Sand, silver spoon and siblings
Galatians
4:4-7 4But when the set time had fully come, God sent his Son
to be born of a woman, so that he would be born under the law, 5in
order to redeem those under the law, so that we would be adopted as sons. 6And
because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts to shout,
“Abba, Father!” 7So you are no longer a slave, but a son. And if you
are a son, then you are also an heir of God through Christ.
Galatians 4:4-7 is one of the great texts of the
Bible. It teaches the incarnation of Christ, the two natures of Jesus as God
and Man, and that through Jesus as the Son of God and Son of Man, we are made
heirs of the heavenly Father.
These four verses are used in our Lutheran Catechism
to teach to our youth and adult confirmands why Jesus had to be true God and
true Man. I’m sure your pastor drilled the meaning of these verses into you in
Catechism class.
This morning, we’re going to do the same. To help you
remember the importance of these verse, I want you to remember three images
(and because it’s me, there is alliteration) – sand, silver spoon and siblings.
Hopefully, during your Christmas break you’ve been
able to play some board games with your family. Some of the intense ones have
sand times like Boggle, Scattergories, Charades, and Jumanji. When the sand
runs out you need to have all your answers figured out. The time is now.
Imagine God had set a grand sand timer in eternity.
When the sand ran out, that was the exact right time to send his Son into the
world to be its Savior.
St. Paul writes, “When the set time had fully come,
God sent his Son …” What was right about this set time for Jesus to be born?
Looking back, we might discover several reasons why this was the right time.
The Greeks had conquered the known world. Everybody
knew two languages – their native tongue and Greek. When the Gospel was written
in the Greek language, it was easy to share it because everyone knew the language.
The Romans conquered the Greeks and enlarged their
Roman Empire. The people still spoke Greek, but now there was the Pax Romana – the
Roman Peace. This peace allowed the Gospel to be shared as people moved around.
God had all his major characters in place. Joseph was
from the line of David, so God could fulfill his promise of a King from King
David’s line. Joseph and Mary were both Jews, so God could fulfill his promise
to Abraham that the Messiah would be his descendant. Mary was a virgin, so God
could fulfill his promise to King Ahaz that a virgin would give birth to a
child. God used Caesar Augustus to move Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem. David’s
city, to fulfill his prophecy through Micah. God used King Herod to move the
holy family to Egypt to fulfill his prophecy through Hosea, that was our Old
Testament lesson this morning. God used Archelaus, Herod’s son, to fulfill his
prophecy that Jesus would grow up in Nazareth.
These are observations looking backwards in time and
Scripture. The Holy Spirit never lays out exactly why God sent Jesus when he
did. We are simply assured that God sent his Son when the time was exactly right
– “when the set time had fully come.”
The last grains of sand in God’s celestial timer had
fallen from the top chambers and filled the bottom one. Unlike the hurried frenzy
when the sand runs out while we’re playing a board game, everything about God’s
timing projects calm and calculation. We can be certain that this was perfect
timing because it’s the timing that God in his wisdom had chosen since before
time. For millennia, God had promised to send a Savior, and when the set time
had fully come, he sent his one and only Son.
God’s timing is perfect. And so was his gift – Jesus Christ,
God and Man to be our Savior.
Some of you remember the short-lived 1980s sitcom Silver
Spoons. The show was about a dysfunctional father-son relationship and
explored the themes of adolescence, friendship and family, all centered around
money. Lots of money. And a train you could ride through the mansion.
Silver Spoons
got its title from the fact that before 1700 common folk used wooden spoons to
eat. Only the wealthy could afford silver spoons. The saying, “He was born with
a silver spoon in his mouth” views an upper class and wealthy person not
knowing anything about the struggles of life.
As the Son of God, Jesus had a silver spoon – his divine
powers. But he was born under the law and usually left his silver spoon in a
drawer.
St. Paul says it so matter of factly, “God sent his
Son born of a woman …” Stop and marvel at that phrase. Jesus is God’s Son, yet he
is born of a woman. Jesus is true God – he is divine, omnipotent, omniscient
and almighty. At the same time, he is man – he has hands and feet, flesh and bones,
and a soul. He became hungry and thirsty. He slept and wept. He even suffered
and died.
“God sent his Son to be born of a woman, so that he
would be born under the law, in order to redeem those under the law, so that we
would be adopted as sons.” From your Catechism classes, you recall that this
was part of Jesus’ humiliation. Jesus, who is the Creator of the law and above
the law, put himself under the to live under the law. In order to redeem – to buy
us back from breaking God’s law, Jesus had to keep God’s law in our place.
