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The Lost Jesus in the Temple and the Image of Dual Care
Education is not just about making a young person good, wise, and decent, but it is also a call for.

We celebrate the feast of the Holy Family. What comes to mind first when we hear the word family? Love? Acceptance? Support? Indeed, it is also a community. Perhaps it also includes responsibility, upbringing, and care. There is also concern about protection. We can say it is God’s work and following God in the mission to create – to create, to create.
I know from my own family that family is also a commitment, looking ahead and thinking one step ahead, parents for their children. In addition, care and fear, and I could probably list many more things.
Today’s Gospel, on the feast of the Holy Family, offers us a picture of two kinds of care. The first is human – very familiar to us. The second is divine and is sometimes quite neglected by us humans. Even though it shouldn’t be, it is.
We have certainly heard what we will read in the Gospel today. In it, we see Joseph and Mary, who, together with the little Jesus, travel to Jerusalem and the temple. And just as they go to the temple to pray, they return home. Nothing unusual.
We have a holiday season; we also go to church every day – to Holy Mass; we also go to visit people every day and then go back home. The way there and the way back. And sometimes we are happy when we are home.
We hear about Mary and Joseph and their care. It is parental care, natural. Even though as soon as the news in the Gospel comes that Jesus was lost to them, someone might say to themselves – typical parents with stressed and hectic lives, they even forgot and lost their child. It’s almost like today.
Well, Jesus is lost. Parents lose their children. What is the first reaction? Fear, pain, worry, discomfort. We would also add arguments and accusations in our time: it’s your fault!
The Gospel is good news; Mary and Joseph will also experience joy. They will find their son. They will find Jesus – not lost, but in the temple, teaching others. Shame-no shame, we have found our son. The worries are gone. The care continues. And as with all good parents, the question comes, gently bordering on reproach – every parent, teacher, employer, or boss knows this.
Mary, as a mother, states: “My son, what have you done to us?” And she continues with justified regret: “Behold, your father and I have been looking for you with sorrow!” Each of us can imagine this fear and concern of a parent. We have it with small children, we have it with young people, and we also have it with adults. We are afraid of people, especially if they are very close to us, especially if we have a relationship with them.
When a child goes to school, parents are concerned that they will arrive and return safely. If a college student goes to boarding school and studies at a university, they are afraid that nothing terrible will happen to him in the city, usually a large one. If someone travels for work or on vacation, a trip, parents are always afraid that nothing will happen.
But there have been enough human considerations and views. Here, we also have an image of a second concern. And it is offered to us by the words of the little Jesus: “Why were you looking for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?”
Jesus warns us to remember another kind of care – education is not only education to make a young person good, wise, decent or successful, but it is also a call for formation – education in faith. And we should not forget this in our families either. Guidance, accompaniment, and faith formation are essential elements of education in families.
Sometimes, it’s hard because even in the family itself, not only in public, we fear this word – faith. It is essential for us, and it is also personal. It is a testimony about God, and it is also about the fact that sometimes we don’t know how to testify at home.
“Dear parents, you are to be where the Father is concerned – you are to be witnesses of faith in the Father.”
Here, I would like to help with something official. Spouses – parents, do you remember the day of your sacramental marriage and one of the questions the priest or deacon asked you? “Do you want to start a family? I ask you before God and the Church. Are you willing to accept children with love as a gift from God and to raise them according to the Gospel of Christ and the laws of his Church?”
And you remember the day of your child’s baptism and the question: “Dear parents, you are requesting baptism for your child. By doing so, you are taking upon yourself the obligation to raise him in the faith, so that he will then keep God’s commandments and love the Lord God and his neighbor, as Christ taught us. Are you aware of this obligation?”
Unfortunately, some may have taken it formally at one point or another but publicly confessed before God that they wanted to bring children to God through active faith. That is a beautiful responsibility and essential care. Just as a young person does not learn to read and write independently – they learn at school, from older siblings, or books by “tracing” the letters – they always need someone or something, the same is true with faith.
As the extraordinary Pope Pius XI wrote in his 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge in his message to the world:
“Faith in the Church cannot remain pure and unadulterated unless it is based on faith in the primacy of the Bishop of Rome. At the very moment when Peter, before all the apostles and disciples, confessed his faith in Christ, the Son of the living God, Christ’s response – rewarding his faith and his confession – was the word about the building of his Church, the only Church founded on Peter as on the rock.”
You, too, dear parents, are to fulfill the words about building the Church, which the Lord founded on the rock, just as fearlessly and resolutely as the Pope, pointing out the evils, injustices, and sinfulness of fascism and Nazism.
Jesus, in his words to Mary and Joseph, says that he is to be where the Father is. I would gently paraphrase his words: Dear parents, you are to be where the Father is – you are to be witnesses of faith in the Father. This care is as serious as caring for anything else. And it is primarily up to you. If you want, keep these words in your heart and let them become reality.
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Feast of The Holy Family, Luke 2,41-52
There are always family holidays on Christmas Eve. All family members try to gather at home, with their parents, to experience them together. Today’s Sunday of the Holy Family should also deepen the sense of family cohesion and togetherness. Let us, therefore, delve into the word of God in today’s liturgy. We could give today’s first reading the title “How great personalities are born“. She was a mother who asked God for a son and dedicated him to God. Like Sarah, Rebecca, or Rachel, Anna was barren, but the Lord heard her prayer full of faith and hope and fulfilled her desire. He gave her a son, Samuel. To bring the required sacrifice to God, Anna travels to Shiloh and gives him her promised son. She took care of him, knowing that she had received him from God, and he made Samuel one of the most significant figures of the judges of the Old Testament.
Children are indeed a gift from God, they belong to Him, and their mission is to serve the Lord God. This is each of our primary missions. Every Christian is, first and foremost, a son of God and belongs to the family of God’s children.The greatest gift that God has given us is that we are children of God, Saint John tells us in the second reading. We are called to be children of God, and look at the great love the Father has given us. The ship of the Son of God has been given to us as a pledge of salvation to reach its fullness.. This is the reason and foundation of our family love and human brotherhood. The story of the finding of the twelve-year-old Jesus in the temple is a fascinating insight into the family life of the Holy Family. It tells us about the annual pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem. The theological message of this story is messianic, and Jesus’s action is prophetic. Jesus shows that he knows his mission well and announces that they will move away from their parents in the future. While Mary addresses Joseph as “your father,” Jesus speaks of God as his Father. His attitude shows that God and the calling he received from him have the highest place in his life, but then he again submits to and obeys his parents.
When Pope Benedict XV established the Feast of the Holy Family in 1921, he wanted to support the family, which was threatened from all sides. He wanted to remind governments in all world countries that the Creator establishes the family and cannot be replaced by anything. He also wanted to remind families directly that Jesus lived most of his life in the family, was raised there, and grew up there. He wanted to remind parents that they are not only at the birth of physical life but also of God’s life, and that the family is a place where children should cultivate virtues and good habits. After 82 years, we see – perhaps even more than then – how important it is still to have these truths before our eyes and apply them in our lives and the lives of society as a whole. Children are obliged to honor their parents. Obedience grows when parents create a suitable space for their children’s growth and personal maturation, where they give first place to God and the mission that God has prepared for them. Children do not belong to their parents but to God and his calling; these are the most important values for a good family. Jesus recognized both obedience and independence in the family of Nazareth. Let us have the example of the Holy Family before us to create good and valuable relationships in our families and communities. Suppose children are to open up to a broader horizon than their own family. In that case, the horizon of parents must also reach further than their children because the highest value is not children but our Lord – the originator of life and our only good
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Feast of the Holy Innocents, Martyrs Matt 2, 13-18
The messenger of God speaks to Joseph in his time of doubt before receiving Mary in a blessed state. He similarly speaks to him and warns him against Herod. He could have spoken to Mary, but Joseph’s central paternal role was to be confirmed in this newly emerging family union, to protect and lead the family. God said to Joseph through an angel. Let us examine and be open to how the Lord most often speaks to us!
He got up, took the child and his mother by night, and went to Egypt.
The flight into Egypt took place under dramatic circumstances when there was no time to explain much, and yet we do not observe in Mary that she has any reservations about Joseph’s decision. Still, she cooperates with him and lets herself be guided by him. She knows that Joseph has considered his choices before God. If only we could accept the decisions and guidelines of our superiors in a similar atmosphere, especially so that we ourselves can consistently recognize God’s will for ourselves and for others.
Our lives, like Joseph’s, are integrated into God’s plans, and often, even ordinary, seemingly insignificant events have an important place and meaning. Estimating one event and overestimating another is inappropriate; each situation deserves special attention and appropriate responsibility.
So, what the Lord said through the prophet might be fulfilled: “Out of Egypt I called my son.”
