Sunday, December 7, 2014

Advent 2: Experience Peace

December 7, 2014
Experience Peace
Isaiah 23; Luke 2      NOTES NOT EDITED

SIS—Peace is a struggle.

The Nativity—or Birth of Christ Story—did not happen in a vacuum.  It is neither the beginning of the story of redemption nor the end.  It is a strategic part of the whole.

The foundations for the Nativity stretch back into eternity when the Bible describes Jesus as “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” (Rev. 13:8). The story continues to build through the Scriptures reaching a mountain peak in the Prophets. From a lofty height of inspiration the prophets could see the coming of the Messiah. Isaiah, as with many prophets, outlines the anticipation of the Birth of Jesus as the Messiah—One Sent from God.  Isaiah describes this “anticipated coming” (advent) in this manner:

Isaiah announced the advent (coming) of the Lord like this:

9:6 For a child will be born for us, a son will be given to us,
and the government will be on His shoulders. He will be named Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.

Of the many aspects of His virtue Jesus gives us “peace.”  That peace does not come without a great struggle, though.  Isaiah later describes the price Jesus paid for our peace.

Isaiah 53  Yet He Himself bore our sicknesses, and He carried our pains; but we in turn regarded Him stricken, struck down by God,  and afflicted. But He was pierced because of our transgressions,
crushed because of our iniquities; punishment  for our peace was on Him, and we are healed by His wounds.

One of the key elements in the promise of the Messiah is that He would be the “Prince of Peace.”  This idea was misinterpreted by the Jews of Jesus’ day, and most people today, to mean:  political peace, or existence without struggle.  That peace will come one day in the second “advent,” but the peace described by Isaiah in regard to the “first advent” has a totally different significance and is birthed in struggle.

The doctrine of peace in the Bible can be easily misunderstood.  The kind of peace most people wish for this side of heaven is largely an illusion—an illusion easily and often shattered by the harsh realities of life.  History has many examples.

On this December 7th, 2014 we memorialize the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.  This attack literally and figuratively demonstrates how peace as it is commonly understood this side of heaven is an illusion.

VIDEO

The attack on Pearl Harbor reminds us how easily peace can be shattered and we can be drawn into a bloody struggle.  Over 2400 sailors, soldiers, marines and civilians were killed in a few hours.  The Navy took the heaviest casualties at 2008.  Four battleships were sunk but all but the Arizona were later raised and returned to service in the war.  A memorial stretches across the sunken haul of the Arizona that serves as a tomb for the 948 crewmen whose bodies were not removed. Now, one of the most solemn memorials of WWII stretches across the sunken hulk of the Arizona—a lasting reminder that “peace as we usually understand it” is mostly an illusion.

The Nativity story reminds us that “peace is a struggle.”  As we read the Nativity Story we quickly realize that the kind of peace Isaiah spoke about in chapter 53 in regard to the coming of the Messiah is a different kind of peace—a broader, deeper, more lasting peace.  In the Nativity scene peace, as determined by blissful circumstances is greatly lacking. 

Mary is a teenage, unmarried Jewish girl travelling on a donkey (or so our Christian tradition leads us to believe) and will deliver her baby in a cattle stall.  Nothing about this story shouts “peace” as we normally picture it.  “Biblical peace is a feeling of well-being wrenched from the grip of difficult circumstances.”

Biblically peace is not so much a “condition” as it is a relationship—a relationship with God, through Christ, the Prince of Peace.  The announcement of the heavenly host that first Christmas declares that peace is not “good circumstances” but a godly relationship.
Let’s Read that Story Together:  Luke 2:1-14

So, what peace comes from “the favor of God?”  It is peace that rises up in the midst of difficult circumstances. So many Christians fall into despair because they do not understand what “real peace” is.

Real peace is a feeling of good will even during times of great struggle.  Peace simply stated, is a struggle.

In fact, this passage in Luke, as well as the two from Isaiah, demonstrates three distinct areas of our lives that require a struggle in order to obtain peace.

