Difference between revisions of "Sermon for December 26, 2010"

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Last Sunday evening, after the amazing and powerful "Feast of Carols" here at 1st Presbyterian, I went up to Bill Dickinson and told him that he and the choir really knew how to fill this sanctuary--the two choirs, the orchestra and brass section, the organ, piano, bells, and percussion, all filled this room with resplendent and majestic music, praising God in the Highest. But they also managed to fill the sanctuary with people, too, and not just here up front. I was grateful to have been one of those people filling the sanctuary. But I'm also grateful that it isn't quite so full this first Sunday after Christmas, because that would have just ruined my sermon this morning!
+
Last Sunday evening, after the amazing and powerful "Feast of Carols" here at 1st Presbyterian, I went up to Bill Dickinson and told him that he and the choir really knew how to fill this sanctuary—the two choirs, the orchestra and brass section, the organ, piano, bells, and percussion, all filled this room with resplendent and majestic music, praising God in the Highest. But they also managed to fill the sanctuary with people, too, and not just here up front. I was grateful to have been one of those people filling the sanctuary. But I'm also grateful that it isn't quite so full this first Sunday morning after Christmas, because that would have just ruined my sermon!  
 
+
I wasn't too worried, though. In churches across the nation, this morning marks an event that has a name, although you won't find it in any liturgical calendar: The Sunday after Christmas is often referred to as "Low Sunday." As in, "low attendance" Sunday. A friend of mine, who is the youth director at a large, multi-staff church in Dallas, refers to it as "Associate Pastor Sunday" or "Guest Preacher Sunday," reflecting the fact that often even the pastor doesn't show up. Don't put Dr. Bob on the hook this time, though—I actually volunteered to preach this Sunday way back at the end of the summer, when I knew this would be my only Sunday morning here in El Paso.  
I wasn't too worried, though. In churches across the nation, this morning marks an event that has a name, although you won't find it in any liturgical calendar: The Sunday after Christmas is often referred to as "Low Sunday." As in, "low attendance" Sunday. A friend of mine, who is the youth director at a large, multi-staff church in Dallas, refers to it as "Associate Pastor Sunday" or "Guest Preacher Sunday," reflecting the fact that often even the pastor doesn't show up. Don't put Dr. Bob on the hook too much, though--I actually volunteered to preach this Sunday way back at the end of the summer, when I knew this would be my only Sunday here in El Paso.
+
I can understand, though, why attendance usually drops off the chart on Low Sunday—the Advent Season leading up to Christmas is kind of like the "playoffs" for most churches, with events like the "Feast of Carols" as the Superbowl, or the Christmas Eve Service as the "All Star Game" (pun intended—get it? All-Star, Star of Bethlehem? I know, that was bad.). By the time Christmas rolls around, the congregation—especially its leaders—are just worn out on worship services.  Then add to that mix the self-induced craziness of our consumer-shopping-cookie-baking-gift-wrapping-photo-taking-wallet-breaking-picture-perfect Christmas culture. No wonder everybody is exhausted by now, and nobody wants to go to churchOf course, the irony here is that after the presents are all unwrapped Christmas morning, most people in our culture think that Christmas is over.  Time to relax and take a break from our Christmas break.  But on the church calendar (unlike the shopping calendar), December 25th doesn't mark the end of the Christmas season—it marks the beginning!  
 
+
I've often heard it said that attendance is low this time of year because people are out of town, visiting  family in other places. I've always thought that excuse was a little shaky:  If people leave *this* town, they're still in some other town, and surely some people from those *other* towns come here to visit family—so attendance should in theory balance out, with attendance down from members, but up from visitors. By the way—if you are one of those out-of-town visitors with us today, welcome! You get a gold-star and some cookies after the service for being so faithful.  
I can understand, though, why attendance usually drops off the chart on Low Sunday -- the Advent Season leading up to Christmas is kind of like the "playoffs" for most churches, with events like the "Feast of Carols" as the Superbowl, or the Christmas Eve Service as the "All Star Game" (pun intended -- get it? All-Star, Star of Bethlehem?). By the time Christmas rolls around, the congregation--and especially its leaders--are just worn out on worship services.  Add to that the craziness of our consumer-shopping-cookie-baking-gift-wrapping-photo-taking-wallet-breaking-picture-perfect Christmas culture. Everybody's exhausted by now.  Which is interesting, considering that in the church calendar (unlike the shopping calendar), December 25th doesn't mark the end of the Christmas season, it marks the very beginning! I've also heard often that attendance is low because people are out of town, with family in other places. I've always thought that one was a little shaky:  If people leave *this* town, they're still in some other town, and people from other towns come here to visit family--so attendance should stay the same, but out-of-town visitors should be way up. And if you are one of those out-of-town visitors with us today, welcome! You get a gold-star and some cookies after the service for being so faithful.
+
But whatever the reasons, good or bad, the Sunday after Christmas remains one of the most poorly attended Sundays of the year. Low Sunday.  Look around you...you are the few, the proud, the real "Christmas Christians." I'll come back to this idea of Low Sunday in just a bit, but first I want to backtrack through today's scripture reading in the Psalms.  
 
