The Rev.
Maureen R. Frescott
The
Congregational Church of Amherst
December 24,
2017 - Christmas Eve
Luke 2:1-20
“The Force is
Strong with This One”
A long
time ago, in a galaxy far, far away…
A
baby was born.
A
baby who would one day become a people’s only hope for liberation.
The
one destined to carry the light that would overcome the presence of darkness in
the world.
The
one who would embark on a mission to teach others to carry the light and to use
the forces of good – love, compassion, and grace – to overcome the forces of
evil.
This
Christmas, millions of people all over the world will flock to theaters to see
this story come alive through the character of Luke Skywalker in the latest
movie in the Star Wars franchise - George Lucas’ classic tale of good vs. evil.
But
on this day, millions more will flock to churches like this one to hear a
similar story written by another famous Luke, an ancient tale of light
overcoming the darkness that has been told and retold for thousands of years.
The
story of the Nativity.
It’s
a story of hope, and peace, and love, and joy.
A story
of a baby born in a stable to parents with no money and no power.
A baby
who would grow up to save the world.
And
as we stand among the witnesses to this ancient and familiar story –
among
the shepherds, the angels, the wise men, and Mary and Joseph themselves – we
might imagine peering into the manger at this tiny baby who radiates light, and
saying those iconic words,
“The
Force is strong with this one.”
As
I listen to our teens retell the story of Jesus’ birth – as they do every year
at our 7 pm Christmas Eve service – I wonder, as I do every year, how
much of this story resonates with them, and how much of this story do they actually
believe to be true?
How
much of this story do any of us believe to be true?
I
wonder – do we really believe that Mary gave birth to this baby two thousand
years ago?
Do
we really believe that this baby was God in human form?
Do
we really believe that this baby had the power to save the world?
Do
we really believe that we too are a part of the story – that the light and the
love that flowed through Jesus also flows through us?
A
few weeks ago, a friend of mine tagged me in a post on Facebook.
It
was a link to an article that claimed that at least one aspect of the Nativity
Story could be proven to be true.
The
article was titled,
“Biological
Evidence that Jesus Actually Was Born in December.”
As
a pastor, I often have people sending me links to articles containing newly
unearthed proof that something that occurred in the Bible actually happened
just as the Bible said it did.
Articles
with headlines like:
“Could
This Mountain be the Final Resting Place of Noah’s Ark?”
or “Archeologists
Discover the Location of the Garden of Eden”
or “Chariot
Wheels and Human Bones Found at the Bottom of the Red Sea – Proof that Moses
Destroyed the Egyptian Army.”
With
God’s help, of course.
While
these articles often draw us in with the promise of offering empirical evidence
that something we’ve always taken on faith actually happened,
it
often takes only a quick search on Google or Snopes.com to discover that the
“evidence” cited is based on pure speculation, or
inaccurate information, or
was entirely made up and circulated as satire or fake news, which was then
shared hundreds of thousands of times by those who believed it be true.
So
it was with a keen sense of skepticism that I clicked on the link to the
article that promised biological evidence regarding Jesus’ date of birth.
You
may have heard it said that Jesus was NOT in fact born on December 25th
– that this date was chosen by the Christian church in the 4th
century, and adopted over time because it coincided with existing Pagan
festivals that celebrated the Winter Solstice and the ancient Sun God.
During
these celebrations, people burned Yule logs, dragged evergreens indoors, drank
heartily, and welcomed the light returning to the world on the shortest day of
the year.
The
church – it has been said - was determined to co-opt this existing winter holiday
and overwrite it with the celebration of the birth of Christ – the true light
of God coming into the world.
The
modern theory is that Jesus was actually born in the springtime.
This
is based somewhat on the timing of the birth of John the Baptist,
but
it’s also driven by the presence of the shepherds and the sheep in the Nativity
Story we have in the Gospel of Luke.
Shepherds,
we’re told, would not have been awake in the fields at night watching their flocks
unless the sheep were about to give birth,
and,
as every shepherd knows, sheep drop their lambs in the springtime,
not
on a cold winter’s night in December.
But
hold on – says the article promising proof of Jesus’ December birth - there is a
certain breed of dessert dwelling sheep that does in fact give birth in the
winter.
In
fact, it is the only breed of sheep that is indigenous to the area of the
Middle East where Jesus was born.
So there’s the proof.
So there’s the proof.
The
author of the article celebrates this bit of biological evidence, saying it
satisfies her desire for something concrete
to hold onto in the Nativity Story.
She
writes: “Long ago, I accepted the idea that December 25 was probably not the
actual date of Christ’s birth. It was just one more sad thing about being an
adult, one more little bit of wonder gone from life.”
