Today heaven and earth are united for Christ is born
Today God has come to earth and man ascends to heaven
Today, God who by nature cannot be seen,
Is seen in the flesh for our sake.
Let us glorify Him, crying:
Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace!
Thy coming has brought peace to us:
Glory to Thee, our Savior!
- Stikhera on the Litya Great Compline for Christmas
(Eastern Orthodox Church)
And she gave birth to her first born Son and wrapped
Him in swaddling clothes and laid Him in a manger because there was no place
for them in the inn. Luke 2:7
Dear Brothers & Sisters in Christ Jesus
As we celebrate the feast of Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ, I would love to share some thoughts that have been in my mind. This is my Christmas message to you all for this year. The message might seem quite long, but I assure you that you will surely enjoy the read.
THE INN
In the Nativity story, a woman who was about to give birth to a child, and her betrothed, went from inn to inn, asking for lodging and help. There was no room in any inn. But even more poignant, there was no room in
anyone’s heart to extend charity and help to a woman at her moment of
delivery. How could a city so filled
with people not have had even one room, even one bit of charity for someone in
need? Never mind that this woman was not
just anyone, but God’s chosen vessel for our salvation.
In the Mexican culture, there is a Christmas-time
tradition called Las Posadas. In this
tradition, a couple dressed up as Mary and Joseph go from home to home, asking
if there is any room at “the inn”. Each
home takes on the role of an inn in Bethlehem.
They are rebuffed each time until they reach the home that has been
designated as “the inn,” at which point they are allowed in and a celebration
ensues.
Imagine your heart as an inn—there are lots of rooms in it
as there would be at an inn. At many
inns, there are economy rooms, rooms with a view, rooms with a balcony, perhaps
even a penthouse, or top floor room.
Some rooms are more expensive and more lavish, others more simple.
The inn of your heart is similar. There are things in life, like relationships
or family, that tug at our heart strings, and they often get the biggest rooms
at the inn of our hearts. Careers get
large rooms as well. Material possessions occupy space. So do our friends. Hobbies and things that bring us joy have a place,
perhaps a smaller room, but there is still a place for them. Friday nights out with friends, Saturdays in
front of the TV watching sports, the Sunday afternoon barbecue, they all find
accommodations. Hopefully one’s heart
is big enough that there is a room for charity.
The question for today is which room does the Lord get in your
heart? Is it the biggest one? Or the economy room? Is there a room for prayer? Worship?
Charity? Are these rooms well-kept or in
need of a remodel?
If your heart or your life is like an inn in Bethlehem, is
there room in your inn for the Lord, or have all the spaces been filled with
other things? In order to have Christ in
your life, there needs to be not only room in “your inn,” but the committed
Christian offers Christ the best room, the first portion, of your life. The
committed Christian has a rooms for charity, for prayer, for scripture reading,
for obedience to the commandments. As we
journey through Advent and prepare to celebrate the Nativity, it is a good time
to clean the rooms of your heart and of your life, to make sure there is room
for Christ in them.
Because just as they do at Las Posadas in Mexico, Christ
comes to knock on the door of your heart every day. Do we turn Him away, saying there is no room
at the inn, that all the rooms have been filled with other “things”? Or do we welcome Him with joy? Do we give Him the economy room? Or do we give Him the biggest and the
best? Spend some time today evaluating
how you spend your time. And reflect
seriously on which rooms Christ occupies in the inn of your heart. Just like they upgrade rooms at hotels for
special guests, consider giving an upgrade in your heart to Christ, the most
special guest of all.
THE CAVE
In every Nativity story that we have heard or every Icon that we see which shows the scene in Bethlehem, we know that when Mary and Joseph searched for a place to stay and help, they are told that there are no rooms available. They are, however, told that there is a stable out back and are shown to a stable where the animals are kept, where Jesus is born and laid in a manger. Every Nativity scene appearing under every Christmas tree shows a barn with straw roof and wooden walls with Jesus lying in the manger.
Yet, every Orthodox icon shows Jesus Christ incarnate in a cave, in the desert, outside of Bethlehem. Why a cave? Why not the traditionally depicted stable or barn?
We are not told in scripture whether the birth took place in
a barn or a cave, only that there was no room in the inn. There are two reasons that a cave is shown in
Orthodox icons, rather than a barn. The
first is actually historical. At the
time of the Nativity, animals were not kept sheltered in wooden barns, but in
caves and recesses in the hills. The
second is symbolic—the cave that is shown in the icons is traditionally
surrounded by sharp and steep rocks, which represent the cruel world into which
Jesus was Incarnate. The space inside
the cave looks peaceful and welcoming.
