The theology of
Christmas is called incarnation. Those of us who call ourselves Christians celebrate
God incarnate (enfleshed) in Jesus of Nazareth, whom we profess to be the
Christ, meaning the anointed One. I embrace that theology wholeheartedly.
Most Christians stop there. But if we read the letters of
the apostle Paul, for example, he talks a lot about our participation in this
incarnation. We are “in Christ” and have been since the beginning of the universe.
“For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and
blameless in his sight.”
We are united with Christ who is one with God. We identify
with this Divine One. We lose ourselves in Christ. We are one with Christ, as
Christ promised we would. We start out believing this by faith and end up
experiencing it in our lives. As my favorite Scripture verse says, “It is no
longer I who live but Christ who lives in me.”
John the Baptist put it this way of Christ, “He must
increase; I must decrease.” As a sponge is filled with water, so are we filled
with Christ. Like a fossil gradually loses all of its organic elements until it
is fully replaced by minerals from the matrix in which it resides, so we who
abide in Christ gradually lose ourselves and are replaced with Him.
In other words we become incarnations of Christ and incarnations
of the Spirit who dwells within us. To put it even more boldly, we are incarnations
of God. To fundamentalists this sounds dangerously close to claiming divinity
for ourselves. In fact we are claiming nothing for ourselves. We are nothing.
God is everything.
This incarnational language is at the heart of Eastern
Orthodoxy, which was the original form of Christianity before Roman
Catholicism, Protestantism or Evangelicalism existed. Orthodoxy calls this truth
by many names: theosis, theopoesis, apotheosis, deification or divinization. (If
you want to explore this more, look up the terms on Wikipedia.)
The Patristic writings (the next generation of Christians after the apostles)
are filled with this teaching. It is not heresy, but the oldest Christian
orthodoxy.
In short the Christian gospel teaches that the purpose of
Christmas – of God becoming incarnate in Jesus – is so that we may be incarnations
of Christ. So that people might not only hear about Christ from us but see
Christ in us. Christmas is not about believing a bunch of stories and doctrines
about an ancient man. It is becoming so infused with Christ that Christ is
visible and present through us.
Jesus prayed this for us the night before he died. Jesus
prayed “for those who will believe in me through their [the apostles’] word, that
they may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they
also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me … that
they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may
become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me.”
In other words Jesus intended for his followers to be so
united with God that we continue his ministry as incarnations of God. That is
the meaning of Christmas and the intent of Christian doctrine of the
Incarnation. Christmas is not just about remembering something that happened
two thousand years ago. It is happening today. It is about who we are as sons
and daughters of God.
It is not just about Jesus as the Son of God, but as Paul
writes, “For all who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. For you did
not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received
the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” The Spirit himself
bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children,
then heirs—heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ….” Elsewhere he reminds that
that we have the mind of Christ and the Spirit of Christ.
Christmas is about having a God-aware mind, a
God-intoxicated heart, and a God-infused life. It is about embodying the Spirit
of Christmas every day. It is about knowing who we are in Christ and living
from that awareness. It is not just about mouthing “Merry Christmas” but being living
incarnations of Christmas. This is Christmas. Happy Incarnation Day!
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete