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“You are to name him
Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”
Matt.1:21
We discovered a new game over Christmas. It is called
‘Eastenders Bingo’. It works like this. You each
choose a phrase which is commonly used in the programme, and
every time it is said, you score a point. Examples are:
‘Woss goin’ on?; ‘You’re ‘avin
a larf, aintcha?’; ‘Leave it aht’, and so
on. I’ll come back to that in a moment.
But first, I wonder how many of us know the meaning of our
names? I suppose all those of us who are parents had a little
book which we got just before our first baby was born, and
searched for a name. If we were really good, we would have
cared about what the name meant as well. I remember being
delighted to discover that my own Christian name meant
‘manly’, and that my surname meant ‘son of
the fair one’, so how blest am I!?
Jewish people believe that a name tells you something
about the person’s character and personality. You
remember Jacob from the Old Testament, son of Isaac. His name
is a word in Hebrew which means wily, or crafty, a
supplanter, and he was certainly that.
Even a swift reading of both Old and New Testaments will
reveal that when a name is mentioned, very often the reason
for the name chosen is given. So it was with Jesus. Our
gospel reading told us how he was named after eight days had
passed, because it was the time to do so, and the name he was
given was the one St Matthew tells us he was given by
‘God’s messenger’, or angel. It was
‘Jesus, for he shall save his people from their
sins’. It is the same name as Joshua, and it literally
means ‘Jehovah is salvation’.
What on earth did Mary make of it, one wonders? If she had
been in ‘Eastenders’, she would have said:
‘I can’t believe I’m ‘earin’
this’. I can just imagine the look on her face. But a
month or so after the birth, when they went to the temple for
the purification ceremony, it was all confirmed by Simeon. He
recognised this baby Jesus for what he was – the one
the Jewish people had waited for so long to see – the
Messiah. And the seal was set by a prophetess named Anna, for
she also recognised the baby as the Christ, the anointed one
of God.
So that was it. This baby named Jesus was the man born,
not only to be king, but also to be Saviour, the saviour of
the whole of the human race. (No, Terry, not Lily the Pink!)
He was the one of whom Charles Wesley was to say was
‘born to give us second birth’. Or as we say in
the Creed week by week: born ‘for us men and for our
salvation’
From the beginning of the church’s history, exactly
how Jesus saves humanity from sin has been the subject of
quite heated discussion, and perhaps one evening we could
have a go at it. I wonder if the Education Group would like
to take it on? To make a very broad generalisation, in the
Eastern Church, the Incarnation is seen as the great saving
act, whilst in the Western Church, it has been the Cross. We
can all surely see that in the very act of God taking on
himself the form of a human, as St Paul says, there is what
the theologians call a soteriological act – a saving
act, the Divine reaching out to fallen humanity.
So it is fitting that the church, on the eighth day after
Christmas, which is today, remembers the event. Names, as I
have said, are important.
If, like the Chinese, we were to give our years names,
(though they name them in advance) I guess that 2005 could be
called ‘The Year of Disasters’. A year ago today
we watched in amazement, awe and horror as the countries
around the rim of the Indian Ocean were struggled with the
aftermath of the giant tsunami – a new word for many of
us, and word which was filled with dread.
2005 moved inexorably day by day into one disaster after
another – earthquake, wind and fires, to say nothing of
global terrorist attacks. ‘Where was God?’ was a
question many people asked, implying that He wasn’t
there, and therefore doesn’t exist. Perhaps that could
be another project for the Education Group.
We cannot tell what the name of 2006 will prove to be. Some
things, I suppose, are fairly predictable. For instance, we
can be reasonably certain that global warming will continue,
with all its attendant consequences, many of which could
bring us again into disaster.
But let me take you back to our festival theme –
‘Jesus, for he will save his people from their
sins’. We, as Christians, say that ‘we bear the
name of Jesus’. Now, there’s a thought. We bear
the name of the one who is the saviour of humankind. I would
say that makes us, in a way, guilty by association. What I
mean is this.
If Jesus was truly the one who would save his people, then
I put it to you that we have a part to play in that work of
salvation today. Of course, everything has been done to work
that salvation for all. But go out into the street, into
Lover’s Walk, and how many people would know that? How
many would know that salvation (whatever that may mean) is
for them? What, would you say, does it mean for you?
Our task in 2006, it seems to me, is to first of all
accept God’s work of salvation in Christ as being for
us. Secondly, it is to proclaim, in word and deed, that
salvation to humanity. Tell people that they are accepted by
God. That is a life-changing experience, the ‘second
birth’ of which St John in his gospel speaks, and which
the Wesleys went on about incessantly. Charles wrote:
‘O for a trumpet voice,
on all the world to call!
To bid their hearts rejoice
in Him who died for all;
For all my Lord was crucified,
For all, for all, my Saviour died.’
Which brings us back to the Cross – the other end of
the Incarnation story. The birth, life and death, the taking
by God of our humanity, was not for some chosen few, but for
all – whether they know it or not, whether, for the
moment, they accept it or not. Our task as those who bear the
name of Jesus is to tell them. The problem with spreading
this good news is that a ‘one size fits all’
approach will not do. It is about the right word, to the
right person, in the right place, at the right time. Just
don’t let that put you off!
Let 2006 be the year of witness to the saving work of
Christ.
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