Thursday, December 27, 2018

The Gift of Christmas

December 24, 2018
Christmas Eve
There is so much to do that Christmas can feel like a burden.  Pastor Rob proclaims the good news, that Christmas and the gift of Jesus Christ as a gift!  He then unwraps a bit what this might mean for us.  And because he is preaching on Luke 2​, there are sure to be surprises.

Hark and Harold

December 24, 2018
Christmas Eve:  Childrens' Worship
Pastor Rob and Deacon Emily play two angels, "Hark" and "Harold."  Alas, Harold has slept through Christmas!!

Advent 4: Pondering with Mary

December 23, 2018
Fourth Sunday of Advent
At the end of the year, we often find ourselves reflecting on the year behind and the year ahead.  Based on the witness of Mary, Pastor Rob offers two questions for us to consider:  1)  How was God been faithful to me in the last year?  2)  What risks is God calling me to take in faith in the coming year?   (Based on Mary's Magnificat, Luke 1).

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Advent 3: Who holds the future

December 16, 2018
Third Sunday of Advent
Mary has arguably the most important role in Holy Scripture after Jesus -- to bear him in her womb, birth him, nurse him and raise him.  Yet she is given precious little data about her assignment.  In life we also are not given much information about the road ahead.  In fact, we often only have as much information as Mary, namely:  We do not know what the future holds, but only the one who holds the future.  (Based on Gabriel's visit to Mary, Luke 1).

Weep Warwick Weep


For the Blue Christmas service this year, I wrote a poem (as my sermon)


At Christmas time, I see many colors

This is one of the joys of Christmas, the colors.

The colors on the tree, the colors in the windows

Oh yes, I see many colors at Christmas.

I see greens in wreaths that grace doorways

I see velvet on Mary and I see velvet on little girl’s dresses

I see straw yellow around Jesus and in my golden retriever running around the tree

I see sparkling rubies in wise men’s robes and I see sparking ornaments on Christmas trees.

***

I remember my first Christmas after my grandmother died.

I expected bright gold as I anticipated seeing her again

Gold, something bright, something eternal, something lovely

I knew I wouldn’t see her again on Christmas, for she had died

But I expected colors.  Bright colors that would somehow tell me

I’m here Rob.

I did not hear that voice.

I did not see gold. 

That year I saw purple.

Purple, the color of Lent, the season before Easter. 

The season in which we walk with Jesus to the cross.

That was an odd color to see on Christmas Eve

A color I associate with fasting, discipline and even death…

Purple is a part of Christmas though, as the hymn reminds us: 

Nails, nails shall pierce him through, a cross be born for me and you. 

But I did not want to see this color. 

I wanted to a soft glow emerge from the manger, to see that life wins, to see joy unfolding before my eyes

I wanted to see everything put back together

I wanted my family put back together. 

***

This year I have seen a lot of red and black;

I have seen the posters and signs UV stickers that tell me

In red and black

Warwick Strong

At first I understood the what and why of this slogan

We wanted to come together and stand united in the face of death

          As if

          As if

As if we could fight it ourselves, somehow stand up and not let it get the last laugh

But death is a mighty foe, one whose weapons are ancient and unrelenting. 

And so, I’ve begun to say, ever so softly

          Warwick weep

Weep for your children

          Weep for your loss of innocence.

                    Weep because we are out of words

                             Weep Warwick weep

***

We may be out of words, but this world, this world that God made, is not out of colors

No, Christmas still has it’s colors:  red, black, green, blue

But is there gold? 

Yes.

The gold of the angels, the gold of the magi, the gold of the Christ child is there

Do not fear if you cannot see the gold this year

If all you can see is purple or blue or red or some other color

For there is Gold, there is a promise of God’s love

There is a promise of hope that even death will finally kneel

And adore on bended knee the new born king



A coda

My desire is to wrap Christmas in a beautiful bow

To cover up all the grief in streams of gold and silver and glory

As if grief was simply a stage, something to be dealt with

Something that could be packaged

But I know it is not. 

Grief is too powerful, too present, too elusive for this.



Oh how I long to put it all back together

The pastor’s, the care-givers’ torture

To realize we cannot put humpty dumpty back together

And heal every heart

And make Christmas back to the way it was, it is and ever more shall be.  Forever.  Amen.



I offer no packages of grief boxed up and painted over.

I offer a promise:

The Christ child’s love is big enough.

Big enough to handle your grief,

your sadness

your anxiety

or whatever else you bring tonight.



For unto you, whatever color you see, a savior is born.

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Advent 2: Mercy breaking forth the new dawn

December 9, 2018
Second Sunday of Advent
Through our perspective and experience, we can sometimes see things that others cannot.  For example, an excellent coach can see mistakes players are making that others cannot.  The ancient priest, Zachariah, and his wife Elizabeth, can see something that others cannot -- the new dawn that is breaking by the mercy of God.  Pastor Rob reflects on where we may see this dawn breaking forth in our life.   (Look at the birth of John the Baptist and the "Song of Zachariah" in Luke 1).

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Advent 1: Getting Lost in Jesus

December 2, 2018
First Sunday of Advent
There is this thing called "Christmas"; in many ways it is so much "bigger" than the celebration of Jesus' birth.  It is easy to get lost in all the happenings of the month of December.  Pastor Rob offers three Advent gifts to help you get lost, not in the shuffle, but in the mystery and majesty of Jesus Christ and his coming among us (look at Luke 1 and Luke 21).