religious experts pouring over their sacred texts

They know their scriptures

They’ve got PhDs in biblical prophesy

They can tell you straight off which town the messiah will come from

But when he actually comes, when the prophesies are fulfilled, who picks it?

The prophesy experts?

Nope

Some wise guy astrologers who don’t know the Bible at all

They read it in the stars

Or was it the tea leaves?

Or did they see it in the horoscope in a stray copy of Women’s Day at the dentist?

Somebody is taking the mickey here!


And then there is Herod trying to look all devout to the visiting wise guys

“When you find him, let me know, so I can pay my respects”

Neither Herod nor the religious experts have taken their story seriously enough to go with them

But just in case, “If you find something, come back and let me know”

Subtlety was not what Herod was known for


But the wise guys do find the baby

And what do you do when you visit a new baby?

You bring presents of course

It used to be the case, and in some countries it still is,

that today was the present giving day

in honour of these wise guys and their present giving

What do you give a baby?

A bunny rug?

A bottle and dummy set?

Some squeaky toys and one of those things that plays Greensleeves when you pull the string?

No, how about some gold, frankincense and myrrh?

Babies love that kind of stuff

And it will be so useful while fleeing to Egypt as refugees

Not!

Funnily enough you don’t ever hear of those presents again

Does Mary ever say, “Jesus, get out of the kitchen and go and amuse yourself with your frankincense set”?

I know, I know, there are some theologically significant symbolic meanings in these gifts

But really?

There is a joke going on here too, isn’t there?

God is having a laugh for sure


Well, thank God for the joke

If God is chuckling here, that’s pretty good news

Because just a few minutes ago we were realising what the light showed about us

We saw that when the light came on suddenly

we didn’t look all that much better than Herod

We wanted to dive for cover

What would God do to us when the truth was known?


But the answer seems to be to laugh

It’s not that God doesn’t take sin seriously

Or that none of this matters a bit

It matters very much, and God cares a great deal


But it probably is pretty funny watching us scurrying for cover

as though the light were showing up something that God didn’t already know

And the divine jokes all seem to be about pricking holes in our balloons

    whenever we start taking ourselves too seriously

Yes, sometimes we even take our own sin too seriously

As though we were so important that our sin deserves all God’s attention

All God’s anger

And we get all religious and declare that we know how God deals with such sin

We know the rules and God will deal with this the way our reading of the Bible says

And God rocks with laughter

and sends along three wise guys with funny names and funny presents

and not a bible verse between them


The outcomes are still serious

Even deadly serious

Jesus escapes the death squads this time

but every other little boy in Bethlehem cops it for him

and it is only a matter of time before Jesus’ number is up too

The stakes are high

God is deadly serious about breaking through our defences

and exposing our Herod-like selves to the light of love and mercy


But in the midst of it all

God can still laugh at you and with you and for you

because that is the nature of the kingdom that is coming

a kingdom that the Herods could never understand

It is a kingdom of joy and dancing and laughter

It is a kingdom where our jealous rivalries and defensive hostilities

are not scourged from us with punishment and retribution

but melted out of us with the shining light of love and laughter and joy

of mercy and welcome and dancing

of useless gifts and cosmic jokes

And everyone is invited

everyone is welcome

Even Herod

Even some wise guy religious weirdos from the East

Even you

And when that picture begins to fall into place,

when the penny drops and you know yourself beloved,

when the lights go on and you laugh and rejoice

the Epiphany will be fulfilled.

Friday, 6 January 2012

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