Sunday, December 16, 2012

Christmas Shoes Sharing



Luke 3:7-18
John the Baptist proclaims, “I baptize you with water, but one who is more powerful than I is coming.”  Who is coming?  Who are we preparing for?  Who is this character whom John the Baptist speaks of?
These days it is easy to think we are preparing for Santa Claus.  The good news of Santa Claus proclaims, “Blessed are the rich. Blessed are the powerful.  Blessed are the religiously correct.”  Santa Claus says, “Love your family.  Love your friends.  Enjoy a festive dinner.  Befriend the well dressed, the healthy, the young, the comfortable, and the respectable.”
            What we are really preparing for is Christ.  The gospel of Christ proclaims, “Blessed are the poor in spirit.  Blessed are the meek.  Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for justice.”  Jesus says, “Love the stranger.  Love your enemies.  Befriend the hungry, the naked, the sick, all ages, the homeless, and the prisoners.” 
            Santa Claus proclaims that “Christmas comes that we may have things more abundantly.”  God proclaims that “Christ comes so that we may have life more abundantly.”  Regardless of how much we may like the things we receive at Christmas from friends, family, and Santa Claus, I hope that we can recognize who it is that is coming to us this day.  It is Jesus.  He is more powerful than you or I, even more powerful than John the Baptist.  He is bringing to us the good news of the gospel.
            In the meantime, John’s job is to prepare us for the coming of Christ.  To prepare us for the coming of a babe born in Bethlehem.  To prepare us for the second coming of Christ at the end of the world.  Last week, we heard John proclaim, “Prepare the way of the Lord.”  This week we pick up right where we left off.  So the crowd asks, “What then should we do?”  John tells them to share their coat with the coatless.  To share their food with the hungry.  Then to a few specific groups of people he says, “Do not collect more than is yours” and “Be satisfied with your wages.” 
               At the core of John the Baptist’s message is to share.  This is something we learned or should have learned at a young age.  It is something I am reminded of every time that the song “Christmas Shoes” comes on the radio.  Maybe you have heard the song, read the book, or seen the movie that is based on this song.  The chorus goes like this:
“Sir, I want to buy these shoes for my Mama, please It's Christmas Eve and these shoes are just her size Could you hurry, sir, Daddy says there's not much time You see she's been sick for quite a while And I know these shoes would make her smile And I want her to look beautiful if Mama meets Jesus tonight.”
Lately I have witnessed some incredible sharing in our local community – Christmas Shoes sharing.  The first weekend in December people in our congregation shared, out of our abundance, with thirty families in this area who are living in scarcity this holiday season.  As over one hundred people gathered in the front of the sanctuary for a photo before we left to make our deliveries, I was amazed at people’s willingness to share with others.  In addition to those people, all of the confirmation small groups and the high school youth group helped as well.  What a gift of Christmas Shoes sharing.
            Recently, I was in conversation with one of the staff of Lutheran Social Services.  She was telling me that the staff off Lutheran Social Services adopt someone in their stepping stones program.  This is a program that reaches out to 16-20 year olds in our area to provide affordable housing and independent living skills.  When these young people make their wish lists things like toothpaste, toilet paper, socks, and gloves appear.  Of course the staff help provide those basic necessities, but they also make sure to get them a fun gift as well.  They want to share beyond gifts of basic necessities.  What a gift of Christmas Shoes sharing.
            As a member of the Board of Directors of the Lutheran Campus Ministry at the School of Mines and Technology, I was surprised at our recent meeting to hear about another opportunity of sharing happening in our midst.  They put up an angel tree in the campus center.  College students, people who are accruing student loans at a high rate and possibly eat Ramen Noodles and Easy Mac for many meals, share gifts with children in our community who may otherwise not have a gift to open this Christmas.  What a gift of Christmas Shoes sharing.
            We see acts of sharing and kindness happening all around us.  We see gifts given.  We see love shared.  We see joy passed along.  We see prayers lifted up.  All of this sharing points us to God.  That was John the Baptist’s job – to point us to Jesus, to point us to the one who would come after him.  May our giving, our sharing, our loving, our prayers and all that we do we continue to point others to Jesus.  That is our job.  In the midst of pain and suffering.  In the midst of hardship and homelessness.  In the midst of hurt and sorrow.  In the midst of war and school shootings.  In the midst of death.  It is our job to point others to Jesus.  It is our job to share the hope of the resurrection – the risen Christ, the one who overcame death and sin so that we would live forever.  It is our job to share the joy and the hope of the New Jerusalem, when there will be no death, no mourning, no crying, no pain. 
I think beyond the crowd’s question of what they should do is a bigger question of why they should be the ones to prepare the way.  Why is it our job?  That role falls to each of us, too.  It is our job to prepare the way.  It is our job to prepare for the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords.  It is our job because of what Christ has done for us.  Christ has come and made us holy.  Christ has called us his own and loved us just the way we are.  It is not about anything that we have done.  It is all about what Christ has done.  Because of the gift of grace that has been freely given to us we respond by preparing the way, by making the paths straight.  It is our job to share what we have been given.  It is our job to share the Christmas Shoes.  Amen.

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