Sunday, December 29, 2013

Birth Announcements



My focus today is on Matthew, chapter 2, with a special emphasis on verses 19-20: “After Herod died, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and said, ‘Get up, take the child and his mother and go to the land of Israel, for those who were trying to take the child’s life are dead.’”
Let us pray. Heavenly Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let us go to the house of the Lord.’”[1] Now that our feet are standing within your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.

Today would be mom’s 87th birthday. For a couple of years when I was Pastor in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, I would invite mom to come to church that Sunday, announce her birthday to the congregation, and we would sing “Happy Birthday.” Although I never gave away her age, after the second year, she instructed me, “Don’t ever do that again!” Mom did not want that much attention.
We celebrate birthdays because the birth of a child is a joyous event. Cindy and I are expecting the birth of our first granddaughter any day now, and we will travel to Indianapolis to see Emma Jade Gardner. We will text, email and post pictures on all the social media sites. We should. After all, this is the biggest birth announcement since Prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge.
Birth announcements are a big deal. Even in antiquity, births were joyous events. Those who were in my class last Sunday know that Caesar Augustus was born 9 years before Jesus. Archeologists found an inscription of the birth announcement of little Caesar in Turkey. The ancient birth announcement stated that it was good for the city to celebrate the evangelium, the “good news,” of the birth of Caesar Augustus, the savior of the world. Romans saw Augustus as son of god, since his father through adoption, Julius Caesar, was deified.
Since the Romans announced the birth of baby Augustus, Matthew was not to be outdone. Matthew answered questions about Jesus’ identity and origins. Questions people asked then are the same we ask today. Who is he? Where does he come from? Whether it’s a new pastor, student, boss or neighbor, we want to know a person’s origins. We inquire where this person was born, where he went to school, who his parents were, and if he can produce a birth certificate. We want to know because we want to make a connection with that person.
Wanting to connect, the Magi, who inquired about the newborn King of the Jews, were overjoyed when they saw the Child Jesus. They bowed down and worshiped him, opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh.[2] Having found the true King, humanity’s Savior, the Son of God, the joyous Magi celebrated evangelium, good news, Gospel.
Today, some question the authenticity of Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth. Allow me to compare it to the birth of a man I met 20 years ago. He was born Lhamo Dhondup on July 6, 1935, to a farming family, in a small hamlet in northeastern Tibet. At the tender age of two, he was recognized as the reincarnation of the 13th Dalai Lama.
Lhamo Dhondup, the 14th Dalai Lama, was found by Tibetan Monks following signs that led them to his village and to his house. When monks set before the boy objects that belonged to the 13th Dalia Lama, he cried, “It’s mine.”[3] With that, the boy became the 14th Dalia Lama. … Skeptics question Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth and Herod’s bloody persecution,[4] but readily accept how monks choose the next Dalai Lama.
While the Magi celebrated Jesus’ birth as good news, the birth of the newborn King of the Jews was bad news for Herod because he was “King of the Jews,” and there was room for only “one King of the Jews.”
After Herod’s nephew overthrew him, Herod fled to Rome to plead with the Senate to restore him to power. The Roman Senate elected Herod “King of the Jews” around 40 BC. He returned to Judea to wrestle his kingdom from his nephew. Three years later, Herod and the Romans captured Jerusalem and executed his nephew. As sole ruler of Judea, he claimed the title of basileus or king for himself.
Herod protected his throne through blood. In order to maintain power Herod slaughtered his own family members. He slaughtered and all boys in Bethlehem who were two years old and under.[5] Herod killed them because he feared the Christ sought by the Magi might be among them. We consider these innocent boys martyrs because Herod killed them thinking Christ was among them.[6]
According to Martin Luther, tyrants who persecute Christians and rage against the Gospel shed innocent blood, and “the blood of the Christians is [like] fertilizer on the field, making it rich and productive.”[7]
Despots and dictators martyr Christians because they interfere with their political and religious agendas. Political and religious leaders killed Jesus because he interfered with their political and religious views. According to Matthew, Jesus is not the kind of Christ many were willing to receive,[8] but God’s message is clear: evil kings will have no power over this child who fulfills Scripture.
God thwarted Herod’s fail-proof method to kill Jesus when He revealed to Joseph the diabolical plan and redirected the family to Egypt, where they stayed until Herod died. This fulfilled Hosea’s prophecy: “Out of Egypt I called my Son.”[9]
My son. … I started this sermon talking about birthdays, birth announcements and the fundamental questions we ask about people. Matthew’s infancy narrative offers some insight into those questions.
Who is Jesus? What has He come to do? Jesus is the Son of God who came to save us from Satan, sin and death. God’s plan, we know, is accomplished on the Cross. Nothing or no one will deter or prevent God’s plan, not even Herod. The birth of Jesus, the newborn King of the Jews, may have been bad news for despots and dictators, but good news for us. Yet, even after Herod died, the family was unable to return to Judea. Hence, many knew our Savior as Jesus of Nazareth, where Joseph and Mary raised Him. He returned to Judea only to die for our sins. His birth and His death are both Good News for believers.