+
I first started preparing for this sermon a few months ago (not because I'm that on top of things, but because Patty and Rev. Lynnette know I like to procrastinate, and sent me nice emails saying, “Hey! Get your act together!). Preaching from today's Gospel passage about the birth of Jesus would have been a slam-dunk: Easy tie-in to the season.  On the other hand, it's always a little dicey preaching from the Old Testament passage. The Old Testament is the "box of chocolates" where you never know what you're gonna get.  
But whatever the reasons, good or bad, the Sunday after Christmas remains one of the most poorly attended Sundays of the year. Low Sunday.  Look around you...you are the few, the proud, the real "Christmas Christians." I'll come back to this idea of Low Sunday in just a bit, but first I want to backtrack through today's scripture reading in the Psalms.
+
Psalm 148, as it turns out, is all about sea monsters, fruit trees, and cows praising God. Yeah, let's run with that one! In addition to those, you also have sun, moon, stars, water, wind, snow, frost, fire, mountains, and hills praising the Lord. All inanimate objects. How does a hill praise God, I wonder? For your homework assignment, I want you to go home, find a hill, watch it very carefully for a few hours, and let me know. If people think you're weird, tell them it's just a Presbyterian thing. They already think we're weird, so it won't change anything.  
 
+
If you add to that list wild animals, creeping things, flying birds, and angels—we still have a lot of non-human entities praising God.  In fact, only two little verses toward the end mention kings, princes, rulers, young men and women, old and young alike: Let them Praise the name of the Lord, too.  I mean, they might as well.  After all, everyone else is doing it.  But you see, we humans are a minority in this Psalm of praise to God.  And in a Bible so predominantly focused on people and nations, that seems a bit odd, don't you think?  So, I put this verse on the shelf in my brain, and went about the business of getting ready for my own season of self-induced Christmas Craziness (mine mostly revolved around final exams).  
I first started preparing for this sermon a few months ago (not because I'm that on top of things, but because Patty and Rev. Lynnette know I like to procrastinate, and sent me nice emails saying -- Hey! Get your act together!). Preaching from today's Gospel passage about the birth of Jesus would have been a slam-dunk. Easy tie-in to the season.  On the other hand, it's always a little dicey preaching from the Old Testament passage. The Old Testament is the "box of chocolates" where you never know what you're gonna get.
+
It was somewhere about halfway through my 4th time singing "Joy to the World" this Christmas season that it hit me: Where is the other big place you see a whole lot of inanimate things praising God, along with farm animals and celestial beings? Christmas hymns:  
 
+
1. Fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains, repeat the sounding joy, repeat the sounding joy...and heaven and nature sing, and heaven and nature sing...  
Psalm 148, as it turns out, is all about sea monsters, fruit trees, and cows praising God. Yeah, let's run with that one! In addition to those, you also have sun, moon, stars, water, wind, snow, frost, fire, mountains, and hills praising the Lord. All inanimate objects. How does a hill praise God, I wonder? For your homework assignment, I want you to go home, find a hill, watch it very carefully for a few hours, and let me know. If people think you're weird, tell them it's just a Presbyterian thing. They already think we're weird, so it won't change anything.
+
2. Ox and ass before him bow, and he is in the manger now.  
 
+
3. The stars in the sky look down where he lay, the little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay  
If you add to that list wild animals, creeping things, flying birds, and angels--we still have a lot of non-human entities praising God.  Only two little verses toward the end mention kings, princes, rulers, young men and women, old and young alike: Let them Praise the name of the Lord, too.  You see, we humans are a minority in this Psalm of praise to God.  And in a Bible so predominantly focused on people and nations, that seems a bit odd, don't you think?  So, I put this verse on the shelf in my brain, and went about the business of getting ready for Christmas Craziness.
+
4. Do you See what I see? A star, a star, dancing in the night. Do you hear what I hear? A song, a song, high above the trees with a voice as big as the sea.  
 
