SERMON TITLE 12.25.2025 — “BABY BLUE”

December 25, 2025 – Christmas                                               Text:  Matthew 1:18-25

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Baby blue.  Traditionally the color for the room of the newborn male.  One of the most popular of the blue hues and according to color experts it is “young, vibrant, and playful.”  It’s a color that just makes you feel good.  It should do the same today, we have got an infant to see, he’s male and we come into the presence of . . .

“BABY BLUE”

            Today we are going to talk about a cornucopia of colors.  As we step into the nativity, it is not simplicity of the setting that makes this place more regal than a nobles’ palace.  This King of kings and Lord of Lords has been given his title by God himself.  Into this baby blue setting we observe the pitch-black sins and blood-red offenses of his people that Jesus came to erase.  We have the diamond dust of a starlit night, the gold of angelic heralds, and the silver of their sparkling news.

            Matthew makes clear that Jesus is not just another baby blue baby born in the squalor of the times.  He is the long-awaited Messiah, the chosen one of God, whom the prophets foretold, and the one apostles would proclaim.

            Jesus was not conceived like all other children.  “She was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit.” (v. 18).  Later he assures Joseph that he can take Mary as his wife, “but knew her not until she had given birth to a son.” (v. 25). It was a miraculous event.  It was God entering into the human world to experience it in human form. 

            So, the King came as a baby.  His kingdom was not of this world, but his infancy most certainly was.  He was nursed and nurtured, caressed and cradled.  He hungered, cried, needed a changing.  He slept.  Just imagine him smiling at his visitors.

            He came to make a conquest of life and death with new life.  His colors would not always be baby blue or even royal purple.  The red blood of the cross would change these colors to the majestic hues of heaven.  Jesus came to offer our world hope and peace.  Jesus came so that our lives would be less blue and more royal.

            The world turned a deaf ear to the “baby blue” infant of Bethlehem, just as later it plugged its ears to the “royal purple” Good News with the din of legalism and denial.  The Lord keeps shouting for us to recognize him, to hear that the King has come and his name is Jesus, Immanuel, “God with us.”  He keeps shouting that he loves us and seeks our membership in his royal family.

            This Christmas we remember that baby blue is just a color swatch in time.  Jesus grew from infancy to manhood, and from manhood to Saviorhood.  He grew beyond the shades of human coloring to be the vivid Lord of all.  From cradle to cross, from Bethlehem’s cave to calvary’s crucifixion, Jesus painted an image of God’s immense love for us.  As Easter dawned and the conquest of death became complete, we thrilled to the golden sunrise that changed the color of life forever.  Instead of dull and depressing, his victory gave life the brilliance of joy.  If no longer baby blue, he has nevertheless shared with us the white that adorns the palace of eternity and made us through Baptism his brothers and sisters.

            As we savor the goodness of his love in a simple wafer of bread and sip of wine, we recognize that Jesus imbues our lives with more than color – he offers forgiveness and love that never blur or fade or wash out.

            Let us, then, like the shepherds, celebrate the miracle of Christmas and experience the baby blue of God’s grace and salvation.  A Blessed Christmas to you!

                                                                                                                                    Amen.        

SERMON TEXT 12.24.2025 — “WRAPPED PRESENTS”

December 24, 2025 – Christmas Eve                                   Text:  Luke 2:1-20

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Are you ready to unwrap some gifts?  Maybe already today, or tonight, or tomorrow?  It is fun to get a gift.  As we get older, we probably enjoy the giving more, but then maybe you still enjoy the getting.  It is a blessing to watch a child unwrap.  I can still see the scene of our boys jumping around the living room when they received tickets to an Illinois basketball game.  For kids, the unwrapping of presents is foremost on their minds.

            Christmas is about the gift.  Not the tinsel laden, bright-lighted glitz of the holiday.  Behind the Santa and reindeer and snowman and shopping is something far deeper.  This gift is wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.  The gift of a baby who will save His people from their sins.  We conclude our series, “Every Heart Prepare – Seeing Christ in the Holiday Decorations . . .

“WRAPPED PRESENTS”

            One Christmas, a woman ran so rampant in her Christmas preparation that she went to a card store and picked up a box of 100 cards.  She didn’t take time to read them.  She signed them, stamped them and sent them off.  She had one card left and she read it:  “This card is just to say, a little gift is on the way.”  Were people expecting a gift that would never come?

