Christmas Eve 2019: Two decrees. Two visions of who we are and who we are called to be. Which will we heed?
A Sermon Preached at the
Cathedral Church of St. Mark
Christmas Eve
The Very Reverend Tyler B. Doherty, Dean
& Rector
“In those days,” our Gospel begins, “a decree
went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world be registered.” So used are
we to hearing these words—perhaps in the voice of Linus from Charles Schultz’s Peanuts—that
we forget that what we actually get in St. Luke’s narrative is a powerful
depiction of two ways, two decrees: one that stamps our names in the book of
worldly power and domination, and one that scribes our names in the book of
love.
Emperor
Augustus wants money for his coffers. He needs people to register so they can
be taxed to maintain his regime of conquest, domination, and keeping people in
line. He demands obeisance. Groveling. Deference. His decree is that the
Emperor—empire, power, control, and orderliness enforced at the tip of a
spear—be the axis around which the world turns. The Emperor’s decree comes from
the perceived center of the powers of this word and is executed by faceless
bureaucrats, nameless cogs in the wheel of Empire who see numbers, not people,
dollar signs not faces, who hear the clink of coins in the purse in place of
stories.
We all know
this decree. It tells us to buy, consume, hoard, and tear down those who don’t
share our point of view. It tells us there’s not enough to go around. It speaks
of fear, scarcity, and lack, of walling ourselves up against our neighbor whom
it only recognizes as threatening other.
But, there
is another decree that goes out in our Gospel for this evening. It comes not
from the Emperor’s hand, but from the lips of an Angel. It’s received not by
fawning governors in their mansions eager to do the Emperor’s bidding in order
to curry favor, but by humble shepherds, “living the fields, keeping watch over
their flock by night.” This decree comes not from the center of power, but from
the very edge of things—what the poet Malcom Guite calls, “The edge of town,
the outhouse of the inn,/The fringe of empire, far from privilege/And power….”
“Christmas,” he writes, “sets the centre at the edge.”
Unlike the
Emperor’s decree, the Angel’s decree doesn’t want something from us—no, the
Angel’s decree wants to announce that something astounding has been given to
us. In a world on fire with getting and spending, in a world driven by fear of
the other, in a world whose bloody peace is maintained on the backs of innocent
scapegoated victims, the Angel’s decree announces the culmination of a new way
for humanity to be for and with each other. The axis of the world has shifted.
Power, domination, fear, exploitation are shown for what they really
are—counterfeit versions of who humanity is called be, which is nothing less
than love.
Two decrees.
Two visions of who we are and who we are called to be. Which will we heed?
In another poem, Guite writes, “They sought
to soar into the skies/Those classic gods of high renown/For lofty pride
aspires to rise/But you came down./You dropped down from the mountains
sheer/Forsook the eagle for the dove/The other Gods demanded fear/But you gave
love.” That’s what Christmas, the Incarnation, the Nativity of our Lord
announces—a God unlike those imposter gods like Emperor Augustus—who forsakes
the lofty heights to come among us as love, to save us from ourselves, to save
the world from itself, and show us new way to be. Where Emperors demand fear,
God in Christ at the outskirts of town comes as love that that love might be
born, not just in a manger, but in our hearts.
Christmas is the journey to the manger of the
heart that we might run there and unswaddle by grace those bands of fear and
exclusion and Christ live Christ’s life in and through us. That’s the trouble,
I think, with hearing the Gospel solely through the lens of history and
science. We start asking questions like, did that really happen? Do Angels
really exist? What did these shepherds look like and what was their average
life-expectancy? Do you see the problem? We turn the invitation to love, to
make the journey to the manger of the heart, to have the axis of our own lives
shifted, into a rather dull, antiseptic, and academic, affair. We use our
so-called intellect to dodge the invitation and then harrumph around wondering
why nothing changes. And perhaps it’s not a lack a faith, so much as a failure
of imagination, wonder, and awe; an incapacity to open ourselves to something
other that what we already know, the stubborn insistence that the way things
are is way they’ll always be.
Two decrees.
Two visions of who we are and who we are called to be. Which will we heed?
I look
around at the world, people say, and I don’t see that Christ has made a
difference. Well, I say, stop looking at the world and look to the baby in the
creche, look to those awestruck shepherds, look to Mary pondering these things
in her heart. The Gospel, and the Church as the always faltering attempt to
live it out, shows the world the dead-end nature of its way of operating. The
world, left to its own devices will never be a just place. It will forever be
the stronghold of power, domination, and registering people in its book. It
will forever be the place that sees numbers instead of people and hears the
clink of coins instead of stories. That’s what God in the person of Jesus comes
to set right.
Only when
that little creche in the outhouse of the inn is the axis around which the
world turns will our world start to resemble God’s dream for it rather that
what is so often our human-created nightmare. The Gospel, as the unique
disclosure of God in human form in the person of Jesus shouldn’t accord with
how the world turns. God has come into history to throw into sharp relief the
way of Emperor Augustus and its nasty habit of making a meat-grinder of human
beings. So don’t fret that we only get glimmers of the in-breaking Kingdom on
the daily news. That, sadly to say, is to be expected. Only strive, with all
your heart, with all your strength, and will all your mind, to have that other
decree, the one that’s turned the world upside down, the one that’s announced
on the edge of town to scruffy bunch of shepherds, take root and grow in you.
God comes
among us to show us in flesh and bone and blood what love looks like in the
world. In Jesus we get, once and for all, the example of life wholly united to
God by nature in a way that we are to embody by grace. And what do we see? We
see boundary-crossing love that touches the untouchable, that gives name, and
face, and voice to those who have been rendered nameless, faceless, and
voiceless. We see self-emptying love that comes to serve others instead of been
served. We see one who comes as bread to feed, water to wash, oil to heal, and
wine to slake the thirst of the parched. We see Love giving itself away in love
that we might become that love for others, that Love might make a home in us,
that Love might tabernacle in our hearts. We see that each of us is a beloved
child of God that “in you and you, and you, without exception, God is well
pleased.”
That decree,
that call, that invitation to love went out to the Shepherds, but if you get
quiet, if you get still, you can hear it whispered this night from the depths
of your being. That’s the new song God is singing in Christ Jesus. And the only
question that remains is will we give it heed? Will we let it sing us away from
ourselves? Will your life be that cradle for infinite love made flesh, the placeless
place where time and eternity kiss?
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