Today Christ is born!
This is the Feast of the Nativity, Christmas Day. Many, if not most Americans, think this is the culmination of all of December and even earlier. We know better. Today is not the last day of Christmas, but the first - of Twelve, no less - ending with the Feast of the Epiphany on Sunday, January 6, when the Wise Men come to visit Jesus with precious gifts in his honor. Christmastide includes the Feasts of St. Stephen, St. John the Evangelist, and the Holy Innocents. On January 1 we celebrate the Holy Name of Jesus. The Proper of the Day will of course honor all of these as well :-)
The Archbishop of Canterbury has offered a particularly apt reflection for this day. Here it is in its entirety:
One of the strangest yet most moving expressions in the New Testament is a verse in the Letter to the Hebrews (11.16): God ‘is not ashamed to be called their God’. The writer is talking about the history of God’s people. When they have been faithful to God, faithful in keeping on moving onwards in faith rather than settling down in self-satisfaction, when they are true pilgrims, then God is content to be known as their God. He declares himself to be the God of pilgrims, of people who know that their lives are incomplete and that they are still journeying towards the fullness of God’s promises. Visiting refugee camps in the Middle East, as I did this October, brings home so powerfully what it is to be literally and absolutely homeless, not able to be confident in any resources, inner or outer. People in these terrible circumstances will never be complacent, they will always be looking for a future. They are in the most obvious way those whom God is not ashamed to be with, people whose God he is happy to be. He is at home with the homeless. But it is also an image of God’s relationship with all those who are homeless or wandering in other ways.
What an odd expression, to say that God is not ‘ashamed’! It’s as though we are being reassured that God, in spite of everything, doesn’t mind being seen in our company. Most of us know the experience of being embarrassed by someone we are with – children are embarrassed by parents, parents by children; I have sometimes found myself walking down the road with someone who is talking loudly or behaving oddly, and wishing I weren’t there. But God is not embarrassed by human company when that company is turning away from self-satisfaction and ready to move on. We might think that God would be ‘ashamed’ of human company that was imperfect, confused, even sinful. But God is happy to be the God of confused and sinful people when they recognise their own confusion and face the truth of their need. That’s what the great parables of Jesus in St Luke’s Gospel are so often about, especially the Pharisee and the Tax Collector.
So at Christmas, God shows that he is not ashamed to be with us. He has heard our cries of weakness and self-doubt and unhappy longing, he has seen our wanderings and anxieties, and he is not ashamed to be alongside us in this world, walking with us in our pilgrimage. And because he is content to walk with us, we are challenged about whose company we might be ashamed to share. So easily we decide that we would be ashamed to share the company of the sinful, the doubting or the outcast. But God, it seems, is not ashamed to be seen with such people. If he is ashamed to be called the God of any human group, the text from Hebrews strongly suggests that he is most ‘embarrassed’ by those who think they have arrived at the end of their journey, who think they have already attained perfection (compare St Paul’s angry and scornful words in I Corinthians 4.8 – ‘Already you have become rich!’). And it is clear why God would be ashamed to be the God of such people: they behave and speak as if they didn’t really need God, as if they didn’t really need grace and hope and forgiveness.
God loves the company of those who know their need, and that is why he comes at Christmas to stand with them, to live with them and to die and rise for them. He is the God who blesses the poor – not only those who are materially poor, but those who are without the ‘riches’ of self-satisfaction and complacency, those who know all too well how far they fall short of real and full humanity. And so we are to pass on that blessing to the poor of every sort, those who are without material resources and those who are ‘poor in spirit’ because they know their hunger and need. Let us ask ourselves honestly whose company we are ashamed to be seen in – and then ask where God would be. If he has embraced the failing and fragile world of human beings who know their needs, then we must be there with him.
May God give us every blessing and joy in the Christmas Season.
+Rowan Cantuar
And in response, we join in singing:
Almighty God, you have given your only-begotten Son to take our nature upon him, and to be born this day of a pure virgin: Grant that we, who have been born again and made your children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by your Holy Spirit; through our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom with you and the same Spirit be honor and glory, now and for ever. Amen.
RFSJ
3 comments:
The Nativity Scene above brings to mind
what the ABC’s dog said
when his tail was stepped upon,
“Error! Error! Error!”
Well, it's a pic of the parish creche under the altar at Trinity Parish in Bergen Point. Many people do not add their wise Men to the creche until Epiphany. At home, it can be fun to parade them around the house beginning at Christmas until they finally get to the creche on their Scripturally-appointed day. As a matter of fact, my own Wise Men are in the kitchen as we speak. Perhaps tomorrow they'll make it to the dining room, who knows?
RFSJ
That is a beautiful tradition.
However, you may wish to count them as they go by, just to set history straight.
As Tiny Tim said, "God bless us one and all."
Troglodyteus
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