The Work of Christmas
This is Christmas. This is
Incarnation. No shepherds, no angels, no crèche, no Magi. John’s story is so
utterly unlike the familiar crèche or pageant. How on earth could one make
this, John’s story of the Incarnation, into a pageant? It begins before time
itself.
Note the opening words: “In the
beginning….” The first to hear or read John’s Gospel had heard these words
before. The entire Bible begins with these words, “In the beginning God
created….” Jesus’ origins are cosmic – at the very root of the universe, all
that is, seen and unseen. And we now know that fully 95% of the created
universe is unseen: dark matter and dark energy. Only 5% is anything at all
like us, and animals, rocks and trees and stars and planets, etc. God’s
creation is mostly unseen.
John puts Jesus, the Word, the Logos, present before anything was made.
Before God said the word, “Light!” and there was light! God speaks and things
come into being. Before God speaks, however there was the “Word.” In Greek that
is logos – word.
But for Jews and Gentiles alike in
the first century, this word logos
meant more than what we think when we say “word.” For at least six centuries
before Christ came into the world, logos
had currency among philosophers and meant something like the principle of
reason that ruled the universe. Logos
could also describe the Hebrew idea of wisdom – hokma in Hebrew, sophia in
Greek. According to the rabbis, wisdom was responsible for creation. So
universal is this Word, this logos,
that it is in everything that has been created. There is nothing “made that was
made” that is not made through this Word. This is why we promise in our Baptism
to “seek and serve Christ in all persons.” Christ as logos is in all persons. And in all things. Thus our need to care
for the Earth.
The Word is life, and this life is
light, This light is a beacon of light that shines and cuts through all
darkness – and darkness did not and has not overcome this light. That is there
is evil, not just in people but in all the created order. Our redemption in and
by the Word – the logos- is a vital
part of a larger project – the redemption of the entire universe of God’s
creation.
Yet, we who come from this Word,
this logos do not readily recognize
him. He comes to those of us who claim his name as our own – Christian- and yet
we know him not. This continues to be a problem. Just look around us. Two
Thousand Years of claiming his name as our own, and just how brilliantly does
the world around us reflect this life giving light? In a world of ongoing
brutalities – torture, killings, mass shootings, capital murder as retribution,
bombings, not to mention hunger, loneliness, hatred, bigotry, poverty and
rejecting strangers – can we really believe it pleases God to electrocute a
human being? Or, to kill him with an injection? Do we truly believe we can
bring about a greater good that reflects the life-light of God in the dark
places in the world and in our own hearts through such ongoing brutalities? We
are promised that all who do receive him, accept him, follow him, are given power to become “children of God.” We
say we receive, accept and follow Jesus, the Word, but is this at all reflected
in all that we do or say? Or, in all that is done or said on our behalf by
others who claim to know, receive, accept and follow this Word?
It makes it all the more remarkable
that this Word becomes flesh and blood and moves into the neighborhood. The
text literally says he “tabernacled among us.” That is, he pitched his tent,
this Word, this logos, this divine
wisdom, set up shop right in our midst despite our not knowing him. We are
meant, of course, to recall that other time in our tradition’s past when God
tabernacled among us in the tent of meeting in the wilderness – that place
where “the glory of the Lord filled the tent.” Again we behold his glory!
For John, this is Christmas. The
Word of God comes and pitches his tent to sojourn with us, giving us another
chance to know, accept and follow him. We behold his glory. He adopts us as his
own.
A story is told about some Navy
Seals sent to free a group of hostages in one of the dark corners of the world.
As they storm into the hiding place, they find the hostages huddled on the
floor in a corner of the room. The Seals tell them they are there to take them
home, get up and follow us. No one moves. They are so damaged by the experience
of their captivity that they do not believe these are really people sent to set
them free. So one of these Seals does something: he takes off his helmet, puts
down his gun, gets down on the floor, softens his face and huddles up next to
the captives, putting his arms around a few of them. No guards would do this.
He whispers, “We are like you. We are here to be with you and to rescue you.
Let us take you home. Will you follow us?” One by one the prisoners get up and
are eventually taken to safety on an aircraft carrier and brought home.
Lots of rhetoric and ink has been
spilled to explain the miracle of the incarnation – how it is God becomes one
of us to take us home – to redeem us as a step in redeeming a broken world and
broken universe. God sees us captive to many things, unwilling to simply step
away from those things that keep us in prison – often prisons of our own
making. In Jesus, God takes off all his glory, gets down on the floor with us,
huddles up with us – tabernacles among us, pitches his tent among us – and
whispers, “It is OK – I am with you – I am one of you now – come with me,
follow me, and I will take you home.”
John tells us that the essence of
Christmas does not need a creche, does not need shepherds, does not need angels,
or greens, or red bows, or piles of gifts, or carols, or turkeys and roast
beefs with all the trimmings. All Christmas needs is for us to know the Word,
to accept the Word, to get up and follow the Word. There is no way we can ever
know all there is to know about God – but in Christ, the logos, the Word, we can see the light and the logos, and He will
lead us home. This is Incarnation. This is Christmas. It is time now, writes
Howard Thurman, for the Work of Christmas to begin.
The
Work of Christmas
When the song of the angels is stilled
When the star in the sky is gone
When the Kings and Princes are home
When the shepherds are back with their
flocks
The work of Christmas begins:
To find the lost
To heal the broken
To feed the hungry
To release the prisoners
To bring peace among brothers
To make music in the heart
-Howard
Thurman, The Mood of Christmas
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