http://www.workingpreacher.org/dear_wp.aspx?article_id=537
Something More
Posted 12.18.11
Dear Working Preacher,
Do you remember those movies from the sixties, when they would soften
the edges of the leading actress -- be it Doris Day or Grace Kelly -- on
close ups? I think we've done something similar with Christmas. Our
pictures of the holy family are softened, even sepia-toned in their
depiction of all that is lovely and fair: Mary in her blue robe gazing
lovingly at her glowing newborn, Joseph attentive to both of their
needs, shepherds gazing on in wonder, their charges puffy white balls of
cotton in the background, and rays of angels' glory streaming in
through the windows of the well-swept stable with strains of "Joy to the
World" in the background.
It's a nice picture, beautiful
even, and I cherish it probably as much as or more than the next person.
But of course it wasn't like that. We've domesticated the picture
beyond nearly all recollection. If you've worked on a farm you can
probably imagine the stench that accompanied Jesus' birth. And speaking
of the birth, if you've been anywhere near the labor room you know it's
not all meek and mild. Mary was probably a frightened teenager, Joseph
in way over his head. And the shepherds? These were the undesirables of
the first century, the folks on the lowest of the low rungs of the
socio-economic ladder.
Now I know you've heard realistic re-tellings of the Christmas story
before and perhaps used them yourself in order to heighten the sense of
your hearers' appreciation for the depths of God's love poured out in
the Incarnation. That's a fine sermon, and I'd be glad to hear it this
week. But that's not what I'm interested in just now. Actually, I'm more
curious about why we prefer the Photoshopped picture of the nativity in
the first place.
I have a hunch it's because life is hard enough already. Do you know
what I mean? Day to day, we struggle to keep pretty turbulent lives in
tact, to stem the tide of chaos that too often threatens to overwhelm us
at home or work or in the world at large. We've had enough "realism" in
the news, thank you very much. Can't we at least come to church for a
vision of something that is inherently and undeniably good, pure,
beautiful?
I actually think that's a pretty understandable request. We put a lot of
time and energy into managing things, controlling as many of the
variables of our twenty-first century lives as possible, and frankly are
nearly worn out by the effort. Little wonder we come to church wanting
not just a respite from the frenetic pace of everyday life but something
more, something comforting and comfortable, something, preferably,
warm, cozy, and inspiring. And so we devour Luke's nativity scene like
it's a kind of spiritual comfort food, chicken soup, as it were, for the
beleaguered soul.
Except that that's not Luke's nativity scene. Luke knows something about
wanting to order chaotic lives, too. In fact, his story begins just
there, naming upfront the rulers of this world who were responsible for
maintaining -- and enforcing! -- the Pax Romana. Moreover, Luke
sets his story amid a census, the act of ordering -- that is,
registering, counting, and taxing everyone -- par excellence. Yet this
is only background for Luke; the main action takes place elsewhere, on
the fringe, far away from the centers of power, in a little backwater
town called Bethlehem, where a scared young girl and her equally scared
husband can't find any decent place in which to birth their first child
and so are forced to take refuge with animals, with only dirty shepherds
and their even dirtier sheep to notice.
Why does Luke tell his story this way? Even more, why does God do it
this way? I actually think it -- this whole story -- is an indictment of
the order, an accusation against things as they are. Do you know what I
mean? Let me try to say it another way: I think that by playing out
this redemptive story on the fringe of things, just where you'd least
expect God to be, God is telling us that the way things usually are just isn't good enough.
It's almost like God is whispering to us something that deep down we
know already but are afraid to admit, even to ourselves: these lives
we've so carefully created, this world we work so hard to manage, are
beautiful, precious, and wonderful ... but also vulnerable, fragile, and
ultimately insufficient.
Even the best of lives is filled by measures of regret and
disappointment, and if we take even a moment to gaze around us we see
how many lead lives that are difficult, painful, and all too short. And
so God comes not at the center of the world to straighten things out a
bit, but on the fringe to call the orders and structures of the day into
question and herald a new beginning altogether. Ultimately, Luke's
story -- if we're willing to listen -- witnesses to the simple yet scary
fact that God didn't come in Jesus to make things a little better, a
little more bearable. God came to turn over the tables, to create a
whole new system, to resurrect and redeem us rather than merely
rehabilitate us.
It's scary because we've invested a lot in our lives as they are and it
can be down right frightening to give up what we know. But at the same
time it's thrilling because this promise speaks to a place deep down
inside each of us that wants something more, something more than a
better job or higher income, something more than a more comfortable home
or enjoyable retirement. These things may all be good, but they don't
save; often enough, they don't even satisfy for long. No. We desperately
want a sense of meaning and purpose, we desire to believe that there is
more to this life than meets the eye, we need to hold onto the hope
that despite all appearances we are worthy of love.
And so God comes at the edges of the story and our lives to speak
quietly but firmly through the blood, sweat, and tears of the labor
pains of a young mother and cry of her infant that God is irreconcilably
for us, joined to our ups and down, our hopes and fears, and
committed to giving us not just more of the same, but something more.
Christ comes, that is, not just to give us more of the life we know, but
new and abundant life altogether. For in Christ we have the promise
that God will not stop until each and all of us have been embraced and
caught up in God's tremendous love and have heard the good news that
"unto you this day is born a savior, Christ the Lord." No wonder we
sing, "Let heaven and earth rejoice!"
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