Sermons

Blue Christmas - "Unmasked by Grace" – John 1

John 1:1-5, 14, 16-18

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. all things came into being through him, and without him, not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.

And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth. From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace. The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever seen God. It is God, the only Son, who is close to the Father's heart, who has made him known.


I came across a poem by Shel Silverstein some time ago, and put it in the hopper as something that might be good to remember, or to use, or at least just to read again for my own edification and inspiration. It’s a poem called “Masks,” that takes on a whole different meaning for me than I originally thought it might, when I considered it again in the dim days of Advent and with the idea of Blue Christmas swimming around in my mind. Of course, Shel Silverstein, the author of The Giving Tree, Where the Sidewalk Ends, and A Light in the Attic writes poems and stories that are always better if you can see the drawings that go along with them. So… “Masks” is short and sweet, and looks like this:

At first blush, it’s enough if this poem is about being yourself in every way that God might have created you to be. Imagine all the ways we hide our true selves from one another and the world. We wear masks that change the color or style of our hair. We put on masks that cover up all variety of physical features we’d like to keep hidden. We use masks to cover up our insecurities and our dreams, even, if we think – or if someone has told us – that we shouldn’t feel that way or dream that big, or whatever. We use masks, sometimes to pretend we’re okay when we’re not and masks and some use masks to pretend they’re not okay when they’re really just fine. We use masks too much of the time to blend in, then, and to not stand out, to not be seen, in ways maybe we should be.

And Shel Silverstein reminds us that if we’re hiding something about ourselves that matters, and if we’re waiting for someone else who looks or acts or believes the way we do, there’s a very good chance that someone else is in hiding, just the same, and that we’ll never meet or know about each other if we keep ourselves “hid,” as the poem goes. And wouldn’t that be a shame?

But the poem got my attention in a different way this time around – again with Advent and Blue Christmas on the brain – because what the boy and girl were hiding behind their masks just happened to be “blue.” Again, “blue” as something to hide, could just as easily mean “afraid” or “addicted” or “recently diagnosed” or “gay” or “abused” or “bankrupt” or “stressed beyond our limit” or any host of things we’d just as soon keep hidden behind a mask from the rest of the world.

And maybe that’s why Shel Silverstein picked “blue” instead of “red” or “orange” or “purple” for his poem. Maybe he chose “blue” because whatever it is we hide isn’t good for us. I think this “blue” that we keep hidden behind a mask – whether it’s the thing itself or the sadness, despair, and loneliness that comes from living our lives in hiding – is what God means to uncover for us at every turn, and especially at Christmas. And it’s the kind of “blue” I mean for this worship service – this “color of Christmas” – to be about.

I can’t tell you how often I’ve been told by any number of people that they didn’t come to a particular event, or they weren’t in church one particular Sunday, or they couldn’t sit through the rest of a worship service, even, because they were just too sad, or struggling with too much, or knew they wouldn’t be able to sing, or serve, or stick around for small talk, pretending that everything was okay in their world. In other words, they just didn’t have the energy for the mask. (Notice how big and cumbersome Shel Silverstein paints the masks to be.)

And I understand, believe me. Between you and me, there are plenty of days when I’m only here because it’s my job to be here. I’m as good with a mask as any of you. But I also believe it’s on those days, at those moments, during those times in our lives when we’d rather bury ourselves under the covers or stay at home, safe and secure and secluded… when we’d rather keep our friends and our family, the world, and our God, even, at a distance…those are the times when God might just be inviting us to let ourselves be seen.

And I understand that “for everything there is a time and a season under heaven,” but in those moments when we’re hiding behind – or hiding from – whatever it is we’d rather keep to ourselves, we might just be better off making our confession; or singing a song; or hearing a good word; or praying a prayer, or whatever. When we stay hidden behind our masks or locked up and locked away in our grief or our fear or our struggle or whatever it may be, we are denying the reality – and missing the chance to see – that so many others are very often right there with us, struggling or suffering or scared, just like we are.

And that doesn’t always make things better, but the truth of that removes the illusion that any one of us can expect to be happy and content and without struggle and sadness at every moment.

Which is one of the greatest gifts of God, in Jesus, at Christmas, in the end. By choosing to show up, in the flesh, God takes off God’s own mask, and invites us to remove ours, too. Not only are we free to be just who and how God created us to be, but we are free and encouraged to feel just exactly who and how we are feeling – faithful and afraid; loved and lonely; hopeful, but grieving.

