First Sunday of Christmas – December 28, 2025

Matthew 2:13-23

Herod…who is a ruler on a throne of power…

  • And Joseph…who is a peasant in an unconventional marriage.
  • One man is powerful…
  • And one man is not.
  • And yet the text only describes one of these men as being afraid.
  • And it was not the peasant.

Matthew’s Gospel tells us that King Herod made the Magi tell him where this baby was…because he was frightened.

  • Yes…Frightened of a baby.
  • Threatened by a horoscope and a newborn.

And this fear that Herod’s position in life is so tenuous…

  • That it must be fortified by sacrificing whoever it takes…
  • Is not a theoretical one by the way…
  • This Herod guy literally killed two of his own sons because he felt threatened by them.
  • Yes…his own sons.

Fear that what he had could be taken away.

  • Or fear of not getting what he wanted…
  • Turned him into a monster.
  • So much so that when he cannot quite locate the right baby…
  • The one that is so threatening to him…
  • He just sends for all the children two and under in and around Bethlehem to be killed.
  • Let us take that in…for a moment.

This is what fear does.

  • Fear disguises itself in so many ways:
  • As greed…hate…isolation…addiction…
  • The list is endless.
  • But in the end fear is at the root of all of it.
  • And while we might not be murderous tyrants…
  • None of us are free from the effects of fear in our lives.
  • It keeps us isolated and small and it steals away joy and possibility.

But in Joseph we see a different kind of man than Herod.

  • Joseph was not afraid.
  • An angel came from God and spoke love…was love…embodied love…
  • Sought to protect love…like a divine can of compressed air…
  • And this cast out Joseph’s fear so that he could function the way he was supposed to.
  • And here’s one clue…one way we can know that Joseph was not afraid…
  • He did not bat an eye when the angel said that his baby and wife were not safe…
  • So…he should take his family to Egypt.
  • Yes…Egypt.

The place his ancestors were enslaved.

  • The place that God rescued his people from slavery.
  • With fear cast out…Joseph was able to believe it possible that God’s redemptive work can happen anywhere…even Egypt.
  • With fear cast out…Joseph no longer saw everything through the lens of what it was in the past.
  • With fear cast out…he was able to beat a king…
  • Protect his wife and child…
  • And preserve that which is good in the face of tyranny.

Herod’s fear caused death.

  • And Joseph’s fearlessness protected life.
  • Of course…the irony is that Herod feared this baby for all the wrong reasons.
  • The Christ child did not knock Herod off his pathetic little throne.
  • History took care of that.

No…Jesus of Nazareth did not overthrow Rome…

  • He laughed at Rome.
  • He saw Rome for what it was:
  • Fleeting. Harsh and demanding and tyrannical…yes…but temporary.

And this child…protected by the songs of angels…

  • And the heart of his mother and the fearlessness of his father…
  • Came to free the people.
  • Free us from the shackles of sin and fear.
  • Gospel people are free people and free people are dangerous people.
  • Free people are not ruled by fear.
  • Free people see Rome for what it is.

And you know what?

  • There are angels hovering round us too…good people of God.
  • There are messengers of love all around.
  • And again…and forever…they say:
  • Do not be afraid.  Do not be afraid.
  • For in the heart of God there is enough love to cast out fear.
  • Herods…of the world…take note.

 

A postscript:Top of FormBottom of FormTop of FormBottom of Form

  • Wise women also came.
  • Long before they saw
    the flaming star in the sky.
  • They walked in shadows trusting the path would open under the light of the moon.

Wise women also came…seeking no directions…no permission from any king.

  • They came by their own desire…their own longing.
  • They came in quiet…spreading no rumors…sparking no fears to lead
    to innocents’ slaughter.

Wise women also came and they brought gifts:

  • Water for labor’s washing.
  • Fire for warm illumination.
  • A blanket for swaddling.

Wise women also came.

  • At least three of them.
  • Holding Mary in the labor.
  • Crying out with her in the birth pangs.
  • Breathing ancient blessings
    into her ear.

Wise women also came.

  • And they went…
  • As wise women always do…
  • Home a different way.