"We spend a lot of time listening to and singing songs about the
greatness of this child that is called the Christ but I wonder how much we
understand it. It is not a sort of oohing and ahhing at the cute kid but rather
a profound message about the nature of ourselves and the spiritual power of the
child.
I guess as we come to this day with the background noise of terrorism
threats and the horror of the world news, we wonder about whether this is a
hollow celebration full of smultcz. But it isn’t. The message couldn’t be more
significant. The message of love and vulnerability that this child is bringing
is to transform the world. It is to bring a great light into the darkness. It
is to tell that the power of the divine is not in powerful structures or
domination but that true power lies in vulnerability and love. This is a
message about the great love of God to all of a suffering humanity and so a
message of a new hope. To quote T.S
Eliot again - "You bring me news of a door that opens at the end of a
corridor, sunlight and singing; when I had felt sure that every corridor only
led to another blank wall."
The way the Bible tells
it, the baby worked a kind of magic on the surrounding world on the night of
his birth. Here is a new image of this ‘God’ not as an all-powerful God but
rather as a helpless, vulnerable infant. The traditional image of ‘God’ is
still a powerful, if old man ...not a helpless baby. The magic that surrounded
the baby lifted people above the misery, cold and darkness that surrounded them
so that all they could think about was the birth of this child. We can surround ourselves with all sorts of
distractions on this wonderful day but if we let ourselves forget the message
that we hold the holy deep within us, then we have cheated ourselves of the
true meaning of Christmas... Emmanuel - God-with-us! I love the lyric of a song
by Sinead O’Connor that says that “All babies are born saying God’s name.”
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