"The
light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it."
John 1:5
Dear
God, we come here this morning hopeful for a word from you to meet
our needs, hopeful for a little light to help us see our way better,
a little light in the darkness. So startle us, O God, with your truth,
and come into our lives with your light and your love in Jesus Christ,
our Lord. Amen.
*
* *
"In
the beginning was the Word."
Words
are powerful. Words have power to create reality where there was no
reality before. Think of the reality created by "Youre
beautiful and I love you." Something very real comes into existence
between two people when those words are said.
"Youre
stupid. Youre lazy. Youre no good. Youll never amount
to anything." Think of the reality created when those words are
spoken to a child.
Words
create reality where there was no reality.
In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God. He [the Word] was in the beginning with God. All
things came into being through him.
That
is how one ancient writer begins the story of Jesusand the Christian
faith: "In the beginning was the Word." Remember the first
words in the book of Genesis: "In the beginning when God created
the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness
covered the face of the deep," and then a word was spoken. God
said, "Let there be light," and there was light.
Words
are powerful. Words create new reality. And instead of a story about
a birth in Bethlehemthe Fourth Gospel, written perhaps a generation
after the other Gospels, begins with "The Word."
In
the beginning was the Word. . . . In him was life, and the life
was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness
and darkness has not overcome it.
And
then this incredible leap, the startling affirmation:
"The
Word became flesh and dwelt among us."
I
loved reading or hearing, although I cant remember or find the
source, that when Johann Sebastian Bach wrote the opening notes of
the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, he was thinking about John 1. John
Sherer has agreed to play the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor as our
postlude. It is one of the most powerful compositions, I think, in
all of music. Its opening figure"In the beginning
was the Word"and then a descending cascade of notes"the
Word became flesh"down, down to a rich, deep foundation
of harmonics in which the composer constructs a complex Gothic cathedral
of sound. You might want to remain for a few minutes after the Benediction
and listen to it.
In
the beginning was the Word. In the beginning is Gods impulse
to speak, to communicate. God speaks and creation happens, which,
because it is a product of Gods self-communication, contains
the reality of God: God revealed in sun, moon, stars, in lakes, and
oceans, and forests. God revealed in nature. But there is more to
it than nature.
I
love the way Frederick Buechner put it whimsically:
God
never seems to weary of trying to get himself across. Word after
word he tries in search of the right word. When creation itself
does not seem to say it right, sun, moon, stars, all of ithe
tries flesh and blood. He tried saying it in Noah, but Noah was
a drinking man. . . . Tried saying it in Abraham but Abraham was
a little too Mesopotamian with all those wives and whiskers. .
. . Tried Moses but Moses himself was trying too hard; tried David
but David was too pretty for his own good. Toward the end of his
rope, God tried saying it in John the Baptist with his locusts
and honey and hellfire preaching and you get the feeling that
John might almost have worked except he lacked something small
but crucial like a sense of the ridiculous or a balanced diet.
So
he tried once more
Jesus as le mot juste [exactly the right
word] of God. (Wishful Thinking, pp. 121-122)
That
is the basic fundamental Christian affirmation. God high and holy"Immortal,
invisible, in light inaccessible, hid from our eyes"as
our opening hymn put it. The high and holy God speaks and creation
happens, speaks in human history, in the particular history of a particular
people, speaks a final and ultimate word, in a human life, a human
being, Jesus of Nazareth, who his followers will call the Christ,
the Messiah, the Word of God made flesh.
And
furthermore, Christian faith will maintain that that life is the light
of the world, a light that shines in the darkness, a light so resilient
that no darkness ever overcomes it.
It
has always been the strongest temptation of religion to focus on heaven
instead of earth, pie-in-the-sky-by-and-by, instead of the earthly,
sensual reality of human life. Religion has always been tempted to
be otherworldly, rather than this-worldly in the suspicion that the
world is not quite right, not to be trusted, embraced, and loved.
Religion has always been tempted to see as its mission to deliver
people from this world into the next world, or from this world into
some other world. So it has seemed to some to be an act of religious
faith to deny, denigrate, or even punish the flesh, to deny human
needs and appetites, to live apart from all the ambiguities and joys
and sorrows of human life in this world, on this earth. John will
have none of it. The eternal Word of God, by which God speaks and
acts and creates reality, that Word became flesh. Gods ultimate
self-disclosure comes not in a beautiful sunset or a powerful storm,
not in a book of wise sayings, or a philosophic treatise. Gods
ultimate self-disclosure comes in human flesh, this human birth, this
human life, this man, what he said, how he lived, what he taught,
this human life subject to the same limitations in which we all must
live our lives, subject to the same joys and disappointments, the
same passions, the same impatience, the same potential for despair
and ecstasythe same death.
The
Word became fleshthe theological, or Christological, basis of
our faithwhat relevance does it have for us? What does it have
to do with me? There are two implications here: one for the church
as an institution, and the other for us as individuals.
First,
the institution. A group of scholars, with a few ministers scattered
in to keep their feet on the ground, one of whom was our new Co-Pastor,
Joanna Adams, gathered recently at Columbia Theological Seminary to
talk about the mission of the church in the new millennium. It was
a propitious time for that discussion because there are a lot of people
who have concluded that the church as we know it is about done for.
