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Living In the Fields

December 24, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

God can’t do this without you because there is no “this” without you.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Eve of the Nativity of Our Lord
Texts: Luke 2:1-20; Isaiah 9:2-7

Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

If you look carefully tonight, you’ll see signs of what God is really doing.

You’ll see ordinary people, living in the fields where they work. You’ll see ordinary villagers, engaged to be married like millions of others, anticipating their coming life together.

You’ll see another family of villagers inviting this pregnant couple into their home, but, with no room in their guest room on the roof, having them settle in on the main floor amongst the rest of the family and the family’s animals.

You’ll see a perfectly normal human birth, with the cries of the mother in pain, and blood and mess, and with an experienced aunt as midwife, the tension and release back and forth, leading up to the final arrival.

When the Magi looked for this child, they went straight to the seat of power, Herod’s court. As well as they could read the sky and stars, they missed these other details. They missed that, for God, the plan from the beginning was always about ordinary people.

There’s no secret to what the Triune God is hoping for with this birth.

Peace on earth to all of God’s people, those working shepherds were told. A Prince of Peace, Isaiah says, who will establish endless peace, a reign of justice and righteousness. A light to shine in the darkest shadows of this world, Isaiah says.

From the beginning, our Scriptures say, this was always God’s dream: a creation living in peace and harmony, with humans in charge of caring for the garden and each other and all God’s creatures. Everything God tries to do with all humanity, and eventually the chosen people, throughout the Hebrew Bible, is to get people back to this original dream and hope of God’s.

Coming as an ordinary human being, a poor one in an oppressed country, was just the next step of this plan. To live among us and show us the path that had been laid out since the beginning. Love God and love neighbor. Share the abundance of this creation so all are filled and safe and the creation blooms.

And God’s plan only works if everyone, all God’s children, are a part of it. Including you.

We sometimes think the whole point of God’s coming in Christ was to forgive us.

Certainly, the Son of God made it clear that you are forever loved and forgiven by God. Clearly, in Jesus’ death and resurrection you have the promise of that forgiveness and restoration. A love is revealed that will not stop until all are found and brought home in grace.

But forgiveness happens throughout the Scriptures long before Jesus’ death and resurrection. God repeatedly forgives God’s people, again and again, individually and collectively. God didn’t need to be born as a human being to forgive you, or me. The Scriptures are clear about that.

That’s what you need to understand tonight: God’s plan all hinges on what God can do and what God can’t do. God can and does forgive. All the time.

What God can’t do is make you love.

Force you be a peacemaker. Make you care for others and this creation. God’s greatest hope and dream depends on you, and me, and everyone, choosing to obey, to love, to walk the path of God.

Start in Genesis and keep going, and you’ll see. God always reaches out to ordinary people and calls them to follow, to care for strangers, to end oppression and poverty, to love God and neighbor. But God’s whole dream is that people do this willingly. So God has to wait and see who will.

Now you see why ordinary people are key to tonight’s story.

The shepherds likely weren’t expecting God to do much to fix the world. They just lived and worked their lives. But it was to them, not the royal court, that God sent heavenly messengers. And after seeing, they returned to their fields “glorifying and praising God” for all they’d heard and seen. Telling others. The message got to the people God needed, ordinary people who’d come to find the path of peace and love and walk it. And tell others.

The same for Mary and Joseph, their family in Bethlehem and their family in Nazareth. Coming amongst common folks meant that the plan from the beginning remained: God would not use power over anyone to force love. So it’s no surprise God avoids Herod’s power and starts a love insurgency from the ground up, with an ordinary but holy child. It’s the only way God will do it.

Ultimately, it’s the only way true peace on earth will ever happen.

Isaiah promises tonight that in this coming peace of God, “all the boots of the tramping warriors and all the garments rolled in blood shall be burned as fuel for the fire.”

But if God’s not planning a bigger army to destroy the warring armies of this world, which Scripture clearly says God will not do, how will army boots and bloody uniforms become fuel for furnaces to keep people warm?