When Herod saw that the wise men had tricked him, he was furious and had all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity killed from two years old and under…
The deceitful Herod was tricked by those wiser than he. His weakness expresses his fear of power. And where there is weakness without trust in God, it turns into fear that has “big eyes.” Can a defenseless child threaten the ruler of the world? “What are you afraid of, Herod?” He who offers the kingdom of heaven does not seize the kingdom of earth! Herod’s fear and mind, darkened by the lust for power, produce senseless violence. The innocent girls of Bethlehem are similar to Jesus only in their age, and they are already in disgrace. But even this is enough to teach us that anyone who wants to be like Jesus will suffer. Children become martyrs. Those of today, martyred, unwanted in the world, are deprived of life for the lack of our martyrdom, for the lack of sacrifice.
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Feast of Saint John, Apostle and Evangelist, Joh 20,1-8
Let us look at least a little into the tradition and what ancient testimonies tell us about St. John. St. John the Evangelist was the son of Father Zebedee and mother Salome and the brother of St. James the Elder, the apostle. Together with the apostles Peter and James, they formed a kind of most intimate community around the Lord Jesus. They were witnesses of the Transfiguration on the mountain, but they also saw the bloody sweat in Gethsemane. The Lord Jesus gave them the nickname “sons of thunder.” The old tradition preserved in the letter of Polycarp of Ephesus to Pope Victor (189-198) speaks of St. John the Evangelist. Still, it also applies to his brother James, “John, who rested on the Lord’s chest, was by birth a priest and wore a petalon. He was a witness and a teacher. He rests in Ephesus”. According to this testimony, both brothers, James and John, came from the High Priestly family. The petal was the headdress of the high priests. Only the high priests had the right to wear the petal.
Among the Jews, every priest who was not currently in the office of high priest had to earn his living by craft. We see this, for example, in St. Paul, who, in addition to studying at the feet of Gamaliel, nevertheless appears to master the making of tents. Perhaps from these facts, we can better understand the special request of their mother that they occupy more prominent places in the kingdom of God. In a certain sense, this request had its justification. Finally, with Peter the Apostle, who represents the New Testament priesthood, they form a unique, most confidential group around the Lord Jesus. It was known that the Jewish high priest was obliged to watch in prayer in the company of the younger priests the night before the Feast of Atonement. The Lord Jesus does the same on the Mount of Olives. From what we have said, we can understand both the truly theological talent that is manifested in the Gospel of St. John and the unique position that the Apostle James had among Christians of Jewish origin, as well as why St. James the Elder had to be the first of the apostles to die a martyr’s death.
The feast of St. John has been celebrated in the East since the 4th century. It was initially associated with the memory of his brother, James the Elder. According to tradition, St. John worked in Ephesus, was exiled to the island of Patmos under Emperor Domitian, where he wrote the Apocalypse, and after returning to Ephesus, where he wrote his Gospel, died at an advanced age (under Emperor Trajan). A legend also contributed to his veneration in the Middle Ages, according to which, to convert a certain pagan priest in Ephesus, he drank poisoned wine, and nothing happened to him. Another legend says that he was thrown into a vat of boiling oil before the Latin Gate in Rome without being harmed. On this saint’s feast day, wine is blessed in many places. This blessing, influenced by the aforementioned legend, developed from an ancient custom rooted in the ancient Greeks and Romans.
The liturgy of this feast presents St. John as the great herald of the mystery of the eternal and incarnate Word. In the first reading, we hear: “That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our own eyes, which we have looked upon and our hands have handled, this we proclaim: the Word of life. For the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear witness, and proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and was manifested to us” (Jn 1:12). In the prayer of the day, we again ask that we may understand the mystery of the eternal Word, which God revealed to us through St. John, with an enlightened mind and a loving heart. St. John was captivated by the Word, who became flesh and could be looked at with human eyes and touched with human hands. Let us ask through this apostle for respect for the human body, which became the dwelling place of the Word.
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Feast of Saint Stephen, First Martyr Matthew 10, 17-22
Many church celebrations are decorated with some lovely ideas. For example, in the First Holy Communion, the following is written on the cloth in churches: “Let the little ones come to me.” When there are primogeniture, for example, it is written: “You are a priest forever.” For confirmation, for example, “Send your Spirit, Lord.” During the Christmas holidays, the words of angels are most often written: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men of good will.” What would you say if today, on the feast of St. Stephen, we at least mentally wrote a banner with the words: “Beware Christmas! Dangerous to life!?” What kind of meaningless slogan is this? How can Christmas be dangerous to life? After all, they are the most beautiful days of the year. We are comfortable at home. We have received gifts. We have something to eat and drink. We have had or will go to visit. Christmas trees are lit everywhere, and Christmas songs are sung.
