Sunday, January 4, 2015

Christmas 2 - G - 2015 - Obedient For You

1 Kings 3:4-15            Ephesians 1:3-14         Luke 2:40-52
Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Amen.  Our text today is from the Gospel lesson just read, especially these words, “they saw the child with Mary his mother, and they fell down and worshiped him.”  Thus far our text. 
Dear friends in Christ.  It happens all the time. You misplace your kid. He wanders down an aisle at Toys-R-Us; she goes off on her own in the mall. Kids have a tendency to do that. But when the kid you misplace is the Son of God, the Savior of the world, the stakes go up considerable. When the Word becomes Flesh and dwells among us things are never quite “normal” again.
Mary and Joseph were required by Jewish law to go to Jerusalem 4 times a year, for different feasts and festivals.  And once Jesus was 12, and was confirmed, he needed to go to the feasts as well.  (Please note that when he was confirmed, i.e. a man, he went to more church, not less!)  So Mary, Joseph and Jesus head for Jerusalem for the Passover feast. 
Jerusalem at the time of the feast was packed.  The small town of 25,000 people swelled with some estimates putting over a million people in Jerusalem for the feast.  It is no wonder then that 12 year old Jesus gets separated from his mother and father, twelve year old boys don’t hang around with their mother’s especially when they’re in their father’s house. 
So on the way home, Mary and Joseph discover they don’t know where Jesus is.  Now, don’t think that Jesus has been disobedient, or that he has broke the 4th commandment.  He hasn’t.  In fact, his staying in the temple was in obedience to his Father in heaven.  He listens there, in the courts to the teachers of the law – he hears gladly hears God’s word and keeps it.  He is the Wisdom of Solomon made flesh.  In fact he stays and begins teaching the teachers.  The student becomes the master; he is the one who understands God’s word clearly – and what’s more who obeys it perfectly.  And he boldly proclaims the truth of God’s Word, even at the young age of 12. 
But Jesus’ earthly mom and dad are still searching for him.  And when Joseph and Mary find him, they are frustrated.  Where have you been?  Why have you been disobedient?  But Jesus’ answer is true – I wasn’t disobedient.  I must be in my Father’s house.  I must obey God.  I must listen to the word of my heavenly father, and I must proclaim it, because that word is the most important things in my life.  I must do my heavenly father’s will, not my own.  It’s a truth that Jesus will fulfill 20 some years later, when he enters the temple for that great Passover of Good Friday. 
So what do we make of this text?  Why importance does it have for us?  Dear friends, the truth is, we are the opposite of Jesus.  We are not obedient of our heavenly father.  We don’t spend enough time in his house.  In fact, we run the other way as Jesus.  Instead of running away to God’s house, we run away from God’s house.  Instead of obeying God our Father’s word, we disobey. 
Think of yourself, and your attendance in church weekly, or even more so in bible studies.  Are you present as often as God’s word is proclaimed?  Or are there other “important” things to do, things like NFL playoffs, and holes in the ice to pull fish through.  Are there children to take care of and beauty sleep to accumulate?  Is it too hard to get out of your pajamas on Sunday morning?
And while those of us who are in church smile and nod about those we know who aren’t here each week, remember that we are that much more guilty.  Yes, each week we hear God’s word and yet still give in to our sinful nature each week.  We hear that we should not murder, but hate all the same.  We hear that we should not commit adultery, but still look at others with lust in our hearts.  We should know better!  We’re here after all, we are in our Father’s house.  But we still fall short in all ten commandments, we still fall short in our thoughts words and deeds.  We sin, just as much as the unchurched. 
And in our disobedience to God, and in our sin, we deserve eternal death and damnation.  We deserve the rod of punishment from our heavenly father.  Unless we are as obedient as Jesus, the eternal chastisement of hell waits.  It is eternal death.  It is the place where the worm does not die.  It is the place with weeping and gnashing of teeth.  And in our disobedience we deserve it. 
But what we deserve and what we receive are different.  For in our baptism, we switch places with Jesus.  What I mean is that his obedience became your obedience, and your disobedience became his disobedience.  He took your place in suffering and punishment, and you took his in the eternal reward of heaven. 
That’s why Jesus returns to Jerusalem – to the Passover – years later.  To go to the cross, and suffer, bleed and die, in your place and for your sake.  It was the ultimate obedience to God the Father.  To die to save you – the people whom God loves.  To take away your sins.  To make you holy and righteous for his names sake.  And since you belong to Jesus in baptism, you share that obedience. 
You have kept all of God’s law, not in yourself, but in Jesus.  You have been in God’s house hearing and believing God’s Word, not in yourself, but in Jesus.  You are holy and righteous in God’s Sight, not in yourself, but in Jesus. 

Dear friends in Christ.  In our text today, Jesus is obedient to God, and its all for you.  It’s the reason he’s come in Christmas to make you obedient to the Father, by his obedience.  And that obedience is seen in our text, and it is seen in his loving death for you on the cross.  You are saved, because of his obedience in your place.  In the name of Jesus.  Amen.