+
5. Sing choirs of angels, sing in exultation, sing all ye citizens of heaven above  
It was about halfway through the 4th time singing "Joy to the World" that it hit me: Where is the other big place you see a whole lot of inanimate things praising God, along with farm animals and celestial beings? Christmas hymns:
+
6. Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o'er the plains, and the...[pause]...MOUNTAINS in reply, echoing their joyous strains.  
#Fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains, repeat the sounding joy, repeat the sounding joy...and heaven and nature sing, and heaven and nature sing...  
+
The list goes on and on. Humans, of course, do feature in Christmas Hymns too, but often the non-humans are *already* praising God, while the hymn is pleading with humans to join in: "Joyful, all ye nations rise, *Join* the triumph of the skies, *With* the angelic host proclaim: Christ is born in Bethlehem." In other words, what the hymn is acknowledging is the fact that for the most part, humans are *not* praising God on that first Christmas morning, even though they should, and the person writing the hymn really wants them to be.   
#Ox and ass before him bow, and he is in the manger now.
+
The High King of Heaven—the long awaited messiah—comes at last to earth, and if there's ever a time for a full orchestra, brass section, and welcoming chorus, this is it! What does he get?  Well, contrary to the cute little nativity scenes we're used to, the “royal welcome” with gift-wrapped presents (the three kings, or magi, or wise men) doesn't show up for another three weeks yet. On Christmas day, you find a handful of shepherds (who likely wouldn't be there if not for angels scaring the bejeezus out of them), Mary and Joseph, and that's it for the human contingentEven if we're generous and assume 10 or 12 shepherds, that leaves us with a total attendance of 14. *This* is the original "Low Sunday."  
#The stars in the sky look down where he lay, the little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay
+
What to do? What to do? Should we postpone the birth of Christ until people get back from out of town? Should we shut the doors of the stable and call the whole thing off?   Maybe what the nativity really needs is a better marketing strategy.  A better website.  Or more young people involved. Or maybe we need a nativity-committee to make it work. There's no room and the inn, and there's no room in the budget, eitherWe'll wait to have the birth of Christ until *after* a good capital campaign.
#Do you See what I see? A star, a star, dancing in the night. Do you hear what I hear? A song, a song, high above the trees with a voice as big as the sea.
+
Fortunately endless dilemmas of humans are no-brainers for God. God doesn't focus on what's missing, what might have been, or what the world thinks is appropriate—the God of Psalm 148 says, "I made everything. So what've we got? Let's roll...with that." We got some livestock? Let them praise the Lord! We got a really bright star? Praise the Lord! We got angels? Praise the Lord! We got a mountain? Let it echo the angels! We got some frightened shepherds who don't quite know which end is up? Then let them praise the Lord!  
#Sing choirs of angels, sing in exultation, sing all ye citizens of heaven above
+
Because a thousand years from now, when the rest of the humans have finally caught on and realized the divine significance of this day...it will be the lowly shepherds, the humble cow and donkey, the rocks, and hills and plains—not the kings and committees, not the masses or megachurches—just these precious few, that had the once-in-history opportunity to welcome the savior of the universe and praise his holy name!  
#Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o'er the plains, and the...[pause]...MOUNTAINS in reply, echoing their joyous strains.  
+
So look around you, "Low Sunday Christians." See the faces of the ones God is ready to use. Because it is precisely in the bleak mid-winter that hope comes to the faithful. It is precisely on Low Sundays like this one that that the Creator of the Universe loves to show up. And if God can use rocks and cows and shepherds to praise the birth of the messiah, then God can use those few of us gathered here today to begin something new and something wonderful in the life of 1st Presbyterian Church, and in the city of El Paso—Praise the name of the Lord! God can use the very pews upon which you sit—and those no one sits upon—the rafters in the roof, and every brick in every wall of this place to praise the name of the Lord!  God can use associate pastors and seminary students, out-of-town visitors, and people who just barely made it out the door today!   
 
