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Emphasis Preaching Journal
(Lectionary Commentaries & Illustrations)

The Nativity of our Lord - A

And so it comes to this: After days of cooking and baking, planning and preparing, buying and wrapping and decorating, the goal of our efforts is at hand. The presents are under the tree, the stockings are hung, the Christmas dinner is on the table, the family is all together, perhaps trying to avoid the standard family arguments that always boil up and over when we're together at the holidays.

And so it comes to this: After the retail efforts nationwide, in which some businesses do 50 percent of their annual sales at Christmastime, after the shot in the arm that the Christmas shopping season gives to the national economy, the end of the shipping and advertising and stocking and restocking and ordering arrives.
There are no more shopping days until Christmas. For most people the news comes as quite a relief. But for others, those who find some special kick in buying gifts for others, the news may come with a blow.
Have you ever noticed how the story of Jesus' birth is set in the midst of a play of darkness and light? The whole event, with its Babe and mother, the animal shed, the keepers of sheep on the hillsides, and later the wise men from distant places making their trek to see the Holy One, all are set first in darkness then in light!

The night begins with the people of Bethlehem putting out their lamps and trudging off to bed. The city that was David's birthplace goes dim, then dark, house by house. And all is at rest. Then, suddenly, a star appears, first as a mere speck then a spot, then a fire ball punching its way through the night, pointing its finger at the stable where the peasant woman and Child are.
There will be a lot of present-opening these days. It has long been a part of the festive celebration of the season: giving and receiving gifts. We sometimes bemoan the commercialism and materialism that have become parasites on Christmas, and we are sometimes dismayed by the children who grow up thinking that the holiday is all about Santa and the toys he brings. But, at its core, the tradition of gift giving at Christmas is a lovely one with wholesome roots.

Some of us will use tags on our gifts, and those tags will indicate "from" whom and "to" whom the gift is given. Let's use the occasion of the season to put one of those tags on the gospel.
"And so this is Christmas...." Bob Geldof's musical Band Aid gift to Africa ("Do They Know It's Christmas" and other such songs) replays the ongoing crises of our times every year in this season. Perhaps this will be the year when faith gives way to sight, and all Christmas Eve services will be pre-empted by our Lord's return.

But if not, the texts for preaching this year are the great classics. Isaiah charges our imagination with hope. Paul, in his memo scratched off to Titus, ties our hope to the tangible. And Luke, as he recounts the first Christmas, makes the tangible wondrously strange and compelling.

One child, learning to recite the Lord's Prayer about this time of year, petitioned God to "forgive us our Christmases as we forgive those who Christmas...
Schuyler Rhodes
And so it comes to this: After days of cooking and baking, planning and preparing, buying and wrapping and decorating, the goal of our efforts is at hand. The presents are under the tree, the stockings are hung, the Christmas dinner is on the table, the family is all together, perhaps trying to avoid the standard family arguments that always boil up and over when we're together at the holidays.

And so it comes to this: After the retail efforts nationwide, in which some businesses do 50% of their annual sales at Christmastime, after the shot in the arm that the Christmas shopping season gives to the national economy, the end of the shipping and advertising and stocking and restocking and ordering arrives.
David Kalas
The Psalmist cries out "O, magnify the Lord with me" (Psalm 34:3), and we make take that as our invitation and our calling this holiday. The occasion and Scriptures combine to give us that opportunity. They give us the chance to magnify the Lord.

When I was a boy, I misunderstood the phrase "magnify the Lord." It made no sense to me, for I thought that you can't make God bigger than he already is. And, of course, we can't. But what we can do with him is something akin to what we do with any magnifying glass: we can try to look at him more closely and to see him more clearly.

In that sense, of course, it is always the role of the preacher to be a magnifying glass for the congregation. And today's familiar passages are a great benefit to us in that work....
Frank Ramirez
For some the story of Christmas is a fantasy set in an idealized world where pregnant women get to ride donkeys and prophets look into a deep future divorced from the day’s realities. It’s a world defined by the lyrics of Christmas carols and the illustrations on Christmas cards. But the real world is far more interesting and exciting -- and the birth of Jesus takes place in that real world, where desperate situations demand even more than in peaceful times that we act righteously according to God’s word, with the expectation that God’s good will shall be accomplished in our own life’s struggles.

