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Wednesday, December 25, 2024

343 An Irrelevant Christmas

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “An Irrelevant Christmas”, originally shared on December 25, 2024. It was the 343rd video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   We are celebrating a birth today that launched the most important events in human history, and it happened through a young woman whose place in human history was otherwise irrelevant. Today, we’re going to find out how that worked.

   Pastor Rick Warren once said that God doesn’t call the qualified. God qualifies the called.

   Sometimes, that happens in unexpected ways.

   I read a story the other day about a famous doctor who was being given a tour of the Tewksbury Institute, a combination physical and mental hospital, in Massachusetts.

   At one point, he bumped into an elderly floor maid and then struck up a conversation to cover his embarrassment.

   It turned out that the maid had worked there almost from the beginning.

   She took him down into the old basement and showed him some small, rusty, prison cells.

   She pointed to one and said, “That’s the cage where they used to keep Annie Sulivan.”

   “Who’s that?”, the doctor asked.

   She said that Annie was brought in as a young girl because no one could do anything with her. She’d bite people and throw her food at them. She’d thrash around and scratch, and no one could examine her.

   So, one night, the floor maid baked Annie a batch of brownies after work. She took them to Annie’s cage and left them where she could reach them. Then she said to her, “Annie, I baked these brownies just for you. I’ll put them right here on the floor and you can come and get them if you want.” Then, she said, she got out of there as fast as she could. 😊

   The maid said that Annie ate the brownies, and after that she was a little bit nicer to her. So, she would talk with her, and even got her laughing once.

   One of the nurses saw this and the medical and psychiatric staff asked the floor maid if she would help with Annie, and she did. Every time they wanted to see Annie, she would go into the cage first and explain what was happening, and why, and she would stay with Annie and hold her hand.

   That’s how they discovered that Annie was almost blind.

   After they had worked with her for a tough 12 months, the Perking Institute for the Blind opened a place for Annie and she was able to study and to learn, and eventually she became a teacher herself!

   One day, Annie came back to Tewksbury for a visit, and the director talked with her about a letter he had just received.

   A man had written to him about his daughter, who was totally out of control, almost like an animal. He wrote that she was blind and deaf and mentally ‘deranged’. He said that he didn’t know what to do, but he knew that he didn’t want to put her in an asylum. He asked if anyone at the institute knew of anyone who could come to his house and work with his daughter, Helen Keller. Annie Sullivan went to that house, and she became Helen’s lifelong teacher and companion. Her story became a Broadway play, a television production, and an award-winning movie, all called “The Miracle Worker”.

   Helen Keller attended Radcliffe College of Harvard University and in 1904 she became the first deaf and blind person in the United States to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. She graduated cum laude. She wrote 12 books, was a prolific speechmaker, was a vigorous social activist, and received many awards. In 1999, she was  listed in Gallup's Most Widely Admired People of the 20th century and as one of Time magazine's 100 Most Important People of the 20th Century. She was a witness for a kind of broadly mystical Christianity.

   When Helen Keller was nominated to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1954, she was asked who had had the greatest influence on her life, and she said, “Annie Sullivan.”

   But Annie Sulivan said, “No Helen, the woman who had the greatest influence on both our lives was a floor maid at the Tewksbury Institute.” I couldn’t even find that floor maid’s name.

   That floor maid may have thought of her life as being irrelevant, but without her there would have been no Helen Keller.

   Billy Graham grew up on a dairy farm in North Carolina during the Great Depression.

   He grew into his teenage years as a popular, athletic, young man with movie star looks. He enjoyed having fun. Some might say that he was a little wild. His father was concerned about him.

   In May of 1934, a group of businessmen from nearby Charlotte, North Carolina got permission to hold a prayer meeting on the Graham farm where a prayer was offered that God would call someone from the Charlotte area to preach the Gospel to the world.

   That same year, some friends talked a reluctant 16-year-old Billy into attending a revival meeting that was being led by a travelling evangelist, Rev. Mordecai Ham. Billy Graham would later say that he became a Christian at one of the evening events during that revival.

   Billy Graham grew up to preach the Gospel on every continent and in most countries of the world. He was the friend of presidents and royalty and regular people alike. He had strict accountability requirements for his staff, and there were no scandals associated with his worldwide evangelistic mass gatherings for which he secured the cooperation of churches of all kinds. He pioneered Christian media. He founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and the World Emergency Fund. He founded “Christianity Today” magazine, which is still highly influential today.

   Millions of people around the world know who Rev. Billy Graham is, but Rev. Mordecai Ham is pretty much unknown today. He may have thought that his life was irrelevant to the world, but without him, there would have been no Rev. Billy Graham.

   Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a young woman, unmarried in a Patriarchal culture in an almost unknown country to the world. It was occupied by the Roman Empire, which was just the most recent of many empires that had occupied Israel for almost 1,000 years. She could have been as young as 12. Try and wrap your head around that for a minute

   Mary was pregnant, and Joseph, who had a legal relationship with Mary that was not yet marriage, knew that he was not the baby’s father. In those days, Joseph could have had Mary put to death for the shame she had brought upon them and their families. But Joseph who, like Mary, had been visited by an angel (a messenger from God) believed that Mary, a virgin, had been made pregnant by the will of God.