The Church is very nice, and the nativity scene was delicious. On TV, all the politicians who bombard us with hate throughout the year wish us good health and peace, while we light a Christmas tree and a candle and make resolutions that they will stop hating. So, what kind of stupidity is it that Christmas is life-threatening? You are right. If we look at Christmas from the perspective of our five senses, we could instead write on the screen: “Stop for a moment, how beautiful you are.” But if we look at Christmas from the perspective of faith or the perspective of the life of our saint today, then Christmas is genuinely life-threatening. After all, if Jesus had not been born, St. Stephen would not be standing before us today as a hero and martyr, as a model of a new life.
So what is it really about? We often say in life: this is my life, these are my affairs, these are my rights, this is my thing, this is my opinion, this is my speech. Behind these general concepts, there is often sad content. Hatred. Meanness. Pride. Falsehood. Envy. Infidelity. Comfort. Careerism. And this is our life, which we protect, love, and are even proud of. And such a life is exposed to the danger of death at Christmas because Jesus was born to give us a different, new, and more beautiful life. A life that St. Stephen also accepted. This happened when, as an adult young man, he received the sacrament of baptism. He accepted not only the sacrament but also the entire teaching of Jesus. He was determined to serve Jesus with his whole life. Therefore, his life shone with the ideal of Christian perfection. He bore witness with his thoughts, words, deeds, and entire personality. Anyone who could see him had to say he was a faithful disciple of Jesus of Nazareth.
His love for others was also manifested in an extraordinary way. Therefore, we cannot be surprised that the apostles also noticed this. Stephen was the first to be chosen when the need arose to serve at tables. He thus became the first deacon of the Church. He could thus bear even greater witness to the new life. He did this by setting an example of service in everyday life and by proclaiming the Gospel. He explained to his fellow countrymen the prophecies of the Old Testament, which were fulfilled in the person of Jesus. He convinced them that the crucified Jesus was the true Messiah, whom every pious Israelite had been waiting for. However, his Master expected another testimony from him.
The most beautiful and difficult testimony – martyrdom. Stephen decided to accept this testimony as well. And at the very moment when they were throwing stones at him to kill him, all his virtues shone in a whole light. He has Jesus on the cross before his eyes and longs to imitate his manner of dying. He sees the open heaven and looks forward to meeting him. That is why he prays for his tormentors, that is why he forgives them and asks Jesus to do the same. And we all know that the first visible fruit of his testimony was the conversion of one of his tormentors, Saul. He also buried the old life within himself and accepted a new life, the life of Jesus, and a new name – Paul.
Do we now understand what kind of life Christmas is dangerous for? It is hazardous for a life in which there is nothing of the life of Jesus and his witnesses. If our senses are happy during these days, then our hearts, reason, and faith should also be happy after Christmas. The heart is because we have decided to give it a new quality of life. After all, we have uprooted all evil from it and planted the seeds of new virtues, and we want them to germinate and bear fruit in us gradually. And reason rejoices because its ability will finally be used.
It will no longer have to work only at a tenth of its capacity as before, when it was only at the service of our senses. It will be filled with the service of love and faith, and help us constantly discover the beauties of new life. And faith will rejoice because it will be anchored entirely in God, as in the source of new life that Jesus gives us and sustains, the Holy Spirit. The heart, reason, and faith will constantly help us bear witness to what we live and believe, even in the most significant difficulty. If we have correctly understood the thought: “Beware of Christmas! Dangerous to life!” We can replace it with a new one: “Beware of Christmas! A chance for a new life!”
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The Nativity of the Lord, Luke 2,15-20
And so we can truly forgive ourselves and not just put on a show during those days that everything is perfectly fine between us. If we want love, we must first give it away and spread it entirely selflessly, without any expectations. It will not fall from the sky on its own. And if we want tolerance and consideration, we must also first and foremost commit ourselves to it. That is, to behave tolerantly and considerately.
And when we count on the whole family getting together, it’s nice because not all families are together today. But Christmas is also experienced by lonely people today, abandoned by their families and forgotten by society. How do they experience a time of joy and cheerfulness? If we count only on the fact that we have enough of everything – both to eat and to drink – let’s thank God for that, too, that we are not in need! That we have a roof over our heads. We have those who care about us, and we care about them. These are not things that are self-evident or automatic. But let’s also think of those who are not allowed this! Let’s think of the seriously ill, for whom this Christmas may be the last in their lives! Let’s think of people who are going through difficult trials. Let’s remember children in hospitals or children’s homes! Let’s think of the unemployed and the needy, who must be modest. How will all of them experience the “Silent and Holy Night”?
