10/29/2019

First Sunday of Christmas

by Rev. Dr. Neal Presa

December 29: Isaiah 63:7-9; Matthew 2:13-23

The living God of Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Isaac, Jacob, Rachel, Esther, David, Mary, Joseph, and all the matriarchs and patriarchs of the faith, fully and finally revealed in Jesus Christ is both absolute and personal. Being absolute, the Lord is to be followed and obeyed because God is our Creator and we are not. Being personal, the Lord pursues us and comes to us so that our following and our obeying is done out of love, not out of fear, not out of wrath. As his children redeemed in Christ, we desire and delight in the ways and will of the Lord.

This first Sunday of Christmas, which means the last Sunday of this calendar year, gives us as texts Isaiah 63 and Matthew 2. Both Scripture passages demonstrate the intensely powerful and personal God who has the backs of his people, who says of Israel, “Surely, they are my people.” (63:8). The Lord displays that personal love of his people by redeeming, lifting, carrying them because of the abundance of his love. The response of the prophet and of the prophet’s community was to recount the Lord’s gracious deeds, and in recalling the Lord’s goodness, the prophet and Israel would inspire others to, likewise, love and serve the Lord. God of our matriarchs and patriarchs is powerful, which means the Lord is more than able to overcome any power or principality that seeks to frustrate God’s love for us and God’s righteous and just intentions for his creation. Being personal, God seeks us out. In fact, variations of 63:9a render that part as “in all their distress, he (the Lord) was distressed.” And the NRSV renders 63:9b as: “It was no messenger or angel but his presence that saved them.” The message is clear: the God of our matriarchs and patriarchs is aggrieved at our burdens and suffering, and the Lord personally sees to it that we are cared for and protected.

Matthew 2 showed our absolutely powerful and absolutely personal and loving Lord caring for the holy family. The Lord, through an angelic messenger, instructed Joseph to take Mary and Jesus to Egypt until the threat of Herod subsided; after the threat was gone, the Lord again instructed the holy family to return to the holy land, to Nazareth.

As we end this calendar year and are in the midst of Christmastide until Epiphany, let us join the affirmation and action of the prophet Isaiah and his community of recounting “the gracious deeds of the Lord, the praiseworthy acts of the Lord, because of all that the Lord has done for us.” (63:7a). Worship, as we understand it in the Reformed traditions, is the human response to what God has done in Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit. The human response is one marked by thanksgiving, joy, love, gladness, confession, commitment. Stewardship is an important act of worship for it is a tangible response to God first acting powerfully, decisively, and personally in loving us, in pursuing us, in having our backs not only this year but in every season.

Rev. Dr. Neal Presa

Rev. Dr. Neal Presa

The Rev. Neal D. Presa, Ph.D. is Executive Presbyter of the Presbytery of San José. He also serves as Affiliate Associate Professor of Preaching at Fuller Theological Seminary, and Senior Fellow of The Center for Pastor Theologians. He is past chair (2020-2022) and vice chair (2018-2020) of the Board of Trustees of the Presbyterian Foundation. He served as Moderator of the 220th General Assembly (2012-2014), and he currently represents the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) on the World Council of Churches Central Committee and Executive Committee, where he is moderator of the finance policy committee. He is moderator of the Theology Working Group for the World Communion of Reformed Churches’ 27th General Council (2025, Chiang Mai). He is author/(co-)editor of nine books and over 100 essays, journal articles, and book reviews, including the recent Worship, Justice, and Joy: A Liturgical Pilgrimage (Cascade, 2025), as part of the Worship & Witness series in partnership with the Calvin Institute for Christian Worship and with funding from the Louisville Institute. For two decades he served congregations in New Jersey and California, and as a senior administrative faculty and visiting professor/research fellow in theological institutions in the United States, Philippines, and South Africa. He is married to Grace née Rhie (a publisher of English books on Korean subjects) and they have two college age sons. Connect with Neal on social media @NealPresa or email Neal@sanjosepby.org.

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