   Just then, everyone in the country was ordered to go to their family’s city of origin in order to be registered by the occupying Roman Empire. The Romans wanted to make sure that everyone was accounted for at tax time.

   Mary and Joseph traveled the 90 miles to Joseph’s family town of Bethlehem, by donkey and on foot, in Mary’s ninth month of pregnancy. They arrived and found that people coming into town from all over the country had taken all the rooms. It’s almost inconceivable, though, that Joseph’s relatives couldn’t have found someplace for them. But the out-of-wedlock pregnancy had shamed the family.

   It was not likely that there was no room for them at the inn, but that there was no room for THEM at the inn, or anywhere else with the family.

   They found some shelter in an enclosure for animals and, having no place to put her baby, Mary wrapped him in tight bands of cloth and laid him in the container from which the animals ate their food.

   This is how God, who created everything that exists from nothing as an act of God’s will, was born as Jesus, who was fully God and fully a human being.

   Mary the earthly mother of Jesus, is pretty well known throughout the world today.

   But she would have been utterly irrelevant to history except that she was obedient to God’s will. And that made all the difference.

   It doesn’t matter if we are irrelevant to the world.

   All that matters is that we are so relevant to God that he came from heaven to earth to be born for us, to give his life and to take it back again for us, and that he will come again to take us to be with him forever.

   Christmas is the story of the power of those who the world sees as irrelevant.

   So, this Christmas, be like the infant Jesus. Depend only upon God. Turn to Him and receive His power, for when we are weak, then we are strong.

   Tonight, we may be able to see the moon. When we see the moon, we see the same moon, in the same phase, as everyone else in the world. We see the same moon that Jesus saw when he was born over 2,000 years ago. Mary saw that same moon, and Joseph, and the shepherds. We all share that common experience.

   But the bond that we have with Jesus is even stronger, infinitely stronger, than the shared experience we have with all people of looking at that same moon.

   Today, we celebrate the common relationship we have with God, given to all who will receive it, because Jesus was born in order to restore that relationship for which we were created as an act of God’s will. The relationship that only comes from God.

   And anyone can share that good news with people they know who need to know about Jesus. We only need to listen to the voice of God and follow Jesus to do great things.

   It doesn’t matter if you think that you are irrelevant to the world.

   Let us be like the shepherds who first saw the baby Jesus. They may well have thought that they were irrelevant, but today we know their witness, as in Luke 2:20,

20 The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been told them.

   Share that same good news during this Christmas season.

   The Christmas story is filled with people who were irrelevant to the world, but the power of God enabled them to do great things.

   As Pastor Warren said, “God doesn’t call the qualified. God qualifies the called.” 


Wednesday, December 18, 2024

342 Drones

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Drones”, originally shared on December 18, 2024. It was the 342nd video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.) 

   Lots of people are looking up these days. For drones. There is a better reason to look up, and it promises a much better outcome. Today, we’re going to find out what it us.

   Drones of unknown origin, at least unknown to everyone except those who are flying them, have been popping up on both coasts of our country lately. They have been producing a lot of weird reactions. And nobody claims to know where they are coming from.

   Can we have already reached the long-dreaded Artificial Intelligence singularity, when our machines are smarter than we are, find us a nuisance, and are producing more and more of themselves in order to become our robot overlords?

   Or are drones the result of people with bad intentions toward us? Could they be spying on our military and industrial facilities? Or carrying bombs, grenades, mines, or toxic materials? Or are they remotely guided missiles? But, if so, why do they fly at night with lights shining out of them? And why aren’t we using attack drones? Or capture drones?

   Are they experiments paving the way for our long-anticipated flying cars?

   Why doesn’t our government claim to know anything about them? It they can track them with radio waves (and they can), why don’t they?

   Or are they just toys for the affluent. I mean, Amazon and lots of other places have been selling drones for years. I’d bet that we’ll see a lot more of them after the Christmas presents have been opened.

   Some have said that some of the ”drones” are just normal manned aircraft. OK, but some are not.

   And that could be an opportunity!

   When I served at a Lutheran church in San Dimas, there was a family there whose young sons competed in shotgun shooting contests around California and the Southwest and did quite well. One day, I was talking with their parents after church and said that I might have found a career path for them. I had read that some police departments were finding and training shotgun marksmen to shoot down drones!

   And lots of people today are calling for just that.

   The problem is that you can’t do it over a populated, or even a developed, area because pieces of metal could fall on people, and flames could set structures on fire. We would have to weigh risks and rewards.

   And maybe whatever is up there is being blown out of proportion by our fears.

