Sunday, December 28, 2014

Probably the most unique movie debut of recent times took place this past week with the release of “The Interview.”  It’s a comedy about two TV show hosts who decide to try and interview Kim Jong-Un, the young, eccentric leader of the People’s Republic of North Korea.  The plot twist involves the CIA, which recruits them to assassinate Kim as they interview him. The film stars James Franco, who I know from OZ and The Rise of the Planet of the Apes.  He incidentally has 10 movies in production.  And Seth Rogen, who had a continuing role in the TV series Arrested Development and played the Green Hornet in – The Green Hornet.

What you know if you’ve been listening anywhere is that Sony pictures suffered a computer breach in the last weeks that was purportedly linked to the release of the film.  At first Sony halted the film’s release over fears that acts of terrorism might take place at theatres.  Since then it has been released and is doing quite well, thank you.

It’s amazing how these things work out, isn’t it?

Well, I jotted down a list of much less frantic movies releases at Christmastime over the past years and much better (I understand) movies.  Here are a few: How about raising your hand if you think you may have seen it first at Christmastime:

To Kill a Mockingbird
The Sting
The Bucket List
As Good as It Gets
Les Miserables
War Horse
The Aviator
The Trip to Bountiful
Avatar
The Return of the King
Alvin and the Chipmunks:  The Squeakquel
Marley and Me
National Treasure Part Three
Django Unchained
Sherlock Holmes
Babes in Toyland

I was 6 when my mother trundled us to downtown Minneapolis on the bus to watch “Babes in Toyland,” what Walt Disney hoped would be a second “Wizard of Oz.”
And if you’re a fan of Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Princess Leia, and Chewbacca the Wookie you know already what’s coming out next Christmas:  Star Wars:  The JJ Abrams’ version.  (Light saper strokes here).

But here enacted on this stage as it were is the ultimate Christmas drama.  The irony is that across our culture today there are millions of people, children especially, who don’t associate the day of Christmas with Jesus at all.  Between the Grinch, and Santa, and Rudolph, and what have you, even if they hear the name “Jesus” it’s liable to sound like one more character out of someone’s imagination. 

The ability to differentiate between what is real and what isn’t comes along somewhere in a child’s early years, but for a significant time he or she won’t be able to tell the difference between “believing in Santa” and believing in Jesus Christ.  My wife Kristin tells how as a girl her mother almost lost her faith entirely when she was told that Santa wasn’t real.

It’s why if you name yourself a follower of Jesus I think it pays to ex-nay on the anta-Say.  Beyond being able to present Jesus unambiguously to your child or grandchild, the other reason to judicious about using Santa – even to inspire generosity - is that Santa is a pawn of consumerism.  Everything from cars to computers to candy is in the big sack.

But it wasn’t a movie studio that determined the “release date” of Jesus.  As St. Paul said to the gathering of new believers in the province of Galatia:  “When the right time finally came.” 

Not geological time.  Certainly not human timekeeping.  God’s time.  We were reminded a few Sundays ago by the verse from Peter:  With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.

Something about that era met criteria of which we will likely ever know except that in God’s timing it was “the right time.”  And so came Jesus into human flesh.

In fact if you want to see a stunning depiction of these things in  a movie see The Nativity Story starring Keisha Castle-Hughes, a young woman of Maori descent and Oscar Isaac from Guatemala. 

As we’ve been saying these past weeks. God was in the process of fulfilling promises that he had made through his people, the nation of Israel, for centuries.  And they came to pass in this place.  No billboards, no fanfares, no parades.  In fact, though we know about the star of Bethlehem and angels and shepherds it was likely a modest group that knew anything at all about this boy being born.

He wasn’t given his name, Jesus, for a week.  That was Jewish custom.  A child wasn’t named until it seemed as if he or she would survive.  He was given the name the angel Gabriel had spoken to Mary.  Jesus.  Jeshua.  Joshua.   

And they did what Jewish parents had been enjoined to do since the days of the Exodus.  Bring a first-born son to the temple in Jerusalem and present him to the Lord.  As a memorial to the Passover, when God freed the children of Israel from bondage in Egypt.  So they were to offer a sacrifice.  At the same time Mary fulfilled what she as a woman of her day had to do to purify herself after having given birth.

What may be helpful to remember in all this is that Luke is not writing the biography of Jesus here.  He’s writing the Gospel – a telling of the good news that Jesus embodied and lived out to the end of his life on earth and beyond.  So beyond the encounter we’ve read today there is only one other account of Jesus during his growing years: when Mary and Joseph took him to the Temple at the time of his Bar Mitzvah or coming of age. And he disappeared from their company only to be found in the temple talking with the elders.  Who marveled at his wisdom.

Here it was Anna, an 84 year old  woman who sought God her whole life long, including almost seventy years that she had lived as a widow.  She saw Mary and Joseph and the baby Jesus and knew immediately that he was God’s answer to the pain of her people. 

Like Anna, Simeon was a prophet, meaning he knew something about putting God’s word to work in our lives.  He was filled with the Holy Spirit, who had revealed to Simeon that in his lifetime he would lay his eyes on the coming Messiah.
Can you even imagine being promised something like that? Wouldn’t it entirely captivate you and give direction to your life?

Here are some of the promises I’d like to make to young people today:
In your lifetime you will see the end to our dependency on fossil fuels.
In your lifetime you will see a human colony on another planet.
In your lifetime you will see the perceived differences between people of different skin colors disappear.
In your lifetime nuclear weapons will be turned into engines for atomic power and that is all.
In your lifetime HIV/AIDS will be defeated, along with malaria.
In your lifetime the conflict between Israel and Palestine will be settled in a way that brings peaceful justice for all parties.
I would love to say to someone who is young, in your lifetime you will experience the coming again of Jesus Christ.

But we don’t know that and never will.  Like a thief in the nights, scripture says.
And Simeon took the babe in his arms and held him close and said,  “Lord, let know Thy servant depart in peace, according to Thy word.  For mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared before the face of all people.  A light to lighten the Gentiles and the glory of Thy people, Israel.”

Come to think of it, I wonder if Simeon wasn’t simply one of those people that we meet every day who are convinced beyond a doubt that, as the old hymn says,
“God is working His purpose out as year draws into year.  God is working His purpose out, and the time is drawing near.  Yes, nearer and nearer draws the time, the time that shall surely be when the earth will be filled with the glory of God as the waters cover the sea.”

Postscript:  Someone commented to me about this passage after I had delivered the sermon that he hoped that Simeon in fact uttered his "nunc dimittis" over every child that came into the temple!"  What a word of promise that would have been to every parent, and every child.

Amen.