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Todd A. Peperkorn, STM
Messiah Lutheran Church
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Christmas 2 (January 5, 2003)
Matthew 2:13-23
TITLE:
The Flight of the Christian Life
Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ. Amen. Our text for this morning is from Matthew chapter
2, the flight of the Holy Family to Egypt.
Many, many years ago God called a man named Jacob to
go to Egypt.
Jacob was an old man, he was tired and hungry, and there was no sign of
rest for his soul. His soul had been restless and in pain since the loss
of his son, Joseph, so many years ago. Imagine what it must have been
like, to believe your favorite son was lost and killed all those many
years. No father should ever have to bury his own son. And there they
were, left in the land of Canaan,
in the midst of a famine. No food, enemies on every side. Where should
they go?
Egypt.
That is where God commanded that they go. It was a foreign land, a land
of pagans and strangers to the Lord God. And yet that is where God sent
them to go. Jacob didnt know that his son Joseph was the governor
of Egypt.
Joseph was really their protector, and he was the one that God would use
to keep his father Jacob and all of his brothers safe, especially
Judah.
But God is always taking strange circumstances and bringing about great
blessings.
Thousands of years later, another son of Jacob would
go down to Egypt,
but this son of Israel
was not fleeing hunger. He was fleeing the wrath and hatred of Herod
the Great. Herod could not bear the thought that their might be a King
in Israel.
He couldnt stand the idea that anyone but he would be in charge
and in control of his little kingdom. His hatred for Jesus ran so deep
that Herod ordered every male child under two years old in Bethlehem
be murdered.
Its hard to imagine that kind of hatred for the
Prince of Peace, isnt it? This is the part of the Christmas story
where most people kind of want to close the book. What could be so threatening
about a little infant? Would he start a rebellion? Would he lead the
people to go against King Herod? What could he possibly do to deserve
such hatred?
Thats the thing about Jesus. For Herod, Jesus
represented everything that was wrong in the world. Herod could not understand
the concept of forgiveness, or that God would pay the price for our sins.
It was unfathomable, unthinkable that God would pay for our trespasses.
He must have something else in mind! He must be trying to take away my
power as the king, or so Herod thought. But Herod did not, could not
understand, just like the world cannot fathom the depth of Gods
love in the Gospel today. The world cannot understand Gods love,
and so the world rejects Him.
So Jesus fled to Egypt,
just like his father Jacob did so many years before. And just like his
great-great-great-grandfather Jacob, Jesus was protected by a Joseph,
this time His foster-father. God used one Joseph to keep the
family line and the promised Messiah coming so many years before, and
he again used another Joseph to protect this little infant King and his
mother. You see, this is all about timing for our infant King. His time
to die had not yet come. God protected Him now, but there would come
a time when God would unleash His own wrath upon His only-begotten Son,
so that your suffering would have an end.
Were getting a little glimpse into Jesus
life here, and already we see that this life is not an easy one. Born
in a stable, no place to lay His head, this little one will do battle
for your soul His entire life. But the battle He fights will not be fought
with swords and guns and weapons. No, His weapons are poverty and weakness.
He survives on the charity of strangers, but that charity will run out.
He does all of this because of His great love for you, His wayward children.
So what does this mean to you? What Jesus does this
morning is teaches us how to understand our lives of suffering and hardship.
St. Peter tells us in our Epistle that if anyone suffers as a Christian,
let him not be ashamed, but let him glorify God in this matter. In
order for us to understand this suffering, though, we really have to see
ourselves in Jesus life. He left His home for a foreign land, and
God saw Him through. The foreign land to which
He traveled, though, was not finally Egypt.
It was death itself. For truly, what could be more foreign to the eternal
Son of God that the road of death?
Yet that is the road that He took for you. His journey
is the road to death, so that your journey does not end in death, but
life. That is the miracle of Jesus birth into our flesh. The real
miracle does not lie in how humble was His birth, or the beauty of the
scene, or any of these things. No, the miracle lies in the reality that
when He takes on our life, He gathers all of our hurt and suffering and
sorrow into Himself. So when you look at His life,
that is your life in Him.
As we near the close of this Christmas season, this
is an important lesson for us pilgrims here on earth. When we talk about
the Christian life here on earth, God calls us to look at it through the
lens of Jesus life. God does not call you to a life of perfection,
victorious living, happiness and fulfillment. That is what Satan falsely
promised Adam and Eve in the Garden. No, God has bigger plans
for you and I. He calls you in Baptism to a
life of suffering and trial, but a life that is shaped by the cross of
Jesus Christ.
This is a far greater life, because it is a life of
sacrifice that is lived in God. Only God can bring this about in your
life. You and I just dont live lives of sacrifice by nature. You
and I are inward focused, self absorbed and possessive, not unlike our
friend Herod from our text. That is how you live. But by your Baptism,
God creates you anew, and gives you this life that is lived in Him and
in your neighbor. You are Joseph and Mary, taking care of the Christ
child. Its a strange though, isnt it? And yet that is the
reality of Jesus birth. Jesus puts His very life into the hands
of sinners like you and I.
His own life is wrapped up in yours. When you hurt
and suffer, He hurts and suffers. When He lives the perfect life of obedience
to the will and Word of God, you live that perfect life. And when He
finishes His great journey to the cross and the empty tomb, your pilgrimage
is complete.
Oh, to be sure, we still have these trials and hardships
here on earth. But look at this babe fleeing in the arms of His mother.
If God can live such a harried and difficult life for you, dont
you think Hell take care of you here on earth? That is the gift
that He brings to you this Christmastide that goes beyond all understanding.
He gives you the gift of peace, peace that He is in charge. Peace that
He has suffered all things for you. And peace that will bring you eternal
life. Believe it for Jesus sake. Amen.
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