Grace Presbyterian Church
December 27, 2015, Christmas 1C
Luke 2:41-52
Going Into His Father’s
Business
It is remarkable how
little we truly know about the life of Jesus. During the season we are accustomed to hear much about
Jesus’s birth, of course, but remarkably little is told; only two of the gospels
have any sort of birth story for Jesus, and Luke’s story spends almost as much
time on the birth of his cousin John as on Jesus himself. Once Jesus is born, aside from the text
for today, we fast-forward almost thirty years to the public, adult ministry of
Jesus. Of this we are given,
between the four gospels, about a three-year period of ministry before Jesus’s
crucifixion and resurrection.
This is not
typical of the biographies of most major religious figures. A casual scan of Wikipedia entries for
figures such as Muhammad or Buddha will reveal stories that, if not complete,
at least don’t have decades-long gaps in the life of the subject. Even in the early Christian world
stories of ancient heroes or demigods were far more complete, and likely to
contain accounts of the subject’s childhood that suggest that the essential
traits of that hero’s character, if not their miraculous abilities, were
well-established at an early age.
It seems that in
the early days of Christianity, around the second century or after, the absence
of such stories about Jesus helped spur the writing of a number of “gospels,”
some of them specifically infancy narratives or childhood stories, purporting
to fill in the yawning gaps in the life of Jesus. These “gospels” of course were not ultimately accepted into the biblical canon as we know it, and
in more than a few cases we’re probably glad of this fact. One such collection, known as the Infancy Gospel of Thomas today, purports
to cover an eight-year span of Jesus’s life, beginning from age five. Most of
the stories are miracle stories, not surprisingly. Some of them are harmless, or even cute: at age five Jesus
is creating birds from clay and bringing them to life, and a little later, when
helping Joseph in the carpenter shop, he magically stretches out a board that
was too short for the use Joseph intended. Some of the stories, however, are rather frightening. Jesus
strikes dead a boy who bumped into him, and then strikes blind those who complained
about the boy’s death. In another story Jesus raises a boy from the dead, but
only so the boy could testify that Jesus wasn’t the one who pushed him off the roof.
Frankly, in many of these stories Jesus comes off as little more than a brat
with superpowers.
Fortunately, the
one account of Jesus’s young life to be found in the canonical gospels is
rather less gruesome. Indeed, it is a story that is at first glance remarkable
for its unremarkability. Its context is that of a very typical, devout Jewish
family life for its time, with regular trips to the Temple in Jerusalem for the
observances required of the faithful.
One such
observance was the Feast of the Passover, which Luke tells us the family
traveled to Jerusalem every year to observe. The year when Jesus was twelve
years old was no different than the years before, evidently; the family
gathered itself up and made its way to Jerusalem, in the company of relatives
and other faithful acquaintances, for the Passover observance; they remained in
Jerusalem for all of the appropriate events of the festival, and when it was
all over, they, along with their relatives and fellow travelers, made their way
home. All very typical of a devout Jewish family of the time, this was.
Only after a day’s
return journey towards Nazareth did the story take its unexpected turn. Maybe in
our extremely cautious age, where parents can keep children on leashes or
attach beepers to them, this story is hard to believe, but a day into the
journey home it became clear that Jesus wasn’t there. He was nowhere to be
seen.
The sense of panic
Mary and Joseph must have experienced is probably not hard for you to imagine. Emotions
rise to a fever pitch, desperation sets in. And there’s no 911 to call, no
Amber Alerts to issue; he’s just … gone. At last the only answer is for Mary
and Joseph to retrace their steps to Jerusalem and try to find the boy.
Jerusalem is a
large city, even at the time in which Mary and Joseph are searching. The
frustration of wondering how this boy, normally such a good boy, could go off
and do something so irresponsible was
no doubt mixing with the sheer terror of desperately trying to find the boy
before it was … too late. He’s not at the lodging. He’s not at the market. Where could that boy be???
Finally, after
three days of searching, the parents arrive at the Temple. Sure, this was where
no doubt the family had spent much of their time during the Passover, but why
would Jesus come back here with the festival over? And yet that’s exactly where
Jesus was.