The cave represents heaven. It is
a peaceful respite from the world.
There is an icon that shows the cave, with the manger and
the baby Jesus, with just the animals surrounding the manger and the star
overhead. The theme of this icon is “Creation worships the Creator.” The significance of the feast of the Nativity
is that the Creator came to live with His creation. And not only was there no room in any inn,
but there was no room in any place made by human hands to hold the Creator of
those hands. So, the Creator came to be
part of His creation in a cave He Himself created.
In the last reflection, it was mentioned that in icons, the
manger is depicted symbolically as a tomb.
Historically, the manger was the wooden trough from where the animals
were eating. Most likely it would have
been filled with hay, which horses were eating.
Again, there was no bed made by human beings that could hold the
Creator. So, He was laid on straw, in
wood that He created. His birth also
reflects the most humble of beginnings.
And it begins a ministry where Jesus would tell His followers: “Whoever would be great among you must be
your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of man also came not to be served
but to serve.” (Mark 10: 43-45)
The cave reflects peace, surrounded by danger. The manger shows humility. Later on, when we discuss how all of creation
worshiped and brought gifts to the Creator in its midst, we will note that the
earth itself worshiped the Creator, and for a gift, the earth offered a cave.
For today, examine peace and humility in your life. Does your life favor what is grandiose or
simple? Are you more boastful or
humble? If the cave reflects peace
surrounded by danger, are you able to find inner peace in a life that is
continually dangerous? Or have you
succumbed to the dangers of the world?
Today’s verse is an important reminder of what is truly important—the
virtues of peace and humility will go a long way in helping you grow as a
Christian this Advent and far beyond it.
THE PURPOSE
If you look closely at many icons of the Nativity, you
will notice that the manger is not a straw-filled wooden trough as we see in
most Nativity displays around town.
Rather, it resembles a casket or tiny tomb. The swaddling bands are not like the large
cloth that we swaddle our children with, but rather are the burials band used
to bind the bodies of the dead. Why do
the icons depict this? It’s to make clear
from the beginning the purpose of the Incarnation of Christ. His purpose in coming to be among us was to
die for our sins. It all leads to the
Cross and the Tomb. This is the reason
Christ came to earth. This is the reason
God incarnated His Only-Begotten Son.
When you enroll in high school or college, what year
do they label your class? It’s the year
you are scheduled to graduate. I entered
college for my masters in 2010. I went in as the class
of 2012, which ended up being the year I finished. And why do schools label classes by the year
they finish, rather than the year they start?
Because when you go to school, the purpose for your attendance is in
order to finish. So, even from the first
day of school, the focus is on the last.
Sure, the journey is long, and fun, and important, but the focus of the
journey is its end, not the journey itself, certainly not the beginning of it.
is the reason
God incarnated His Only-Begotten Son
.
Our Christian life is the same. God’s purpose in putting us here is so we can
GRADUATE from this life, into eternal life.
No one can get to heaven if they haven’t lived on earth. Just like no one can graduate from college if
they never spend a day in school. So,
every day of our life, there should be a thought given to eternal life. This is why we hear at every Divine Liturgy
(and in the daily vespers), a petition that speaks to us of “A Christian end to
our lives, peaceful without shame and suffering and a good defense before the
awesome judgment seat of Christ,” so that this thought of our destination
inspires how we spend our present journey.
So, take some time every day, whether it is Christmas, or Advent,
or the middle of summer, to work on your salvation, think about where you are
headed for eternal life. So many people
plan for retirement, but not for eternity.
Spend time each day through prayer, meditation on scripture, obedience
to the commandments and charity towards others.
Spend a lifetime doing that and you will be in good shape for that
accounting at the awesome judgment seat of Christ.
The Resurrection couldn’t happen without the Nativity. However, the Nativity without the
Resurrection would make Christ into an incredible teacher and healer, but not
our Savior. An incredible life without
Christ is just that, an incredible life that will one day come to an end. A life with Christ and a life in Christ is
like going to school—you will be there for a while, you will even make good
memories and have good times, but one day you will graduate to something bigger
and better.
The
purpose of Christ’s Incarnation is apparent from the Nativity. God’s purpose for our life is apparent from
our birth as well!
to the dangers of the world?
Today’s verse is an important reminder of what is truly important—the
virtues of peace and humility will go a long way in helping you grow as a
Christian this Advent and far beyond it.