God shows up, in Jesus, to live this life we live with all of its struggle. God shows up, in Jesus, to teach us that light comes in the morning; that forgiveness is offered for sins; that what is lost can be found; that life follows death, even. God shows up, in Jesus, so that we can stop pretending we’re alone in this; so that we can stop searching for what seems elusive; so we can see in each other the face of this Christ: the common ground of our humanity, the forgiveness of sins, the light in our darkness, the life everlasting.

God shows up in Jesus, not to end all of our suffering and struggle, but to unmask it, to uncover it, to expose it to the light of God’s grace in one another, and to help us to bear it and to forgive it and to hope in spite of it, that it will all be redeemed by God’s grace, in the end.

Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.

"Mary and Elizabeth: Transcending Women" – Luke 1:39-45

Luke 1:39-45

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


For perspective of course, we need to know, or be reminded some, of what happened to Mary before she makes her way to visit her Aunt Elizabeth, with the news of her pregnancy, which is what she’s up to in today’s Gospel. There was an angel, remember, who appeared with all sorts of news for the young girl: that she had found favor with God; that the Holy Spirit would come upon her and that she would conceive and bear a son; that the child would be holy, that he would be called “Son of God”; that she would name him Jesus, because he was going to save his people from their sins. Oh, and that she should not be afraid about any of this, even though she was a virgin.

But it’s no wonder she got the heck out of town and headed for the hills to make her way to Zechariah’s place to find Elizabeth’s. And I like to wonder about all the reasons Mary left, like she did, and went to see her aunt and uncle. Maybe she went to Elizabeth because the angel told her aunt she was pregnant, too. Maybe she went to Elizabeth and Zechariah, because they were the cool aunt and uncle, she knew would help her out of this mess, or at least might help her explain things to her parents. Maybe she went to Elizabeth because Zechariah was a priest – a faithful man of God – who could confirm or deny whatever the heck was going on with those angels. Maybe she went, just because they lived in the hills, outside of town, and she could hide out there for a time, until she figured out what to do next.

Maybe…Maybe…Maybe. We can’t know exactly what drove Mary to Elizabeth out in the hill country of Judea. There may be a bit of truth to all of the above, for all I know. But I always feel under-qualified and ill-equipped to pretend I can make guesses about what a young girl, unmarried and pregnant, in first-century Palestine, might have been thinking or feeling or up to, in Mary’s shoes.

But I was reminded about something I’d seen several years ago on YouTube – a reading from Kelly Corrigan. I’ve shared a reading of hers with you once before. If you haven’t heard of her, Kelly Corrigan precedes Glennon Doyle Melton, of Momastery fame, in the literary genre of motherhood memoirs, but they seem to be cut from the same cloth. Anyway, something she wrote made me think of today’s Gospel, and gave me another way to imagine what Mary might have been up to when she ran off to find Elizabeth:

Now, because I pay attention to the way my wife is friends with her friends, it seems to me women are hard-wired for – or at least better at – this sort of thing than most men, and that we could all learn a thing or two from their example. 

See, I wonder if Mary was looking for that kind of “circling,” that kind of transcendence, when she ran off to see Elizabeth. Maybe she needed a friend, a shoulder, a confidant. Maybe she needed a confessor, a partner in crime, someone to limp with, or someone to carry her through whatever was to come. Maybe she needed advice or comfort or encouragement. Maybe she was looking for a second opinion, or a way to help the time pass more quickly, or a belly laugh, or a howling cry of understanding and compassion.

And it seems to me that’s what she found in her Aunt Elizabeth. It seems some sort of transcendence – some stirring of the Holy Spirit – did transpire between Mary and her aunt.

And I wonder if that might not be our call and quest in these last days before our celebration of Christmas. I wonder if we’re called to be as bold and faithful and brave as Mary and Elizabeth – and as Kelly Corrigan and her friends – to offer that kind of holy, circling, transcendence to one another.

Maybe we need something from someone, ourselves. Maybe we have something to give to somebody else. Maybe there’s a shoulder to be offered, a tear to be shed, a confession to make, forgiveness to extend. Maybe the coming of this savior – for us and through us – will send us running, not with fear or despair, but running with hope and expectation, boldness and courage to grow relationships that matter, for a change; to grow deeper connections with others – that change us and that change the world in return. And maybe, all of this will happen, this time around, in ways that the coming of a child can inspire and that only the grace of God will allow.

Amen