Seated among the
teachers in the Temple, far removed from the celebrating crowds that had
thronged there only a few days before, was the boy Jesus. Luke tells us he was
listening to the teachers and asking them questions, and that those hearing him
were extremely impressed, to say the least, by his questions, by his
attentiveness, by his intelligence, by his insight.
Not surprisingly,
though, the parents are not really in the mood to be regaled with stories of
their son’s intelligence and perceptiveness. No, the first thing on their
minds, perhaps first after OhthanktheLordhe’ssafe,
is “HOW COULD YOU DO THIS TO US???” Luke
describes the parents as “astonished,” or “astounded” – but not in a good way. Child, why have you treated us like
this? Look, your father and I have
been searching for you in great anxiety. Now let’s put that in terms we can
understand: Oh, Jesus, how could you put
us through this? Your poor father
and I have been searching all over Jerusalem for you, and you’ve just had us
worried sick! What were you thinking, son? How could you just go off on your
own like this? Don’t you know it’s not safe?
At this point it’s
impossible to speculate what kind of response Jesus’s parents expected from
him. Maybe Mary and Joseph themselves didn’t even know what to expect, or
perhaps they expected no response at all, as long as he was quiet and did what
he was told and took his scolding and didn’t sneak off again.
They most
certainly did not expect the reply they got, though. That much is certain. “Why
were you searching for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s
house?” Why would you think I’d be anywhere else? The words must have cut
like the sharpest of knives. How long had it been since Mary and Joseph thought
back to those events of twelve years before, the strange angel apparitions and
stars and shepherds? And now, to
be confronted with such a harsh declaration? No wonder they couldn’t understand
it.
For all the
seeming disconnect between parents and child, in the end Jesus was obedient,
Luke tells us; he went home with Mary and Joseph, his mother and his earthly
father, and if there were any similar incidents in Jesus’s teenage years Luke
does not tell us about them.
Still, even though
the scene doesn’t have the lurid appeal of a superboy striking people dead or
blind in a fit of pique, what we do learn of Jesus in this account is
disconcerting and disorienting in its own way. At the age of twelve, on the
cusp of manhood in the Jewish tradition, Jesus has made his own declaration
that, ultimately, he would be going into his Father’s business. Above all else,
this twelve-year-old boy tells us, he is the Son of God; and this above all
determines where he must be, what he must do, how he must live. Even as we’re told that Jesus grew up well and was
well-regarded by those who knew him or met him, the overriding and unbreakable
marker of his life was to be in favor with God, no matter how much his parents
might not understand, or his brothers or sisters, or his fellow citizens of
Nazareth.
The biblical
scholar R. Alan Culpepper describes two ways of understanding obedience to God,
saying:
Some define their
religious practices with lists of things they may not do: “thou shalt not …
“. Such lists set boundaries, but
they do not define goals. A commitment to God that is born of the experience of
God’s love and presence is expressed in grateful participation in God’s
redemptive work. There are some things we have to do just because of who we
are: “I must be about my Father’s
business.”
In the end, that’s
what we are given to learn from the youth Jesus. No matter how much others –
even one’s own family – might misunderstand or resist, if we are truly to be
about our Father’s business, there are things we must do. Not because they are
written down in a list of rules or held over our heads as threats or dangled
before us to entice us towards some reward, but because being a child of God
means we do those things – we love God’s children, we care for those poorer
than we, we worship when we’d rather be sleeping in, we teach our children what
it means to be a child of God, even at the risk of their taking it seriously. To
borrow words from our confessional document, A Brief Statement of Faith, we pray without ceasing, we witness
among all peoples to Christ as Lord and Savior, we unmask idolatries in church
and culture, we hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and we work with
others for justice, freedom, and peace. And we do it because we must, because
that’s what it means to be a child of God, and because that’s what it means to
be working in our Father’s business.
Thanks be to God. Amen.
Hymns
(all PH 90): “Once In Royal David’s
City” (49), “Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming” (48), “O Sing a Song of Bethlehem”
(308), “Go, Tell It On the Mountain” (29).
from JesusMafa.com, Jesus Among the Teachers
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