St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church, Owings Mills MD
December 24, 2025
Christmas Eve
Isaiah 9:2-7
Psalm 96
Titus 2:11-14
Luke 2:1-20
God Goes "All In"
Merry Christmas!
As most of you know, every year the church conducts a stewardship campaign, or sometimes we call it a stewardship season.
Every fall, we try to reflect a little more deeply on the many blessings we have received from God, and we think about how we should and can respond to those blessings by giving of ourselves more generously, by sharing our time, talent, and treasure, by being generous with the church and with others.
Every year, it’s customary to come up with a theme for the stewardship campaign. Ideally, it’s something catchy and memorable.
One of my favorites was “An Attitude of Gratitude.”
You just can’t go wrong with a rhyme.
But my most favorite was a theme we used one year at my previous church in Jersey City:
“All In.”
“All In”
Now, “All In” had a double meaning.
First, we hoped that all our parishioners would fill out and submit their pledge cards.
But on a deeper and more meaningful level, “All In” was about commitment, calling all of us to be fully committed to Jesus, to be fully committed to our church, to be fully committed to love and mercy.
“All In.”
I don’t remember exactly how successful our stewardship campaign was that year, I think we did OK, but I do remember one particular parishioner who took our theme to heart.
I’ll call him Anthony.
He was a challenging guy. He had some mental health challenges, with wide mood swings, which often made him very difficult to deal with.
You always knew when he was in church.
Anthony was essentially homeless. He would tell me that he was “living off the land.”
Some of us were able to help Anthony, at least a little, but it was tough.
Anyway, for whatever reason, “All In” really captured his imagination.
Often when I’d see him around in the neighborhood, he’d yell out, “Father Tom, I’m all in!”
And believe it or not, Anthony was a pledging member of our church.
And that year, he wrote on his pledge card that his ministry was to “Seek the lost.”
And that’s exactly what he did.
He was always trying to convince people he encountered on the street to come to our church, and a few times he managed to get them there, people who were often in worse shape than he was – living on the streets, addicted, overwhelmed by life, bewildered to somehow find themselves in an Episcopal church on a Sunday morning.
Of course, Anthony’s ministry of seeking the lost made many of us church people, very much including me, uncomfortable and on edge.
The good order of our service was sometimes disrupted when one of Anthony’s lost sheep would start wandering around.
And yet, although he was pretty messed up himself, or maybe because he was messed up himself, Anthony felt the urgency to share Something Good – to share the One who is Good – with those who were lost.
Anthony went “all in” – and, by his example, he challenged us to do the same.
On the first Christmas, God went “all in” with us, and for us.
The God who creates all that is – the God who is pure love and mercy – the God who transcends time and space – this God comes among us in a new and unique way, limiting God’s Self in a particular human being, born to a couple of nobodies in the humblest of circumstances.
In and through Jesus, God goes “all in” with us and for us.
God submits to the limitations of humanity, the limitations of infancy, unable to walk or speak or feed himself or clean himself, totally dependent on the care of Mary and Joseph, who, let’s face it, just barely manage to pull it off.
In and through Jesus, God goes “all in” with us and for us – all the way to the cross and the empty tomb.
Take that in for a moment.
All in. For us.
So, if we ever think that we don’t matter, that our life has little or no value, or that our mistakes are just too bad to be forgiven, remember that God goes “all in” for us.
And if we ever think that other people don’t matter, that their lives have little or no value, or that their mistakes are just too bad to be forgiven, remember that God goes “all in” for them, too.
Two thousand years ago, almost no one knew about the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem – just a no doubt exhausted Mary and a stunned Joseph, and maybe the innkeeper who sent them away.
And, of course, the shepherds, who encountered the angels singing their song of glory - they knew, too.
But that’s about it.
And yet, this obscure birth, both unique and ordinary, this birth changes everything.
In and through Jesus, God goes “all in” with us and for us.
And how should we respond to this greatest of all blessings?
Well, with an attitude of gratitude, of course!
This Christmas and always, let’s go “all in.”
Like Anthony, let’s seek the lost – and there are a lot of them – some have no homes and some have very nice houses.
With God’s help, let’s live lives of love and mercy, reminding everybody, including ourselves, that we are all loved – that we all matter - because God goes “all in” with us and for us.
Amen.
.jpg)
