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December 27, 2009 The First Sunday
after Christmas Day, All
Souls' Episcopal Church
When the fullness
of time was come …
Whenever I hear the Christmas
story I am always struck by the way in which the well
known narrative and familiar images convey to us
messages so layered with meaning we learn something new
and important each time we are presented with the moving
account of our Savior’s birth. St. Paul writes in his
letter to the Galatians:
But when
the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth his
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them
that were under the law, that we might receive the
adoption of sons. And because ye are sons, God hath sent
forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying,
Abba, Father. Wherefore, thou art no more a servant, but
a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ.
(Galatians 4:4-7)
St. Paul
employs a lovely phrase when he writes of “the fullness
of time.” The phrase refers to the right time or the
appropriate time, but it means even more than that. By
“the fullness of time,” St. Paul means the summing up
and completion and conclusion of what has been longed
for. A note in the New English Translation (the NET
Bible) defines the phrase as an
“idiom for the totality of a period of time, with the
implication of proper completion.” In other words, the
birth of Jesus was what all of human history had been
leading up to, not only as some sort of inexorable
conclusion but as the very purpose of time itself.
That first Christmas certainly
didn’t seem like the ‘right time,’ or the “appropriate
time,” let alone the fullness of time. It seemed like
the worst possible time for Mary and Joseph. Everything
had been turned upside down by the required census
making the Holy Family travel far away from home just
when Mary was about to give birth. I wonder how often
Joseph might have scratched his head and marveled at the
bad timing of it all? What we learn from this is that
God’s timing is not our timing. Think of it this way:
Imagine there is an important but difficult conversation
which you as a parent have to have with your child. If
you try imposing that conversation upon the child,
you’ll end up with predictably dismal results. On the
other hand, if your child comes to you and is ready to
have that conversation, will the times find distracted
and too busy or will you be open and receptive? In a
similar way, we must be vigilant by remaining open and
receptive to God’s timing. We are on God’s schedule, so
to speak, and so it’s not a matter trying to work him
into ours. We must remain on-call – open and receptive
to the God who knows us perfectly.
One of the details which has
always bothered me about the Christmas story is that
there was no room for the Holy Family. I know there was
the census and that apparently there were far more
people than there was room, but who doesn’t make space
for a young teenaged mother whose water was about to
break? How completely devoid of compassion are you when
you turn away this young mother who is having
contractions? How tightly do you have to squeeze your
eyes shut, and how many pillows do you need to wrap
around your ears to ignore this situation. She was
having a baby! St. John tells us, “He came unto his own,
and his own received him not.” It would appear that our
response to Jesus the Christ, the suffering servant,
continued the way it started out. Our track record when
it comes to welcoming the Incarnate God leaves a lot to
be desired all the way from Bethlehem to that hillside
near Jerusalem where we tortured him to death. My
question today is a simple one: Are we yet willing to
make room for him? Are there rooms we still won’t let
him enter – like that room where we keep all of our
grudges, or that room where we store all of our
resentments? Do we have room for him?
Another familiar part of the
narrative is the message of the angels. The shepherds
were told: “fear not,” for there were glad tidings of
great joy. John the Baptist’s father, Zechariah,
St.
Joseph, and the shepherds all were told not to fear.
Instead of fear, the angels promised “great joy.”
Fear is
a useful tool in a world of predation which is why it’s
hard-wired into us prompting a fight or flight response
which can save our life. However, even though it is a
normal human response to stimuli, like hunger, or like
any other natural impulse, fear is a really horrible
filter or interpretive principle through which to
respond to the world. Fear always tends to lead us to
stray from our principles, away from the better angels
of our nature. The message of the angels is that we are
not to fear. Instead, they offer us glad tidings of
great joy. Imagine for a moment that joy instead of fear
was the lens through which you view the world. Imagine
that your first response to the good fortune of another
was always unbridled joy. After all, we were created for
joy. We were created in God’s image; with the capacities
of reason, memory, and will is that we could know God
and enjoy him forever. Joy is our destiny in God. We
must begin with the joyful knowledge that everything in
this world was created by God as an expression of his
love. Knowing God in faith and rejoicing in his presence
is supposed to be our starting point. The joyful
knowledge of God ought to be the filter and interpretive
principle by which we seek to engage the world. It would
be like embracing the second great commandment, to love
our neighbors, because we have been so thoroughly
inspired by the first great commandment and love God. In
the end, this is what has to happen in order for us to
receive the other part of the angels’ message in which
we glorify God and have “peace on earth, and good will
towards men.”
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