Tuesday, December 23, 2008

A Christmas Sermon Poem

This third week in December
I sallied forth to see
Potomac Mills and Spotsy Mall
in their Christmas revelry.

There were hordes of Christmas shoppers
racing 'round the floors.
The face of haggard sales clerks
could be seen in all the stores.

Some customers were lined ten deep
to honor the tradition
of charging on plastic what they don't have
- a risky proposition.

One scene sticks in my mind as I speak
of a quest for the Toy Story dog.
A footsore clerk shook a "No" with his head
and said, "Try the catalog."

I saw many a pillow-stuffed Santa
with kids upon their knees
listening patiently 'bout X-Men,
Barbies, and Hercules.

Yes, the malls were all a bustle
in the midst of preparations.
They came; they saw; they purchased
in their Christmas time migrations.

But merchants are not the only ones
that seem to have a reason
to schedule, to premeditate,
to get ready for this season.

Also homes prepare
for the coming of the King.
Sweets are baked, lights are strung,
songs are sung by Bing.

Evergreens are purchased,
crooked trunks and bare spots all.
Some are clipped, some are chopped,
some found a bit too tall.

Young ones eyes are glowing
as trees become displays
of a thousand twinkling colored lights
which rival Milky Ways.

Cookie cutters covered with flour,
sugar sprinkles on dough,
manger, angels, trains and candy,
and, we hope, some snow!

Festive, warm, inviting
are our homes this time of year
preparing for the Savior Child
in holiday atmosphere.

But we are not the only ones
who labor in preparation.
God, Himself, determined too
for Christmas celebration.

This blessed Christmas story
has roots that run far back
into the old, old testament
when men the light did lack

and prophets wide who spoke for God
gave promise of a son
who would dispel the darkness
when the kingdom had begun.

The Lord, our God, took great pains
to unfold His Christmas plan.
He set four things in place, you see,
to bring His Son to man.

Each incident has a part, you'll find,
in bringing Christ to us.
The Child who saved us from our sins
by a death so hideous.

The first of God's preparing
was a setting for the King:
a time, a place, a people,
an historic opening.

The spot for Messiah's birthplace
was predicted, as you know -
"Bethlehem," the prophet said
so very long ago.

Seven-hundred twenty five B.C.
was when that prophet spoke.
The chances of him guessing that
were really quite remote.

But "To whom would God send His only Son?
What people? What race? What tribe?"
To the Jews. To Judah. To David.
Was the setting that God prescribed.

"And when should we expect Him?
What time? What year? How late?"
In the fullness of time God sent Him
for God had arranged the date.

God's timing was just perfect:
One empire. One language. And roads -
had been built from Spain to Persia
so the good news could just explode!

The time, the place, the people -
the setting for the coming King.
All these were prepared for Christmas
by the Father who rules everything.

And next God prepared a name.
Quite a few to be exact.
"Emmanuel" was one - it means
God and man would somehow contact.

Five more are also listed
in Isaiah nine verse six.
These five inspire excitement
from Baptists or Catholics.

His name is Wonderful
that takes care of the dullness of life.
We no longer need cheap substitutes
nor to wait for an afterlife.

His name is Counselor
that takes care of life's decisions.
With Jesus we have the wisdom we need
to deal with life's hardest oppositions.

His name is The Mighty God
- that takes care of life's demands.
Through Him we can conquer when life seems tough.
There is nothing He can't withstand.

His name is The Everlasting
- the Father of life's dimension.
Whenever we place our life in Him
time has an eternal extension.

His name is Prince of Peace.
He takes the disturbance of life.
As you put the control of your life with Him,
He deals with the pain and all strife.

Think of the names I've just listed.
Choose one that meets your need.
God prepared that name for your Christmas.
It was all arranged and decreed.

And then God prepared a woman.
He predicted to Adam and Eve
that to a woman a child'd be born
- a Savior the world would receive.

Every Jewish lady wondered
if she was the one through whom
God would send the promised Messiah,
the Redeemer in woman's womb.

"Behold, favored one!" said the angel.
"The Lord is especially with you."
She wondered at this strange greeting
and what he would ask her to do!

"You will be with child and give birth to a Son
and he will be called 'the Lord saves.'
The Spirit of God will father this child
to break Satan's hold o'er his slaves."

You can imagine her feelings!
What questions. What stirrings of heart.
She understood genetics.
Who would be her counterpart?

"The first child born to a virgin
will be the Son of God!
With God all things are possible
though His actions may seem a bit odd."

And so the faithful young woman
accepted Gabriel's word
"I am the servant of God," she said
"and all that you've said I have heard."

Mary shows us not only privilege
but exceptional sacrifice.
She joyfully offered her body, her trust,
and her future (to be precise).

Mary was mother to God's own Son!
There was just one hitch in the plan -
besides an aunt and an uncle who knew
God told no one else in the clan!

The pain of shame was hers to bear.
Her fiancé was possibly lost.
But she submitted to God's tough will
and the Lord redeemed the cost.

So God prepared for Christmas.
He chose the perfect place.
He set the time and named the group
- the setting in time and space.

And God prepared a woman
- a virgin by design -
who qualified more, for her faith
than her Davidic line.

But one more thing God had prepared
upon that Christmas eve.
A book of Paul, Ephesians one
tells one more thing to heed.

"Before the world began
- before all time and space,
God prepared you to receive
this Savior by His grace."

Before there was a Christmas
you were headed for rendezvous
You were not made to fit Christmas
Christmas was made to fit you.

The child in manger grew to man,
The crib looked to the cross.
The God-man died, so we might live
And find in Him no loss.

He came to give abundant life
He asks one thing from us.
To place our total trust in Him
From birth to sarcophagus.

So as you prepare for Christmas
remember God has prepared for you.
He is arranging Christmas
for Mike, for Linda, and Sue.

And God is not done preparing.
His love is so profound
that one day soon He'll come again
and make us all homebound.

So a verse from Paul's Corinthians
I close with on this day.
I pray you'll take it with you
as you go along your way:

"No eye has seen, nor mind can know,
no tongue has ever told
the things our Savior has prepared
for those who love Him bold." (1 Corinthians 2:9)

-- Dennis Rupert
Christmas Day Poem Sermon
December 1995

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