            God made a promise that He would send a gift.  We are not left waiting for it.  It came, the promised Immanuel – God with us.  He came to deliver us from captivity.  He came to be our Savior.  The angels announced it.  “For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.  And this will be a sign for you; you will find a baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.” (v. 11-12).

            Some of our wrapped presents our beautiful.  We have in our midst tonight, I am sure, some wonderful wrappers.  Bows and string and all the corners just right.  Then you have me, and maybe you join in this.  Too much paper, not enough paper, things a little askew.  Everyone can tell who wrapped what.  But you see I like that.  The Christmas package Jesus was perfect, but not the setting or the people or the narrative.  Hard travel, babies being killed, stinky accommodations.  This was no wrapping to perfection, because He came for us that are less than perfect.

            When we receive a wrapped present, it is distinguished by the name.  When my whole extended family got together those many years ago, it took 20 minutes to get all the gifts distributed.  Whose is it?  Where are they sitting?  When Jesus was sent, the recipients were every man, woman, and child.  The newly delivered package was “a Savior, Christ the Lord.”  As our sermon hymn, “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” said, we needed someone “to save us all from Satan’s power when we had gone astray.”  We were destined for death and destruction.  We needed someone to save us from the deadly consequences of sin.

            A mother was busy wrapping presents, and she asked her son to shine her shoes for the Christmas Day worship.  She was so pleased at what her eight-year-old had done, she gave him a dollar coin.  When she went to put the shoes on for church, she felt a lump in one shoe.  She removed it and found the dollar coin wrapped in paper with this note from her son:  “I done it for love.”

            When we gaze at this baby wrapped in a manger, God says, “I done it for love.”  God has given the greatest gift, because He has given Himself.  It was for love that He grew up to offer his life as a ransom for many.  Because of His life, death, and resurrection, you are forgiven and delivered from eternal death.

            But there is more.  God’s love gives additional gifts that result from the coming Christ.  In the movie Christmas Vacation when Clark gets enrolled in the Jelly of the Month Club, Cousin Eddie says, “Clark, that’s the gift that keeps on giving the whole year through.”  Advertisers use that same line with their products.  Consumers should expect a gift to please them on an ongoing basis.  Some do, but some are soon forgotten.

            The gift of a Savior has a lasting effect.  Jesus brings a salvation that endures forever.  He is the gift that keeps on giving.  A baptism we can remember daily.  A holy meal that constantly forgives.  A Lord’s Prayer we pray for a lifetime.  A Holy Spirit that renews our lives daily.  Grace and mercy without end. 

            Enjoy those wrapped presents.  Tear into them with joy.  Thank the giver.  Through the Holy Spirit keep wrapped up in the gift that is beyond compare – Jesus Christ.  “For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”  A blessed Christmas!

                        Amen.      

SERMON TEXT 12-21-2025 — “OUT OF THE BLUE – JESUS AS MESSIAH”

December 21, 2025                                                    Text:  Matthew 16:13-20

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Ever had something happen to you that came “out of the blue?”  Maybe it was something that was said that caught you off guard.  Or could it be an action that happened so suddenly that you had no time to react.  If you have spent any time on earth, you have had occurrences, maybe multiple times, that came “out of the blue.”

            This Advent series “Advent Blues” takes us to Caesarea this morning.  Something is going to be said that catches the disciples off guard.  But one of the disciples has an answer that we will focus in on. 

“OUT OF THE BLUE – JESUS AS MESSIAH”

            We are in Caesarea; it is late in Jesus’ ministry, and He is there with his 12 disciples.  This is a pagan place surrounded by statues of Greek and Romans gods.  Jesus starts the conversation, “’Who do people say the Son of Man is?’  And they said, ‘Some say John the Baptist, others say Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.’  He said to them, ‘But who do you say that I am?’” (vs. 13-15)

            Jesus asks a stunning question “out of the blue.”  Peter speaks for all of the disciples when he responds, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” (v. 16).  It was out of the blue that this understanding came.  Jesus does acknowledge that Simon Peter’s revelation was given by God.  “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah!  For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven.” (v. 17).

