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Everything We Need Fits in the Manger

Everything we need fits in the manger. 

Everything we need as peopleā€¦ whoever we are, no matter our age, our location, our vocation, our gender, our race, our diagnoses, our political affiliation, our preferred sports team, our griefs, our joysā€¦ everything we need fits in the manger. 

This year has been a difficult year for most of us in this room. Almost no family in this community has been untouched by loss. Tight finances, family tensions, unexpected changes, instability in the world, and even random complications in routine procedures have affected all of us. With that level of complexity, we come here on Christmas Eve, wanting the familiar and the comfortable. 

It's also possible that many of us look at the simplicity of the manger and appreciate it only for this moment, an hour or so out of ā€œregularā€ time, because otherwise, thereā€™s no way it can meet the challenges of our everyday lives. 

Hereā€™s the thing, though. You know me. I have been with you at the funerals this year. Our kids have been playing together. I sat through the same tens of thousands of political ads you did. I prayed for rain, fire suppression, protection of rescue workers, safety, and for healing in the same situations you did. So, I have no reason now to pretend or to lie to you when I need the same good news you do. Youā€™re getting the Christmas message that I need to hear just as much as you- everything I need fits in the manger. 

The manger isnā€™t just a historical detail in an ancient story ā€“ it is a powerful metaphor for how God chooses to meet our deepest human needs. That wooden feedbox, whatever its original size was, holds the infant Christ who reveals Godā€™s presence, provision, and peace. 

First, presence. In the Christmas story, we see God choosing to become present with humanity in the most intimate way possible ā€“ by becoming one of us. The manger represents God's desire to meet us where we are, in our messiness and vulnerability. Nothing is more vulnerable or messy than childbirth or, afterward, the baby. 

The reality of God coming into the world as an infant is a powerful reminder that we don't need to clean ourselves up or achieve some level of perfection before we can experience God's presence. God comes to us as we are, where we are. In the manger, we find Christ- God with us- in the same humble state in which we all entered the world. 

Godā€™s willingness to take on the vulnerability of human infancy and the aches and pains of human growth is a witness to how God keeps all the divine promises. A God who is willing to show up like this will always be present in other unexpected and humble ways. The presence of God in the manger is the promise of the presence of God everywhere there is need- in a hospital room, at a dinner table, in the cab of a truck, in a classroom, or in the grocery store.

The manger shows us that God is not uninterested in our lives; God is intimately involved in them. Christ is not far off or distant, but closeā€”close in our suffering, close in our joy, close in our loneliness, and close in our hope.

Now, let's talk about provision. At first glance, a manger might seem like a symbol of lack, not a fancy cradle or even a real bed. In that humble feeding trough, however, lay everything humanity truly needed ā€“ a Savior who would provide not just for our physical needs, but for our deepest spiritual longings. The manger teaches us that true provision often comes in unexpected packages and that sometimes, less isnā€™t really more. Less can be enough.

The manger tells us that God will provide what we need, not necessarily what we want. In the gift of Jesus, God gives us everything we need for life and salvation: the forgiveness of sins, the promise of eternal life, and the hope of a restored relationship with our Creator. In and through Christ, we have everything necessary to live a life of faith, to endure trials, and to be part of how Godā€™s will is done on earth as in heaven.

Jesus is the answer to our deepest hungersā€”our hunger for purpose, our hunger for peace, our hunger for love. When we focus on how we have to do things for ourselves, we often miss the ways that God does provide for us- people around us who are glad to help, open doors and windows that create opportunities, the ability to focus on one day at a time and see blessings around us. 

Understanding Godā€™s provision does not mean we wonā€™t ever suffer or struggle. I am certain Mary didnā€™t imagine laying her firstborn child on a bed of straw in a strange house. Godā€™s provision, though, meant that she had a safe place to give birth and revelation of Godā€™s presence in clear and tangible ways through the location, the hospitality, and then the witness of the angels to the shepherds. The same God shows up for us in clear and tangible ways, providing for our needs. 

Finally, the manger reveals Godā€™s peace. Peace isnā€™t merely the absence of conflict. The original manger was located in an occupied territory of the Roman Empire, whose emperor kept peace by squashing rebellions rather violently. Shortly after Jesusā€™ birth, Joseph and Mary will have to flee with the infant to Egypt in order to keep him safe from Herodā€™s slaughter of innocents. 

The peace that comes to us in the manger is a peace for our hearts and minds. In a world constantly clamoring for our attention, bombarding us with messages about what we need to buy, achieve, or become to find happiness, the manger offers a radical alternative. It whispers to us that peace is not found in external circumstances or accomplishments, but in recognizing and embracing the presence of God in our lives.

This peace reminds us that we have been made by God and we are loved by God. This is a truth not only for us, but for all people. When we see the infant prince of peace in the manger, the Spirit stirs us to hear an echo, ā€œWith God as our Father, we are familyā€. With that sense of an enlarged family, we see peace on earth beginning here and continuing through us in words and deeds. 

Pope Francis said, ā€œGod never gives someone a gift they are not capable of receiving. If he gives us the gift of Christmas, it is because we all have the ability to understand and receive it.ā€ 

Everything we need fits in the manger and God has made us capable of receiving the gifts that have been provided in love.  

This Christmas, let us ask for our hearts to be opened so that we might receive the peace, provision, and presence that God offers through Jesus. And may the joy of knowing that everything we need can be found in the manger fill us with all hope, joy, and love as we celebrate His birth. 

May Godā€™s peace, provision, and presence be with you always. And when any of those seems far away, no matter the time of year, return to the manger. It all fits right here. Amen.

 

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