Some people put up Christmas decorations early. It seems that this year Halloween wasn’t over
until the Christmas decorations were out.
At the Collum house we put our decorations out on the day
after Thanksgiving, not a day before. We refuse to listen to Christmas music
(even though magic 96 has been playing them since Nov 1).
Well, today is the first Sunday in December; we have the
Christmas decorations up in the sanctuary.
And so I want to bring you a few words of encouragement from the very familiar Christmas story found in Luke 2: 8-20. Let’s read it together.
Verse 8: I want you to look at the Shepherds in this
story. I want you not only to look at
the shepherds but I want you to compare YOURSELF to these men.
You can hear a good story. You can read it, watch it on TV,
see it in a movie or listen as it is told to you but you really don’t CONNECT
with the story until you CONNECT with the characters of the story. So this morning I want you to CONNECT with
the shepherds. See how much you are like them.
I. SHEPHERDS: (NOT
IMPORTANT) This profession although a necessary profession, was not a very
prestigious profession. It was not a
very impressive profession. It was not a
very well regarded profession.
Shepherds were around sheep all the time. Sheep smell.
Which tends to make those around them smell. In Chilton County terms: Shepherds stink.
I don’t care who you are and how much you say you don’t care
about what people think of you; we all want to be well regarded by our peers. Oh, I’ve said “I don’t care what people think
about me”, you might have said that as well. But deep inside, I really do care
what you think about me. I want you to like me. I want you to think I am important. I want to have prestige in my life. AND YOU DO TOO.
If you didn’t care about what people thought about you, you
would have gotten up this morning and come to church in you PJ’s or
housecoat. You would have left on your
old ragged pants or shirt. You wouldn’t have taken a bath, brushed your teeth,
or fixed your hair. “Who cares what I look like, what I
wear? I don’t care what those people
think”…BUT YOU DO.
Can I just be honest?
Some mornings I wake up and I don’t feel very prestigious. Do you?
Or maybe you get up every morning and just feel like you have the
world by the tail and you are large and in charge?
In this story, the Shepherds were not in that position. How
do I know this? Let’s look closer.
II. ABIDING: (BORING) Not only were they SHEPHERDS but they
were ABIDING. Staying. They were in an everyday, not so exciting,
not so rewarding, same ole sheep, same ole co-shepherds, same ole grass, same
ole fields, same ole hills. They were
just ABIDING.
There used to be a
commercial that showed a woman in the “daily-ness” of her life and she suddenly
looked up and said “Calgon, take me away”.
The ABIDING, the STAYING, the day to day was pressing down
on her. Are you associating with
this? Am I talking to anyone who is
relating to this aspect of the shepherds?
III. IN THE FIELDS: (NOT
LIKE EVERYONE ELSE) Not in town with everyone else. Not in their house like most people. Not with their families. Not in their bed but IN THE FIELDS.
There is something about “fitting in”. And again, we often say, “I don’t care what other people do. I am my own person”. And you may be different from most
people. But I just bet that you may just
desire to be “like everyone else” sometimes.
Don’t you imagine that those shepherds would have liked to
have had a home and family and nice warm bed to sleep in? Don’t you think they might have liked to have
a 9-5 job?
I read the other day that one reason people get distressed
by FACEBOOK is that they read the stuff that others do (go on vacation, have
the family over for lunch, go on a date with their husband /wife), and they
realize that they don’t do those things.
And it makes them depressed. “Why can’t I have that kind of life?”
We don’t like to be SHEPHERDS and we don’t like BEING IN THE
FIELDS.
IV. KEEPING WATCH: (No credit) That sounds exciting doesn’t
it? Keeping watch. Doing what is necessary, but JUST doing what is necessary. And again, It’s not exciting. Keeping watch
requires faithfulness, steadfast-ness (is that a word?), being
there when you are supposed to be there.
Doing the job no one else wants to do. (and getting little or no
credit).
V. BY NIGHT: (Lonely) I have spent a very large
portion of my life’s work in the dark.