            Does what Peter answers seem out of the blue to you?  Was it spontaneous and impulsive, like Peter’s personality?  Well, it was not.  A theologian named James Stewart wrote, the disciples “were beginning to feel toward Jesus just as they had always felt toward God.  They found now that, when they tried to think of God, it was Jesus’ face they saw.”  Jesus did not want his role as Messiah to be a bolt out of the blue – an impromptu strike of lightning – but an executed plan that began with God and was carefully fulfilled in and through Jesus.  How could people know Jesus as God’s Son if He only trumpeted himself?  By pointing to the Father, Jesus’ followers saw the Son was not just a son, but “the Son of the Living God.”

            There had been ancient prophecies, and the Jews looked forward to the Messiah coming.  Daniel and Isaiah painted wonderful pictures of him.  In 70 B.C. though there came the Book of Enoch.  The Messiah was to be militant, and terror would grip his enemies.  This was not the Messiah Jesus came to be.  He had to teach people all over again.  Daniel and Isaiah showed a Suffering Servant not a patriotic nationalist who comforted the beleaguered Jews.

            Christ the Messiah, the One who comes in love.  Paul wrote this to the Romans, “God demonstrates his own love for us in this:  While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (5:8)

            In the South Pacific during World War II, a 19-century Melanesian religion was revived among tribal peoples.  It happened because airplanes dropped immense crates of supplies to help the embattled people with food and medicines and also dropped weapons and war equipment for the armies defending them.  As the people were primitive, they thought it was one of their gods blessing them with material gifts dropped out of the blue.  Thus the cult became a thriving religion.

            The plan of salvation was not intended to provide material wealth or war supplies, but eternal joy.  Jesus the Messiah was not an unexpected supply drop, but one whose planned invasion of earth had been carefully charted by heaven long ago.  Thus the prophets foretold him.  A people was appointed to receive him.  And God gave to the world, out of the blue, a promise long made and now fulfilled.  It was Jesus, the Infant of Bethlehem.  It was Jesus, the carpenter of Nazareth.  It was Jesus, the Galilean rabbi.  It was Jesus, the crucified one of Calvary, and the risen one of Easter.  In him all the pieces of the puzzle of salvation fit together – all the prophecies and all the proofs of his earthly ministry.  Jesus came from out of the blue, intent on fulfilling the Father’s plan to save the world.  It was not a momentary decision, but the plan love carved out before the beginnings of the universe.

            Jesus is Messiah – Alleluia!

                                                            Amen.         

SERMON TEXT 12.17.2025 — “CRECHE”

December 17, 2025 – Mid-Week Advent                                Text:  1 John1:1-4

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Throughout the world, folks are decorating for Christmas with trees, evergreens, and lights.  Non-Christians and secular people do that.  But there is in this holiday season a decoration that is purely Christian.  It shows to us the message of Christmas.  This third week of Advent, we will continue our sermon series, “Every Heart Prepare – Seeing Christ in the Holiday Decorations . . .

“CRECHE”

            The creche is explicitly Christian because it depicts those who were present when the birth of Jesus Christ happened.  Most creches have some combination of Joseph, Mary, shepherds, Wise Men, angels and animals . . . plus of course baby Jesus away in a manger.  Our church has a creche here in front of the pulpit.  This is a witness to our worshippers of why we celebrate Christmas in the first place.  You may have a creche in your home or outside on your lawn.

            Do you know anything about the word creche?   It derives from the Latin and means “nursery.”  Even today, it is the French word for a nursery or childcare center.  In America, we most associate the creche with the biblical nativity scene in which the figures are arranged to depict the event of Jesus’ birth.

            The creche has been around for centuries.  The birth of Jesus had been depicted in frescos and painting for years, but the first reenacted nativity scene is attributed to Francis of Assisi in 1223 in Italia.  It was staged in a cave with living people and animals.  This nativity became so popular that within a century most of the churches in Italia were doing the same thing. 

            Eventually, the practicality of man started making these nativity scenes with plaster or wood.  Then man started to shrink these down to small models that could be set up in a home or a church narthex.  In the 1800’s that is what happened.  Lutherans and other Christian denominations had them out for display.  No longer just wood or plastic, some of these are made of plastic, paper, and porcelain.

            The creche is a visible representation of the men and women depicted in the accounts of Matthew 2 and Luke 2.  It gives us a nice picture and credible evidence of Christ’s birth.  We can see it with our eyes and touch it with our hands.  Who doesn’t picture that first Christmas if you set up a creche? 

