Second Sunday after Epiphany 2022

“And there were set there six waterpots of stone, after the manner of the purifying of the Jews.” Six is the number of man, for man was made on the sixth day of creation. Because man—who is identified by the number six—fell into sin, six is also in the Bible a number designating incompleteness/lacking/deficiency. Because of this damaged deficiency, every man needs purification for the sins that he does and the sin that he is, i.e., the sinful nature we all have inherited from Adam. Not out of convenience, then, does the Lord select these six stone waterpots used for the Jewish purification ritual before a meal. The transformation of the water from these waterpots points to the transformation of the entire ritual system of purification – a transformation that culminates in the death of Jesus, where He gives His own blood for wine.

So Jesus answers His mother as He does, and John tells us that this miracle was a sign, so that we won’t miss the most important fact…

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The Baptism of Our Lord 2022

Jesus is the only real Somebody. The incredible scandal of His baptism is how He identifies with the nobodies, the bums, the morons, the sinners.

How can there be division—which is really competition—when there’s only one Somebody, one Lord, one Christ? Descending into the water, He is teaching us not to boast. There is no need for our worldly desires; no need to be counted wise by other people. No need for power, no need to be nobility, royalty – or in our context, celebrity….

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The Second Sunday after Christmas 2022

“An angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream.” It’s not an example. Many of our dreams are the fruits of anxiety or indigestion. I once had a dream that Fritz Pauling and I were in Italy stealing a pipe organ. I don’t plan to do what I dreamed. (Although it might make a pretty good buddy caper movie.) The kind of dream Joseph has is extremely rare. But it should remind us of another Joseph: the son of Jacob who had that amazing technicolor dreamcoat. His dreams got him thrown into a pit, then sold into slavery. To where? Egypt. See the similarities? With this new Joseph, and the Mother and Child, God is going to redo the Exodus.

So the “Angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, saying.…” Angel means messenger. An angel speaks; that is his purpose: he brings God’s Word to particular people. What’s the message?

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Best Books of 2021

Of the 35 books I read in 2021, these are my top selections:

Best New Books (published in 2020 - 2021):

  1. Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters (Abigail Shrier) - Shocking analysis of how adolescent angst is manipulated into the permanent mutilation of young women. Meticulously documented by a responsible, left-of-center journalist. A must read.

  2. Live Not by Lies: A Manual for Christian Dissidents (Rod Dreher)

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Circumcision and Name of JESUS

“Eight days were completed.” Completed … or better, fulfilled. For this is no mere random passage of time. “The days were fulfilled” reveals the jurisdiction of God over all things. God is sovereign over time itself. This event, and every event recorded in Scripture, is governed by His plan.

We track the passage of time with calendars. Modern life requires us to juggle multiple calendars: civil holidays and tax deadlines; work calendars, school calendars, family birthdays and anniversaries. We Christians have our own calendar, often out of step with what everyone else is doing. The liturgical calendar reminds us that Christians are to be different.

We learn from the Gospels something about Joseph and Mary: they are pious. They follow the liturgical calendar, and they also conform their personal lives to what the Law of Moses expected, down to the day. “And when eight days were completed for the circumcision of the Child, His name was called Jesus, the name given by the angel before He was conceived in the womb.”

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Christmas Day 2021

“Sing to the Lord a new song, for he has done marvelous things! His right hand and his holy arm have worked salvation for him!”

Today, my friends, we remember that the only-begotten Son of God, who from eternity had no body, assumed a body in the womb of the virgin Mary. This unfathomable thing He did for us children of Adam—the Adam who once stretched out his arm, grasping fruit forbidden by God, plunging our race into bondage and our world into decay.

Adam’s son Cain stretched out his arm to slay his brother; and the human race has been at war with itself ever since.

Cain’s descendant Lamech stretched out his arms to grasp two wives, contrary to God’s design, showing the corruption of lust that has overtaken generations upon generations of men….

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Christmas Eve Lessons and Carols 2021

Things Ain’t What They Used to Be. It’s a jazz standard from 1942, written by Duke Ellington’s son Mercer. It’s increasingly how I feel: Things ain’t what they used to be. In Flannery O’Connor’s story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” one of the characters observes, “Everything is getting terrible.” Perhaps you’ve felt that way. “Everything is getting terrible.” Things ain’t what they used to be.

What does any of that have to do with Christmas? Much in every way. The cultural Christmas event is all about experiences. Adults want to recapture and experience anew our childhood Christmases, when things were better. We want to create great memories for our children.

