Here is the 2014 edition of my Christmas post.
First off, if your Christmas is a little rocky, or maybe not all you hoped it would be, good news -- you're not left out, you're right in there with the first Christmas!  That one was as rocky as it gets.  As we mentioned at the start of Advent, Joseph    wasn't  the  glowing saint of paintings and icons, he was a working guy   with a   pregnant wife about to give birth, in  town to   follow the   law and get counted in the census, with all the  hotels full   and no place   to put his family up but a stable for  animals, and after   the baby was   born they had to put him in a  feeding trough for  animals (that's what a manger is), and pretty soon they'll have to high-tail it  out of town into political exile.  Christ knows all about when Christmas isn't so merry.
And that's just for starters.  In addition to the     many other things remarkable about Christmas, it is so rich in     significance for the Christian faith that over time the church has     evolved, unlike any other feast in the church calendar, three distinct     masses, or divine services, at three distinct times of the day to  contain it all.
That's    exactly what the word Christmas is, a  contraction of Christ's Mass.   The  first appearance of the word in  English, Old English, to be exact,   that  survives is from 1038,  Cristes maesse, which became Christemasse   in  Middle English, and now  Christmas.
25 December is not Jesus'   date  of birth.  The  actual date is unknown.  Scripture does not  record  it  according to  any calendar, although context clues would  suggest  sometime  in about  what we call October. But we just don't know, though many theories  abound.  From which I think it  is safe  to  conclude that the exact and  actual date of Jesus' birth is  not  important  since if it were God  would have seen that it got  recorded in  Scripture.
So  why 25  December? Because it's nine months, the period of human gestation, after 25 March, which for reasons we'll get into in later posts was traditionally held to be the date Jesus' conception.  And it's pretty cool how that worked out for December.  In the larger  culture  around the Hebrews in  which  Christianity first took hold, both the  day and  the general time of  year  already had religious significance.  In a  world ruled by Rome,  every  year at the time of the winter  solstice was  the Saturnalia.  What's a  Saturnalia? Originally it was  held on 17  December and later  expanded to  one week. Saturn, known as  Cronus to the  Greeks, was the  son of Heaven,  Uranus, and Earth, Gaia.  Saturn took  power from his  father Uranus/Heaven  and castrated him. But  a prophecy  arose that a  child of Saturn's would  one day overthrow  him, so to  prevent this  Saturn ate his children.
That's  right,  ate his  children. But  Saturn's wife, Opis, known to the Greeks  as  Rhea, hid  their sixth  child Jupiter, known to the Greeks as Zeus, on   Crete and  gave Saturn a  big rock in a blanket instead. Yeah, he ate it.    Jupiter/Zeus thus  survived and, with his five brothers and six  sisters,   all called  Olympians from their hang out Mount Olympus, did  indeed   overthrow  Saturn/Cronus and his own five brothers and six  sisters, all   twelve  called Titans. (If you're hearing modern words  like Titanic and    Olympics in here, you're right.)
Now in the  Greek version of  this   story the losing Titans got sent to Hell, well,  Tartarus  actually,   meaning a deep place. But in the Roman version  Saturn  escaped the rule   of Jupiter/Zeus and the Olympians and went to  Rome  where he established a   rule of perfect peace called the Golden  Age.  In memory of this perfect   age, Romans celebrated Saturnalia, when  no  war could be fought, no   business conducted, slaves ate with their   masters, and everybody set   aside the usual rules of propriety for   eating, drinking, gift giving and   even getting naked in public.
Right   after this came Dies  Natalis  Solis Invicti, The Day of Birth of the   Unconquered Sun,  celebrated on  25 December, which in the calendar of   the time was winter  solstice, the  day with the shortest daylight  hours  of the year,  demonstrating that  darkness cannot completely  overcome  light. A number  of the early  Christian Fathers, St Cyprian  among them,  spoke of the  parallel that  Jesus the Son of God and Light  of the  World was born on  the same day as  the physical sun and light  of the  world, neither to be  overcome by the  forces of darkness.
In   addition, other religions  in the Roman  world had a god's birthday on   25 December, for example  the Babylonian  sex goddess Ishtar, and the   Persian mediator god  Mithras, whose mystery  cult was popular in the   Roman army and carried  throughout the Empire. On  top of that, the   barbarians living to the  north of the formal  boundaries of the Roman   world (sorry, Germanic  types) where Winter is  harsher had their own   winter solstice  observances.