            The creche does bring to mind Christ’s first advent and bears witness to His historical coming.  God came into the world in a tangible way.  The advent of our Lord wasn’t a spiritual fantasy.  It happened in real time to real people in this real creation.  The apostle John affirms the reality of the incarnate Christ, stating, “That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we looked upon and have touched with our hands, concerning the word of life…that which we have and seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ.” (1 John 1:1,3)

            The creche reveals that Jesus was born in an earthy setting.  A stable with animals and hay.  Laid in a feeding trough – a manger.  God entered this world as a small and helpless infant – dependent on his parents.  Mary did you know you were touching the face of God? the Christmas carol says.  Joseph and Mary did, even if they didn’t grasp the eternal importance of this birth.  “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” (John 1:14). This humble setting displays the One, “who, though He was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied Himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.” (Phil. 2:6-7)

            There are some creche displays that portray the nativity in a cave.  This may be closer to the truth.  On top of this model, a cross is implanted.  This reminds us of the purpose and mission for which Christ was born:  to save us from our sins by dying on the cross.  Jesus did not stay “away in a manger”.  He grew into a man who “was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief…But He was pierced for our transgressions; He was crushed for our iniquities; upon Him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with His wounds we are healed.” (Is. 53:3,5).  Jesus came in humble circumstances to share our humanity and became the Savior of sinners.  The creche reminds us of His humble beginnings on earth.

            The creche – visible and tangible.  It attests to why we even have Christmas at all.  The decoration, this nativity scene, prepares us to celebrate the advent of the baby who was born to save his people from their sins.

                                                                        Amen.        

SERMON TEXT 12.14.2025 —

December 14, 2025                                         Text:  John 18:36-37

Dear Friends in Christ,

            Have you ever met a king?  A real blue blood, noble, aristocratic.  In America it would be rare.  In Europe not so much.  That is where blue blood originated.  Probably in Spain with the noble Castile family.  They were all quite pale and you could see their veins.  These people were “sangre azul” or “blue blood.”  They tried to marry with in the family so that this blue-blooded group of people could continue without getting mixed in with the commoner.

            Now to be sure, there have been used car kings, monarchs of the movies and sovereigns of the playing fields.  Over ten years ago now, we had a homecoming king living under our roof.  Thankfully he was humble and never lorded it over us!  None of these folks are true Blue Bloods.  There has been only one real, genuine, completely authentic King – not a pretender, but a bona fide Blue Blood.  Our series “Advent Blues” arrives at another part of who Jesus is this morning . . .

“BLUE BLOOD – JESUS AS KING”

            Jesus as King reigns from no golden throne and wears no diamond-encrusted crown.  His kingdom is not one of boundaries or border agents.  His people are not those united by language or race or ethnicity.  They are united by faith and prayer and the sacraments – by God’s word and Christ’s church.  His rule extends over the universe, but he has no embassies.  He has a palace of hope, where He dwells and lives.

            This is the One we know as Christ the King.  This is the infant who drew Wise Men over the desert miles from the east seeking the birthplace of history’s most important King.  This is the one who Isaiah wrote, “He will reign on David’s throne…forever.”  (Is. 9:7)

            Born in no palace.  A crown of thorns and a reed for a scepter.  His regal cloak was faded and gambled on by his captors.  He didn’t rule an army from the back of a stallion, he rode a donkey into death.  He touched the sick with healing hands and absolved the repentant of their awful deeds.  He was a King to save people from their sins.  He rose from the dead to rule with love and grace.  He dispenses forgiveness and not retribution.  Welcomes everyone into his eternal Kingdom.  He was and is the most unpretentious Blue Blood this world will ever know.

            Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince almost describes our King Jesus – regal Blue Blood, who is also a regular, ordinary friend.  In the story, the people who lived in the prince’s kingdom, wanted to remember this always happy ruler with a marvelous statue.  It was brightened with gold leaf, sapphires for eyes, a ruby in its sword, the neck decorated with precious stones and pearls.  Whenever they looked at this statue of the Happy Prince, they became happy, too.

            Late one fall, a swallow perched on the Happy Prince to spend the night.  A drop of water landed on this weary bird.  How could it rain on a cloudless night?  He looked up and saw the Happy Prince was not happy at all – he was crying.

            He told his new friend he had been happy behind palace walls, but now he saw the condition of his people.  Poor and struggling.  Enduring pain and heartache.

            The prince enlisted the bird to fly the ruby to a poor widow caring for a sick child.  The Happy Prince was still sad, so he had the bird fly the jewels to another family evicted from their home.  The prince asked for more tasks before the bird headed south.  He dropped the gold into the cups of beggars.  He took one sapphire to an orphan selling matches.  The other went to a student destitute and hungry.