In the Coast Guard our rescue missions were not always on a
bright sunny day. Much of the time it
was in the middle of the night.
Working on the ambulance, I worked the midnight shift
initially. ALL of our calls were in the
dark. As a fire/medic with the fire department, many of our calls came in the
dead of the night.
Even if you don’t have that emergency kind of job, even if
you work at a factory or in a store and it’s at night….it is kind of
depressing.
A line from a poem says “creatures
of the nighttime watch as creatures of the daytime sleep”. We don’t like to be in that position.
QUESTION:
Are you relating yet? Are you
feeling like a shepherd?
I told you initially that I wanted to bring you words of
encouragement. I don’t think I’ve done
that thus far. Let me try harder.
QUESTION: Why did the angles come with “good news of
great joy” to the shepherds and not to the guy that ran the grocery story? Why did the angles come to the shepherds and
not to the business man? Why did they
come to the shepherds and not to the king?
Because God knew the shepherds needed encouragement.
And if you are relating to the shepherds this morning, God
knows you need encouragement.
Let’s see what He did for the shepherds.
VI: V10: FEAR NOT: “I ain’t afraid of nothing. I’m
a grown man/ woman. I’m an adult. I’ve seen it all or most of it. Why should I be afraid?”
Shepherds weren’t wimps.
They lived in the fields. They
were used to hard work. They were used to danger. Remember David having to
fight a lion and bear? You couldn’t be a
shepherd and be a sissy. But these guys were afraid. NO, more than that, they were sore afraid. In Chilton County words again, “They were
scared to death”.
I don’t know what you are afraid of this morning. Sickness, bad health, financial problems,
family issues, problems with your spouse, issues at the church, issues at work,
the future of our world, death, eternity?
If I didn’t hit on yours you feel free to go ahead and add it to the
list.
I don’t know what it is but I know this, you and I are
afraid just like those shepherds were afraid.
Scared to death, AND GOD KNOWS IT.
And the SAME all-knowing, ever-loving God who sent a band of angles out
on that grassy, dark hill that night to send a message of encouragement to
those shepherds, is sending you the same message this morning. Oh, you may not see the heavenly host this
morning but don’t doubt it, God wants you to hear this message. DON’T BE AFRAID!
VIL. GOOD NEWS,
JOYFUL NEWS, TO EVERYONE: I didn’t
come this morning to bring you a fancy message.
I didn’t come with angles and lights and a choir of heavenly host. But I came bringing you Good news. It’s not sad news. It’s not depressing
news. It’s not fearful news. It’s GOOD NEWS. And it should bring you GREAT JOY.
The angles came to
announce that a SAVIOR had come.
Let me make this statement.
If you have related in the slightest way this morning to the shepherds,
if something I have said has made you realize that in some ways you and the
shepherds kind of felt the same way. Then you need a savior.
I’m not saying that you are lost and unsaved or not a
Christian. Sure, Jesus came to save
those in that condition but do you realize that He also came to
deliver you, save you from the conditions that we talked about.
You need a savior to save you from your feeling of being “UNIMPORTANT”.
You need a savior to
save you from being bored.
You need a savior to save you from not feeling a part of the rest of the civilized world.
You need a savior to save you from being faithful but getting no credit or recognition.
You need a savior to save you from being lonely and
depressed.
You need a savior to save you from fear.
The encouragement,
the good news of great joy, the gospel I came to share with you this morning is
simply this:
UNTO YOU IS BORN A
SAVIOR, WHO IS CHRIST THE LORD!!! And
if that don’t fill you bucket, you need to check it out because it’s got a
really big hole in it.
CONCLUSION:
The holiday season can be one of the most depressing,
dismal, sad, lonely times of the entire year.
In EMS we saw more suicides and self-inflicted wounds during the holiday
season than any other time of the year.
You will hear these little verses quoted many times over
the next few weeks. Will you remember
what I’ve said this morning? Will you
simply take these 4 verses and sticky note them to your brain.
Just remember, You are the shepherd, Jesus is
the Savior, and THAT’S GOOD NEWS
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