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SERMON:
Luke 2:21
When eight days were completed for the circumcision of the
Child, His name was called JESUS, the name given by the angel before He was
conceived in the womb.
Dear fellow Christians:
January 1st, was a noteworthy
day. It was noteworthy not only because it was New Year's Day according to our
calendars, but also because it was the eighth day of the twelve days of the
Christmas season. When we look at what happened on the eighth day of that first
Christmas, we find an important event. Now, Scripture doesn't tell us much
about the Lord's childhood, but we are told about that particular day. An
important day in the life of Jesus, it was the day of His circumcision.
Circumcision was the outward sign God had given to the
Jews that they were children of the promise. It was similar in significance to
the New Testament sacrament of Baptism. It reminded the Israelites that they
had been set apart as the people from whom the Savior of the world would be
born—that they were the people of the covenant.
The eighth day was also significant in the life of Jewish
boys because it was the day they were officially given their names. In the case
of Jesus, there was no suspense or surprise about the name He would have.
Before He was born, even in an age without ultrasound machines, Mary already
knew she was having a boy, and she knew what He would be called. Nine months
earlier she had been visited by the angel Gabriel who had told her “You will
be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus” (Luke
1:31 NIV).
I.
Notice when Jesus’ name was chosen. Luke
recorded for us in our text that this was “the name given by the angel
before He was conceived in the womb.” See the timing of the choosing
of Jesus' name. The name was chosen before Jesus had ever been conceived. It
was picked out beforehand. Can this tell us something about God? Does it mean
something for us?
This tells us that God was sure this was going to happen.
Imagine a mother saying to her friends, “Yes, and the name of my next child
will be...” when she doesn't even know if she will even have a
child in the future. There was no such trouble in the case of Jesus. God knew
this was going to happen, because He had been planning this birth for a long
time. He had been getting ready for it in many ways. He was sure of it.
Down to the last detail everything had been made ready.
For hundreds of years the prophets had been announcing that the Savior would be
born. They had been telling the people to get ready. The wheels of history had
been turning in this direction—turning faithfully toward the manger and the
swaddling clothes and the shepherds in the field.
Mary, the mother, and stepfather, Joseph, were in place.
They were descendants of King David as had been prophesied. The family had been
brought to Bethlehem by royal decree, so that too had been worked out and
fulfilled prophecy.
God knew what He was doing, and this birth was no
accident. It was planned and carried out in the mind and by the power of God.
It was specially engineered by the Father in Heaven—specially engineered for
you. It is because of you that God got everything ready like this. Because
you needed someone to save you from yourself. You’re not perfect. You never
have been and you never will be, so someone needed to come for you and live a
life that really could please God. This Jesus came to do.
God was sure about all this. He didn’t change His mind
back and forth even when He saw mankind on earth sinning against Him and
straying away from Him like foolish sheep. That isn’t the kind of God you have.
You don’t have a God who one minute determines to help you and the next minute
decides to withdraw that help. That’s how we are sometimes, and so we tend to
think of God in those terms too. We think sometimes that God gives things to us
and takes them away on a whim without any thought for our feelings and needs.
But God isn’t fickle that way. You can count on the fact that He is absolutely
unchanging with regard to His decisions and judgment. That’s a great blessing
for it means also that His love toward you does not change and you need never
doubt it.
Jesus was named before He had been conceived. This tells
us too that God was excited and anxious to send this child.
When you see a husband and wife paging through a baby name
book before a child is officially “on the way,” it means they are very anxious
to have a baby. How much more does it mean when God chooses a name for His Son
even before the child has been conceived! It means God was eager for this Child
to come into the world! God was not only sure He was going to save you, but He
was eager to do so! God couldn't wait to send Him to you!
That’s how the Lord is with you. He can’t wait to share
with you His greatest gifts. When you sometimes think that He is slow and
forgetful with His blessings, He perhaps has them named already in preparation
for sharing them with you. Have you ever thought of that?
It does not give our Heavenly Father any joy when He sees
His children depressed and sorrowing any more than we earthly parents are
joyful when a child of ours is hurting. So it did not give God joy to see the
world fall under condemnation for its sin, so He sent His only begotten Son—not
to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. Indeed,
God wanted with all His heart to do this for you.
II.
The name “Jesus” also fit this Child perfectly. We have
something of an interest in names “fitting” people too. My sister and I had a
game we would play sometimes. We would see people in a mall or in a grocery
store and we would try to guess what their names were. Sometimes we were able
to find a sneaky way to tell if we were right. For example, by getting behind
them in a checkout line and overhearing a conversation. During this game wee
would ask each other things like, “Does she look like an Amy or
a Nancy? I don’t know, what do you think? With that color of hair
she has to be an Amy!”
Did you know people have certain stereotypes in their
minds when it comes to names? Many hear a name and they make some kind of
association, sometimes without even thinking about it. I found a survey on the
computer about name stereotypes. I discovered that 45% of people think the
name Alfred suggests a grumpy old guy. 63% think Brad suggests
a high school athlete. Ashley is a cheerleader. Mary is
a Sunday School teacher. Shelly is a hairdresser. Mario is
a drug dealer, and so on.
What do you think the Lord’s mother thought when the angel
said to her, “Jesus”? Would she have thought: Shepherd? Businessman?
Farmer? No, none of these. For there was a clear association with that
name. Jesus is the same name as the Hebrew Joshua. They
mean, “Jehovah saves.” Jesus’ name suggested that through Him God would save
all people. It was a name that fit Him perfectly!
It is the name the Apostle Paul proclaimed to the
Philippians when he said of the Lord: “... being found in appearance as a
man, He humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!
Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is
above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven
and on earth and under the earth” (Philippians 2:8-10 NIV).
At the name of Jesus we bow down—for He
is our Savior. At the name of Jesus we rejoice, we enjoy forgiveness,
we find peace, we have hope for all time. Bless His holy name! Amen.
— Pastor David P. Schaller
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