            By now the bird had delayed his journey so long, that he would not go south.  He would stay and be the eyes for the Happy Prince.  To tell him about the happiness spreading among his people because of the prince’s love for his people.

            The Happy Prince is a legend.  The King of Kings is genuine.  He gave not gold and jewels but his life for those he created.  He brought joy to the world not with glistening sapphires, but the sparkling gifts of salvation and love.

            He came to be King of our hearts, so we can love as He loves.  He came to be King of our heads, so that we can think of others as he does.  He came to be King of our souls, so that we can live as he lives – forever.

            Jesus is our joyous King, the happy Prince of Peace.  This King’s blood was so royal that it was shed for all his subjects to redeem them eternally.  His Royal Highness – Jesus as King – a true Blue Blood.

                                                Amen.     

SERMON TEXT 12.10.2025 — “LIGHTS”

December 10, 2025 – Mid-Week Advent 2 2025    Texts:  Isaiah 9:1-2,6-7;

2 Corinthians 4:3-6; John 1:1-9

Dear Friends in Christ,

            The property board of a church wanted to improve the property.  They voted to add a chandelier.  One member frowned at the idea saying, “I am against for three reasons.  First, nobody in this church can spell chandelier.  Second, nobody in this church knows how to play it.  And third, what we need above all else in this church is more light!”

            We need more light.  Not visible light per se, but more spiritual light.  We need the light that Christ brings into the darkness of our sinful world and sinful lives.  We need His light to guide us in the path of righteousness.  Blessedly, in His advent, Jesus has come to bring us that much-needed light.  Seeing Christ in the Christmas decorations . . .

“LIGHTS”

            Light are everywhere this time of the year.  Our homes have extra lights.  Communities string lights on streets and poles.  Business and shopping centers decorate with more illumination.  We even have a “Festival of Lights” in our area.

            Our sanctuary is adorned with more lights.  Five candles on the advent wreath that gets brighter and brighter as we approach Christmas.  The lights on the tree and hanging off the church balcony.  The light in the creche.

            Why decorate like this?  Sentimental value?  Or is there a deeper significance?  Last week we learned about the beginning of Christmas trees in Germany in the Middle Ages.  By the 1500’s they were attaching candles to the trees.  First with pins, then by holders, then by lanterns.  These lights reminded Christians of the lights that accompanied Christ’s birth – the Bethlehem star and the angels who lit up the night sky with the glory of the Lord.  They reminded people that Christ is the light of the world.

                        Eventually, this practice came to America.  As lights became more affordable, lights started to become commonplace in 1950’s America.  Today 150 million sets of holiday lights are sold lighting over 80 million homes.  According to statistics in December of 2015 the USA produced more electricity in one month than the country of El Salvador used the entire year.

            Christmas lights are beautiful.  I love to just sit at home with only the Christmas lights on and relax.  But for the Christian it goes deeper than that.  Our sin represents darkness.  We can ignore the light, turn our back on the light or just plow ahead with our dark thoughts and deeds.  But God promised to break this march into the abyss.  Isaiah foretold it, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shone.” (Is. 9:2). The light breaking came in the form of a birth, “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given.” (Is. 9:6)

            Jesus’s birth was signaled by the light of the special star that guided the Wise Men.  John doesn’t write about the birth of Jesus, but he writes about the impact of that blessed event.  “The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world.” (John 1:9). When Jesus became an adult He announced, “I am the light of the world.  Whoever follows Me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” (John 8:12)

            By grace through faith.  Once in darkness we now receive Christ’s light of righteousness and glory.  The apostle Paul declared, “For God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” (2 Cor. 4:6)

            The lights also point to the second coming of Christ.  Jesus’ return will inaugurate a new creation in which the darkness of sin ends, and the light of righteousness endures forever.  We who are made righteous through faith in Christ will abide in that eternal righteous realm.

            On Christmas Eve, many churches like Good Shepherd hold a candlelight service.  The flame that night is spread from the Christ candle to the Pastor’s candle to the ushers’ candle to your candle.  This signifies that the coming of Christ brings the light of righteousness to all who believe.  So, every time you see the lights of Advent and Christmas emanating, remember the message:  Jesus has come and will come again to bring you the light of forgiveness and glory.

                                                            Amen.