Four times. Four precious times
in this life, I have screamed and cried and experienced the last grueling moments
of pregnancy. And then a nurse or doctor
has placed a brand-new baby onto my chest, and I have felt a love like no other. Four times I have stared at this tiny new
creation and felt the immense responsibility of caring for and guiding this
child. And everything was changed
forever. There’s something about a baby
that changes things. A difficult day is
made brighter by the smile on a baby’s face.
The smell of a baby’s hair can calm an anxious heart. When we welcome a baby into the world, there
is great celebration. Something new is
afoot. There is possibility and hope. When we watch someone die, we feel the sense
of release and completion of their journey.
When we watch someone be born, we feel the sense of excitement and anticipation
of what is to come in their life. They
have zero mistakes, zero heartbreaks. No
one has told them that they have limits. There is a concept called “tabula rasa,” a belief
that a baby is born with a “blank slate” and that everything about that person
is determined by events after birth. I
don’t completely buy into this psychological theory. I think that babies are born with plenty of
predetermined characteristics. Just ask
any parent of multiple children. But certainly,
a large part of who a child will become will be connected to their experiences.
An unhealthy parent will look at this tiny new creation and
make a (usually unconscious) decision to mold it into his or her own image. This tiny baby that God created in his image with
unique gifts and talents and personality and purpose will be required to grow
into the image of his earthly parents, to think like they think, talk like they
talk, vote like they vote, you get the idea.
Unhealthy parents seek personal validation from their children instead
of seeking to support them as they grow into their own unique selves. Healthy parents support and guide their
children as they become who God created them to be.
This week we will celebrate the birth of a baby. This baby’s birth brought forth the ultimate
hope. This baby came with great
excitement. This baby’s name was Jesus. And this Christmas as I look down into the
manger and stare at this baby, this new creation full of possibility, I have one
question for him. “Who are you?” You see, I fear that we have grown this baby
up into our own image. We don’t look at
the baby and see the new beginning and the possibility so much as we look at
the adult version of Jesus we have created or embraced. And I’m afraid that we have some things wrong
about him. At least I have had.
You don’t go through a life crisis like I have experienced
the past couple of years without tearing down some things and rebuilding
them. You gain perspective and
experience that make you see blind spots you had before. You pay a painful price to get there. And it’s hard in the middle of your life to
rework major things about your belief system.
But this year I’m starting with the baby. I’m looking at the baby, and I’m rebuilding
my ideas of who he is to become. You see,
in America, we seem to have created a Jesus that is white, Christian, republican,
waves an American flag and carries a pistol.
But the problem with that is that Jesus was actually a Jewish, middle
eastern man who rebelled against the Roman empire and non-violently laid down
his life on a cross. I fear that what large
segments of the American church have done to baby Jesus is to form him in our
own image. That is not healthy
behavior. We could start to understand
Jesus better by learning about Jewish faith and Jewish culture. He was a real person living in a real time
period. We would be wise to take that into account.
Another image we portray of Jesus is one of the holy vending
machine. Allow me to explain. We tell people that if they pray hard enough,
have enough faith, live righteously enough - that Jesus will give them whatever
they want. The only problem with this is
that if that were true, no devout father would ever bury his child, no devout woman
would watch her marriage implode, no devout child in a third world country
would die of starvation today or drown trying to get to a safer place. You see
when we try to sell the vending machine Jesus, we say to those who didn’t get
what they wanted, “It’s not Jesus, it’s you.”
And in the most painful moments of life, when you feel like you are in
quicksand, being told to pray harder or live better feels like someone pouring
more sand over your head and tying your arms behind your back. To support these “pep talks,” we use the
verse in Matthew 22, “And whatever
you ask in prayer, you will receive, if you have faith.” But we don’t talk about the fact that Jesus said
this right after cursing a fig tree because he was angry that it had no figs
for him to eat. I think this is one of
the moments in scripture where we really see his humanity. His disciples are so impressed that he can wither
a fig tree on command for disappointing him, and he tells them that they too
can do miracles like this if they have faith.
Does this also mean that we can have whatever we want in this life if we
just believe it will happen? Some may
question my faith, but I don’t think that’s how Jesus works.
One more image I
have had of Jesus at various times in my life is that of a pious and judgmental
Jesus. Maybe you have seen an image of Jesus
pointing his finger at you and asking you a guilt-inducing question. Maybe you have read a passage where he addresses
sinful behavior, and you wanted to crawl under a rock because you know that one all
too well. But looking down in this
manger today, I just ask anew, “Who is this King of glory?” Who is this God that in all his holiness, in
all his splendor, instead of expecting us to ascend to his level – chose
to descend to ours? What kind of
God steps down from heaven and lays in a manger surrounded by the stench of manure? What kind of God takes on a human body with all
its aches and pains and submits to living inside it? What kind of God becomes one of us?
When my oldest
child was one year old, he came down with a bad case of croup. After his going from fairly healthy to barely
able to breathe and a temp of 103 in a matter of a few hours, we were sent to
the hospital. We spent the night in the
ER that night with him. No rooms were available
in the hospital. So, they rolled in a
crib for him to sleep in. And I remember
that he needed so badly to lay down and sleep, but he wanted his mommy. So, I did what most mothers would do. I climbed over the side of that crib, curled
my body around his, and stayed with him. And when I think back to that night, I think it is a tiny glimpse of
what God did and continues to do for us.
He came down. He climbed into the
manger. He met us in our illness, in our
despair, in our inadequacy. He met us in
our pain. He had it all. And he stepped down into our misery because
he loves us. And he still curls around
us in our pain. Emmanuel, God with us. He laid his hands on
people and healed them. He wept with
Mary. He walked on water with Peter. He hung out with Zacchaeus. He defended the woman the people wanted to
stone. No one was off-limits for
him. He embraced people from every walk
of life. No crib was too dirty to crawl into.
In Luke 4, he told the people in his
hometown why he came:
“The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.”
Has there ever been such a beautiful
mission? That baby in the manger would
grow into a man that wanted to right the wrongs in the world. He had brought a kingdom to earth that
would change everything. So, as I look
at him today and ask him “Who are you?”, I trust that this year he’s going to
continue to tell me. I’m starting with
the baby. Because there is something about a baby. God could have come as a full-grown human, but he came as a baby - full of hope, full of possibility. I am throwing out my preconceived notions of
who he will become and asking him who he truly is. Because much more beautiful than my making
him into my image is my being formed into his.
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