Matthew answers questions about Jesus’ identity and origins for us, His disciples, so that we have an idea of who we are and from whence we come. The infancy narrative is the Gospel in miniature because we see not only what will happen to Jesus, but also what will happen to His followers. Throughout centuries across the globe, we see how faithful Christians posed a threat to empires and the political and religious views of despots and dictators.
Today, Christians in the Middle East face persecution.[10] Fifty years ago, Christians made up 20% of the population in the Middle East, including Egypt, Israel, Iran a, Iraq and Syria. Today, Christians comprise 4% of the population. In some areas, Moslems offer a choice: Pay us $70,000 a year, convert to Islam, or die. Is it no wonder Christians flee?
In America, Christian families do not face the same persecution that Christians in the Middle East experience, or the ones Joseph, Mary and Jesus experienced in Judea 2,000 years ago, but Christian families in America face challenges and threats. I wondered about those threats, and posed the question on Facebook and LinkedIn asking: What is the greatest threat/challenge to the American family today?
People responded with an array of answers. Radical Islam, humanism, socialism, busyness, laziness, indifference, poverty, individualism, selfishness, materialism, entitlement, lack of personal conversations and family meals. There were many other answers as well. Then there was this response from Bill Kuehn.
“The disillusionment that children have to be active in every possible activity resulting in exhausted parents running them back and forth, many times missing meals, and rarely taking time to actually spend quality time together. Those activities also tend to distract from opportunities to spend time in worship and fellowship with other believers.”
Bill points out the practical application of how Christian families can live their faith in America today. As others point out, many external forces pressure families. Parents cannot control those forces any more than Joseph could control Herod.
Joseph, however, could control where his family lived. He could also parent little Jesus until he reached adulthood. That was his charge from God. Today, parents, spouses, families and individuals cannot control every external force, but can control internal dynamics within their homes – activities, schedules, budgets, responsibilities. Control who or what comes into your home. Choose wisely those families with whom your children associate. If your children want to spend time at a friend’s house, check out the parents’ values and beliefs. If their friends ask them to attend church with them, first find out what that church teaches.
I say this because, as those who attended my classes on the letters of Peter and Jude know, what threatens the Church and the Christian family is what enters unnoticed. What enters unnoticed and who enters unnoticed. You know, pastors are responsible for knowing who comes to the Table of the Lord and who teaches God’s Word. The threat of the early Church – as recorded by Peter, Jude, Paul and others – was false teaching by those who entered unnoticed and presented a different gospel, one based on works or one that allowed for licentiousness. As pastors take responsibility for the church, parents take responsibility for the family. Review the year, review each day and think about who or what entered your home without you noticing.
Fathers, here is another post from my question. From a Lutheran pastor: “The biggest challenge to the American Family is the lack of Christ in the "man of the house". We are not discipling men! Men are abdicating church and their responsibilities. Men refuse to take responsibility for their actions, and consequently, reproduce boys and let their mothers raise them without showing any positive role model for them to learn the proper way for a boy to grow into manhood.” Have you noticed that? Have any wives notice that about their husbands?
I understand that to provide for your family fathers and mothers need to work more than 40 hours a week. Some men and women work 60, 80, 100 hours a week because the job demands it. Some serve in the military where tours of duty last six months or longer.
Understandably, everyone likes to relax after work. We need time to rest and rejuvenate, but when we do not have time to complete our parental homework, we allow 10 year-olds to choose friends from families raised with a different belief or without a value system. When we simply want peace in the home, we allow 12 year-olds to choose which church they will attend, if any. When we think to ourselves, “What’s the sense of arguing?” we grant minors autonomy without responsibility. At some point, we realize something’s wrong. We failed.
No parent wants to realize failure, but to some extent, all do. If you have not yet reached that point or passed it, know this: Grace, love and guidance of our Heavenly Father are available. As fathers and mothers charged with raising and teaching children, ask God, “What would Joseph and Mary do?” Ask fully knowing that God charged these two people with raising and teaching the Son of God. Ask knowing that God charged you with no less a task because the children granted to your care are no less precious to God, no less sons and daughters of God than the dear Baby Jesus Himself. Ask God for guidance because your role is no less important than the duties of Joseph and Mary. Ask for that guidance not when you have reached the point of despair. Ask for God’s guidance daily. Even if your offspring are older than I am, ask for God’s grace to be Christian parents so that when your birthday comes years after you are dead, your children will fondly remember you as a Christian mother or father.
As we complete 2013, commit yourself to Christ. Thank God and celebrate Christ’s birthday every day. Live each day with Christmas joy, and may the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus (Phil 4:7). Amen.


[1] Psalm 122
[2] Matthew 2:1-12
[5] Matthew 2:16
[6] Jeffrey A. Gibbs, Matthew 1:1-11:1. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2006. p. 144
[7] Ewald M. Plass, What Luther Says, Persecution, #3307.St. Louis: Concordia Press, 1959, p.1040.
[8] Gibbs, 134
[9] Hosea 11:1

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