Only when the soldiers themselves take off their own boots and uniforms and toss them onto the burn pile. This peace God dreams of, this world of justice and mercy, will only happen, can only happen with the consent and participation of all God’s people. When we all put down our weapons and throw our violence onto the burn pile and start loving God and neighbor as God always dreamed we would.

God can’t do this without you because there is no “this” without you.

That’s the joy of God’s coming for you tonight. The shepherds were critical because they, too, were God’s children, and needed to be invited and called. But the only answer God needs here tonight is ours. Yours. Mine. Peace on earth to all God’s beloved, that’s the plan. You are critical to it.

So, should we go to Bethlehem and see this thing God has done for us and for the world? It might change you. In fact, God’s counting on that.

But let’s go.

In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

An Impossible Situation

December 24, 2023 By Vicar at Mount Olive

Mary was in an impossible situation and it is the same situation that we are in, to bear Christ to the World. Thankfully, nothing is impossible with God.

Vicar Lauren Mildahl 
Fourth Sunday of Advent, year B 
Texts: Luke 1:46b-55, Luke 1:26-38

Greetings, favored ones, grace to you and peace in the name of the Father, and of the ☩ Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Mary only asks one question. 

Most people, I think, if they had been in Mary’s shoes, would have asked more questions. I certainly would have. I would have wanted to know at least a few more details about this crazy thing that was about to happen to me. But when Gabriel tells her she will bear the Christ, a baby she will name Jesus, the Son of the Most High, Mary only asks: “How can this be, since I am a virgin?”

And the common interpretation, when we hear this question, is that Mary is wondering about the biology of this whole thing. As if she was fixated on the clinical impossibilities of an immaculate conception. As if she’s asking, “Excuse me, Gabriel, can you explain exactly how this embryo will be fertilized? Where will the other half of this baby’s DNA come from? I need to know how this works, medically speaking.”

But what if that wasn’t what she was worried about?

What if she didn’t actually think it would be much of a miracle for the God who created everything that is out of the chaotic void, to manifest one more life. Maybe she didn’t think it would be a big deal for the God who breathes life into everything to breathe life into her womb. After all, she doesn’t sing, “My soul magnifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God who miraculously impregnates!”  She actually doesn’t mention that part in her song at all.

So maybe she was thinking about something else. Maybe when she asked her one question, “How can this be since I am a virgin?” she meant something more like, “Do you really know what you’re asking me?! I’m not married yet. Don’t you know how hard it is here for single mothers?” 

Because she didn’t know, yet. She didn’t know that Joseph would step up and stick around, great guy, or that her relatives and her community would support their family. She didn’t know, yet, that complete strangers would show up with expensive gifts from the East!

At this point, all she knew for sure was that if she said yes, she might have to do this alone. And she knew what an impossible situation that might be. 

And as if being a single mother weren’t hard enough, what about being a mother to God?! 

Mary might well have been asking Gabriel, “Do you know what you are asking me? I don’t know how to raise a MESSIAH! I’m just a kid!” Because there she was, not all that far from childhood herself, just a poor girl from a small village, tasked to raise a king of whose kingdom there will be no end!  A king to sit on David’s throne forever! A king who is GOD INCARNATE. Is there a person on Earth qualified for that?! How was she supposed to know what to do? 

Another layer of impossible. 

Or, you know, maybe Mary was just not sure she really wanted to bring a baby into this broken world.

She knew about thrones, about the mighty, and the proud, she did sing about them. And maybe in that first moment of contemplating motherhood, she just couldn’t fathom bringing any more life, any more precious and vulnerable and beloved life into this world that wasn’t yet put right. She was just a virgin, just an unmarried young woman living in an occupied nation, thoroughly and in every way cut off from political and economic power – how could she protect him?

Because even knowing that her baby boy was God incarnate, in this world not yet made right, she would have known what would happen to anybody who went around preaching possibility and hope, justice and redistribution, and all those things that might topple a tyrant.  She might have guessed already that she would have to do the most impossible thing of all for a mother: watch her son die. 

Let’s give Mary some credit. 

