Summary: Jesus is coming. Are you Ready?

A Journey Through the Stable III

Hear Ye! Hear Ye! Hearing that makes you take notice, doesn’t it? These are words

that let you know that something important or relevant to you is about to be said.

Now we don’t know if John the Baptist actually said those words but we do know

that people listened to him.

The Jews had endured over 400 years of silence. God had always spoken to His

people through a man, but now the prophetic voice of God was silent. Malachi

closed out the Old Testament with the prophecy of another prophet coming before

the day of the Messiah. John the Baptist was that prophet. Matthew doesn’t give the

Jewish readers any background on him because he was famous. John the Baptist

was the Billy Graham of his day.

His message for all the people was simple, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is

near.”

Advent is a season that invites us to anticipate and prepare for Christ’s coming. It is

certainly a suitable time for reflecting on this biblical promise of the coming

kingdom, since it is also the time which prepares for the celebration of the birth of

Jesus.

So as we gather on this third Sunday of Advent, let us continue to prepare for

Christ’s coming by continuing our journey through the stable.

I asked you the first week of Advent if you were hungry. Today if you were hungry,

you would go into the kitchen and get something to eat. Well, like people, animals

have to eat, too. Grain in the stable would serve as food for the animals, but it is

also important that the animals don’t eat all the grain. It is important to save some

for planting, so that next year there will be more grain.

You know, seeds are strange things. They’re small and they don’t really look like

the big plants they will become. But they do. In the same way, these seeds are like

God’s promises. Lying in the manger, Jesus probably didn’t look like the Savior of

the world he would grow up to become. But the promise of God was there...Jesus

did grow up to make sure we have hope for the future.

Look around the stable. The grain says, “Trust God’s promises.”

What looks like a rake in our stable is actually a winnowing fork. A winnowing fork

separates the grains of wheat from the chaff. When tossed into the air the heavier,

good grains would fall to the ground while the lighter chaff would be blown away.

Sometimes separating things like that is important, like when you peel a banana or

orange and throw away the peel (no good to eat) and keep the good part.

This winnowing fork can reminds us that Jesus came to separate our sins from us so

that what remains can be good. The winnowing fork says, “Your sins are taken

away.”

In most stables then (or barns today) you will probably find tools. A plow is a tool,

the kind that farmers would use to prepare the ground for the planting of their seeds.

Tools are important. There are different types of tools for different kinds of jobs.

Joseph was a carpenter. One of his jobs was to make tools so other people could do

their jobs. I think it’s part of God’s plan to provide work for people to do and to

make it possible for us to have or make the things we need to do our work.

The plow can remind us that Jesus had a job to do, too, and he did it for all of us.

Some people were called away from their work to come to the stable and see baby

Jesus. Shepherds were the first ones to be told the good news that Jesus had been

born. After Mary and Joseph, shepherds were the first people Jesus met.

Remember last week we looked at Jesus as the “Lamb of God.” Sheep need a

shepherd, maybe that’s why later Jesus called himself “The Good Shepherd”. A

good shepherd cares for his sheep, he leads them, guides them, feeds them, and

protects them from harm or wandering off.

One of the ways shepherds protect and care for their sheep is with a staff. This staff

can be used as a weapon against predators, as a guide for the sheep, or lifting them

out of dangerous situations. All of those things our Good Shepherd does for us. He

even laid down his life for his sheep. We should be happy to follow him.

Do you see the travel bag? For people in Jesus’ day, travel often consisted of using

animals such as donkeys, oxen, or camels. Those who used these animals carried

their clothes and such in saddlebags, which is kind of like a suitcase. It was

something to help make sure you took everything along that you might need for a

trip.

What do you think Mary and Jesus packed for their trip to Bethlehem? Later when

they fled to Egypt, what would they take? What would they leave behind? They

wouldn’t forget the baby Jesus, would they? The saddlebag tells us, “Jesus traveled

all the way to earth to be our Savior.”

We know Jesus probably wasn’t born in December but there were times it did get

cold in the stable. Animals would be protected from that by their fur or feathers. But

people would need some kind of covering to protect them. Blankets are good for

keeping us warm and covered.

After they had sinned, Adam and Eve needed a covering. They tried to make their

own but finally God had to provide the covering they needed. The blanket reminds

us that Jesus came to be a covering for us, too.

We started our journey today with grain. And now it ends with bread, something

that is made from grain. In between, we noticed some tools and signs of the different

kinds of work people do. When you put all of these things together - the things God

provides and the work God provides for us - then things happen.

In the Lord’s Prayer we ask God to “give us this day our daily bread”. God does

this and so many other things, as well.

Look around the stable - the Lord provides.

John the Baptist tried to get those who gathered around him to prepare the way of

the Lord in their hearts. “Repent”, he said, which is defined in the original

terminology as turning oneself around and changing one’s direction, to change one’s

mind in regards to the worldly old ways and to begin walking toward God.

It isn’t easy to prepare for anything big or great. Preparation is time consuming. It

takes time for the seeds to germinate, to grow into the wheat that you can make the

bread from. Preparation is energy demanding. It takes hard work and the right tools.

Preparation requires patience and persistence. Preparation is often 90% of all that

we do in life.

And if we are prepared, if we are prepared, God will give us exactly what we need,

when we need it.....like Jesus coming to the stable that first Christmas night.

Let us pray.........

Gracious Father, whose claim on us is strong enough to change our direction, I pray

that you look with favor on this gathered congregation, that no one follows the

wrong path but that all may respond with joy to your promises and go out to share

your good news with everyone this Advent season. Amen