Sermon
1-7-18
Grace and peace to you from God our creator and from our
Lord and Savior Jesus the Christ, by the power of the Holy Spirit, amen.
“In one thousand feet, take the exit on the right.
Continue for three quarters of a mile. In five hundred feet, turn. Left. Left…..LEFT.
Recalculating route. Make the next legal U-turn. Recalculating route.”
Have you ever felt that going through life can be a
little like following the directions on your GPS? Everything seems to be going
just fine for a while – when suddenly she doesn’t warn you until it’s too late
you just passed the turn you were supposed to make. Or she wants you to
take an exit that doesn’t exist. Or tells you about the traffic jam AFTER
you’ve passed all the alternate routes.
Maybe that’s how this last year felt for you: like one
big recalculation. Perhaps it started out fine, but took a few detours here and
there, and you ended 2017 in a part of the map you weren’t expecting, and
you’re finding that the map is unclear, and the usually dependable GPS lady is
suddenly at a loss. Am I going the right way? Do I have the right directions? How
in the world did I end up on this
road, and how do I find my way around, now?
January 6th began a new season of light we
call Epiphany. While the rest of the world has already finished up the
after-Christmas sales and New Year’s parties, and put away the Christmas lights
and decorations, today WE are observing the last element to the Christmas story.
Wise men from the East finally show up on the scene followed a blazing star,
looking for a child born a king. Today we too give honor to a king who so often
comes into our world as a blazing light, surprising us in our hopelessness, and
shining on us when we seem to have lost our way, like a bright star on a dark
night.
Often we are too busy to look up at the stars anymore –
and especially around here there is so much light at night that they are hard to
see. And we have our fancy GPS devices and apps, anyway. Do you remember the
last time you looked up at a night sky full of stars?
When I was a camp counselor at a Lutheran camp in
Wisconsin, one night during the week every cabin went out into the woods for a
camp-out. It wasn’t very far at all from the main camp, and it was only for one
night, but for every cabin of teenage girls I took out there, I may as well
have been talking them to the Canadian wilderness. After it got good and dark, we
would go on a hike to find a nice dark spot. Then… I turned the flashlight off.
After a few moments I pointed out the North Star and why it was special.
Before there were such things as cars and GPS ladies or
even reliable maps, people used the stars to find their way. Here in the
northern hemisphere, people navigated by something called the North Star. Now,
the North Star is NOT the brightest
star or the easiest to find. However, while all the other stars travel around
the sky during the night, the North Star stays fixed in place… making it so
very helpful to find out which way is north… which can help you find the other
directions. For slaves in the South a hundred and fifty years ago, the North
Star was both a beacon of hope and a map to show them the way to freedom.
Each of those teenage girls lived in a world that was
constantly changing. They were trying to figure out who they are and who or
what they should follow. They were trying to find their way in a world that was
often not very kind. But while everything around them swirled and shifted, the
love that Jesus has for them will never change. would never shift or change or
falter or dim, like a kind of North Star shining in our night sky.
In many ways that world hasn’t changed. The world was a
dark place back when the wise men followed a very special star on a long
journey far from their homelands, and it continues to be a dark place today. Then,
like now, there was political intrigue and power plays.
Perhaps the wise men who followed the star had felt like
it had steered them wrong like faulty GPS, when they arrived in Jerusalem. They
expected to find a prince, born to be king. They certainly found a king all
right, but one who was frightened out of his mind at the news that there was
someone out there who would threaten his position.
Magi by Chinese artist He Qi |
For people like King Herod, the darkness was just fine,
thank you very much. The way things are is just great - the powerful would
continue to rule the powerless, the strong would oppress the weak, the rich
would lord it over the poor. All would continue as it “should” be, with the
Herods of the world living it up while the hopeless continue with nothing.
But a light shown out in the darkness, a star appeared
and rose in the night sky, and things started to happen.
The wise men had to keep following the star, and the light stayed with them
until they arrived at their destination – Jesus, the one who would shepherd his
people, who had been called Messiah and Savior and Lord by an angel to some
shepherds working the graveyard shift in a field with sheep.
The life of this Jesus when he grew up seemed to take a
few unexpected detours, too. He did not
grow up to be the king that others expected him to be. Instead of wearing fine
robes and dining in palaces, he broke bread with poor people and hung out with
fishermen, tax collectors, the sick, and the forgotten. Instead of wielding a
sword as a warrior, he used his words to teach and to heal and bring peace. Instead
of being crowned and venerated as king of his people, he was worshiped and
given gifts by wise men from another country. And later, he was crowned with a
crown of thorns and enthroned on a cross… and not even that could make Jesus
waver. The light that he brought into the world blazed on, and could not be
snuffed out.
These days in Epiphany will continue to grow brighter,
little by little, by precious minutes each day. But while we’re in the midst of
it, this little increase of light can be hard to notice. We all need reminders
that the light is indeed growing in our days, and that the light of Jesus is with
us, shining in the darkness of our hearts. We also could use a reminder that
that Jesus wants us to let this light shine out so that others can see it.
For the wise men, this reminder was a star. But for us,
in these days, it can be something smaller and less interstellar. It can be
something physical, perhaps something that you use often or see every day.
Last year I was introduced to something called “Star
words.” Star Words are like the opposite of a new year’s resolution – instead
of a goal you choose for yourself because you feel deficient in some way, and
failing at it before February… A star word is a gift that you receive that you
carry with you for your whole year. You receive a word, not of your own
choosing, to listen to how God is speaking to you through that word 2018. Last
January, my star word was “release,” and God spoke to me a lot through that
word this year, I think.
In 2017 God showed me how to release my fear of the
unknown and doing lots of things for the first time by myself. ….to release my
worry about the things that I can’t control. To free myself from over analyzing
and second guessing myself. To stop gripping both mistakes and successes too
tightly, and to give them both to God instead. All that, from one little Star
Word.
This year I got another Star Word from another friend. I
can’t wait to see where this word will show up in my life this year. For 2018,
my word is “illumination.”
You’re going to get a star word today too, if you would
like one. There will be a couple of star stations set up, one on each side, so
that you can take a star as you go back to your seat after communion, if you
wish. This is for any and all ages, and you can feel free to share what your
star says, or keep it to yourself. Take this star, and hang it somewhere you
can see, so that you may be reminded in the coming year that God loves you, and
Jesus arrived into this world to give life and love to all of us – even the dim
bulbs and the broken lights that we may feel like sometimes. Even when we feel
lost and our lives are in constant need of U-turns and recalculations and
detours.
May this star word, and the coming light of this Epiphany
season, give YOU some illumination this year. May Jesus enlighten your life in
2018, and guide you as a light that never dims, never wavers, and will always
brighten whatever in your life seems dim and hopeless. Amen.
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