The Episcopal Church Welcomes You!

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

The Word Made Flesh


Christmas Eve: John 1:1-14; Luke 2:1-20; St. Paul’s, 12/24/2019
Jim Melnyk: “The Word Made Flesh”


            In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The Word was in the beginning with God. Through the Word all things came into being, and apart from the Word nothing came into being that has come into being. In the Word was life, and that life was the Light of all people. The Light shines in the deepest darkness, a Light that the darkness has never overtaken.
The Word was coming into the world – was in the world – and though the world was made through the Word, the world didn’t recognize it…. And the Word became flesh and lived among us; and we saw the Word’s glory – and the favor and position a parent gives an only child – filled with grace and truth.”[1]
This evening we light the fifth candle in our Advent Wreath – the Christ candle at its center. Throughout the last four weeks we have prayed for hope, peace, joy, and love to come upon us and to dwell within our hearts. This night we celebrate the gift of God’s Son – the Light of the world breaking into our lives – finding a home within our hearts. The Word made flesh is the child born to Mary and Joseph in the midst of a hectic and chaotic world – born in a stable-cave – attended by shepherds and angelic choirs – vulnerable and humble – a child who will grow up to be the Light of the world.
So here we are on Christmas Eve – our church resplendent in poinsettias, greenery, and glowing candles. Our hearts are warmed by friends and family gathered around us as we sing praises to a God who chooses to take on our form and to live among us – to live with us – to love us and to die for us – to take up residence within us in the person of the Holy Spirit. Joy to the world indeed!
            Theologian and Pastor Joyce Hollyday tells a story about “an 11-year-old boy with cancer [who] lost all his hair as a result of chemotherapy treatments. When it came time for him to return to school, he and his parents experimented with hats, wigs, and bandanas to try to conceal his baldness. They finally settled on a baseball cap, but the boy still feared the taunts he would receive for looking "different." Mustering up his courage, he went to school wearing his cap—and discovered that all of his friends had shaved their heads.
You can't hide the pain of the world,” says Hollyday. “You can't cover it up. You can only share it. Make someone else's journey a little easier. Be willing to go to great lengths to help someone else carry their pain.
God did [exactly that]. God left whatever throne people had put [God] on in their imaginations and came to earth. And God made the absurd choice to arrive as a baby, vulnerable and dependent, [born to May and Joseph in a tiny little village in the middle of a tiny, occupied country,] subject to all the pains and fears and frustrations that plague the rest of us humans.”[2] The very God who spangled the heavens with stars and planets – the very God who brought life to this fragile earth, our island home – that same God chose incarnation as a way of getting our attention and capturing our hearts. The very Word that called into being the vastness of the universe emptied itself of all power and came to us in the powerless body of a human baby – born in the chaos of an occupied land – lying in a manger – because sometimes it takes the simple innocence of a child – a baby – to capture our attention and change our hearts.
This holy night we light five candles and recall that no amount of darkness can quench the light of God’s love for this world. As we look at the light of these candles we recall God’s great love for each and every one of us. And as the Spirit of the incarnate God of heaven fills each of us, we each become the Light of Christ for this world. Whatever brokenness is to be found in this world, it will never quench the Light of Christ. Whatever gloom surrounds us amid the vagaries of life, the Light of Christ cannot be dispelled. One single candle – one tiny flare of a match – will light up a room.
Think of what the smallest gesture of kindness – the smallest act of compassion – the simplest work of mercy – can do to repair and transform this world.[3]
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God…. And the Word became flesh and lived among us…giving us power to become children of God.” And that, my friends, is the wonder of Christmas.


[1] John 1:1-5, 9-10, 14. Taken and blended from The New Testament and Psalms: An Inclusive Version, Oxford University Press and The Inclusive New Testament, Priests for Equality
[2] Joyce Hollyday quoted in Sojourners Online, Preaching the Word, 12/25/2019
[3] ibid

No comments:

Post a Comment