Dear believers, why should we ask ourselves such serious questions at the beginning of the holidays? Because we are no longer children, we look at this time differently than we did x years ago. We have to ask ourselves these unpleasant questions because it is reality. Today, the spirit of the times leads us to a material view of these holidays. We are bombarded with challenges about what else we need for a peaceful and wonderful Christmas, or rather, without which we will not survive it happily. We will still be missing some excellent products for a peaceful Christmas…
But let’s not forget that the magic of these days lies in other content. If we do not fill Christmas with spiritual content, if we remain only on a material level, we will enjoy some gifts for a while, but even the best surprise will become commonplace. What I mean is that unless the holidays of the birth of Jesus Christ change us internally and in the long term, unless this time leads us to reflect on life and the values for which we live, unless this time brings us closer to God, to the originator and source of love, peace, tranquility, forgiveness, tolerance, willingness or consideration – then it will not be a time well and entirely spent. As I have already indicated, even during this Christmas, quite a few people are fighting. I am not thinking so much of military conflicts. I am thinking more of the internal struggles of specific people. Seriously ill, abandoned, etc.
Of course, even that first Christmas was anything but ideal. It must have been tough to walk in labor pains crisscrossing Bethlehem and not be accepted with everything taken. It must have been an inner struggle to bring a child into the world among the animals in a stable – in the stench, the dirt, and the harsh conditions of a stone cave. And yet. Neither Mary nor Joseph gave up then. Mary did not protest when she learned she would become Jesus’s mother. Joseph did not protest taking his pregnant fiancée as his wife. They did not protest even against Emperor Augustus’s decree; in the end, in humility, they accepted the manger for animals as a cradle for the newborn baby. All this is in the joy of being at God’s intervention in history, which they could be a part of and participate in, and that they had the grace to bring into the world and continue to raise the future Savior of the whole world.
You are correct that Christmas is still a struggle for many today. For a sick person, this struggle may lie in a decision – will I accept my fate in silence, humility, and at the same time in hope? Jesus also came to carry me through death and give me eternal life in his kingdom… For a person without a job, this struggle may lie in a decision – will I accept into my life that even though I do not work, my life has meaning and value? Even so great that the little boy who was born later laid down his life for me? For a well-off person, the Christmas struggle may lie in a decision – will I think more about and support those who found themselves in need through no fault of their own? God has blessed me incredibly… For our children, this struggle may lie in a decision – will I accept into my young life, in the born Jesus, a model of how to be obedient to parents and authorities, or will I continue to pretend that everything always and every time must revolve only around me? And for parents, the Christmas struggle lies in the decision – will I tell my children about this Jesus more than once a year at Christmas? Will I come to church with them so that from a young age, they will recognize that they, as baptized people, are part of a large family – the church, and will I fulfill the promise I made to God at the baptism of my child? Well, and we could continue like this.
Brothers and sisters, this time is a time of inner struggle for one common cause: whether I will accept the newborn Jesus and the message he brings into my life. Let us, therefore, all open our lives to the One who came so that we may have life in abundance. To the One who came with love, peace, tranquility, reconciliation, forgiveness, and self-sacrifice, He wants to fill this Christmas and the following year with us and our families.
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The Nativity of the Lord-Vigil Mass, Mt. 1, 1-25
I welcome you to our (…) church for this midnight service. We can only contemplate the mystery of Christmas when we can stop and contemplate in silence the message that is proclaimed to us anew year after year. The wonder and attitude of a child are essential means for us to receive the good news of this night. The reason for this joy is straightforward: it is the birth of a child, the Savior of the whole world; it instills new hope in all people who long for peace, justice, and Love. What sign does this child bring us? Vulnerability, poverty, weakness and humility. The Son of God appropriates what the world has categorically rejected. We will only experience the miracle of Christmas peace when we accept the gifts that Jesus brought us. As Pope Paul VI said, Jesus’ peace is the foundation of the “civilization of love.”
