The sermon was primarily preached on Luke 2:7, the passage in which Mary and Joseph are told that there is no room for them in the inn. I was deeply disappointed to watch the pastor recycle clichés and present a sermon that I can only assume was almost meaningless to most of the people present. I doubt it deeply affected anyone because everyone has heard this sermon in some variation a hundred times before. He basically compared the inn-keeper to Christians today, and asked whether we made any room for Jesus in our lives. Would we give Jesus the presidential suite in the inn of our lives, or would we relegate him to the stable? What a tame, overused message with absolutely no bite.
How long will ministers insist on delivering sermons about some vague concept of making room for Jesus in our personal lives? What does that even mean? What does it mean to "make room" for Jesus in our lives? Does it mean going to church once or more each week, attending bible studies, reading our bibles or a Christian devotional book, and praying before meals? Perhaps in part, but those measures seem to me to be lazy and weak. I believe that we Christians have a completely skewed vision of the Christian self.
It is time to stop focusing completely on the private sphere of our lives. We have all bought into the Enlightenment separation of the private and the public spheres. And Christianity, now labeled a "religion", is relegated to the private sphere, because religion is a private matter, as opposed to public matters like business and politics. To "make room for Jesus" in our lives means to integrate our "religion" into the completely private sphere of our practices. What a comfortable and easy task that is! By making Christianity a private religion, we don't have to face the scrutiny of others, and we rarely have to change the way we interact with others.
Let's face it. Our lives are made up of our social interactions. This is evident not only from a sociological and psychological perspective, but also from a biblical perspective. The Messiah acts on earth through the Church, a social body of Christians. This social body called the Church is the central focus in the book of Acts. Jesus himself instituted this idea of a centrally important social body of Christians when he gathered twelve disciples to learn from him and carry out his mission.
So why are Western Christians so focused on "religion", on Christianity as a personal, private aspect of life? If anything, Christianity opposes the personal. As humans, our every action is driven by the motivation to protect and enrich ourselves. We are mammals, animals like the others, driven by the need to survive and procreate. However, there is something that makes us different from the other animals. God created us in his image. He calls us to sacrifice our animal interests, like Jesus did, in order to bring in the Kingdom of Heaven.
The longer I go through life, the more I am convinced that humans are fundamentally selfish. However, Christians are called and empowered by God to constantly battle our self-serving nature. God has revealed to us that we are so much more than a self. We are children of God, and we were created to live forever in the Kingdom of God.
So it is time to cast aside this division between the public and the private. It is time to cast aside this category of religion that we often use to describe and understand Christianity. Your relationship with Jesus, your calling by God should not be separated from your job, your finances, your relationships with friends and strangers, or your politics. Otherwise, your faith is a farce. To use a simple and common example, stop joking about how you are a rude driver, about how you always tailgate and cut people off. All you are doing is revealing a festering sore in your life. You are just declaring to the world that your faith is safely relegated to other, more convenient aspects of your life.
So yes, "make room for Jesus" in your life. But realize that this is a fundamentally social calling. Remember that you will have to make room for Jesus when you are in a hurry to get somewhere on the road, or when a homeless person asks you for a dollar, or when someone new shows up on the periphery of your friend group, or when you are faced with a choice between making a bigger profit or selling a better product.