Thursday, January 01, 2026

Sermon: Ephesians Christmas

 


            “How would things be different, if Jesus had never been born?” he asked us.

            Unfortunately, he asked Dayna, Micah, Billy, and me
—I don’t know if there were 4 kids in all of Wyoming more in their heads than us.
We proceeded to:
-imagine western civilization without a Christian influence,
-sketch out where rocketry and astronomy might have been at, without the Roman Catholic Church’s condemnation of Galileo,
-considered the forces of colonization of the Americas without the religious missionary zeal involved…
…and on and on…
that poor Sunday School Teacher…
he just wanted us to say without Christmas we wouldn’t be saved

            Here in Ephesians,
in this packed 200-word sentence of Paul’s
(in English we break it down into 6 sentences… but it’s actually one big one)
—Paul gives an equally heady, but decidedly more faithful, sort of witness. He describes what it means to be In Christ.
He explains the why of Jesus Christ
—the Why of Christmas
—he came among us
—as John talks about today,
he was born among us,
that we might be born of God.

He is in us, that we might be found in him.

The why of Christmas,
the reason Jesus being born makes a difference
—is that because of Christmas we are in Christ.

Let us pray

 

            9 times in a single sentence, Paul describes what it is like to be In Christ. But, to get there I think it is worth considering each one’s opposite
—after all if Christmas is about being saved,
we obviously must be saved FROM something,
to be saved FOR something.

 

            When we are outside of Christ, it is like we’re cursed
—imagine that, a world cursed, a world where we don’t want the best for each other,
where even our best efforts, our most holy and righteous acts
—are awful, are failings and condemnation.

            Outside of Christ we are rejected
like a dog shooed away from a taco truck,
or a fugitive
—chased for the whole of our life,
never able to relax,
always looking over our shoulder.

            Outside of Christ, we are orphaned,
like a character in a Dickens novel,
or the backstory of some superhero or another
—the tragedy that at our most vulnerable, the person who would be expected to care for us, is dead.

            Outside of Christ, we are impoverishment.
A fallen Victorian estate,
a scammer getting hold of the family bank account while away on vacation,
a major medical bill not covered by insurance
losing everything.

            Outside of Christ, we are kidnapped
—held for ransom…
and the clock runs out,
no one comes for us.
We start to ask the frightening questions like:
“How long will our captors keep feeding us? What’ll they do if no one comes?”

            Outside of Christ is obscurity and ignorance.
We’re thrown into a situation without an explanation,
blindfolded, barefoot, spun around,
and then instead of being pointed toward a piñata or given a tail to pin on the donkey,
told to watch out for the broken glass, it’s everywhere.

            Outside of Christ we’re disinherited
—losing status, told implicitly or explicitly, “you are not my child. You aren’t part of my family.”
            Outside of Christ are broken promises
—being lied to,
buying a ticket for the 8:15am train, and 8:15 has come and gone, and come back round again.

            Outside of Christ it is a Caviat Empor world, buyer beware
—it is all on you,
you’re ripe for the picking,
every deal is a trick,
every sale is final.

Cursed, rejected, orphaned, impoverished, kidnapped, obscured, disinherited, lied to, untrustworthy…
I know—that all sounds a little dire,
especially in the season of Christmas,
but hopefully these long shadows, help us to see what it means to be In Christ,
it helps us to crack open the why of Christmas
—it’s meaning here in Ephesians.

            In Christ we are: blessed, chosen, adopted, gifted, redeemed, informed, entrusted, promised, and sealed.

            In Christ God’s good plan for all the earth is revealed.
God’s plan to right the whole world
—save his beloved Creation
—is most clearly seen in Christian Unity.
We witness to God’s work in the world the best, when we love each other!

            In Christ we find a sibling—a brother,
adopted into God’s family. That’s the baptismal promise after all, right?
—hey you, you’re a Child of God now, welcome to the family!

In Christ we are redeemed
—a relative sees us captured and comes along and frees us,
buying us out of captivity,
out of slavery,
rescued from the bonds that hold us,
by our kin who loves us.

In Christ there is blessing and life.
Kindness, goodness, mercy, is all poured out like an overabundance of oil,
given to us freely, unmerited grace
—we did nothing and receive everything! How can that be? Thanks be to God!

 

“How would things be different if Jesus had never been born?”

We would be outsiders, but we have been made insiders.
Christmas is a revelation.
Christmas is a homecoming.
Christmas is a rescue mission.
Christmas is mercy all the way through!

Amen.

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