For a time, Jesus laid aside his divine powers. Oh, we
see them burst forth at times when he calmed the storm, fed thousands, cleansed
lepers, cast out demons and raised Lazarus from the dead.
Most of the time, though, Jesus voluntarily laid aside
his divine powers and did not use them. While he could walk on water, he
usually used a boat. While he could turn water into wine and multiply loaves
and fish, he usually used food and drink that was furnished naturally.
As Mediator, Jesus came “to redeem those who were
under the law.” To mediate, Jesus needed to be under the law in the same way as
those he would redeem were under it: as humans. So, in matters of temptation
and obeying the law, Jesus “humbled himself and became obedient.” (Philippians
2:8) While still having full divine powers, he voluntarily did not use them.
Jesus kept the commandments for all the times we have
broken God’s commandments. Jesus was tempted in every way as we are, yet he never
once fell to temptation. We face temptation for a little while, and then give
in. Again, from Catechism class, this is part of Jesus’ active obedience. These
are things Jesus actively did to pay the price for our sinfulness. Jesus was
obedient to pay for our continual disobedience. Jesus was perfectly righteous
to cover over our unrighteousness.
Jesus never took the easy way out. He kept his silver
spoon in the drawer. He could have taken out the silver spoon and used his
divine powers to call down legions of angels in the Garden of Gethsemane or
walk away from his captors or strike down those who dared to mock and strike
him. He could have quit his office as Mediator.
But then the price would never have been paid. Then we
would still be in our sins. We would be abandoned to the hell we deserve.
But Jesus stick with the hard way, all the way. He
humbled himself, and kept humbling himself, to the bitter end that gives us a
new beginning as heirs of God through Christ.
Christmas is a time for celebrating family. It is a
time to gather together as parents and children, as siblings and cousins, as
grandparents and grandkids — what a joy it is to be included in a family!
Such joy would be rather void and empty if it weren’t
for another family relationship we celebrate at Christmas — a far more
important family relationship — our relationship with God through faith in
Christ.
The apostle Paul speaks of that family relationship: “But
when the set time had fully come, God sent his Son to be born of a woman, so
that he would be born under the law, in order to redeem those under the law, so
that we would be adopted as sons. And because you are sons, God sent the Spirit
of his Son into our hearts to shout, “Abba, Father!” So you are no longer a
slave, but a son. And if you are a son, then you are also an heir of God
through Christ.” What a joy it is to be called God’s children! What a joy it is
to be included in God’s family!
But it wasn’t always that way. In fact, our
relationship with God used to be completely broken. As human beings, we were
born “under [God’s] law.” In other words, everything that God, the Giver of the
law, demands of all people in his laws and commandments, God expects us to
obey, and obey perfectly. However, as sinful human beings, we have lived under
God’s law imperfectly. We have broken God’s law repeatedly, and we continue to
do so every time we sin. Because of such disobedience, we deserve to be outside of
God’s family forever. We deserve to suffer the punishment of hell, separated
from all our heavenly Father’s blessings.
But it was never God’s desire that we should live
outside of his family. And so, God determined to send us a Savior from sin.
That Savior would be his very own Son. In pure grace, God molded and shaped the
course of human history so that, at just the right time, “when the set time had
fully come,” he could send his Son into the world. Though his Son was true God
in every sense of the word, he became a human being. Just like us, he was “born
of a woman, born under law.”
This is Jesus’ incarnation – when God became a Man. Jesus
was a man so he could live under the law and be able to die. Jesus was God so
he could live under the law perfectly and so his death could pay for the wins
of the whole world.
When the God-Man gave up his life on the cross after a
lifetime of perfect living, the Lord did something amazing. The One who lived
perfectly washed all of our sins away in his blood and gave us his perfection
in return. And now, when God looks at us, he no longer sees any sin. He sees only
his own Son’s perfection. Because of it, our relationship with God has been
fixed. We are part of his holy family. And we will be forever and ever.
We are brothers and sisters in Christ – siblings in
God’s holy family.
Though our culture is done with Christmas, as
Christians we are still celebrating Christmas for another week. Christmas is a
time for celebrating family. It is a time to remember and rejoice in Jesus
Christ, God and Man.
Galatians 4:4-7 is such an important Christmas text. “When
the set time had fully come” – sand. “God sent his Son to be born of a woman so
that he would be born under the law” – silver spoon. “So that we would be
adopted as sons” – siblings. Amen.
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