Here we are amid our celebration of the 12 days of Christmas, but not all is peaches and cream. Today’s texts present the dark side of the Incarnation. December 28, 2025 – EUMC & BCUMC – Christmas 1, Year A Today's Scriptures: Hebrews 2:10-18; Matthew 2:13-23 1. Introduction: Lingering in the Glow On the first Sunday after Christmas, we find ourselves in a peculiar space between celebration and memory. The decorations are still up, the last of the cookies are being eaten, and the melodies of familiar carols still echo in our minds. We want to linger in that warm glow—the candlelight services, the children’s pageant with shepherds in bathrobes, the joy of “Silent Night,” and the comforting hum of the season. Many of us have deep-rooted memories of this time. Perhaps you recall a childhood ritual of venturing into the woods with your father to find and cut down the perfect tree. Today, the process may be simpler, but the act of setting up and decorating the tree r...
This week we had a Service of Lessons and Carols , so I didn't have a sermon. So I decided to dig out an old sermon to share with you. This one was written in 2008 for Horne Memorial UMC in Clayton, NC. I spent time thinking about how Christmas is indeed a Feast Day, not just in a liturgical/theological sense, but also in a larger, secular context. In this country, the observance of some understanding of Christmas is universal, even if it is little more than a day off or a chance for people to share a meal together. The scale of the Christmas story (religious and secular) unfolds much like a Grand Opera. So I decided to prepare a sermon that marks Christmas in this manner. A Christmas Feast A Christmas sermon by Dr. Alan P. Swartz December 24, 2008 Horne Memorial UMC Preludio In the Christian tradition, this is one of the principal feast days of the church – the Nativity of the Lord – commonly called Christmas. What is Christmas like in your home? Families gathering to...