1.  Most obvious is a struggle with difficult CIRCUMSTANCES

The Bible is a “real” book.  By that I mean it presents real people in real situations—sometimes even putting people of God in a less than admirable light.  The Bible tells of Noah getting drunk, Moses getting angry, Abraham lying, David committing adultery, and Peter cussing to mention just a few examples.  The Bible is “raw, unscripted life.”

The same is true of the Nativity story.  The language is simple and raw.  Take for example, Luke 2, verse 5.  In the King James we read that Mary was,  “great with child. Modern translations simply say, “she was pregnant.”  It is amazing to me how difficult it is to describe linguistically a woman in the state of pregnancy.  We might say a woman is “expecting,” or “carrying a child,” or “with child.”  We might use an idiomatic expression like, “In the pudding club,” or “bun in the oven,” or “in a family way.”  What seems so obvious seems so difficult to describe adequately.

The original Greek writers had a similar problem.  Several different expressions were used to describe pregnancy.  The word used hear is only used one time in the entire Bible.  It literally means, “in a state of swelling.”  In other words, “she was about to burst.”  Hence, the King James captures this very well saying, “great with child.”

The point that becomes “painfully” obvious to me—and I’m sure also to Mary—is that she was at the very end of her pregnancy and her child could come at any minute.  Where do we find her?  We find her on a winding road a 80 miles from Bethlehem, their destination, on the back of a donkey.  The Bible doesn’t say, but the usual mode of travel would have been on a donkey.  Donkeys were expensive so Joseph probably walked and let his soon-to-be-wife ride.  The trip would have been a grueling five to seven days, at least.  Mary would sleep on the ground, under the stars.  How many of you women envy Mary who is “bursting with child” on a week long hike through rough terrain?

The circumstances were not good for Mary, and they don’t get much better when they finally reach Bethlehem.  Here we have the entrance of the much maligned and annually scorned innkeeper.  Verse 7 says,

Then she gave birth to her firstborn Son, and she wrapped Him snugly in cloth and laid Him in a feeding trough—because there was no room for them at the lodging place.

I’ve been the consultant on three pregnancies:  my daughter Amanda, my daughter Natalie, and my son Jonathan.  In each case Shari and I opted for “natural” child-birth.  Let me say, “I don’t see anything NATURAL about the birth of a child!”  I’ve heard talk of a “beautiful experience.”  I love my kids and they were all beautiful babies—but the experience was “horrible.”  The pain was more than I could bear, and the sights and sounds were quite frankly, frightening.

And . . . that’s in a hospital with a whole staff to help things along!  I cannot imagine being “born at home,” much less being born in a cattle stall!  The circumstances were simply NOT peaceful.  The circumstances were, to put it mildly, less than ideal.  Yet, we know Mary was at peace.  Look at verse 19:

But Mary treasured up all these things
and pondered them in her heart.

I could give similar examples of difficult circumstances in the life of Joseph—he was facing a “tax audit,” or the shepherds living as societal outcasts in the field.  Peace is a struggle against circumstances.

2.  Peace is a struggle with RELATIONSHIPS

Look back again at verse 5:  “He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him and was expecting a child.”

Joseph was a devout Christian man.  The Bible presents him as righteous and honorable.  After all, he was chosen as the step-father for God.  That is pretty phenomenal in and of itself.  As a devout Jew he would be very careful in his selection of the one he would marry.  She would have to be a virtuous, virginal lover of God.  Joseph sought for such a woman and found Mary.  They were “pledged” in marriage to each other.  All was well until, “Mary turned up pregnant.”

Now, we know from Matthew’s account that this meant the marriage was off.  As a pious Jew, Joseph could not even consider marrying Mary no matter how much he loved her.  So Matthew tells us:

1:19 So her husband Joseph, being a righteous man,  and not wanting to disgrace her publicly, decided to divorce her secretly.

Jewish engagement was actually considered the first step of marriage so the only way to break off an engagement was formal divorce.  Mary would be labeled and adulterer and subject to a life of scorn.

