We run across truth in the strangest places. Sometime back it was revealed that there is a course in a major university on Donald Duck comic books. These particular comics were created by Carl Barks. From the early '40s until his retirement in 1966, Barks produced some 400 comics about Donald Duck, his Uncle Scrooge, a stingy billionaire, and three frenetic nephews, Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
In one classic series, the rich uncle's billions nearly have driven him crazy. Everybody is asking him for money, and Scrooge is gulping nerve medicine by the bottle. In an attempt to save his sanity, Scrooge parachutes with Donald and the nephews into a remote, agrarian village named Trala-La, a parody of Shagri-La, the Utopia in James Hilton's novel, "Lost Horizon."
But Scrooge makes the mistake of carelessly discarding a nerve-medicine bottle cap, and the natives begin using it as money. They fight over the cap, and disrupt their idyllic existence. Scrooge brought plenty of medicine to Trala-La and because he has lots of bottle caps again finds himself the richest person around. He decides to teach the natives a lesson by having a plane rain bottle caps on the village to devalue the currency. The caps soon threaten to bury the village and fill its lake. Scrooge turns off the cap shower, and everybody learns that money can be the root of all evil.
The final scene shows the three nephews asking Scrooge to pay them for accompanying him on the trip. Scrooge soon is gulping nerve medicine again. He can run but he cannot hide. Everybody wants money from him.
In another strip, the wind distributes Scrooge's money equally among the world's population. What do the newly rich do? Take a vacation, of course. Meanwhile Scrooge continues to tend his farm. In the end, everybody lines up to buy ears of corn from him. Spreading the wealth has failed. Scrooge is the richest man around again.
What Barks seems to be saying is that Uncle Scrooge by his very nature attracts wealth. Even if his circumstances change, he will still end up at the top financially because of who he is and the things he values.
In the Gospel of John we are told the same sort of thing about Christ. We are told that Christ is the light that has come into the world. In other words, there is something about Christ's very nature--something unique that has never existed in a human being before. His very presence dispels darkness. The Christmas season is a celebration of the light that has overcome darkness.
There are three great truths about the light which is Christ that we need to explore this morning.