Provoking Faith in a Time of
Isolation
Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
25th December
2020
Christmas Day
Reading:
Luke 2:1-20
The virus that has
dominated global affairs this year,
reminds us of our physicality;
we are born, we
live, and we die.
And there is a truth
in this notion of physicality
that we often miss or even deny.
We are not disembodied
minds, nor are we trapped souls.
We’re not ‘passing through’ this
life
on
our way from somewhere to somewhere else,
and neither are we able to transcend
the messiness of our mortality
by
escaping to our higher minds.
We are embodied
beings, and despite the fantasies of science fiction,
there is no way to separate us into
our component pieces
of mind, soul, and body.
We are holistic beings.
The incarnation, the
story of God becoming fully human
in Bethlehem two thousand years ago,
speak to us of a God
who enters into the experience
of what it means to be human;
embracing the fullness
of humanity, with nothing held back.
This, of course, is
why the early explorations in theology
that came to be labelled ‘heresy’,
in the end, failed to convince.
This is not God
pretending to be human, or a human aspiring to divinity;
the baby-in-the-manger,
God-made-flesh,
speaks
to us of God’s utter, total, and complete commitment to humanity,
from
birth to death, with all that this entails.
So, why does this
matter?
What’s it to you? Or to me?
I was talking with
David Shapton this week,
and those of you who remember David
will know
that he has the ability to go deep,
and go there quickly.
This is still true,
despite him now being 94 years old!
And he said to me
that, for all the familiarity we have with the Nativity story,
a lot of people miss an aspect of
its significance that gives us hope in our lives,
and this is the message that there
is always new life coming into being.
There is always new life coming into being.
I’ve said before
that my favourite carol is In The Bleak Midwinter,
and I’m always surprised that some people
struggle with it
on the grounds that it isn’t
historically realistic!
Which, of course, it
isn’t… but then it’s not supposed to be.
I mean, yes, we all
know that Jesus wasn’t actually born
in the middle of a deep snowy winter
in Palestine;
for starters it
rarely snows in Bethlehem, and when it does, it melts in a few hours.
Snow doesn’t fall snow on snow in Bethlehem.
But this isn’t the
point of the Carol.
Christina Rossetti was using the
Victorian ideal
of
a snowy wintry English December
as a metaphor for the world into
which the Christ-child was born,
offering
a beautiful and hopeful image
that even in the depths of
winter-darkness,
when
all life and light seems to have left the world,
nonetheless God is still at work
bringing
new life into being.
And this God-given
gift of new life
is still at work in our world, in
our lives.
The second verse of the carol captures something of this
conviction
that God still comes to our world:
‘Heaven cannot hold
him’ - God comes to us today, and every day,
bringing new life to birth in our
lives and our world.
God may be the
almighty,
attended by angels and archangels,
serenaded by cherubim and seraphim,
but God is also found
in the cry of a tiny baby, in a stable in Bethlehem,
fully embracing humanity in all its
diversity of creed, colour, and status.
And, as the carol
finishes,
it asks each of us what our response
will be?
Our reading gave us
the story of the shepherds,
and how they brought their gifts to
the stable,
and it asks us to
consider how we will respond
to the good news of God coming to
us,
bringing the spark of hope and the
promise of new life.
I’m sure that today
isn’t what any of us
would have planned and hoped for,
for this year.
‘Life’ sometimes
just gets in the way, doesn’t it?
And the image of a
dark snowy winter
may seem particularly appropriate
for Christmas 2020,
as we find ourselves
confined to our homes
by our common biology and the forces
of nature and evolution.
But it is to a world
in lockdown that Christ comes,
again and again and again,
bringing to each of
us the hope, the promise, of new life.
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