So it can look  like the whole   Christmas thing  originated with the Christian Church  adopting and   adapting familiar  material from the world around them, Dies  Natalis   Solis Invicti,  Saturnalia, and the widespread observance of  Winter   Solstice, to create  a time of celebration for the birth of Jesus. Is  that it then?  Is Christmas  and the observances that go with it simply    another step in the  evolution of stories about the sun and light not    going away but coming  back, gods getting born and golden ages,  another   recasting of universal  human themes -- maybe just like  Christianity   itself?
Don't  think so.  But also I don't think  it is at all necessary to become defensive about the fact that other new  life and new light stories pre-existed it, or to insist that Christmas  was entirely independent of them, or (yeah, I know, too many ors) to  fasten on to one or the other of the many attempts to theologise, like  Cyprian, the date of 25 December.
Consider. What did Saturn do?  Here's a   god who had kids all  right -- then ate them to prevent them  from doing   to him what he did to  his own father. In contrast to the  stories Man   makes up about gods,  the story God reveals to Man is just  the opposite!  Man is a creation,  not a child, of God, lost in his  own nonsense,  some  of which he  encapsulates in mythology and some of  which he  considers the  latest of  enlightened thinking, Man who will  thus  destroy himself, to  avoid which  God becomes Man in Jesus, whose  body  and blood will be given  for our  salvation on the Cross that the   creation of God may become  children of  God, and in the mass he gives that body and blood as the   pledge of that salvation.
Consider:  a child of  God who does not overthrow   his father but lives in perfect  submission  to his will; a child of God who does not   banish his father's rule but  proclaims his  kingdom; a God who does  not  eat his child in fear but  gives him to us  in love so we could eat  his  body and blood as the food  of eternal life,  a real golden age to   come; a mother who has to hide her  newborn son  not from God but from Man   for his survival. And the imagery of  light, not  validating all sun   gods but demonstrating that even in its  fallen and  broken state   Creation still shows that the Creator will not  be overcome  no matter   how the darkness gathers.
These  pre-Christian  observances are   not the real roots and story of Christmas,  but rather  aspects of God's   truth written into both Man and Nature even  in its  fallen state,   which we now see in retrospect point to the truth  we  could not see in   prospect as we look forward and try to make sense  of  our situation,   so God reveals it to us. The Christmas liturgy will  exactly  sum this up in the   Introit, the introductory Scripture passages, for  the  first mass of   Christmas: Why have the Gentiles raged, and the people   devised vain   things? -- The Lord has said to me, Thou art my Son, this   day have I   begotten Thee (Psalm 2:1,7. See below, or with my fellow   geeks and   wannabes, vide infra).
We call this coming of God into   Man's   flesh the Incarnation, from the Latin that means exactly that, to     become in the flesh. To be born. For which another word is Nativity,     from the Latin to be born. Christ comes into Creation, into the flesh,     is born into our world, on three levels: his historical birth in the     flesh as a human baby, his spiritual birth in the hearts and souls of     those justified by faith because of Christ, and his eternal birth or     generation from the Father in the Godhead.
Consequently, the church celebrates a mass for each of these three, as it prepared for them in Advent.
The First Mass of Christ's Mass, at midnight.
The Historical Birth in Bethlehem.
Introit Psalm 2:7. Psalm verse 2:1.
Collect
O     God, Who hast made this most sacred night to shine forth with the     brightness of the true Light, grant, we beseech Thee, that we may enjoy     His happiness in heaven, the mystery of whose light we have known  upon    earth.
Epistle Titus 2:11-15.
Gospel Luke 2:1-14.
The Second Mass of Christ's Mass, at dawn.
The Spiritual Birth in the Believer.
Introit Isaiah 9:2,6. Psalm verse 92:1 Septuagint, 93:1 Hebrew.
Collect
Grant,     we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that we, who are filled with the new     light of Thy Incarnate Word, may show forth in our works that which  by    faith shineth in our minds.
Epistle Titus 3:4-7.
Gospel Luke 2:15-20.
The Third Mass of Christ's Mass, during the day.
The Eternal Generation in the Trinity.
Introit Isaiah 9:6. Psalm verse 97:1 Septuagint, 98:1 Hebrew.
Collect
Grant,     we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that the new birth of Thine only     begotten Son in the flesh may deliver us who are held by the old bondage     under the yoke of sin.
Epistle Hebrews 1:1-12.
Gospel John 1:1-14
May I take this opportunity to wish all who visit this blog Merry Christmas, Feliz Navidad, Fröhliche Weinachten!
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
For the basics of our faith right here online, or for offline short daily prayer or devotion or study, scroll down to "A Beggar's Daily Portion" on the sidebar.
24 December 2014
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