It
is sad when we lose that sense of wonder that we have in childhood.
When
we stop believing in fairy tales and discover a growing desire for concrete
evidence on which to base our beliefs.
While
that desire is well placed when it comes to ideological, political, historical,
and scientific beliefs – it can be misplaced when applied to religious beliefs –
because religious beliefs are often rooted in story.
Stories
that are a woven tapestry of myth, meaning making, and metaphor, with an
underlying message containing the truth that we seek.
The
Nativity Story in particular is one that is multi-layered and pregnant with
meaning and metaphor. Pun intended.
I
would argue that trying to pinpoint a birth date for Jesus based on the mating
habits of the sheep mentioned in the Gospel of Luke is like trying to pinpoint
the birth date of Luke Skywalker based on the appearance of "womp rats" in George
Lucas’ original screenplay of Star Wars.
Sometimes
the sheep – or the womp rats - are there because they’re meant to point us
towards something else.
A
later plot point, a deeper meaning, a metaphorical marker that gives us insight
into who the main character is.
While
Jesus is not a fictional character, like
Luke Skywalker, the Gospels we have that contain the stories of his birth, cannot
be categorized as non-fiction.
They
were never intended to be historically accurate accounts of his life.
And
they’re not biographies in the same way we write biographies today.
The
Gospels were written as proclamations of Good News – the Good News contained in
the message and teachings of Jesus and the saving action of his life, death,
and resurrection.
For
our ancestors – who lived in a largely myth-based and oral-storytelling
culture, it was the message behind the story, not the details of the story,
that contained the truth.
The
details could change based on who was telling the story and who was listening
to the story. Because the details were just a vehicle to help the listener
grasp and understand the underlying truth.
It’s
hard for us to wrap our minds around this - given our modern desire for
accuracy in the printed word and the level of importance we place on factual
details.
Especially
in this age we live in where alternative facts and alternative truths confuse
us and set us against one another.
As
we search for something concrete on which to hang our beliefs it’s tempting to
want there to be real sheep in a real field tended by real shepherds on a cold
winter’s night.
Because
then we can say – without doubt – that God really was born into this world - and
through Jesus - has gifted us with the power to change it.
Luke
believed this to be true.
(the Gospel writer, Luke, not Skywalker Luke).
Luke
so believed it to be true he crafted an amazing story that transported his
readers back in time to the moment it happened.
To
the point where they could almost smell the animals, and feel the cold, and see
the shepherds breath hanging in the air.
Those shepherds were there for a reason.
In
Luke’s time, being a shepherd was thought to be the most menial, demeaning, and
filthy job that anyone could take.
It
involved living out in a field day and night for years on end, without shelter
in all kinds of weather.
It was a life of stepping
in sheep dung, sleeping in mud (and worse), birthing lamb after lamb and hoping
to find a source of water to clean up the mess afterwards.
It
required being away from family and friends and sometimes not seeing or
speaking to another human being for long stretches of time.
Those
who took the job of shepherd were truly desperate – for the money to send home,
for the food they foraged in the field, for the solitude, for the time and
space away from whatever it was they were fleeing.
Perhaps Luke
had shepherds present at the birth of Christ because they were the least likely
to be welcomed at the birth of a King.
At
the moment God was born into the world, the first to gaze upon him, and bless
him, were the ones with the least value, the lowest status, the ones with
absolutely no power.
The
ones whom Jesus had come to liberate, and lift up, and save.
The
story of Jesus coming into our world in the form of light and hope and love
should be told and celebrated every year just as we do.
Personally,
it doesn’t matter to me if he was born in December or April,
and
being able to say with certainty that any of the details of the Nativity Story
are true in a concrete way, adds nothing to my faith,
just
as NOT having certainty about the details takes nothing away.
The Star
Wars movies have a powerful message behind the overarching story they have to tell even though we know the
details of the story are largely the product of George Lucas’ imagination.
The
story has meaning and incites wonder and awe for the millions who allow
themselves a few hours to step into it and be carried away by it.
I
approach the Nativity Story in the same way.
God
is in the feeling we get when we hear the story, year after year.
God
is in the wonder and awe – and in the joy and relief that the shepherds feel –
and that we feel - when we realize the wheels of change have been set in motion
by the legacy Jesus left in place for us.
Every
year, on Christmas Eve, Jesus is born again in our imaginations and in our
hearts.
And
we in turn carry his light and love and grace out into the world with us.
And
no political posturing,
or
power grabs,
or
acts of injustice,
or
expression of greed,
or hostility,
or bigotry,
or fear of any kind,
can
overcome this light that shines within us, and through us.
May
the force of Christ be with you all.
Thanks be to God, and Amen.
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