Christmas Day
(Gospel: John 1:1-18)
The dignity of the flesh
A
few years ago on Christmas day after I had celebrated the two morning
masses, I went to visit some friends, took a short walk and then went
back to my house looking forward to a nap as I was exhausted.
When I opened the front door I was horrified to see water pouring
down through the ceiling. The pipes had burst! So I spent
most of the rest of the day trying to mop up the house.
Compared to many people I know I got away lightly, but it still did a
lot of damage. However, in spite of the damage, one of the
things it made me realise was that you don’t really need very
much. I still got a Christmas dinner, I had a place to stay and
I was warm enough. What more could I ask for? We will
always have inconvenience and problems, but if we have the basics we
are ok and most of us have a lot more than just the basics.
One
of the things that I find beautiful about the feast of Christmas is
what the feast says about us as human beings. God didn’t
sort everything out before He took on human flesh and came among us.
He came into all the inconvenience, injustice and chaos that is all
around us all the time and he was born into a human family with all
the ups and downs that goes with any family. Mary and Joseph
were away from home because of the census that was being taken and
then Mary ended up having to give birth in a far from ideal place: a
stable or cave. It must have been very upsetting. Soon
afterwards they had to flee the country as refugees because of a
death threat. There were difficulties from the start, and yet
God was happy to come right into the middle of all that.
Perhaps
what is easiest to overlook is the significance of God taking on
flesh. He didn’t take on the nature of an animal, or
of an angel, but of a human being. We are not animals, but we
are not angels either and we are not meant to be. The Word
became flesh, and that tells us that we are good as we are.
Of course that doesn’t meant that we shouldn’t try to improve,
but we are meant to be ‘flesh’. I think many of us have
grown up with the idea that spirit is good, but flesh and all to do
with it is bad. However, that is not what God teaches us; in
fact He is telling us the complete opposite by taking on human
flesh. This is how we are meant to be and not only that but in
our flesh we imitate God, especially in the way we love.
The
beginning of John’s Gospel, which we read on Christmas morning,
tells us a few wonderful things. It is speaking about the
person of Jesus, God the Son, which it calls the Word. It says
that the eternal Word—who becomes Jesus—was there from the
beginning. God the Son has always been there. It also
says that apart from him we would not exist at all. We only
have life because He is there, which also means that our life has no
meaning apart from him. Then it says a most encouraging thing
for the times that we live in. It says that Jesus (the Word) is
the Light that shines in the darkness and ‘the darkness could
not overcome this light’. In other words, no matter what
happens in the world around us, no matter how much evil there appears
to be, it will never be able to overcome Jesus, who is God. God
is stronger. God will have the last say.
In the book of Revelation Jesus says,
I am the First and the Last, the Living One. I was
dead, but now I am to live forever and ever. I hold the keys of
death and of the underworld (Rev 1:17b-18).
All
things are subject to God and yet he was pleased to come among us as
one of us, to teach us about God, about the afterlife, about how we
should live and of most importantly to die for us. If God was
prepared to come among us in this way it means that we must have
enormous worth or value in his eyes. This also means that we
are not just here by accident, but for a definite reason.
So although the world around us may seem to have lost its way, it has not. God doesn’t need to make it all perfect to be with us. He didn’t when Jesus was born and he doesn’t have to now either. Instead he shows us a different way; the way of love and the way of sacrifice, which may seem to be insignificant, but is in fact the more powerful way. Earthly rulers need to show how strong they are, but God does not. God is powerful enough to be able to work away quietly in the background, mostly unnoticed. ‘He came among his own and his own didn’t recognise him.’ It didn’t matter and it still doesn’t matter, because He is with us no matter what and He goes on teaching us no matter what. He will continue to teach anyone who is willing to listen that we were created by God and at the end of our time on earth we will return to God if we are open to it. That is the purpose of our life and the reason why we are here. For our time on earth we just do our best to follow the path that He points out to us.
The Word was made flesh and lived among us.
No comments:
Post a Comment