Thanks to Bishop Doyle for his thoughts and words....
"The Word became flesh and
lived among us."
St.
Augustine said that we are Easter people, and that "Alleluia is our
song." I believe that we are also
Christmas people, and as our altar hanging says, “Gloria in Excelsis Deo” or "Glory
to God in the Highest" is also our song. Who am I to amend a statement by
the man who laid the foundation of theology in the Middle Ages and forever
since?
Why
do I say that we are Christmas people? Well, though the celebration of Easter
preceded the celebration of Christmas by centuries, and despite the fact that
American Puritans considered it a pagan festival and outlawed it, and in spite
of the obvious secularization of this holy day, I suspect that most devout
Christians find our hearts strangely warmed by the thought of the babe in the
manger, and its message is a very unique one.
Every
religion has had to deal with questions of the relationship between God and
creation: Who we are in relation to the Creator? And then there is the big
question of what happens after we die. For some religions, it is an escape from
the bonds of the flesh, for some it is the Resurrection of the body. Plato
thought that disembodied souls lived on. The Christian celebration of Easter says
something very specific. And, in my experience and study of other religious
traditions, I have never found any other that believed in the Incarnation quite
the way Christians do.
The
closest might be the Hindus: their god, Vishnu is believed to have appeared on
earth many times, including his incarnations as Prince Rama, and Krishna, of
whom you may have heard. But these incarnations, what the Hindus call “avatars”
never quite get their feet dusty, they never really leave their divine glory
behind. They are never as human as you and me.
This
is one of the places where Christianity goes beyond other traditions: God is not simply manifest in the
natural world, nor simply in the human heart, but, in the words of St. Paul in
his letter to the Galatians, we read, “But when the fullness of time had come, God
sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, in order to redeem those who
were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as children. And because
you are children, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying,
"Abba! Father!" So you are no longer a slave but a child, and if a
child then also an heir, through God.” And,
from the Gospel of John we hear these words: “But to all who received him, who believed in
his name, he gave power to become children of God… And the Word became flesh
and lived among us.” It is this that makes Christianity so different. It is also
something, ironically, that many of us forget when we view Jesus as "just
a step above" "real" humans. Our Creeds remind us that Jesus was
fully human, as well as fully divine.
There
is really only one thing that we as Christians can never say in prayer. It is:
"But God, you don't understand." Because Jesus became a human, God
always understands. He’s been here and experienced it. And that, I suspect, is
the motivation behind the Lucan story of the stable, the manger, and shepherds:
this child was not born as a prince, or as the son of a CEO. Not in a palace,
not even in the maternity ward at a good hospital, but in a barn, sleeping in a
feeding trough, visited by dirty, smelly common laborers.
It
is that initial coming to live with us, one of us, that we celebrate at this
time of year. If not for the Incarnation, the Paschal Mystery could not have
taken place: it is the essential condition for Good Friday and Easter Sunday.
But it is more. Many of the Church Fathers considered the Incarnation to be the
beginning of the defeat of Sin and Death. St. Ignatius said in the 2nd century,
"Christ became what we are so we could become what he is." And St.
Athanasius in the 4th century made the statement, "God became human so
humans could become god." This sounds sacrilegious, but he is only echoing
2 Peter, where it says "we are made partakers in the divine nature."
And it is echoed in the Roman Catholic liturgy, when the priest puts the water
in the wine, he says, "By the mingling of this water and wine, may we come
to share in the divinity of him who humbled himself to share in our
humanity."
But
perhaps there is even more to it than that. Some theologians have believed that
even had there been no sin, the Incarnation would have taken place, anyway: that
God created precisely because God wanted to share in the lives of his creatures
as a creature. Karl Rahner, the 20th century Christian scholar, said that when
God wishes to express Godself, there must be a structure, a "grammar"
if you will, for that expression, the Word, and that the grammar of God's self-communication
is humanity. In other words, we don't need to figure out how to get the Word
(Christ) "to fit" into a human nature, since human nature was created
precisely to hold the Word. Like a shoe is made for a foot, not a hand, and the
foot slips easily into the shoe, so does the Word precisely fit into human flesh.
What
does all this mean for us? I believe that the Incarnation is an indication that
the Word has been becoming flesh since God said, "Let there be
light." It means that for Christians, matter matters. Matter is the
beginning of God's self-expression into the world. It means that human beings
are truly created according to the Imago Dei, the image of God, and that
includes our bodies. The great Protestant theologian Karl Barth said that if we
truly understood what it meant for God to become human, we could never again
harm another human being. We are, all of us, "mini-incarnations." If
the Word had been becoming flesh, the Word is now continuing to become flesh. Or
did you not remember that when you were baptized, you were baptized into union
with Christ?
And,
as expressions of Christ, individually and corporately (as this church), our place in this world is to be Christ
to the world. To take that mental
image of our “Christ-ness” and carry it with us, remain in awareness of it,
wherever we go. Yes, it’s a constant job to remember, and to act from that place in our daily dealings with
others. And it’s very easy to forget.
I
start and end most days in prayer; I wear crosses most all the time, and put up
pictures and quotations around our house – not to show off that I’m a
Christian, but to remind myself of
whom and whose I am – of what I am to strive for. It helps me to pay attention
to what is most important in life. Perhaps something similar could help you to
daily recall your individual, personal mission in life: which is to share God’s
love.
It’s
been quite a while since I mentioned the Millennium Development Goals. Remember
those 8 goals put forth by the United Nations back in 1990? We have only 3 more
years to meet those goals. Yes, 2015 is the target date. Just to remind you of
this effort, here is the list of worldwide goals: To reduce extreme poverty and
hunger by half, to provide primary education for all children, to promote
gender equality in education and opportunity, to reduce by 2/3s the deaths of
children under age 5, to reduce by 3/4s the numbers of mothers who die in
childbirth, to halt the spread of HIV/AIDs, to ensure environmental
sustainability throughout the world, and to develop policies among nations to
further economic progress for all. Perhaps you will be led to become involved
in certain portions of this work, or at least add their mission to your daily
prayers. And on a corporate, church level, perhaps we should consider becoming
more active in helping those less fortunate right here in Pflugerville. We have
been doing well with our donations to the Storehouse, but the last few weeks
we’ve fallen off. Next week, and every week, let’s make sure that the
Storehouse box is overflowing with food (especially peanut butter) for those
who don’t have enough to eat. Perhaps this next year we could do more, actually
volunteering at the Storehouse, as well as donating food and money.
For
you see, human life, matter itself, is even more than it appears to be, because
God has come to Earth as one of us. And Jesus has given to each of us the greatest
gift of all, the gift of being a child of God. We have union with Christ
through our baptism, and are heirs to the kingdom of God.
And
that seems to me, to be more than enough reason to sing "Glory to God in
the highest." Amen.