All Roads Lead There

“Lord, it is good that we are here…”
(Matthew 17:4)

I want to begin this week’s message with a word of “Thanks” to all who helped to make the Cherokee Community Theater Production of A Christmas Carol: The Musical such a success. (You may find some pictures at www.cherokeect.org).   To the over 60 cast members, the orchestra, the flight crew, the directors, and the fantastic audience (a sell-out for almost every show), this was truly a fantastic experience.  Performing with such a talented troupe before such an enthusiastic audience every night was a joy, and ending every show with a standing ovation and the (faux) snow coming down while singing “God Bless us Everyone!” is a memory I will carry for a lifetime.

And perhaps that is why this week has come with a tremendous sense of “Post-Production Letdown.”  For three months nearly every evening was spent at the theater in rehearsal, laughing with friends, exploring characters, learning challenging music – being a part of something very special.  The show ended Sunday night, and on Monday I was back at the office, preparing for a committee meeting, studying for a sermon, planning Sunday worship.

One of the best compliments I heard following the show was that we should take the production on the road, that it was better than anything they’ve seen at the Orpheum.  While very kind, I shudder at the thought of trying to take this production anywhere.  After 8 shows over two weekends, I am ready for the show to be over.  Still, I miss being part of something so special, something that worked so well.  Then I tell myself, it wasn’t real.  It was a play, it was Community Theater.  It was great, but it isn’t permanent.  Life will go on, and the bills will keep coming, so it’s back to life, back to reality.

I wonder if this is sort of what it was like for Peter, James, and John, when they were on the mountain with Jesus as he was transfigured before them, with Moses and Elijah appearing, and the voice of God speaking from the heavens.  Okay, it’s probably nothing like that, but I can understand the sentiment of Peter when he said to Jesus, “It is good for us to be here. Let me make three tents, we’ll make camp here, and we can usher in the Kingdom right here and now.”  Peter didn’t want to have to go back down the mountain, to face the real world.  The glory, the joy, the paradise he glimpsed in that moment was something to hold on to.

Or consider Mary.  A new baby in her arms and the shepherds had come to share what the angels had heralded from the sky, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth, peace and good will to men.”  Wise men brought their gifts, rich treasures fit for a king.  But the baby had to grow.  There was no stopping that.  And there was no stopping what was to come.  The prophet Simeon, after blessing the family at the Temple, turned to Mary and warned her, “a sword will pierce through your own soul also.”

The hymn What Child is This? has us sing,

Why lies he in such mean estate where ox and ass are feeding?
Good Christians, fear; for sinners here the silent Word is pleading.
Nails, spear shall pierce him through, the cross be borne for me, for you;
Hail, hail the Word made flesh, the babe, the son of Mary.

This is why He came.  We cannot avoid it, we cannot get around it.  At the center of the history of all mankind stands a cross, and we must come to it, even in the midst of our Christmas.  We must eventually leave the nativity for it.  We must sometime or other come down from the mountain for it.  For it is at the cross where God deals with our sinfulness, it is at the cross where the debt is paid, it is at the cross where forgiveness is found, it is at the cross where the fountain of grace bursts forth.

SDG

“The Lord is in his holy temple; let all the earth keep silence before him.”
(Habakkuk 2:20)

It’s about this time of the Christmas Season when I’ve had about enough.

I know, it’s only started.  Keep in mind, though, I’ve been working on the Christmas Services since September.  We put our tree up at Thanksgiving this year, but for whatever reason, Christ the King Sunday came after Thanksgiving, not before, and now Advent has only just begun and the tree has been out for two weeks.

Then consider the fact that it’s not enough to have Black Friday shopping and Cyber Monday.  Now we’ve got “Doorbusters” on Thanksgiving Day, weeklong advertising leading up to it, and the Christmas music pumped through the shopping centers long before the turkey ever gets cooked – it’s a bit of a Christmas overload.

Call me a Scrooge, if you must, but I’m tired of it.  And I’m really not a Scrooge at all. **Let me shamelessly plug the Cherokee Community Theater one more time in our production of A Christmas Carol the Musical…  Seats are still available, and we have five shows this weekend.  Visit www.cherokeect.org for more details.**  As I was saying, I’m not really a Scrooge.  I do love Christmas.  The music, the message, the decorations, the general good spirit that people have during the season.  What really turns me off to it all, however, is the busyness.

There’s the noise, the lights, the decorations that often times turn to clutter, the general mayhem and madness that we call Christmas.  Then add to that the programs, activities, concerts, etc. that we have to throw in, and Christmas flies right by and you never even notice.  Maybe that’s the point.

We have a general rule in our house that goes something like this: NEVER WAKE A SLEEPING BABY.  Every parent knows the significance of this rule, and how difficult it is to enforce it especially when there are older children in the home.  But a baby resting (and not crying) is a beautiful thing to sleep deprived parents.

So then, what would Mary and Joseph think of the way we celebrate the birth of the Christ-child?  Would they usher us out of the stable saying, “Shh!  The baby’s sleeping.  Take your plastic Rudolf and Perry Como’s Christmas elsewhere.”

One of the ancient carols of the church says,

Let all mortal flesh keep silence, and with fear and trembling stand;
ponder nothing earthly minded, for with blessing in his hand
Christ our God to earth descended, our full homage to demand.

Friends, let me ask you this: When was your last quiet moment this Advent Season?  If you can’t remember, then it’s been too long.  Are you so busy with all the busy-ness of the season that you have forgotten why He came?  He came to bring peace to our hearts, to quiet our souls – but we drown out the silence with noise, noise, noise.  Take a moment right now – stop what you are doing – stop reading this – and quiet yourself before the Lord.

SDG