+
Especially on a day like today, as the Christmas season of the world comes to an end, let our Christmas season begin. Let God use you. Why? Because you came. Who? Just you. Just you humble few.  How? Just with three small words. We are not called to solve all the problems of the church or the world (at least not by ourselves). We are not called to worry about the future, or to dwell on the past. We are not even called to understand the complexities of a God who sends a baby to do what kings and kingdoms could not.  
The list goes on and on. Humans, of course, do feature in Christmas Hymns too, but often the non-humans are *already* praising God, while the hymn is pleading with humans to join in: "Joyful, all ye nations rise, *Join* the triumph of the skies, *With* the angelic host proclaim: Christ is born in Bethlehem." In other words, what the hymn is acknowledging is the fact that for the most part, humans are *not* praising God on that first Christmas morning, even though they should.  The High King of Heaven--the long awaited messiah--comes at last to earth, and if there's ever a time for a full orchestra, brass section, and welcoming chorus, this is it! What does he get?  Contrary to the cute little nativity scenes we're used to, the royal welcome with gift-wrapped presents (the three kings, or magi, or wise men) doesn't show up for another three weeks. On Christmas day, you find a handful of shepherds (who likely wouldn't be there if not for the angels scaring the bejeezus out of them), Mary and Joseph, and that's it for the human contingent. Even if we're generous and assume 10 or 12 shepherds, that leaves us with a total attendance of 14. *This* is the original "Low Sunday."
+
We are called to do the one thing that all creation does in Psalm 148. We are called to do the one thing asked of us by countless Christmas hymns. We are called to do the one thing done by shepherds and animals and angels on the low and lonely day Christ came into the world. I believe that if we get this one thing right, the rest falls into place. If you would let God use you today and in the Christmas season to come, then it starts right here with those few gathered today. It starts with three words. Do you know what they are yet? PRAISE THE LORD!  
 
+
What to do? What to do? Should we postpone the birth of Christ until people get back from out of town? Should we shut the doors of the stable and call the whole thing off? What the nativity really needs is a better marketing strategy.  Or more young people involved. Or maybe we need a nativity-committee to make it work...   
+
 
+
Fortunately endless dilemmas of humans are no-brainers for God. God doesn't focus on what's missing or what might have been -- The God of Psalm 148 says, "I made everything. So what've we got? Let's roll...with that." We got some livestock? Let them praise the Lord! We got a really bright star? Praise the Lord! We got angels? Praise the Lord! We got a mountain? Let it echo the angels! We got some frightened shepherds who don't quite know which end is up? Then let them praise the Lord! Because a thousand years from now, when the rest of the humans--the kings and the rulers and the nations have finally caught on and realized the divine significance of this day...it will be the lowly shepherds, the humble cow and donkey, the rocks, and hills and plains--not the kings and committees, not the masses or megachurches--just these precious few, that had the once-in-history opportunity to welcome the savior of the universe and praise his holy name!
+
 
+
Look around you, "Low Sunday Christians."  Because it is precisely in the bleak mid-winter that hope comes to the faithful. It is precisely on Low Sundays like this that that the Creator of the Universe loves to show up. And if God can use rocks and cows and shepherds to praise the birth of the messiah, then God can use those few of us gathered here today to begin something new and something wonderful in the life of 1st Presbyterian Church, and in the city of El Paso--so let us praise the name of the Lord! God can use the very pews upon which you sit--and those no one sits upon--the rafters in the roof, and every brick in every wall of this place to praise the name of the Lord!  God can use associate pastors and seminary students, out-of-town visitors, and people who just barely made it out the door today!  Especially on a day like today, as the Christmas season of the world comes to an end, let our Christmas season begin. Let God use you. Why? Because you came. Who? Just you. Just a humble few.  How? Just with three small words. We are not called to solve all the problems of the church or the world (at least not by ourselves). We are not called to worry about the future, or to dwell on the past. We are not even called to understand the complexities of a God who sends a baby to do what kings and kingdoms could not.  
+
 
+
We are called to do the one thing that all creation does in Psalm 148. We are called to do the one thing asked of us by countless Christmas hymns. We are called to do the one thing done by shepherds and animals and angels on the low and lonely day Christ came into the world. I believe that if we get this one thing right, the rest falls into place. If you would let God use you today and in the Christmas season to come, then it starts right here with those few gathered today. It starts with three words. Do you know what they are? PRAISE THE LORD!
+
 
+
 
Thanks be to God.
 
Thanks be to God.

