Pastor Sherry’s Christmas Eve message 12/24/2024
This is the 9th Christmas Eve worship service I have attempted to help us wrap our minds around what it means to realize that Jesus was born. I have asked us in the past to consider what each of the participants might have felt as they responded to Him: (1) The shepherds—remember the little boy who thought the words shepherds were watching their sheep by night, were instead shepherds were washing their socks by night? That misperception led me to images of shepherds, sitting around camp fires, washing their white tube socks and placing them on sticks to dry. (2) The wise men, possibly disciples of the prophet Daniel, who traveled for miles and miles, seeking the Christ Child. (3) The angel, Gabriel, ever obedient to God, but wondering if it was such a good plan to send Jesus to earth as a baby—afterall, they are not all very trustworthy or nice down there. (4) The inn-keeper in Bethlehem, who no doubt wished he had built on even one more room for the young, very pregnant couple. (5) Jesus’ adoptive father, Joseph, tasked with protecting and providing for his special little family. 6. Even God the Father–what must it have cost Him to send His only Son to earth to die? And (7) we have examined the feelings and perceptions of the young Mary, unwed, but chosen by God to be the mother of the Messiah. Tonight I want us to consider again the feelings, the wonder, the awe, the love of Jesus’ mother, Mary.
Perhaps you are aware of the song, “Mary, Did You Know?” It’s my new favorite Christmas song. We bless Mary because she said “Yes” to God. We know she was a devout, humble, faith-filled young woman.
Scholars believe she was somewhere between the ages of 14-16YO, a teenager. She was also unmarried, yet promised to an older fellow named Joseph (30? Young girls in those days tended to marry older men who were established in a career and had the means to support a family). When the angel, Gabriel, appeared to her she was first afraid; then perplexed about how she would have a child though a virgin; and then obedient, willing to bear the long awaited Messiah, no matter the personal cost to her (NIV, Luke 1:38)🡪”I am the Lord’s servant,” said Mary. “May it be to me as you have said.”
Mary was willing to do God’s will, but did she understand what her obedience would mean? Consider the words to the song, “Mary, Did You Know?”
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would one day walk on water?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would save our sons and daughters?
Did you know that your baby boy would come to make you new?
This child that you delivered will soon deliver you?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would give sight to a blind man?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would conquer storms with His hand?
Did you know your baby boy has walked where angels trod?
When you kiss your little baby, you kiss the face of God?
Oh, Mary did you know? (repeated several times)
…the blind will see;
…the deaf will hear;
…the dead will live again;
…the lame will leap;
…the dumb will speak the praises of The Lamb.
Mary, did you know that your baby boy is Lord of all Creation?
Mary, did you know that your baby boy would one day rule the nations?
Did you know that your baby boy is Heaven’s Perfect Lamb?
The sleeping child you’re holding is the Great I AM!
(Lyrics by Mark Lowry, 1985; Music by Buddy Greene, 1991; my favorite version can be located on YouTube, sung by the Pentatonix. It is well worth the listen.)
It’s such a beautiful song! It causes us to wonder what she might have known, as well as what she probably never expected.
I asked a long time Christian mentor of mine. who also has a doctorate in Marriage and Family Therapy, what she thought Mary might have been cognizant of as she raised her Holy Son. We agreed she certainly knew He possessed miraculous powers (Remember she encouraged Him to change water into wine at the wedding at Cana). She would have known He had mastered the Scriptures (Remember she and Joseph found Him at 12 years disputing the meaning of Old Testament passages with Jewish scholars in the Temple). She of course knew that He was the Son of God, Messiah, and that He would save us all.
But did she know how it all would work out? Did she suspect the extent of His miracles, even to raising people from the dead? Did she worry about the tangles He would get into with the Jewish religious leaders? (Remember at one point she and her other children tried to rescue Him, thinking He was crazy.) Did she suspect she would witness the horrendous way He died? Probably not, but thank God she said “yes”! This brave young woman who, as the song says, kissed the face of God. This Christmas Eve, let us all follow her example and say “Yes” to God’s will in our lives. This Christmas Eve, let us welcome Jesus into our hearts and into our homes. Amen! May it be so!
©️2024 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams