Thursday, 8 January 2026

Epiphany 4 January 2026 Sermon

Epiphany 4 January 2026 One Savior

The word ‘adorable’ is often used of babies. The Baby we are particularly concerned with today is the most adorable by a long way, and in the full sense of the word – valued, trusted, obeyed, exalted, inviting and compelling our response.

For He has come from Heaven to dwell in our  human condition and save us.

No other god can do this or has done it.  Only this Child can receive our full adoration and obedience. 

Is it too much to ask that all honor and glory go to Him? He has come among us but has been largely undervalued.

Some will say He is just one more saviour among others. He is not meant for everyone. Every country or culture has its own gods, its own ways. Why single out Jesus Christ?

Because He is God and the others are not; He exists; they do not.

Look at it this way:  We believe in one God, Creator of heaven and earth. He made the lot, all that is seen and unseen. It all comes from Him.

If the world were ten times bigger than it is there would still be one God, big enough to know everything, and have the power to deal with it.

National distinctions crumble here. We cannot say, I am from another culture and therefore do not need Jesus Christ.

You need Him and you have Him, and this is His own teaching: I am the way, the truth and the life (Jn 14,6);He who is not with Me is against Me (Mt 12,30) or Go and baptize all nations(Mt 28,19-20)

God has created us to share His glory. Not because He was lonely but because it is in His nature to give, and keep giving.

He has enough love and power to look after all the billions whom He has made.

To put His plans into effect He came among us in this surprising way, to be born at Bethlehem.

Some people caught on, the shepherds and the wise men, and later, people of every generation. Some at least.

The message does not get any less important or less relevant.

So we keep the message current to our minds by means of our worship. We express the goodness of God, just as we are receiving from that goodness.

He sends us out as His ambassadors, at which we are not always very good, and for which we ask His pardon. The limitations of His followers do not take anything from His truthfulness; it just makes it harder to convince others. We ask Him to help us to do a better job, to be our strength in weakness. ‘We I am weak, then I am strong…’ (2 Co 12,10).

The wise men were humble enough to bow down to what looked like a powerless baby.

They discerned the hidden greatness.

Our Lord wants us to do the same. He wants our submission, but always voluntary.

The more we submit, the better it is for us because we take on the qualities of the Baby, the Lord.

The Epiphany is not new for us, perhaps, but our response needs to be refined. We give Him first place in a world which has many claims upon us. He is the first and the last – the Saviour -  only one, but in this case, one is enough!

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