Sermon
from Grace and St Stephen's 12/25/2017 John 1:1-14 Christmas
When I
was in college I remember complaining to a friend that every class
had to start with some sort of historical survey. I was a psychology
major and I loved learning about human behaviors, relationships and
how the mind works, but before we ever got into that we always had to
read about the history of that particular branch of psychology. The
same with all my electives. I had to read chapters about the history
of theater, astronomy, and every major world religion … I couldn't
believe it when I arrived for my first day of my summer step aerobics
class and was directed to a desk and a book where we had to learn
about the development of aerobics before we began. As I would read
about names, dates and locations, wars, brutal regimes and plagues
(those last three not as much in step aerobics) my eyelids would
suddenly gain too much weight to hold up and my mind would drift.
Naturally seminary brought with it a whole lot of history. I was
fortunate to have some great professors not just for the two
semesters of straight up church history but also all the theological
and Biblical history in my other classes who taught it in really
interesting and relevant ways.
But
when I sat down to dinner after the McJimsey lecture with our own Dr.
Carol Neel and asked her the topics of her published works I have to
confess that I prepared myself for more polite nodding than genuine
fascination. But as she started to explain a book she wrote some
years ago I was totally intrigued. Carol wrote an introduction and a
translation for a ninth century book that a mother wrote to her son.
This medieval book challenges not just the prior held understanding
of women's literacy, education and influence of that time but also it
challenges the ways in which we tend to look at relationships of the
past. When we read of wars, famines, brutal rulers, names and dates
we see only a society so very different from ours, circumstances
unimaginable for our comfortable selves to live in and we make
assumptions about how they related to one another, perhaps assuming
that with so much death and despair and child mortality, there was a
certain kind of emotional distance even within families. So I was
very curious about this woman, Dhuoda's, love letter and parental
guidance for her son so long ago.
The
book was written during a particularly bloody era. Dhuoda's husband
worked closely with Louis the Pious until Louis's sons rebelled which
resulted in terrible wars and also her husband making a deal to prove
his loyalty to Charles the Bald and offering his young son as part of
that. To this son, who eventually is killed avenging his father's
death, she writes this book of love, wisdom and instruction. In the
introduction to her book Carol offers background on Dhuoda and life
in the ninth century, pointing out that during such bloodshed and
fighting there was also such devotion to religious life- endowing
churches, establishing abbeys, studying the scriptures. And all of
this is what I found myself thinking about as I read these words from
John about the Word that was there even in the chaos, shining in the
darkness, never overcome by darkness. This Word here in humanity,
among us. A mother's letter of love, abbeys, churches, religious
devotion present in such dark times of despair and enduring longer
than any of the emperors or borders or weeping.
Light
in the darkness. At the beginning, in medieval times, today …
again and again, never letting the darkness win the day. Even in the
beginning, before all of us, before time and space- was the Word …
with God. A relationship. Love. A Word is something that is
revealed. In the beginning the Word was with God. A revelation
always intended even before creation.
Even
though we no longer live in medieval times and can look back at those
stories of war and pain with shock and distance, we still have
darkness in our world. Sometimes the pain of the world feels so
deep, so pervasive and so inescapable. Some days it feels like the
darkness is overcoming the light.
And
it's not just out there. The darkness of the world is not just in
the newspaper headlines, twitter feeds and political rants. It's in
here. It's in us. As scary and painful as outside forces like war,
disease and injustice may be to confront I believe that the darkness
within can be the scariest to face.
The
inner demons we carry with us, the self doubt that manifests as
insecurity and pushing others away, the prejudice we try to cover
with words but comes out in actions, the fears that eat away at us at
night and tell us to protect, defend, close off. And the sadness
that threatens our joy, that casts a shadow on our worldview and
tries to convince us that it will never get better. The darkness
that starts to choke out the light in our souls.
The
Gospel of John dives right into these dark places. It does not begin
with a beautiful image of a baby born in a manger, it does not
preface the narrative with historical background or important names
and dates. It goes right to the point, right to the heart. It
starts at the beginning, in the darkness.