Revision as of 15:29, 23 December 2010

Last Sunday evening, after the amazing and powerful "Feast of Carols" here at 1st Presbyterian, I went up to Bill Dickinson and told him that he and the choir really knew how to fill this sanctuary—the two choirs, the orchestra and brass section, the organ, piano, bells, and percussion, all filled this room with resplendent and majestic music, praising God in the Highest. But they also managed to fill the sanctuary with people, too, and not just here up front. I was grateful to have been one of those people filling the sanctuary. But I'm also grateful that it isn't quite so full this first Sunday morning after Christmas, because that would have just ruined my sermon! I wasn't too worried, though. In churches across the nation, this morning marks an event that has a name, although you won't find it in any liturgical calendar: The Sunday after Christmas is often referred to as "Low Sunday." As in, "low attendance" Sunday. A friend of mine, who is the youth director at a large, multi-staff church in Dallas, refers to it as "Associate Pastor Sunday" or "Guest Preacher Sunday," reflecting the fact that often even the pastor doesn't show up. Don't put Dr. Bob on the hook this time, though—I actually volunteered to preach this Sunday way back at the end of the summer, when I knew this would be my only Sunday morning here in El Paso. I can understand, though, why attendance usually drops off the chart on Low Sunday—the Advent Season leading up to Christmas is kind of like the "playoffs" for most churches, with events like the "Feast of Carols" as the Superbowl, or the Christmas Eve Service as the "All Star Game" (pun intended—get it? All-Star, Star of Bethlehem? I know, that was bad.). By the time Christmas rolls around, the congregation—especially its leaders—are just worn out on worship services. Then add to that mix the self-induced craziness of our consumer-shopping-cookie-baking-gift-wrapping-photo-taking-wallet-breaking-picture-perfect Christmas culture. No wonder everybody is exhausted by now, and nobody wants to go to church. Of course, the irony here is that after the presents are all unwrapped Christmas morning, most people in our culture think that Christmas is over. Time to relax and take a break from our Christmas break. But on the church calendar (unlike the shopping calendar), December 25th doesn't mark the end of the Christmas season—it marks the beginning! I've often heard it said that attendance is low this time of year because people are out of town, visiting family in other places. I've always thought that excuse was a little shaky: If people leave *this* town, they're still in some other town, and surely some people from those *other* towns come here to visit family—so attendance should in theory balance out, with attendance down from members, but up from visitors. By the way—if you are one of those out-of-town visitors with us today, welcome! You get a gold-star and some cookies after the service for being so faithful. But whatever the reasons, good or bad, the Sunday after Christmas remains one of the most poorly attended Sundays of the year. Low Sunday. Look around you...you are the few, the proud, the real "Christmas Christians." I'll come back to this idea of Low Sunday in just a bit, but first I want to backtrack through today's scripture reading in the Psalms. I first started preparing for this sermon a few months ago (not because I'm that on top of things, but because Patty and Rev. Lynnette know I like to procrastinate, and sent me nice emails saying, “Hey! Get your act together!”). Preaching from today's Gospel passage about the birth of Jesus would have been a slam-dunk: Easy tie-in to the season. On the other hand, it's always a little dicey preaching from the Old Testament passage. The Old Testament is the "box of chocolates" where you never know what you're gonna get. Psalm 148, as it turns out, is all about sea monsters, fruit trees, and cows praising God. Yeah, let's run with that one! In addition to those, you also have sun, moon, stars, water, wind, snow, frost, fire, mountains, and hills praising the Lord. All inanimate objects. How does a hill praise God, I wonder? For your homework assignment, I want you to go home, find a hill, watch it very carefully for a few hours, and let me know. If people think you're weird, tell them it's just a Presbyterian thing. They already think we're weird, so it won't change anything. If you add to that list wild animals, creeping things, flying birds, and angels—we still have a lot of non-human entities praising God. In fact, only two little verses toward the end mention kings, princes, rulers, young men and women, old and young alike: Let them Praise the name of the Lord, too. I mean, they might as well. After all, everyone else is doing it. But you see, we humans are a minority in this Psalm of praise to God. And in a Bible so predominantly focused on people and nations, that seems a bit odd, don't you think? So, I put this verse on the shelf in my brain, and went about the business of getting ready for my own season of self-induced Christmas Craziness (mine mostly revolved around final exams). It was somewhere about halfway through my 4th time singing "Joy to the World" this Christmas season that it hit me: Where is the other big place you see a whole lot of inanimate things praising God, along with farm animals and celestial beings? Christmas hymns: 1. Fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains, repeat the sounding joy, repeat the sounding joy...and heaven and nature sing, and heaven and nature sing... 2. Ox and ass before him bow, and he is in the manger now. 3. The stars in the sky look down where he lay, the little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay 4. Do you See what I see? A star, a star, dancing in the night. Do you hear what I hear? A song, a song, high above the trees with a voice as big as the sea. 5. Sing choirs of angels, sing in exultation, sing all ye citizens of heaven above 6. Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o'er the plains, and the...[pause]...MOUNTAINS in reply, echoing their joyous strains. The list goes on and on. Humans, of course, do feature in Christmas Hymns too, but often the non-humans are *already* praising God, while the hymn is pleading with humans to join in: "Joyful, all ye nations rise, *Join* the triumph of the skies, *With* the angelic host proclaim: Christ is born in Bethlehem." In other words, what the hymn is acknowledging is the fact that for the most part, humans are *not* praising God on that first Christmas morning, even though they should, and the person writing the hymn really wants them to be. The High King of Heaven—the long awaited messiah—comes at last to earth, and if there's ever a time for a full orchestra, brass section, and welcoming chorus, this is it! What does he get? Well, contrary to the cute little nativity scenes we're used to, the “royal welcome” with gift-wrapped presents (the three kings, or magi, or wise men) doesn't show up for another three weeks yet. On Christmas day, you find a handful of shepherds (who likely wouldn't be there if not for angels scaring the bejeezus out of them), Mary and Joseph, and that's it for the human contingent! Even if we're generous and assume 10 or 12 shepherds, that leaves us with a total attendance of 14. *This* is the original "Low Sunday." What to do? What to do? Should we postpone the birth of Christ until people get back from out of town? Should we shut the doors of the stable and call the whole thing off? Maybe what the nativity really needs is a better marketing strategy. A better website. Or more young people involved. Or maybe we need a nativity-committee to make it work. There's no room and the inn, and there's no room in the budget, either. We'll wait to have the birth of Christ until *after* a good capital campaign. Fortunately endless dilemmas of humans are no-brainers for God. God doesn't focus on what's missing, what might have been, or what the world thinks is appropriate—the God of Psalm 148 says, "I made everything. So what've we got? Let's roll...with that." We got some livestock? Let them praise the Lord! We got a really bright star? Praise the Lord! We got angels? Praise the Lord! We got a mountain? Let it echo the angels! We got some frightened shepherds who don't quite know which end is up? Then let them praise the Lord! Because a thousand years from now, when the rest of the humans have finally caught on and realized the divine significance of this day...it will be the lowly shepherds, the humble cow and donkey, the rocks, and hills and plains—not the kings and committees, not the masses or megachurches—just these precious few, that had the once-in-history opportunity to welcome the savior of the universe and praise his holy name! So look around you, "Low Sunday Christians." See the faces of the ones God is ready to use. Because it is precisely in the bleak mid-winter that hope comes to the faithful. It is precisely on Low Sundays like this one that that the Creator of the Universe loves to show up. And if God can use rocks and cows and shepherds to praise the birth of the messiah, then God can use those few of us gathered here today to begin something new and something wonderful in the life of 1st Presbyterian Church, and in the city of El Paso—Praise the name of the Lord! God can use the very pews upon which you sit—and those no one sits upon—the rafters in the roof, and every brick in every wall of this place to praise the name of the Lord! God can use associate pastors and seminary students, out-of-town visitors, and people who just barely made it out the door today! Especially on a day like today, as the Christmas season of the world comes to an end, let our Christmas season begin. Let God use you. Why? Because you came. Who? Just you. Just you humble few. How? Just with three small words. We are not called to solve all the problems of the church or the world (at least not by ourselves). We are not called to worry about the future, or to dwell on the past. We are not even called to understand the complexities of a God who sends a baby to do what kings and kingdoms could not. We are called to do the one thing that all creation does in Psalm 148. We are called to do the one thing asked of us by countless Christmas hymns. We are called to do the one thing done by shepherds and animals and angels on the low and lonely day Christ came into the world. I believe that if we get this one thing right, the rest falls into place. If you would let God use you today and in the Christmas season to come, then it starts right here with those few gathered today. It starts with three words. Do you know what they are yet? PRAISE THE LORD! Thanks be to God.