Isaiah’s prophecy is sent in a real political world, in which a failed king who ignored God’s advice now reaps the bitter consequences, as do his people, yet amid the smoke and rubble...
Mark Ellingsen
Isaiah 9:2-7
The First Lesson is a prophecy of the historical Isaiah, working in the southern kingdom of Judah in the 8th century BC. The text is a prophecy about the Messianic King. It may have originally celebrated the accession of a new Judean king. This king is described as a great light [or] for those who had been in darkness [choshek], that is in oppression (v.2). Based on v.1, presumably this is a reference to the liberation of the Israelite inhabitants of areas annexed by Assyria. Darkness is standard biblical imagery for oppressions, and light is an image for relief from such oppression. This observation was readily applied to the Babylonian exiles of the 6th century BC addressed in the chapters from 40 to the end of the book...
Christmas shops are not just for Christmas anymore. These stores that specialize in everything yuletide-ish do business year round and can be found everywhere. I have seen them in an outlet mall near Washington, D.C., nestled in a small village in the mountains of North Carolina and adorning the white sand beaches of the Alabama Gulf Coast.

To enter one of these shops is to experience both the nostalgic and the surreal. There are trees and lights and ornaments that look like museum pieces belonging to the late nineteenth or early twentieth century. There are contemporary displays that leave you wondering what its connection to Christmas could possibly be. And then there are those memory-evoking displays that transport one back to one's childhood. For me it was the bubbling tree...
Sandra Herrmann
Merry Christmas! The midwinter festival has come, and it calls for parties, feasting and drinking and dancing and the exchange of gifts. Like all people in the northern hemisphere, we need light in the dark days of winter. The only problem with all of this is that the pressure to be joyful can send us spiraling in the exact opposite of mind sets.

The people of the first century C.E. had a huge festival, the Saturnalia, which likewise featured feasting and drinking, laughter and dancing, the giving and receiving of gifts. In and around Jerusalem, where most of the Roman garrison was posted, their celebration grated on the Jews, whose power had been taken away by this foreign army. Watching them celebrate their ‘pagan’ religious holy day in such a way was the height of...

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Emphasis Preaching Journal

Sandra Herrmann
Merry Christmas! The midwinter festival has come, and it calls for parties, feasting and drinking and dancing and the exchange of gifts. Like all people in the northern hemisphere, we need light in the dark days of winter. The only problem with all of this is that the pressure to be joyful can send us spiraling in the exact opposite of mind sets.
Christmas shops are not just for Christmas anymore. These stores that specialize in everything yuletide-ish do business year round and can be found everywhere. I have seen them in an outlet mall near Washington, D.C., nestled in a small village in the mountains of North Carolina and adorning the white sand beaches of the Alabama Gulf Coast.

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
Call to Worship:

Jesus is born! A bright light has come into our world, so let us thank and praise God for his gift to us of Jesus, the Messiah.

Invitation to Confession:

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, make us worthy to worship at your crib.

Lord, have mercy.

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, may we remember you in today's excitement.

Christ, have mercy.

Lord Jesus, we are thrilled by your birth, be born in our hearts today.

Lord, have mercy

StoryShare

John E. Sumwalt And Jo Perry-sumwalt
Contents
A Story to Live By: "
Christmas Stories: "Christmas Presence" by Janice Hammerquist
"Silver In His Soul"
"www.ChristmasHouse" by John Sumwalt
Scrap Pile: Great Prayer of Thanksgiving for Christmas Eve by Thom M. Shuman


What's Up on Christmas Eve

Lamar Massingill
John E. Sumwalt
Contents
"Taking His Joy unto Ourselves" by Lamar Massingill
"God Acted that We Might Act" by Lamar Massingill
"The Hopes and Fears of All the Years" by John Sumwalt
"God with Us" by Peter Andrew Smith


* * * * * * * *


Taking His Joy unto Ourselves
Lamar Massingill
Luke 2:1-14 (15-20)

Christmas would be incomplete without recognizing Incarnate Love's first fruit, which is joy. Johann Sebastian Bach recognized it when he, as an act of worship, composed "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring."

SermonStudio

John R. Brokhoff
THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 9:2--7 (C, RC); Isaiah 9:2--4, 6--7 (E)
Mark Wm. Radecke
Year after year, we are drawn to this night: This night with its carols, its candlelight, its communion, and the combined fragrance of pine, poinsettia and perfume. (Is that Passion or Poison you're wearing? Or maybe it's Polo!) The gentle poetry of Luke's story draws us, too.