The mainline denominations continue their numerical decline, and what
energy they have left is pretty much expended on internal fights about
sex. Someone has concluded that at the current rate of decline the
last living Presbyterian will die in the year 2117. So its a
good idea to get our smart people around a table and talk about what
we ought to be doing.
This
symposium published a book, Hope for the World, and said unequivocally
that this world must be the focus of the churchs mission, not
just trying to convert everybody. In fact, these scholars had the
courage to observe that traditional Christian evangelism sometimes
does violence to other cultures and people and actually contributes
to the violent fragmentation of the human race. Our priority, the
symposium declared, must be the world that God loves. The church must
be world-oriented, in the world thoroughly in the name of Jesus, never
abandoning the world no matter how ambiguous, or terrible, or sinful,
or evil it seems. "Christians," they said, "do not
hope to perfect the world, but they do expect and hope to change it,"
"The rule," they said is, "in the church, tell the
story; in the world, live the story" (Hope for the World,
Walter Brueggemann, ed.)
Lets
bring that close to home. This church calls itself a "Light in
the City." We have been and are clear that we are called to be
a light in this city in the name of Jesus Christ, that as he was the
Word made flesh, so we, together are the Word become flesh in acts
of kindness, service, healing, comfort, done in his name. As he is
the light shinning in the darkness, so we aspire to be that light,
in worship and education and programming designed to nurture human
intellect and spirits and bodies and relationships.
We
tutor 500 children every week. We welcome the homeless and feed the
hungry, cloth the cold. We comfort the grieving and stand with the
anxious. We counsel the troubled and open our doors to the elderly
and the infants. We invite the world around us to experience the beauty
of music and art and join in the exploration of issues of importance
to our city and nation.
And
now we are looking ahead into the new millennium and launching a new
initiative we have called Project Light. We are a growing churcha
much larger church than we used to be, and our hopes are to enhance
the way we live our life together as a community of faith. We hope
to enhance our programs of education and nurture for our children,
our young people, and our young adults. We hope to expand and strengthen
our programs of education and faith development for adults through
our Academy of Faith and Life. We intend to enhance and expand our
programs for the care of our elderly members, and we intend to deepen
our ability to care for the spiritual needs of all of our members.
And we intend to do that by building an exciting new facility, here
on this site, behind the sanctuary and parish building, to contain
larger gathering spaces, a hospitable welcome center, more and better
classrooms and meeting rooms, and a Wellness Center to house the Counseling
Center, the Center for Health Ministry, and portions of the Center
for Older Adults.
And
at the same time we hope to be faithful to the mandate of Word becoming
flesh and light shining in the darkness by expanding our presence
in a new community that is emerging west of here in and around Cabrini-Green.
We hope to build a community center, an extension of this church,
to serve as a bridge for people of all income levels and racial identities
who are already starting to create a new community. In the name of
Jesus Christ, we will be there with a facility for recreation and
education, nurture and job training, and faith formationa light
in the new city.
Those
are the institutional implications of striving to follow one who is
Word made flesh, light shining in the darkness.
And
there are personal implications. "The Word became flesh and dwelt
among us." "In him was life, and the life was the light
of all people."
You
know you cant see the stars until it is really dark. City people
know that. Light pollution from urban areas necessitates a trip to
the country, or the beach, and there, lo and behold, the vast, shining
panorama of heaven. But it has to be dark. Philosopher Joseph Campbell
wrote, "Only at the bottom of the abyss comes the voice of salvation.
The darkest moment is the moment when the real message of transformation
comes."
We
experienced some of that last fall. In the darkness of what happened
to us, we were able to see some stars shining, stars that were always
there but simply became visible to us because of the darkness.
- The bright
shining stars of our love for our families, our church, our
nation, which we saw clearly and experienced profoundly in darkness.
- The bright
shining stars of human compassion and kindness.
- In the
darkness of what happened on September 11, light began to shine:
in the strength and heroism and self-sacrifice of firefighters,
police officers, rescue workers, airplane passengers.
Sometimes
you have to be in the darkness to see the light.
Joseph
Campbell also wrote
People
say that what were all seeking is a meaning for life. I
dont think thats what were really seeking. I
think that what we are seeking is an experience of being alive,
so that our life experiences on the purely physical plane will
have resonance with our innermost being and reality, so that we
actually feel the rapture of being alive. Thats what its
finally about. (The Active Life, Parker Palmer, p. 8)
Campbell
was right, I believe. What we most want is to be completely alive,
to live our lives thoroughly, to live deeply, to see and experience
everything we can.
And
the promise is that in him, Word made flesh, the gift of life is given.
In him, following him, in living the life to which he calls us, a
life of serving and giving and sharing, a life of passionate commitment
and sacrificial generosity, you and I become the people God created
us to be. And even more, in him we know a love that will never let
us go, a bond with him that not even death can sever, a light no darkness
will ever overcome, a light that promises to shine in whatever darkness
we encounter along the waydarkness of suffering and loss, darkness
of separation and grief, darkness of disappointment and depression.
In
him was life, and life was the light of all people. The light
shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it.
Thanks
be to God.
Amen.