This
is the accepted reality of life. There is darkness. And this story
of Jesus is here to confront that. God's revelation, God's Word,
God's redemption, incarnate love has been there since the beginning,
it was always part of the plan, part of the human condition. We were
born through it. “All things came into being through him, and
without him not one thing came into being.” We are born through
the Word. We exist in the revelation of God. The light in the
darkness has been shining since before we can fathom and nothing- no
dictator, no war, no famine, no sadness, no pain has extinguished it.
This
light is with us. It is incarnate, in flesh. And through this we
are called children of God. We live in the light and the light lives
in us. This is our reality. This is our Christmas story. The
Christmas story in John is not the stuff of Christmas pageants and
bed time stories. Instead of a nativity scene there is a simple
light in the dark. Instead of a manger there is a mirror. Held up
in front of us. We have come into being through the Word. We are
benefactors of God's revelation. The Word is here, with us, in us,
pushing against the darkness.
Christmas
is an emotional time. The music, the colorful lights, the warm
fireplace are all meant to elicit emotion. And sometimes that can be
sadness. Sometimes I get a little sad around the holidays. The
marking of the passage of time, the nostalgia, the sense of longing
can be sad. I was feeling this last year at Christmas Eve. It was
my first Christmas ever not spent in Ohio. When I was growing up
Christmas Eve was always spent at my aunt's house. Grandpa, aunts,
uncles, cousins, mom, dad, sisters, brother all together with
beautifully wrapped presents, delicious food, sounds of laughter and
sleepy hugs good bye. I was thinking of this as I drove my two
little boys home after the 4:30pm service last year. My husband
wouldn't be home until very late, after the 11pm service and we don't
have any family here so it was just us. I decided to take the boys
to McDonald's, a rare treat in our house. They were thrilled. We
walked in with our church clothes on and they hurried over to the
high stools that spin and giggled in excitement. I brought them
their food and they were blown away to find a toy with their food!
It was a pig that repeatedly said things like “Oh yeah, piggy
power!” I sat on the stool and continually reminded them to eat
the food I felt guilty for feeding them.
I
looked around and I have to tell you that McDonald's on Christmas Eve
night is kind of a sad place. There was a security guard at the
door, tired employees and just a few people eating alone. The boys
didn't care, they were having the time of their lives- a new toy
mixed with salty food and the magic of Christmas morning almost here.
Then … I felt a tap on my shoulder and turned around to find a
young couple standing behind me. They looked familiar as I think I
had seen them on the streets downtown. They had some bags of
belongings around them and looked homeless. Honest confession … I
looked over to make sure my purse was still by me and glanced at the
security guard as I was sure they were going to ask me for money.
They reached into one of their bags and handed me something without a
word. It was two toys, one for each of my boys. The boys' eyes lit
up and they jumped up and down. I reminded them to say thank you.
In my
heart I felt a light burning down some of my darkness- my prejudice,
my self-preservation, my self-centeredness in thinking that Christmas
could only be truly experienced in the comfortable and familiar
places of my childhood. I was a recipient of kindness and generosity
in a dark and lonely McDonald's. The light in the darkness. And I
realized something else, just as they were the Word incarnate for me
there in that place, we were for them too. Perhaps the giggles and
excitement of children is something that brought them joy. Perhaps
the smiles and thank yous is what they were hoping for when they put
those toys into their bag. The Word is in us from our birth. We are
children of God.
When
the story of my life is written it might say the year I was born, the
year I died, some significant historical occurrences during my life
span, the names of my parents and children, the location of my birth
and death. Some basic facts, recorded somewhere for no one to read
and if they do then I am sure it will add weight to their eyelids and
make their minds wander. But beyond that, beyond the basic facts
lies a truth that we who are gathered for worship on Christmas day
all know. A truth that makes all of our lives so much more
interesting and bright and hopeful and meaningful. I am born through
the Word, I am part of God's revelation through Jesus Christ. We all
are children of God. God chose to pour God's self into flesh and
dwell among us. And God has been here with us, dwelling in the
hearts of mothers caring for their children in the midst of medieval
war and dwelling in the hearts of those seeking a break from the
street at a McDonald's on Christmas Eve. This was the plan, all the
way from the beginning and through the end. This is the light the
darkness has never and will never overcome. This is Emmanuel. God
with us.