Why is it that we are so drawn to this night, I wonder? There are, I suppose, as many answers as there are people in this room.
Charles L. Aaron, Jr.
It's not an easy life, I'll tell you that. I work my small farm during the day, but that doesn't bring in enough money. I have a family to support, taxes to pay -- oy, don't get me started on taxes -- so I need more than my farm brings in. I do the only other thing I know how to do. I hire myself out for the night shift watching other people's sheep. Tending sheep would not be my first choice, you understand. First, I have to stay awake all night. Then, there's counting the sheep to make sure one or two haven't wandered off. Thieves are always a problem.
Timothy J. Smith
There is a special feeling from being in church on Christmas Eve. For many of us it feels like coming home for Christmas. We come to hear the familiar story of Mary and Joseph making their way to the little town of Bethlehem. We hear once again of Baby Jesus born in stable. Soon after an unexpected encounter with angels, the shepherds head to the manger to see Jesus for themselves. Children have creatively acted out this story for generations complete with the wise men offering their gifts. Living Nativities complete with live animals are portrayed in church parking lots in many communities.
Frank Luchsinger
"The grace of God has appeared ... training us ... to await our blessed hope" (Titus 2:11-13), and oh, how we have waited! The air is filled with anticipation, the Holy Night has come. We each wait for different things: the lighting of candles, the singing of carols, loved ones returning home, feasting, and forgetting ferment, for the Prince of Peace is coming. We wait for delight in the eyes of someone we love as he or she opens that special gift. We wait in awe in the hope that one star's strong light lingers still and will lead us home to him who redeems us.
John B. Jamison
He stood on the steps and waved. He nodded to those cheering to him from below, and took a deep breath as if to soak up their praise.
Susan R. Andrews
At the risk of putting you to sleep, I'd like to ask each one of you to close your eyes. Right now, for just a minute. Please close your eyes. And now imagine with me. Imagine that you are holding a newborn baby. Imagine how this baby feels - skin touching skin, curves touching curves - harmonious heartbeats as life surges between you. Imagine the smell - the earthy sweetness of breath and body perfuming the air. Imagine the sound - the silent melody of sighing, stretching, settling. Right now, for just a minute, let your imagination go. Feel the baby. Smell the baby. Hear the baby.
Amy C. Schifrin
Martha Shonkwiler
Gathering
P: Born into this world,
C: born into our lives,
P: God made flesh.
C: O Emmanuel, we praise you now and forever. Amen.

Hymn Of Praise
O Come, All Ye Faithful or Jesus, What A Wonderful Child

Gospel Procession
Have the children (dressed as Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds) process and then read the gospel from the center of the congregation.

Intercessory Prayers
After each petition:
L: O God of love,
C: be born in us today.
Beverly S. Bailey
Hymns
O Sing A New Song To The Lord (PH216)
Angels From The Realms Of Glory (UM220, PH22, NCH126)
Born In The Night (PH30, NCH152)
Once In Royal David's City (PH49, UM250, NCH145)
The First Nowell (PH56, UM245, CBH199, NCH139)
On This Day Earth Shall Ring (UM248, PH46, CBH192)
What Child Is This? (UM219, PH53, CBH215, NCH148)
Silent Night (PH60, UM229, CBH193, PH134)
The Friendly Beasts (UM227, NCH138)
That Boy--Child Of Mary (PH55, UM241)
Frank Ramirez
Call To Worship (based on Isaiah 9:2-7)

One:
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light -

All:
Those who lived in a land of deep darkness - on them light has shone.

Women:
You have multiplied the nation, you have increased its joy; they rejoice before you as with joy at the harvest, as people exult when dividing plunder.

Men:
For a child has been born for us, a son given to us; authority rests upon his shoulders -

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Merry Christmas, boys and girls. (Show one of your signs). Do any of you know what this sign means? (Let them answer.) That's right, it means (provide answer). (Show another sign and ask what it means. Let them answer.) Very good. Signs are very important aren't they? They give us direction. They tell us what to do and what not to do. The Bible gives many signs also.

You all know the story about the shepherds on Christmas Eve. The shepherds were in the field watching their sheep. Suddenly an angel appeared to them. The Bible says that the shepherds
Leah Thompson
For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all… (v. 11)

Good morning, boys and girls! How are you today? (allow answers) Who can tell me what today is? (allow answers) That's right -- it's finally here! Today is Christmas [Eve]! We have spent the whole season of Advent preparing for right now. The long preparation is finally over. Christmas is here!

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