Of all the struggles one can face in life, struggling for good relationships or struggling in a bad relationship are perhaps the most stressful.  Years ago while studying pastoral counseling the professor introduced a scale rating different stressful events.  As I recall, the death of a spouse was the highest rated stressful event with divorce following second.  Either one of these life events plus just one other stressful event would put a person in the category of serious physical and emotional risk.

The greatest relationship between two people is marriage, but we have other significant relationships as well.  We have relationships with siblings, friends, co-workers, and other various associations.  There are many pressures that come to bare on these relationships.  The closer and more significant the relationship, the more devastating the stress is that comes when these relationships are “out of whack,” to use a psychological term.  Stressful relationships can actually make us sick physically according to most psychologists.  Bad relationships can haunt us all our lives, such as a bad relationship with a parent, or both parents.

A person cannot be at war with others and at peace with oneself.  That’s so profound it surprised me when I wrote it, so I’ll say it again.  A person cannot be at war with others and be at peace with oneself.

The Holy Spirit understands the nature of man and so the Spirit directed Paul to write (Romans 12:18-19): 

18 If possible, on your part, live at peace with everyone.  19 Friends, do not avenge yourselves; instead, leave room for His  wrath. For it is written: Vengeance belongs to Me; I will repay,  says the Lord.

Relationships suffer from both external and internal pressures, just like the relationship between Joseph and Mary.  Difficult issues arise and must be faced.  Each person brings a personal perspective to the matter that may or may not be helpful.  There are external pressures that come to bear such as views of others, or even financial pressures. 

Joseph obviously had trust issues with Mary.  He knew he was not the father.  Trust issues are not easy to overcome.  Forgiveness, even from such a devout and loving man like Joseph, cannot always overcome the internal pressures that arise within a relationship.  In fact, Joseph’s issues could only be resolved by a word from God, Himself.  Matthew 1 says:

20 But after he had considered these things, an angel of the Lord suddenly appeared to him in a dream, saying, “Joseph, son of David, don’t be afraid to take Mary as your wife, because what has been conceived in her is by the Holy Spirit.

Sometimes, brokenness in a relationship is so severe that nothing short of the miraculous intervention of God in our lives will give us the strength to overcome.  Sometimes, the relationship can be restored.  Sometimes, we must walk away.  But, we can have “peace” if we “struggle to hear God speak.”  I think it is at the point of broken relationships that we can learn a lot from the recent mega-hit, “Frozen.”  You all have heard the message a thousand times:

[CLEAR YOUR THROAT]  “Let it go // Let it go!”

Ago, now you have heard it 1000 and 1 times!  If you want to have peace in your life, you must struggle to find peace in your relationships.  You will suffer just like Elsa and be isolated in a frozen castle of bitterness if you don’t.  The key to peace is not so much your relationships with others as it is your relationship to Almighty God through Jesus Christ.

Peace is a struggle.  It is a precious gem that must be blasted out of the solid rock of human experience.  Like a precious diamond, you are not likely to find peace lying on top of the ground.  You must dig for it in the hard soil of human experience.

We must struggle to find peace amidst difficult circumstances.  We must struggle to find peace in the shadow of difficult relationships. Most of all we must find peace through a daily

3.  Struggle against SIN

Two passages in the Nativity Story serve as the hub around which the entire story of redemption turns.  Verse 11 tells us:

Today a Savior,  who is Messiah  the Lord,
was born for you in the city of David.

Then, look at what the Heavenly Host declares in verse 14:

14 Glory to God in the highest heaven,
and peace on earth  to people He favors!

The only way to have peace is to “have God’s favor” upon your life and the only way to have God’s favor upon your life is to be “saved.”  To be “saved” means to accept the sacrifice Jesus made available on the cross by dying on your behalf.  The only path to “peace with God” is to receive the “grace, or favor of God through Jesus Christ.”

You see, Christmas really isn’t about the “birth” of Jesus Christ.  I know it seems that way with the manger, the star, the wise men the “cattle lowing” and such.  But, we do not even know the date of Jesus’ birth.  We DO know the date of His death.