Before Your birth, O Lord, the hosts of angels already
perceived the mystery. They were struck
with wonder and trembled, for though You adorn the heavens with stars, You are
now well-pleased to be born as a Babe.
You hold the ends of the earth in Your hands, but now You are laid in a
manger of dumb beasts. Yet all these
things fulfilled Your saving plan, by which Your compassion was revealed to
us. Christ of great mercy, glory to You!
So, take some time every day, whether it is Christmas, or Advent,
or the middle of summer, to work on your salvation, think about where you are
headed for eternal life. So many people
plan for retirement, but not for eternity.
Spend time each day through prayer, meditation on scripture, obedience
to the commandments and charity towards others.
Spend a lifetime doing that and you will be in good shape for that
accounting at the awesome judgment seat of Christ.
The Resurrection couldn’t happen without the Nativity. However, the Nativity without the
Resurrection would make Christ into an incredible teacher and healer, but not
our Savior. An incredible life without
Christ is just that, an incredible life that will one day come to an end. A life with Christ and a life in Christ is
like going to school—you will be there for a while, you will even make good
memories and have good times, but one day you will graduate to something bigger
and better.
The purpose of Christ’s Incarnation is apparent from the Nativity. God’s purpose for our life is apparent from our birth as well! to the dangers of the world? Today’s verse is an important reminder of what is truly important—the virtues of peace and humility will go a long way in helping you grow as a Christian this Advent and far beyond it.
THE MESSAGE
I’m sure during the period of the census in Bethlehem, there
were people from all walks of life, all economic classes. There were well-to-do people who got the most
expensive rooms in the most expensive inns, who rode the best donkeys and
camels. With so many people descending
on Bethlehem for the census, there were undoubtedly parties and family
gatherings, reunions of friends, loud music, dancing and good food.
The shepherds were among the poorest of the people. They were not part of the Bethlehem social scene. Their work was done around the clock, in
anonymity, with little compensation. I’m
sure very few parents of the time dreamed for their children to be shepherds.
Yet, God chose these “poor shepherds” (the First Noel) to
hear the good news. He chose to bless
the shepherds to hear a multitude of the heavenly angels singing God’s
praises. And when the Shepherds told
people what they had heard and seen, in a sense, He chose them to become the
first “evangelists,” the first to share the good news.
Why these Shepherds?
First, the message of Christ is for all people. He didn’t take it to the high and mighty, but
to the lowly. Christ’s Nativity
inaugurated the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, but He “reigns” with humility. So the message was given first to the most
humble of people, simple shepherds. This
is good news indeed, because the message of Christ IS for everyone. And that does not include only every
socio-economic level. It includes every
spiritual level:
If you’ve memorized the Christmas story or can’t remember
most of the details, Christ’s message is for you.
If you read the Bible every day, or have never read it
before, Christ’s message is for you!
If you pray every day, or if you’ve never said a genuine
prayer, Christ’s message is for you!
If Christ is the focus of your life, or if you are just
starting your relationship with Him, Christ’s message is for you!
Ok, so what is the message?
The answer comes from the shepherds as well. One of the ways Christ reveals Himself is as
“the Good Shepherd.” In John 10: 11-15,
we read:
Jesus said, “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the
sheep. He who is a hireling and not a
shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, sees the wolf coming and leave the sheep
and flees; and the wolf snatches them and scatters them. He flees because he is a hireling and cares
nothing for the sheep. I am the good
shepherd; I know my own and my own know me, as the Father know me and I know
the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep.”
Jesus uses this image because all Christians are like a
flock of sheep. Jesus is our
Shepherd. Jesus protects the flock from
“wolves” and all harm. When one sheep is
lost, like a good shepherd, He goes in search of the lost sheep. Most important, like a good shepherd keeps
his flock together until they get safely to their pen at the end of the day,
Jesus keeps His flock together and provides for our safety until we reach the
permanent safety of heaven at the end of our lives.
I hope that the images sticking in your mind are not the
loud and raucous parties of Bethlehem, but the peace of the cave and the safety
of the pen. For many people, if you
asked them where do you want to end up—a cave, a pen or a party—the answer most
certainly would be the party. The
message of Christ is that we want to end up in the cave and safely in the
pen. It is in humility that we
experience Christ. The message is for
everyone!
Dear brethren, this Christmas, let us give room for Christ in our inns called life, welcoming Him to dwell in us. Let our hearts be like the cave where peace dwells.Wishing you all a very blessed Christmas.