And let’s imagine that she knew all the many dimensions of impossibility surrounding the scenario that Gabriel was presenting, and that maybe the part about the virgin pregnancy wasn’t even the top of the list.  So she asks her one question, overwhelmed for a moment, by impossibility:

“How can this be?”

And I don’t blame her.  It seems like a reasonable response to a unique and impossible task. 

Although, it’s not truly unique at all, is it?

A young woman and an unplanned pregnancy? Not unique.  Powerless and terrorized people longing for liberty and restoration? Not unique.  Sinners and sinned against waiting for a savior? Not unique. This story repeats and echoes through the generations, in impossible situation after impossible situation. It repeats in us.  Ordinary people, encountering the divine and answering the call to bear Christ into the world.

Because although we don’t have the same physical experience that Mary had, our calling is the same. 

We are all called to bear Christ, to experience divine love growing within ourselves, to labor and birth Christ anew again and again for the world. 

We bear Christ so that every single person can know that they are favored and completely loved by God. 

We bear Christ so that God’s justice can be accomplished, so that the mighty may be cast down, the proud may be scattered, the rich may be sent away empty. So that every unjust social structure built on oppression and exploitation and violence can be overturned, by the strength of God’s arm. 

We bear Christ so that all life can flourish. That the lowly may be lifted up, that the hungry may be filled with good things. So that every single person can be fed and housed and cared for and welcomed. 

And you know what? That can feel pretty impossible sometimes.  Overwhelmed, we also might want to respond with just one question of our own: How can this be, God? How can we do all the things you call us to do?

And then Gabriel’s words echo through the centuries, answering not just Mary’s question, but our own desperate wonderings.

The angel said: “Nothing is impossible with God.” 

Nothing will stand in the way between God and us.  Not the powers of this world, not our own inadequacies and certainly not biology.  God will go over or around or under or straight through any obstacle to save us.

And every impossible situation you can think of, any impossible situation that you may be facing right now, God is already there. The tenderness of Divine Love is already there, turning impossible into possible.  

God is in the business of possible, of new beginnings, new life, ways from no way.  In a word, hope.  After all, what is hope, if not possibility? When we are called to bear Christ we are sharing a future pregnant with possibility! It is not easy (pregnancy and labor aren’t easy), but it is never impossible. 

With God, nothing is impossible.  

This was the only answer Mary needed to her question.

“Here am I,” she says, “the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.”

And then she sings. The song that echoes through every Christ bearer and that is our song too:

Our souls proclaim the greatness of our Lord!

And our spirits rejoice in God our Savior! 

Our God of infinite possibility.  Thanks be to God!

In the name of the Father, of the  ☩  Son, and of the Holy Spirit. 

 

Filed Under: sermon Tagged With: sermon

Worship, Monday, December 25, 2023

December 22, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Nativity of Our Lord

Download worship folder for Monday, December 25, 2023, 10:00 a.m.

Presiding and Preaching: Pr. Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Peggy Hoeft, lector; Lora Dundek, Assisting Minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Worship, Sunday night, 10:00 p.m., December 24, 2023

December 22, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Eve of the Nativity of Our Lord

Download worship folder for Christmas Eve, December 24, 2023, 10:00 p.m. (with 9:30 choral prelude)

Preaching and Presiding: Pr. Joseph Crippen

Readings and prayers: Teresa Rothausen, lector; Vicar Lauren Mildahl, Assisting Minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

Worship, 10:00 a.m., December 24, 2023

December 22, 2023 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

The Fourth Sunday of Advent, year B 

With the angel, we proclaim in our worship the coming of God into our world for healing and salvation.

Download worship folder for Sunday, December 24, 2023.

Presiding: Pastor Joseph Crippen

Preaching: Vicar Lauren Mildahl

Readings and prayers: John Gidmark, lector; Jan Harbaugh, assisting minister

Organist: Cantor David Cherwien

Download next Sunday’s readings for this Tuesday’s noon Bible study.

Note – the Bible study this Tuesday, December 26, at noon, will be held on Zoom only. Click this link to be connected.

Click here for previous livestreamed liturgies from Mount Olive (archived on the Mount Olive YouTube channel.)

Filed Under: Online Worship Resources

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