I have mentioned before that people like to talk about their “Zodiac Sign” that marks the date of their birth.  There is “Aquarius” if you are born in January or February.  As an Aquarius you “set trends, you are innovative, admired, and eccentric.”  Or, you may be a Taurus, like myself.  Born in April or May you “have good taste, you are senual, down to earth, pleasure-seeking, and stubborn.”  Everybody has a Zodiac Sign they were born under.  Astrologists tell us that the sign you were born under directs your life.  Scientists have a term for the power of the Zodiac.  It is “nonsense.”  That is, except for one person.

The Bible tells us that Jesus was born under a unique sign and His birth was attended by a unique star.  The sign Jesus was born under was the “sign of the cross.”  Jesus was born to die and become the Savior of the world.  The cross was his destiny.

Jesus was not born a healer, because sickness is not a biggest problem, though He did heal many.  Jesus was not born a “teacher,” because ignorance is not our biggest problem, though His teachings are sublime and indispensable.  Jesus was not born a philosopher because the lack of answers to life’s deepest questions is not our biggest problem, though the Bible gives us much to help us navigate the vast possibilities and puzzling paradoxes of our existence.

Jesus was born the “Savior,” because our biggest problem is our “sin.”  We cannot be at peace with life until we are at peace with God and we cannot be at peace with God until our “sin problem” has been dealt with.

Theoretically one can have all their circumstances in order.  One can have all their relationships running smoothly and any peace they have is simply an illusion if one is not dealing daily with the problem of sin.  Sin lurks in our life like the Japanese lurking in the Pacific planning the devastating raid on Pearl Harbor.  In a matter of seconds the illusion of a self-made peace in life can be shattered.  One must daily struggle against the sin nature or lasting peace will not come. 

11 Today a Savior,  who is Messiah  the Lord, 
was born for you in the city of David.

Sin interrupts the flow of peace into one’s life like a “tripped circuit breaker” interrupts the flow of electricity into our house.  Sin short-circuits the “flow of God’s favor.”  When we accept the gift of salvation provided by Jesus, the Savior, then we “reset the breaker” on our relationship with God.  We are now connected to Him and His peace will flow in and through our lives.  A real peace.  A lasting peace.
During the course of writing a sermon, I read a large volume of text.  An overwhelming majority of the material I read never makes it into my sermon, even though much of it is really great stuff.  I don’t use a lot of direct quotes, because I try to tell you what God has spoken to me, not what God may have spoken to others.  But, one quote is so simple, and yet so sublime, I feel it begs to be shared.  The source is a Baptist preacher by the name of John Baggett.  He was sharing how he felt that the cross was the original “Christmas TREE.”  He described how this original Christmas tree was decorated with only one light, “The Light of the World.”  Now that is profound but this is the statement that really stuck with me:  “God did not put our Christmas gift UNDER the tree, but ON the tree.” 

We put so much emphasis on the “gifts UNDER the tree.”  These gifts represent “good things in life.”  There is nothing at all wrong with giving and receiving gifts, in moderation of course.  But, there is only one gift that will give us lasting peace, and it is the gift of salvation.

As I said earlier, the common idea of peace is an illusion.  The common idea of peace is based upon getting all the circumstances and all the relationships in one’s life in perfect order.  Even if one were able to do that for the moment, it will not last.  The worldly idea of peace is as much an illusion as the “peace on Pearl Harbor” December 7, 1941.   That piece was shattered and devastation followed.

You CAN have peace-lasting peace, eternal peace.  You will need to struggle to be at peace.  It will require work and effort but you can claim it as your own.  You can have peace though you struggle with circumstances.  You can have peace though you are struggling in relationships.  You can have peace as you struggle against your sin nature.

I will leave you with a beautiful passage of peace, once again from the prophet Isaiah:

26:3 You will keep the mind that is dependent on
You in perfect peace, for it is trusting in You.

<<end>>


No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.