Feelings of nostalgia are powerful. But they might just be a sin. We can’t recapture a golden age. Since man’s fall into sin, there never has been a golden age. The meaning of Christmas is not found in sentiment. The meaning of Christmas is not found in giving. As much as we should love our families, the meaning of Christmas is not found in family time….

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Rorate Coeli 2021

Sermon for the Fourth Sunday in Advent

December 19, 2021

Philippians 4:4-7

 

“He is a perfect little boy,” the doctor said to the new parents. But it was a lie. The flaws were hidden where the physician could not see. But you want it to be true. You have plans, hopes, dreams for the child. Just as you’ve had plans, hopes, dreams for yourself.

All these plans and dreams are rooted in self-love. The etymology of ambition is “the love of honor.” We want our children, just as we’ve wanted ourselves, to be on a trajectory toward success. The perfect child will become the perfect student, the perfect athlete, the perfect musician, the perfect carrier of our legacy.

At the hospital, nursing home, mortuary, a very different trajectory is plotted. Physicians work to arrest the rate of decline, but they can only delay the inevitable. The ambitious dreams of youth always come crashing down and into the earth.

This is what makes John the Baptist such an utterly unique figure. He voluntarily reverses his own upward trajectory of success. “I am not the Christ.” Elsewhere he says of Jesus, “He must increase, I must decrease.”

In other words, his own trajectory doesn’t matter. All our striving, all our contention, all our ambition is folly at best. The dream of building our own kingdom, personally, or for family, church, nation – it’s all vanity, self-love. Repent.

For as St. Paul says, “The Lord is at hand.” The Epistle for this Fourth Sunday of Advent, especially the larger context, shows the true trajectory of the Christian’s life according to God’s Word.

We’re in Philippians 4, but if we back up into chapter 3, we hear Paul talking about what a great student he had been, and how his career was on the rise - until he realized it’s all dung. “Whatever gain I had, I counted as loss for the sake of Christ. Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” Everything, he says, is rubbish, save one thing: having a righteousness outside himself: the righteousness “that comes through faith in Christ—that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection” (3:8-10).

So he doesn’t care if his worldly trajectory makes a rapid decline; one thing matters: “That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and may share His sufferings, becoming like Him in His death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead” (3:10-11). Death and resurrection is the trajectory. Do you see how it’s inverted? Our life experiences growth and success, then declination and mortality; but Christ becomes man to take us through death into resurrection.

Now in the meantime, we’re surrounded by enemies. St. Paul says in Philippians 3:18f, “Many … walk as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their end is destruction, their god is their belly, and they glory in their shame, with minds set on earthly things.” All around you, the culture of this world encourages you to worship self, and set your mind on earthly things.

But St. Paul says we’re citizens of a different kingdom, “And from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like His glorious body, by the power that enables Him even to subject all things to Himself. Therefore, my brothers … stand firm … in the Lord” (3:20—4:1).

And then Paul names names. Two women in the church at Philippi weren’t getting along. I know it’s hard to imagine, but sometimes people in the church quarrel. What does he tell them? “I entreat Euodia and I entreat Syntyche to agree in the Lord” (4:2). And he tells the rest of the congregation to help them, reminding them that their names are written in the Book of Life.

The discussion of quarreling in the congregation is what comes just before the magnificent words of last Sunday and today: “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.” 

The American holiday is a rejoicing devoid of substance. Listen to how many Christmas songs use words like cheer abstractly. There’s no cause for the cheer, and so it cannot last. The cause of joy for the Christian, though is the Lord who is at hand, who is coming to bring His bride the Church through the grave to the transformation of all things.

The next words, then, are directed to those two quarreling ladies and to us all: “Let your reasonableness be known to everyone.” It’s difficult to translate this passage into English; reasonableness is sometimes rendered as moderation (KJV) or gentleness (NKJ); none of these capture the whole idea. The Roman politician and historian Tacitus called it one of two qualities that a leader must have. He must be sensible (phronimos), and epieikēs which the ESV puts as reasonableness. It’s the quality of being honest, balanced, courteous, and generous, but particularly, you deal with other people mercifully.

So you’ve got these two people in the church arguing, and Paul is saying, “Be honest with each other, and in your honesty, be courteous, be generous, be merciful.” And that, he tells the congregation, is how all Christians are to be to all people. “The Lord is at hand.” When He appears, will He find us arguing? Or will He find us moderate and gentle towards each other?

There’s no joy in winning the argument. There’s no joy in getting your way. That trajectory leads only to judgment, where there is wailing and gnashing of teeth.

The Lord is at hand. Repent. Rejoice in His appearing. He sets your life on a different trajectory. His trajectory is the story of the world: The way of humility, through death, into resurrection and the transformation of all things. +INJ+