Throughout this Advent Season, we have been
opening a new Christmas present each Sunday.
We’ve opened a lot of gifts already; the gift of expectation, the gift
of acceptance, and last Sunday, we opened the gift of family.
For today, let’s have 9:00 am-Bronson Farley
representing one of our elementary Sunday School classes 10:30 am-Evelyn Neeley representing our Sunday
Shop Elementary Class ...open the Christmas box.
Let’s see what is in the big Christmas box for today. It’s probably going to be one of the best
gifts since we’re only two days from Christmas!
What’s in the box?
(Opening of the Christmas
Box)
Before we get too disappointed at the empty box, turn to someone near
you and say, “You’re the gift.”
Yes, you are the gift for this Sunday!
We have been pulling out a different nativity display each week to
symbolize the Christmas gift, but for this week, I realized that you don’t
often see the innkeeper in the crèche scene.
In
many ways, the innkeeper represents you and me in the Christmas story. Sometimes in the busyness of the Christmas
season and running around trying to think of everybody else, we forget that
we’re part of the Christmas story too.
We
heard a little about the innkeeper during our Advent candle lighting earlier in
the service. Well the truth is, the
scriptures don’t have a whole lot to tell us about this person. All we know is that there was no room in the
inn. Instead, Mary and Joseph had only
one option on that first Christmas Eve.
They had to lodge where the animals were kept at night. Mary and Joseph would have probably had to
use their own robes and extra blankets just to keep warm.
Sometimes I wonder if we brush aside the innkeeper in the Christmas
story since we are told that there wasn’t any room for Mary and Joseph that
night. There is no indication in the
story that the innkeeper had any idea about the holy child inside Mary’s womb.
So
what happened to the innkeeper in the Christmas story? We don’t know. But the more I think about whoever this
person was, the more I think that this person represents you and me in the
Christmas story.
This innkeeper was right there. I
mean, he was right there with Mary and Joseph on that holy night. Physically, he was as close as anyone to the
holy family, but we’re not sure how close he was in a spiritual sense.
This past summer, I was driving through a trendy section of community
near Columbus. It was around lunch time
and I decided to find a parking spot and try out one of the restaurants on that
block.
As
I was enjoying my lunch, I thought of a good friend of mine who is a pastor of
a United Methodist Church somewhere in that community. After lunch, I started walking to my car
which was parked by a building next to the restaurant.
I
got in my car and as I started to pull out from my parking space, it suddenly
dawned on me. The building next to my
car kind of looked like a church. And
sure enough, it was. It was my friend’s
church. During my lunch, I was only
about twenty feet away. I was right next
to it the whole time! I was so close to
missing it even though it was next to me the whole time.
How can we be so close to something and yet be so far away? This story has a good ending because my
friend happened to be there that day. He
gave me a tour of the church, we had a great conversation, and we ended our
time by praying for each other. That visit became a holy moment for me. I left feeling renewed and encouraged.
Sometimes, we can be right next to something that is holy and can make a
difference in our lives, but unless we open the door, we can miss out on what
God wants to give us. I think this is
true of Christmas. We can be this close
to Christmas and it can be happening all around us, but until we open ourselves
in this season, we can miss it.
The innkeeper was as close as you can get to Christmas. The birth of Jesus happened right there in
his own home. I wonder if this innkeeper
ever realized that this holy moment was meant for him as well.
The innkeeper helps us to think about ourselves on this Sunday before
Christmas. Sometimes, we remember
everybody else at Christmas time except ourselves and our own need to receive
the gift of Jesus’ birth. The innkeeper
may not be in the crèche scene, but he was part of the Christmas story.
Do
you see yourself in the Christmas story?
Or do you see Christmas as only something that is meant for everyone
else and not for you in a personal way?
There’s a United Methodist Church out in California that came up with a
creative way to help everyone in the church and their community feel part of
the Christmas story. Let’s watch.
We’re all part of the Christmas story, each and every one of us,
including the innkeeper, especially the innkeeper.
There was once a Christmas pageant at a small church in which the part
of the innkeeper at Bethlehem was played by a high school student. He was a quiet and polite boy, but the kind
of boy who was a little awkward – in his manner, in his social relationships,
and even physically since his growing frame made it difficult for him to find
any clothes that fit.
When Mary and Joseph appeared at the inn, he stood…awkwardly…in the
doorway, slumping a bit toward the couple as they made their request for
lodging. He then dutifully recited his
one and only line, “There is no room in
the inn.”
But as Mary and Joseph turned and walked wearily away toward the cattle
stall where they would spend the night, the boy continued to watch them with
eyes filled with deep compassion. Suddenly responding to a grace which, though
not part of the script, he startled himself, the holy couple, and the audience
by calling out, “Wait a minute. Don’t go.
You can have my room!”
By
adding this extra line to the play, this boy reminds us that we all have an
important part to play in the nativity scene.
God invites each one of us to participate in the Christmas story in a
very real way. Even the innkeeper can go
off script and say, “Wait a minute. Don’t go.
You can have my room.”
In
the Christmas story, nobody is left out.
Even the innkeeper can take more of a leading role.
Let’s do this one more time. Turn
to a different person this time and say, “You’re the gift.”
You’re the gift on this fourth Sunday of Advent. Of all the gifts that you wrap and open this
year, don’t forget to open up yourself and invite Jesus to live in the room of
your heart.
I’d like to offer three important thoughts on making sure that we don’t
forget to take ourselves out of the Christmas box this Christmas.
The first way is by slowing down.
Easier said than done, right? “There’s just two days left before
Christmas. What do you mean, slow down?” I know.
It almost seems impossible to slow down in our frantic culture. Not too many people are slowing down during
this busy time of year. But it’s
necessary if we want to receive the gift of Jesus Christ in our own
hearts. When was the last time you spent
time praying in a chapel or in a place where it was just you and God?
I
was on Facebook a while back and a friend of mine who serves as a pastor posted
these words one day: “On Saturday mornings I work in the office
and spend time in the sanctuary praying and, when it’s my turn to preach,
practicing the sermon. Some years ago a
serious inquirer asked me, ‘Ed, what do you do with yourself all week long?’
Well, the answer isn’t what any of us do all week long, it’s more like
‘anything God wants to do with us!’”
That was my friend’s Facebook post.
Slowing down and being still and experiencing the presence of God is the
first way for us to personally receive the gift of Christmas this year.
The second thing is to know what is and what is not important. That’s not always easy to do. Especially during the holidays, we can easily
make the little things outweigh the more important things. Don’t worry about trying to have a perfect
Christmas this year. Instead, focus on
celebrating the perfect Savior.
Slow down. Know what is and what
is not important. And last but not least, here’s a third way to help us not
forget that we are a gift that is meant to be opened this Christmas. Have a personal daily devotional time which
includes prayer and a scripture focus.
Allow these daily routines of scripture and prayer to be how you center
yourself during this holy season. It’s a
way for us to take a deep breath and soak in the meaning of this holy season.
I
wonder how the innkeeper reacted to the birth of Christ. Did he welcome all the attention and the
extra guests who came to see the newborn King?
Or was it more of an inconvenience to have those shepherds and onlookers
stop by to see what was happening? Did
it have an impact on him personally or was this all something that he would
soon forget. We don’t really know what happened to that innkeeper.
Just remember, you and I have a part in the Christmas story as
well. This Christmas, may we each say, “Wait a minute. Don’t go.
You can have my room.”
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