The Evangelist Luke speaks of the birth of Jesus Christ. In a simple and yet evocative narrative, he applies the established structure of the missionary proclamation, in which we find three levels: the chronological-historical description of the event, the transmission of the message to the shepherds, the finding of Jesus and the reception of the message of salvation with the subsequent transmission of one’s experience to others. Let us first focus and reflect on the genuinely detailed description of the event based on historical facts: “In those days, a decree went out… And all went to be registered, each to his own town. And Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David…” (cf. Lk 2:1-4). God promised that “the one who is to rule in Israel, whose origin is from of old, from the days of eternity,” will come out of Bethlehem (cf. Mic 5:1). Paradoxical as the course of history is, God will keep his promise. Why? Because Love is patient with details!
Although the description of Jesus’ birth is brief, it nevertheless foreshadows his entire Paschal mystery in detail. “And she gave birth to her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn” (Lk 2:7). She wrapped him in swaddling clothes. – Jesus takes upon himself Adam’s nakedness (“I was afraid because I was naked” Gen 3:10) and needs to be wrapped in swaddling clothes by the loving hands of his mother. Just as he later dies naked and needs Joseph of Arimathea to “wrap him in linen cloths and lay him in a tomb” (cf. Lk 23:53).
In She laid him in a manger. We are accustomed to the manager being an integral part of the Christmas idyll. However, initially, it was a place where food was stored for the animals. In the manger lies the one who will later say: “Take and eat: this is my body” (Mt 24:26) and will offer himself defenselessly as food to those who stand before this mystery like animals before a handful of hay. In this way, she satisfies Adam’s hunger for the fruit “good for eating, beautiful to the sight, and delightful to know,” which the Woman gave him (cf. Gen 3:6). At the same time, she wants it to be the Woman again who will give this new food to every Adam who “in the sweat of his brow” (Gen 3:19) eats bread that is unable to satisfy his hunger. However, one should not reach for the manger as if for the fruit “good for eating, beautiful to the sight, and delightful to know.” On the contrary, one must stoop to the manager. The food placed in the manger is thus available to anyone willing to stoop.
There is no room for them in the inn. – Jesus already takes upon himself the human loneliness caused by sin, to later carry it on his shoulders “to the place called the Place of the Skull, which in Hebrew is Golgotha” (Jn 19:17). Thus, he takes upon himself Adam’s expulsion from Paradise (cf. Gen 3:23), to welcome him there again himself. Love is patient with the details! How can we reciprocate this Love? This will be a sign for you: You will find a baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger. A baby wrapped in swaddling clothes – “All of you who have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ” (Gal 3:27). There was no room for them – “Do not sit in the first place, but in the last place” (cf. Lk 14:7-11). Laid in a manger – “You give them to eat!” (Lk 9:14). In Luke’s passage, we also notice that two motifs complement each other here: the visible poverty of Jesus’ human life and the mysteriously hidden glory of God with which Jesus comes among people. Only a few humble and poor shepherds recognize in Jesus the promised Messiah: This is a unique sign of God, with which a new era in human history and each of us begins. And what about us? Do we recognize him?! Do we worship him?! Do we rejoice that he has come among us again? The reality cannot be denied: “Do not be afraid! I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people: Today in the city of David a Savior has been born to you, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10-11). He is truly Emmanuel – God with us.
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Sermon on Isaiah 62,1-5
Dear congregation, today I would like to reflect with you on a passage from the book of Isaiah that can provide us with comfort and hope in times of uncertainty and change. For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest..
God does not remain silent for Zion. The text begins with a powerful statement. God will not remain silent. In a world where we often feel forgotten by God, this verse reminds us that He actively engages with His people. He is not passive. He hears the cries of the oppressed and sees the suffering of the forsaken. This should encourage us to trust in God even in difficult times.
The promise of righteousness and salvation. Isaiah speaks of righteousness shining forth like a light. This righteousness is not only for Israel but for all nations. God desires His salvation to be visible to all. In a world often marked by injustice, we are called to be light and hope. We should advocate for justice and carry God’s love into the world.
,,A new name. God gives His people a new name. Forsaken becomes ,, Hephzibah” meaning . My delight is in her. This name change signifies identity and belonging, We too can know that in Christ we have a new identity. We are lowed and valuable in God’s eyes. This understanding should shape our lives and encourage us to live out our identity.
The joy of God. The passage concludes with a wonderful promise. God rejoices over us. Just as a bridegroom rejoices over his bride, so does our God rejoice over us. This joy is not dependent on our performance or behavior, but rather is an expression of His unconditional love. Isaiah is a powerful message of hope. It reminds us that God is actively for us, that He desires righteousness and salvation for all people, and that we may live in His love and joy.Let us carry this message into our daily lives and share God’s love with the world.
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