Sermon Text 2024.12.25 — Infinite gifts in finite wrappings?

December 25, 2024 – Christmas. Texts: Exodus 40:17-21, Titus 3:4-7, John 1:1-3, 14

Dear Friends in Christ,

When you see your gifts piled by your chair you learn from their sizes you are not getting a car. Even in childhood your brain could figure out what might possibly be inside. That is because you understand something. A thing can only hold what will fit inside.
It is said, “The finite is not capable of the infinite.” It seems a good rule of thumb. A new car cannot be where it pleases to be. But the key to a new car could be in a small package. Let’s not rule out God being in a package that is too small. The truth is – and we see this best at Christmas – the Lord is big enough to make himself small. He is without bounds. He was before space and time were. He is above them. He is to come.
“INFINITE GIFTS IN FINITE WRAPPINGS?”
John introduces us to Jesus, born of Mary at Christmas and laid on rude straw, as the God we can see and touch with our hands. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.
When God stuffed himself into Jesus there was nothing left for us to seek or find or figure out. This action transforms all mystery under almighty God.
We don’t need to wonder, “what is He doing up there with all that almighty power?” We marvel in faith that His almighty power is always aiming precisely at what Jesus is about. “The Word became flesh, . . . and we have seen his glory.” And that is a great gift in a small package of swaddling cloth – the gift of faith.
God in Jesus puts the infinite in the grasp of our finite minds. Glory, grace, and truth come down to earth. God’s glory, God’s grace, God’s truth slept in a manger, hung on a cross, tucked in a tomb, rose from the dead.
God fills a finite thing with His infinite saving power. His Word makes water a saving bath. Titus writes that we are given “a washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit.” Justified by Christ’s grace we are heirs with the hope of eternal life.
In the Holy Supper, the finite and lowly, mere bread and wine, by His creative Word are made to contain the body and blood of the infinite-become-finite, the immortal-become-mortal, the God-become-man, the dead-become-alive. God can do what He wants, and what can our simple minds say besides amen to the Word who became flesh.
Learn this Christmas, then, not to doubt what God can fit in the packages He sends you, or count them as small among supposedly bigger things. We have run off after the big, wide world and left behind Jesus, seeming small in the manger or powerless in the darkness on the cross. But in that swaddling flesh is the Word that made it all, the light and life of men – and in that flesh lifted up upon a cross is the glory of God revealed to be seen and to save. We’ve neglected the little packages in which God saves – both the receiving of them and the giving of them – in favor of those big packages that always prove empty in the end.
Thanks be to God, the one little package remains – wrapped as a baby and purple robe and shroud, to be wrapped up then for us in Word and water and bread and wine – and, wrapped up so we can find and have it, this one infinite gift. This Word made flesh tells us that the One who is infinite can be where He wants to be – namely Jesus in Word and Sacrament. He can do what He wants to do there – namely, save you and me. Don’t rule God out because you think He’s too big to fit where He’s told you He is. He fits where He wants to, and does what He wants to do and where – that is here in these things. The Word who made all things and became flesh says so. In these little packages we can grasp, all the mystery of God is wrapped up in his will to save – and where the packages are to be grasped, there is the gift of faith. This gift is yours and may it bring you everlasting joy this Christmas and always.
Amen.