A, The Birth of our Lord, Christmas Day - Luke 2:13-14 "Gift Wrapped in Glory"
Luke 2:13-14 (ESV) And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude
of the heavenly host praising God and saying,
“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom
he is pleased!”
The shepherds sit around hoping for a quiet night. They watch their sheep, they don’t want any
trouble from predators or thieves, a quiet night is a good night.
But then in an instant the night is like day. The shepherds are startled; their full
attention has been gathered. This
brightness brings with it a weight they’ve never experienced. It is heavy; but it’s heavenly! They tremble in fear under the mass of light
bearing down on them from heaven. This
is no predator; this is no thief!
Something is going down; but how to explain what is transpiring before
their very eyes!
Then this heavy heavenly thing speaks out of the brightness and light,
saying to them, “Fear not, for behold, I
bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. For unto you is born this day in the city of
David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord.
And this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in
swaddling cloths and lying in a manger.”
(Luke 2:10–12 ESV)
And if that is not enough for these simple shepherds to hear, then, “suddenly there was with the angel a
multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth
peace among those with whom he is pleased!’”
When the angels went back into heaven, what did the shepherds do with
this great burden of information left with them? They left their sheep in the field saying, “Let
us go over to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord
has made known to us.” (Luke 2:15b
ESV)
The weight of the event left its mark on them. This glory, the angel, and its heavenly
entourage was so intense they could do nothing but go and see this Saviour
lying in a manger.
As we have heard today, and have heard every Christmas, they found
Mary and Joseph, they found Jesus in swaddling cloths lying in the manger, the
sign revealed to them by the angel of God.
We are told of the shepherds, “And
when they saw it, they made known the saying that had been told them concerning
this child. And all who heard it
wondered at what the shepherds told them.” (Luke 2:17–18 ESV)
What does God’s glory do to you?
“And the shepherds returned,
glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been
told them.” (Luke 2:20 ESV)
How would you explain this event to those who had not seen it?
We hear this gospel message every year, every Christmas? But how do you explain all that the shepherds saw, and how can we repeat the proclamation today with the same enthusiasm and
excitement as that of the shepherds.
For us to share in the excitement of the shepherds with a willingness
to repeat their sounding joy, we need to allow God the Holy Spirit to open up
the text of this Christmas gospel for us.
Then we can intimately share in the event of the first Christmas. And therefore, repeat it to those who do not
know what this—everyday earthly, but heavy heavenly—birth does for all of
creation.
Three times in the reading today we hear of glory. What is the glory of God? How do we explain the glory of God shining
around the shepherds, the heavenly choir singing “Glory to God in the highest”,
and the shepherds glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen?
The glory of God has a huge impact on the shepherds. They saw it shining around them, they heard
it heralded by the heavenly hosts, then they continued in this glory after
seeing Jesus. What is this glory?
In the Old Testament Hebrew, glory, simply means “to be heavy”. In a bad sense it can mean to be a burden or
severe, but in a good sense can mean numerous, rich, or honourable. It means to be weighty in either a good or
bad way.
When God reveals his glory over Pharaoh through Moses it is both a
burden to Pharaoh but also a joy to the Israelites. When the glory of the Lord covered Mount
Sinai and when it filled the tabernacle and later the temple, people did not
take it lightly. In fact, the people of
God feared the intense weight of God in his glory when it appeared. Even using God’s name was a hefty thing for
fear of saying it in vain and discrediting the weight of its glory.
In the New Testament the Greek word for glory is doxa, from
where we get doxology, or words about glory.
In fact, the angels or host of heaven praise God with what we would call
a doxology.
This glory is: to please, to think well of, to be of good
reputation. With the Old Testament
meaning to be weighty, to glorify God is to give the greatest weight of
pleasure to him, he is worthy of the best thoughts and reputation among us.
Doxologies appear quite often when we acknowledge God’s presence with
us. On the end of psalms, the end of the
Lord’s Prayer, which comes from King David (Psalm 145:11-13, 1 Chronicles
29:10-13), and the Great Gloria and the Holy, Holy, Holy in the liturgy are
combinations of doxological praises sung in the presence of God.
The shepherds heard, saw, and felt the full weight of God’s presence
when the angel appeared. In fact, when
the angels left and went into heaven, the shepherds didn’t say, let’s go and
see what the angel told us”, but rather said let’s see that “which the Lord
has made known to us.”
Much is made of angels today.
Many angelic experiences are over personified and in doing so glory is
taken away from God. However, angels are
messengers of God. Even if they are
named in Scripture, it is not they who we look to, but to God in whose name
they speak. This is why the shepherds
say, the Lord, rather than an angel, had made Jesus’ birth known to them.
The doxology of the heavenly host or angelic choir also functions in
the same way. They announce God in all
his glory. In fact, this is the first
time the Heavenly Choir is heard on earth.
We are accustomed to it these days as we sing in God’s presence the
Great Gloria and the Holy, Holy, Holy in the liturgy. We sing it because God is present, but when
Jesus was born the heavenly choir was heard for the first time on earth.
We do well to be in awe of God being with us today in all his weighty
glory, just as much as he was then before the shepherds, as we join the
heavenly choir each time we sing or say, “Glory
to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!”
Or any other doxology!
“Glory to God in the highest”
is the great glorification of God. It is
the heaviest pleasure that can be bestowed upon God. And now this glory shines around the
shepherds and they pass it onto all whom they see. All who heard the shepherds marvelled and
wondered at the news. These shepherds
had continued the messenger work, God had shone on them through his angelic messengers.
This glory of God is the wrapping of God’s greatest gift to us — Jesus
Christ in human flesh!
The angels sing, “Glory to God
in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!”
Not only is this glory given to God as the ultimate praise, but it is
also given to the shepherds and us, those with whom God is pleased. It is God’s pleasure in the highest to give
you peace through Jesus Christ.
Such is the weight of this event that we receive the gift of love from
God the Father, wrapped in glory and swaddling cloths. With the Psalmist, we look not to our works
or idols but look to the gift of God in the manger and say, “Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your
name give glory, for the sake of your steadfast love and your faithfulness!” (Psalm 115:1 ESV)
We see the steadfast love and faithfulness of Jesus in human flesh and
trust his work and word that his flesh now speaks for our flesh fulfilling the
will of God. This is the will of God
done in heaven and on earth bringing peace to us and pleasure to God.
This gift of God covers us in his glory with his victory over sin and death on the cross, covering you with the forgiveness of sins. Let the Holy Spirit unwrap God’s glory in you, so having seen and heard the gift of God, like the shepherds you continue to glorify and praise God to all whom you meet in these days. Amen.