What are your plans and intentions for Christmas? Now, I don t mean the things

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Malachi 3:1-7 Christmas Objectives What are your plans and intentions for Christmas? Now, I don t mean the things you expect to do on Christmas day, but what you want Christmas to be. Should it be the season of special music and colored lights and hot spiced cider and visions of sugar-plums; should it be that time when you gather with family to eat and laugh and reminisce, to give and receive gifts; a time to pass along the traditions of your own childhood to your children and grandchildren? A time for joy, watching the little ones as they anticipate the visit from that peculiar fat gentleman in the red suit. Yes, surely you want Christmas to be these things- and more- add your own favorite memories and your hopes for friends and family. These would be your Christmas objectives, your goals for the Christmas season in your home. But we should be honest, our Christmas objectives may not be exactly God s goals for us, or for the church, or for the nation, or for the world. I don t think it matters to God if we open presents on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning- or any number of holiday traditions people get upset about- haven t we ve all seen people we know get completely bent out of shape over the smallest things? Perhaps we should say simply that God is glad when we give thanks for the child who has come to us, and when we share and celebrate together; when we laugh and

give to one another, as a family or as a church. Maybe we can say those are God s Christmas objectives- some of them at least. And some others may be found in this passage in Malachi. I count four of God s purposes in this scripture- and I think we can call them Christmas objectives because of the very first one, announcing the coming of the Lord, God s presence among us. Verse 1, the Lord will suddenly come to his temple. And rightly, we will think of the temple in Jerusalem, perhaps remember the story of Mary and Joseph bringing baby Jesus to the temple and offering sacrifices for the birth of their son, or the story of 12 year-old Jesus in the temple discussing religion with the elders and the PhD.s; or adult Jesus entering the temple in a fury and turning over the tables, throwing the money onto the ground, and driving out the people, shouting his complaint that God s house of prayer they have made into a one-stop shopping center. The Lord s coming is a good thing, a great thing, but it can be difficult for us- like it must have been for those people in the temple that day- because he comes to this special place, the temple, and that means his coming may challenge many of our religious feelings and experiences and expectations. This is the second objective, to challenge us: he is like fire and soap, so that he refines and

cleanses and purifies the practice of religion; verse 3 has it, until they present right offerings to the Lord. For us that doesn t mean the sacrifices of turtledoves or lambs, or the proper sequence of the liturgy, but rather the offering of our hearts and lives, cleansed by the one who has come; hearts and lives dedicated to humble living and service to God. Perhaps this second objective is defined by the third: he draws near to us for judgment. In verse 5 the Lord says he will be a witness against sorcerers and adulterers and liars, those who cheat workers out of their wages, and those who oppress widows and orphans and laborers, those who push aside foreigners with disregard or with malice. In this third objective, maybe we can begin to see that much of God s purpose for us is social and interpersonal. The Lord comes into his temple, and as well, the temple of our hearts. First of all, the Lord is against impure or nonchalant religion, but we see that so much of religion is relationship founded upon selflessness and love. Look again, at those the Lord stands against in verse 5. Here, the Christmas objective is right religiosity- he is against those who do not fear him, he says- but we understand that right religion is also justice and fairness and compassion, and not so much a concern over nativity scenes on the courthouse lawn. This is the challenge to each of us, that God may be against

many of our actions and opinions, because some of them are just unimportant and some of them are hateful. It s not about us versus them, as we might hear from certain sources. The Christmas objective is us for them, because God is for them. The Lord s goal is to come and to convert us all into a people who fear and love him as he loves us. And this is the fourth objective, a call to repentance. Return to me, and I will return to you, says the Lord in verse 7. What a beautiful word of grace and forgiveness and hopefulness for those adulterers and liars and oppressors out there, and for sinners in here. Repent, for he has come and is close to us. Even though you have turned away from my commandments, still forgiveness is available. Think, all the dark centuries of human history, of oppression and killing and hatred and madness, tribal and national pride, the ways we so easily self-justify our deeds and attitudes toward others. What profound sinfulness! And yet he comes to us. Here is his promise, I the Lord do not change. Have you ever wondered how it can be possible that humankind has never yet destroyed itself? It must be this, I do not change, and so, you are not consumed. What a hopeful and comforting word! that the Lord has kept us for himself, kept on loving us and loving us, and has come to us that we may see and turn to him.

Don t think that the Lord has come to the temple, or the church, and locked himself away in there. No, he is in the midst of relationships, on the outside every day, calling to us in so many ways. In the strangest places and times of our lives we can see God s Christmas objectives, uniting persons and peoples, revealing his love for us all; in the strangest places, like that time long ago in a quiet pasture in the dark of night when angels announced the good news of joy to all people (Luke 2:10), and peace for all the world (2:14); objectives like the promise to a frightened young Galilean girl that God would bring salvation and forgiveness and light to people in darkness and despair (1:77-79), and would lift up the despised and fill up the hungry (1:52-53); in so many ways show his perfect mercy, that all may rejoice and give him thanks. The prophet continues in the following verses of chapter 3, writing that the way for the people to return to the Lord is to stop robbing God. He states that their tithes and offerings are lacking and incomplete. We shouldn t think that the nation was cursed or that people were hurting because they didn t contribute exactly ten percent to the temple treasury or only because there was something wrong with their sacrifices; or that today there is suffering because we don t put enough in the

church collection plate. No, the offering the Lord demands is a heart that gives itself to God, helping and loving others; and the acceptable tithe may be one tenth of our earnings (or our livelihood), but it is nothing less than one hundred percent of our life. Verse 10 has God speaking, bring the full tithe into the storehouse, so that there may be food in my house, which should call to mind food banks and organizations like Helping Hands. Obviously it is a command that God s people care and provide for one another. And it comes with a promise: put me to the test, the Lord says, and see if I don t open the windows of heaven for you, and pour down overflowing blessings. Isn t this yet another Christmas objective of the Lord who comes, to demand that we take responsibility for our sisters and brothers and neighbors, and show them love; a demand that we give ourselves to God so that God s blessings may fall upon all of us? God s purposes are always for our benefit. Therefore, our objective should be to benefit others, and for the sake of those who do not yet know God s lovethat perfect love we see so clearly in the one who has come.