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Bethlehem, chaos, Christmas, Christmas Eve, devastation, God, good, holy, Holy Land, incarnate, Jesus, Mary, messy, political, Sermon, silent
Sometimes on Christmas Eve, we hear a bunch of strange words. And instead of paying too much attention to them, our minds simply get cued that Christmas has begun. But those funny words [that Chloe read so beautifully] – of Emperors, registrations, censuses, some guy named Quirinius, a bunch of town names, something about the line of David, and of a pregnant woman who isn’t quite yet married – all those words matter. They matter because they set the stage for the birth of the Christ Child. We often think of that birth as this simplified, sacred moment, where everything gets really still. We’ll even sing Silent Night tonight. But nothing about that night was remotely silent. Joseph and a very pregnant Mary have journeyed over 90 miles[i] by donkey and foot. The Emperor has created political chaos by forcing people from their residences to their ancestral homes – all likely in an effort to extort more money from strained peoples. Into that upheaval and manipulation, we find the Bread of Life being born in the town, Bethlehem, whose name means House of Bread, in a bed that was literally used to feed.
This year, I am especially grateful for the reminder that Jesus was born into the chaos of political manipulation, suffering, and tension. Over the last many weeks, we have all been watching as the Holy Land has yet again fallen into chaos – as leaders fight over land, disregard human dignity, and desecrate all that is holy. The images have been horrific: from children standing in long lines with makeshift bowls hoping for enough soup to stave off starvation for themselves and maybe a little for their parents; to hospitals and other places that should be safe zones being decimated; to the Lutheran Church in Bethlehem whose creche this year placed the baby Jesus in a pile of rubble.[ii] And although we associate Christmas with shiny lights, joyous songs, and abundant food and blessings, the reality of that first Christmas was much more similar to Christmas in the Holy Land this year.
Just this week, I read that Christmas in Bethlehem is cancelled – the very place that welcomed Jesus into the manger has once again had to close its doors to the Holy Family. As Sophia Lee reports, “Typically, Bethlehem—a Palestinian city of about 30,000 people in the Israeli-occupied West Bank—is jammed with more than 3 million visitors coming from all over the world to celebrate the birth of the Messiah. Marching bands and carol singers and dancers and fireworks would fill the city with loud cheer and festive energy. Thousands would pack the Church of the Nativity, golden lights would twinkle across Star Street, and a giant tree with a ruby star would illuminate Manger Square. Instead, the streets are dark and hushed.” Christian leaders in Bethlehem report, “It will be a silent night this Christmas—but it’ll still be a holy night… Stripping Christmas of all its extraneous decorations and Western traditions,” they say, “will help them focus on the true meaning of Christmas.” One pastor explained, “…if you look at the real story of Christmas, it was a story of pure hardship. But God didn’t leave Mary and Joseph. And they didn’t leave God.”[iii]
For weeks, I have been feeling like we would have to forego everything good and holy about Christmas – that celebrating this Christmas just did not feel appropriate or respectful of the devastation in the very land we are celebrating. But the clergy of the Holy Land are paving the way to our Christmas celebrations this year. Truth be told, Christmas was never about shiny lights, boisterous parties, and lots of presents. Christmas was and always has been about the miracle of the incarnation – God taking on human form in order to bring us redemption and salvation. And when God does something, God never does that something half-way. If God was going to become human, God was going to become incarnate in super fleshy ways – not in shiny, idealized human ways, but in raw, earthy, messy ways. Jesus came among us – not to the polished versions of ourselves we present to the outside world, but to the real, gritty versions of ourselves who actually need an incarnate God. And I cannot think of better news than that. This Christmas, in the midst of censuses, registrations, and funnily named places; in the midst of bombings, bloodshed, and loss; in the midst of anxiety, loneliness, and dissatisfaction, Jesus comes among us. Jesus does not leave Mary and Joseph. Jesus does not leave Palestinian or Jew. Jesus does not leave you or me. And that is good news for a merry Christmas. Amen.
[i] Timothy L. Adkins-Jones, “Commentary on Luke 2:1-14 [15-20],” December 24, 2023, as found at https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/christmas-eve-nativity-of-our-lord/commentary-on-luke-21-14-15-20-24 on December 20, 2023.
[ii] As found at https://www.facebook.com/christmaslutheranchurch on December 21, 2023.
[iii] Sophia Lee, “Bethlehem Cancels Christmas, But Local Pastors Still Expect a Holy Night,” Christianity Today, December 20, 2023, as found at https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2023/december/bethlehem-cancel-christmas-christian-pastors-church-nativit.html on December 21, 2023.