THE RUNT OF THE LITTER James S. Currie. Belinda was her name. She was actually a little bit younger than I was, a fact of which I

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Luke 1:39-55!!!!!!! First Presbyterian, Pasadena Micah 5:2-5a!!!!!!!!! December 20, 2015 THE RUNT OF THE LITTER James S. Currie! When I was growing up, first in Dallas and then in Houston, our family had a dog. Belinda was her name. She was actually a little bit younger than I was, a fact of which I took great note because that meant, as the youngest child of five, I was no longer the baby of the family, but Belinda was. When I asked Dad what kind of dog she was, he simply said she was a mutt. To this day I still donʼt know what kind of dog she was, only that she was not one that was greatly appreciated by my father. He tolerated her. In my imagination Belinda was probably the runt of the litter. Evidently, some family came by our house in Dallas asking if we wanted a dog and, for whatever reason -- probably my siblings begged and pleaded with my parents and in a moment of weakness -- we had a pet that would stay with us until she died around the age of 15 years.! The picture you see on the screen is of another dog -- a Scottie we saw this past week in Central Park in New York City. I donʼt know if this dog was the runt of the litter, but we were struck by its patient attentiveness to the gentleman playing Christmas tunes on his saxophone. While we watched and listened, aside from turning his head occasionally, that dog sat still and watched and listened.! But you, O Bethlehem of Ephrathah, who are one of the little clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to rule in Israel, whose origin is from of old, from ancient days (Micah 5:2). The prophet Micah lived in the southern kingdom of Judah and watched as the northern kingdom of Israel was attacked and taken captive 1

by Assyria to the north. He preached warnings to Jerusalem and the rest of the kingdom. This one who told Judah what the Lord requires of humanity, namely, to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God, also prophesied that the tiny little town of Bethlehem, about six miles south of Jerusalem, would be the site chosen by God to enter into this world. Bethlehem, the burial site of Jacobʼs wife Rachel, and the place where Samuel anointed David king of Israel about 300 years earlier, would become the birthplace of the Savior of the world.! While not the runt of the litter, Bethlehem is not exactly the site most would have thought to be the site of the birthplace of the Messiah. Wouldnʼt it have made much more sense for Jerusalem, the capital city, the site of the temple, the central place of worship to be the birthplace of the Christ child. Certainly, the Magi seemed to think so as they went there first. But instead, it was Bethlehem of Ephrathah, one of the little clans of Judah. How very strange.! It almost seems that God goes out of the way to choose the least likely place and the least likely persons to do whatever it is that God wants to do. Virtually everything that God does in this red thread of relationships with human beings throughout Scripture is strange and unexpected. In this season of Advent we note Micahʼs prophecy of Bethlehem as the home town of a future ruler of Israel. In the passage that was read from Luke we find Mary, whose family was certainly not among the elite, whether politically, socially, or economically, being the chosen one by God to bear the Christ child, and her cousin, Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came from no higher class than Mary did. And even when in Johnʼs Gospel Jesusʼ first disciples were being gathered and Philip says to Nathanael that he has found the Messiah who happens to 2

have come out of Nazareth, Nathanaelʼs response is, Can anything good come out of Nazareth? (John 1:46).! Itʼs interesting, is it not, that in this season of Advent as we approach the celebration of Christʼs birth, in this country at least, we focus on the big and the boisterous and the most eye-catching. In the midst of lovely Christmas lights some of us almost stumble across several persons wrapped in blankets along downtown sidewalks. That is not intended to be a depressing thought. Rather, itʼs intended to turn our thoughts to the overlooked, the ignored, the outsider, the one whose dear family member just died, the one who is wrestling with depression or some kind of addiction. Do not those kinds of thoughts make the news of Godʼs incarnation in Jesus Christ even more powerful and meaningful, that God has come not as one only for the powerful and the prestigious, but for the likes of you and me? He came for the runt of the litter as much as for the pick of the litter.! This is the very one of whom the prophet Isaiah said, For he grew up before him like a young plant, and like a root out of dry ground; he had no form or majesty that we should look at him, nothing in his appearance that we should desire him. He was despised and rejected by others; a man of suffering and acquainted with grief; and as one from whom others hide their faces he was despised, and we held him of no account (Isaiah 53:2-3).! While this is a joyous season, it is so not because of what we make it nor because we can leave our troubles behind, if only for a little while, but rather it is a joyous time because God has deigned to enter this troubled world -- not to fix what we 3

have messed up, and not to gloss over the troubles of the world, as if they can be shoved aside for three to four weeks. God has entered this world to enter our world.! In the play The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Christopher Boone is a 15-year-old who has Asperger syndrome, high-functioning autism, or savant syndrome. Whatʼs fascinating is that the play isnʼt really about autism so much as it is about Christopher as an outsider, as one who struggles with the world and the world with him. The slightest stimulus, even the human touch let alone the frenetic noise and movement of a train station, can cause Christopher to withdraw into himself even more. Sioban is a para-professional and mentor at his school. She helps him understand and cope with the outside world. The play opens with Christopher discovering that his dog has been murdered. The rest of the play revolves around Christopher investigating this crime. He records his discoveries in a book he calls a mystery novel. His disability ignites fears and obstacles within him that make his investigation rather convoluted and scary. Christopher is in a world within a world. Breaking through both worlds, first the outside world that you and I know and then Christopherʼs own world, has to be the work of a divine agent. But once done, what joy there is for someone like Christopher.! God became human not simply for persons like Christopher, but God enters our world in the same way that someone like Sioban tries to enter Christopherʼs world to show compassion and love and grace and understanding and to teach us to do the same. It is almost as if we all were autistic, confined to our own little world and unable to comprehend any world beyond our own. And to show Godʼs love for this world, God must enter our world, and God does so in the person of Jesus Christ. And this love that God shows is one that cares for the least, the last, and the lost of any of us. Ironically, 4

the more sophisticated we think we are, the more powerful we think we are, the more self-sufficient we think we are, the less open we are to Godʼs love and grace and faithfulness as they are revealed in Jesus Christ and the less likely we are to experience the kind of breakthrough that enables us to experience them in our own lives.! But you, O Bethlehem of Ephrathah, who are one of the little clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to rule in Israel, whose origin is from of old, from ancient days. Not only will the Christ come from Bethlehem of Ephrathah, one of the little clans of Judah, but the Christ will come for Bethlehem of Ephrathah and all the little clans, however small, however weak, however powerless, however marginalized. In the words of the angel to those shepherds, who were themselves among the lowest of the low in Israelite culture, to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord (Luke 2:11).! We are certainly not among the lowest of the low. We are not among the outcasts of our society. Most of us donʼt consider ourselves the runt of the litter. All things considered, we are pretty well off, especially compared to the rest of the world. But is that not perhaps the most dangerous condition of all? Might we not, perhaps more than others, because of our relative contentment, miss out on the true joy of Godʼs breaking through into our world with the good news of Godʼs love and grace? I hope not because that news is aimed at each one of us, regardless of our condition.! The last thing I want to mention has to do with that little Scottie in Central Park. While that musician played his saxophone, that dogʼs attention seemed to be riveted on him. Thatʼs where our attention should be, namely, fixed on the God who dared to come into our world and become one of us. The more our focus is fixed on this Jesus, the 5

more likely it is that we will hear his words of grace, love, joy, and acceptance. Then, led by his Spirit, we will be able to share that same news with others, seeing all others as Godʼs creatures as well and as our brothers and sisters.! Thanks be to God! 6