|
AN INOFFENSIVE
CHRISTMAS SERVICE?
By William H. Smith
Church growth experts tell us that Christmas
Eve surpasses Easter as the time when people are most likely to
go to church. It's a recent development but should not be surprising.
Religious practices have caught up to cultural preferences. Santa
Claus has always won out over the Easter Bunny. It's an important
piece of information for churches planning evangelistic outreach.
Better to exploit than bemoan it.
But the question 'Why?' demands an answer. Why do people prefer
Christmas over Easter? I think it's because it's a lot easier
to make Christmas warm and fuzzy. A baby in a manger, a young
mother married to a poor carpenter making a long journey just
before her due date, some shepherds watching sheep, a choir of
angels, a star, and a few wise men are not very threatening. And
who can object to a message of love, joy, and peace?
It's harder to avoid the confrontation of Easter. Easter confronts
you with the death by torture of an innocent man and with the
claim that his dead body came to life. Easter gets in your face
and asks, 'Can you make sense of this death? Do you believe this
miracle?'
Christmas seems not to have the same potential for offence - unless
you think about it. There is the offence of the mystery. Christmas
reveals God as one God in whom there is a plurality of persons,
who are 'the same in substance, equal in power and glory.' 'In
the beginning was the Word' (the Word already was existing at
the beginning). 'And the Word was God' (though differentiated
yet fully God himself). This second person, the Word, emptied
himself, not by subtraction (he remained God) but by addition
(he became man). 'And the Word was made flesh' (the real stuff
of a human nature) 'and lived among us' (not an apparition but
a man). Christmas confronts with the mystery of the God-Man.
There is the offence of the miracle. God became a man when Mary,
an engaged teenager, who had never experienced sexual relations,
conceived a child, whose name was Jesus. The answer to her question
'How?' is the answer to ours: 'The Holy Spirit will come upon
you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the
Holy One to be born will be called the Son of God . . . For nothing
is impossible with God.' Christmas confronts with the miracle
of the virgin birth.
There is the offence of the message. The message of Christmas
is warm but not fuzzy. 'You are to give him the name Jesus, because
he will save his people from their sins.' 'Today . . . a Saviour
has been born to you.' God never hid the message of Christmas,
nor should we. Christmas confronts us with a message that cannot
be detached from Good Friday and Easter.
Christmas offended from the very beginning. The slaughter of the
babies by Herod was the first confirmation of the prophecy of
Simeon. 'This child is destined to cause the falling and rising
of many in Israel, and a sign that will be spoken against, so
that the thoughts of many will be revealed.'
Christian churches who seek to celebrate the Saviour and save
sinners will courageously confess the Creed:
We believe in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten of his
Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very God
of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the
Father, by whom all things were made; who for us and for our salvation
came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of
the virgin Mary, and was made man . . .
They will maximize the mystery, the miracle, and the message of
Christmas.
Banner of Truth
|
|