SAINT ANDREW’S CHURCH, LAKE WORTH, FLORIDA

Christmas Day [2004]

Canon Richard T. Nolan

   

            Clergy are advised each year not to deliver Christmas sermons that require thought, because most people in every congregation simply want to glow mindlessly in the complex emotions of the Day. I reject this condescending advice. You are not brain dead. I assume that you and I are functioning with heart and mind. So, do bask in the Day’s feelings and, as well, adjust your thinking caps! 

            Earlier this month PARADE magazine interviewed a very talented, young, wealthy actor. He reported that after one of his major successes, he experienced a need to find authentic purpose for his life - a purpose deeper and more fulfilling than vocational success, wealth and fame. 

            Also recently, a New York University student commented for a publication, “I don't believe there is a person without religion; even if you're an atheist, you search for meaning at the end of the day.” This remark reflects a current proposal that human beings are genetically predisposed to seek meaning or some version of the Sacred. 

            The need for meaning and purpose is quite clear among many younger people. Some have been so brainwashed by fundamentalisms that their quest concludes before it ever starts. For others, their searches take them to a smorgasbord of invented philosophical, psychological, and religious notions.  Still others just keep busy so that their deeper needs can be put on hold. Few thinking folks bother with churches and synagogues, because these establishments seem not to deal with life’s big questions in a persuasive way; they seem to focus on ceremonies, soup kitchens, odd language, and the like. Moreover, the young people know that, if they want it, they can usually get a ceremony from some religious functionary. 

            In the early 1960s I was in my first ordained assignment at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. Before the Sunday 4 o’clock Evensong, there was a weekly half-hour organ recital of exceptional music. I was shocked and hurt when a young couple sitting in front of me agreed that the recital was the only thing worth attending. The young man said, “C’mon, let’s get out of here.”

             Today we celebrate the birth of a Jewish baby named Joshua; the Greek rendering of “Joshua” is “Jesus.” Each year one or more of the major news magazines includes a report on Jesus, the Nativity, or related matters. A December issue of TIME is headlined “Secrets of the Nativity.” I honestly found no secrets. The ambiguities cited were those that I had studied as a college undergraduate in the 1950s and later as a theological student. CNN has recently telecast “The Mystery of Jesus” and “The Two Marys.”  Of course, fundamentalists reject such scholarly research. I, for one, am delighted that such information is being provided! 

            After all the scrutiny of Jesus and his birth, beneath the nostalgia and sentimentality, what is left for you and me? I recall a faithful New Testament professor’s words, “Jesus is the God-given clue to life’s meaning.” Perhaps that is sufficient. We have enough grasp of his ministry that we can say to the young actor, If you want significant meaning and purpose for your life, be guided by taking a look at Jesus: his ministry that teaches tough love and responsibility, his faithfulness to the Creator, his equal regard for all people of good will, and his own profound self-acceptance. Not a mythological creation, Joshua was born at a particular time, in a particular place. Scriptural portraits of Jesus suggest that he grew to personify the Creator’s purposes and intentions for all humanity. He attempted to simplify his own Jewish heritage, just as you and I need to simplify the accumulation of regulations, procedures, doctrines, and rituals that we clergy of all religions inflict on our communities. We even need to demystify many of the words used in this morning’s worship! 

            Will everyone be persuaded about life’s meaning and purpose by exploring Jesus? Certainly not. People who have a faith that there is no God, people who trust that they can never know enough to be convinced, individuals needing absolute clarity and certainty, and, men and women already committed to - and satisfied with - their own beliefs are among those who would probably find the deeper meanings of Christmas irrelevant. However, for those who celebrate Christmas with depth, the Bethlehem baby signals a corrective event in human history. I cannot resist proposing that another remedial act of God is very much needed in our time.  So, Merry Christmas, but also a thoughtful, perhaps provocative, Christmas!