   “The War of the Worlds” was a 1938 radio dramatization of a story by H.G. Wells about creatures from outer space invading New Jersey. Unfortunately, people who didn’t tune-in on time to hear the introduction didn’t know that it was a dramatization, and thought it was real, causing mass panic across the United States. Their enemy was literally fear itself.

   Sally and I, and our son James and his girlfriend Nicole, watched the movie, “Godzilla Minus One” the other day. As with previous Godzilla movies, it was a representation of the Japanese psyche after World War II and the destructive power of nuclear weapons, and the fear of them continuing to today.

   Maybe our current fear of the unexplained appearance of drones is a product of both our fear of the unknown and the rising tension between world powers and the prospect of all-out war.

   Perhaps our fear of drones is related to our guilt today that we are so relatively affluent and at peace while most of the world suffers, and our fear that our way of life may be overwhelmed by people who are literally willing to die in order to enter into our country.

   Whatever is going on, at least it has a lot of people looking up!

   And that’s exactly what we are supposed to be during Advent, as in Psalm 24:7-8,

7        Lift up your heads, O gates!

and be lifted up, O ancient doors!

that the King of glory may come in.

8        Who is the King of glory?

The Lord, strong and mighty,

the Lord, mighty in battle.

   The Messiah, the King of Glory, who came at the first Christmas, is coming again in the Last Judgement!

   In this last Sunday in Advent, we celebrate what was fulfilled in Mary, the Mother of God, among people who had waited for 1,000 years. We celebrate that God always keeps God’s promises, even when it seems to be taking a very long time.

   This is an important lesson for we who have been waiting for Jesus’s second coming for 2,000 years.

   What do drones do? The give us a longer vision.

   They could be exploring and seeing new things, or seeing old things from a new angle, or invading privacy, or causing harm. It depends upon how they are used.

   Drones could be like nitroglycerine: able to blow up bridges, or able to heal the human heart.

   Which one is up to us.

   So, which is it? What are we looking into the skies for this Christmas? One who comes to destroy, or one who comes to save?

   Jesus said, in John 10:10,

10 The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

   The abundant life that Jesus came to give now begins in Mary, in the gospel reading that will be shared in the vast majority of churches all over the world this Sunday, Luke 1:39-55, beginning with verses 39-45,

39 In those days Mary set out and went with haste to a Judean town in the hill country, 40 where she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth. 41 When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the child leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit 42 and exclaimed with a loud cry, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb. 43 And why has this happened to me, that the mother of my Lord comes to me? 44 For as soon as I heard the sound of your greeting, the child in my womb leaped for joy. 45 And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.”

   What is a drone?

   Drones are also known as the worker bees that surround a queen bee, mindless doing her bidding, in a hive-mind. Like the undead drones in Star Trek’s Borg cube. Like those today who follow their party, or their ideology, or their social media tribes, reading only that which confirms their bias, seeking only to be validated.

   Living the abundant life of Jesus Christ, however, is something glorious, as in when a human being does the will of God, even while they live as ones who are both saints and sinners!

   Mary’s life had changed. She was what we would consider a girl, possibly as young as 12. The Angel Gabriel had told her Jesus was coming., that Jesus would be born from her, the virgin Mary. We read it in the verses immediately preceding this coming Sunday’s Gospel reading.

   But now, in today’s verses from Luke, it was getting real. Even John the Baptist was excited, and he was in Mary’s relative Elizabeth’s womb! Yup. That was John the Baptist leaping for joy in there. 😊

   So yes, John the Baptist is present in the second, and in the third, and now in the Gospel reading for the fourth Sunday in the season of Advent! 😊

   How did Elizabeth know what was going on? The same way as any of us knows what’s going on, as we read today, “And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit.”  

   She saw that the Messiah, the deliverer, the Son of God, Jesus, was about to be born of Mary. The Natal Star, the Nativity, were coming.

   How do we celebrate that first coming and prepare for the Second Coming of Jesus?

  Look up!

   As Jesus says in Luke 21:28,

28 Now when these things begin to take place, stand up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.”

   Redemption is coming! We celebrate and prepare for it as Mary does, in the conclusion to our Gospel reading for this coming Sunday, in Luke 1:46-55,

46 And Mary said,

“My soul magnifies the Lord,

47       and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,

48       for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant.

Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed;

49       for the Mighty One has done great things for me,

and holy is his name.

50       His mercy is for those who fear him

from generation to generation.

51       He has shown strength with his arm;

he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.

52       He has brought down the powerful from their thrones,

and lifted up the lowly;

53       he has filled the hungry with good things,

and sent the rich away empty.

54       He has helped his servant Israel,

in remembrance of his mercy,

55       according to the promise he made to our ancestors,

to Abraham and to his descendants forever.”

   What was unique in Mary? Nothing. Mary just believed what had been revealed to her. As Elizabeth said, “blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.”

   It’s the same longing that we have at Advent, as we celebrate one coming of Jesus Christ and watch for the second.

   Jesus is coming. Invite someone who you know needs a new life to repent and to know Him. Let us prepare the way for Jesus Christ.

   And look up!