THE PERFECT GIFT
December 18, 2005
John M. Buchanan
Pastor,
Fourth Presbyterian Church
Psalm 95:1–7
Luke 2:1–7
“Beloved, let us love one another,
because love is from God.”
1 John 4:7 (NRSV)
It begins with an emperor’s folly, for
in setting out to register “all the world”
Augustus put something into motion that transcends all
earthly power.
We know the story and how it turns out, but let’s
try to put ourselves
in the shepherd’s place, afraid to open ourselves
to God and in need of reassurance,
being told not to fear. Let’s be willing, like Mary,
to take the words in,
to treasure and ponder them, because so much is possible
when we do.
As these words wash over us they penetrate despite our
distractions and defenses.
Their spirit can change us whether we will it or not. If
we feel utterly exhausted,
drained of all feeling and weary with worldly chores and
concerns,
so much the better. . . . Our emptiness means there is
room for God after all.
Kathleen Norris
Zealous Hopes: A Christmas Meditation
Dear God, in the mist of all the hurried preparing that
lies ahead,
in the midst of the busyness, the last cards to be signed,
gifts to be purchased, wrapped and sent,
in the midst of all the expectations we set for ourselves this week of Christmas,
give us a quiet moment or two, so we can hear the singing of angels.
Startle us again, O God, with news of love’s birth in Bethlehem. Amen
I suspect
I’m not the only one here who spends a fair
amount of time in December on the critical issue of the perfect
gift. I’ve always admired the last-minute people who
don’t begin until Christmas Eve and somehow get it
done.
We are blessed here in this neighborhood to have lots of
help. The goods are right in front of us. Store counters
are full; windows elegantly display a variety of suggestions.
And the catalogs keep coming. Online shopping is now so easy
and efficient that many, I am told, do all their Christmas
shopping sitting at home at their desks and don’t have
to risk stepping into the sea of humanity coursing down the
sidewalks of Michigan Avenue on a December Saturday—a
truly hazardous duty.
In my own pursuit of the perfect gift—which I found,
by the way, but for obvious reasons cannot describe—I
found myself reading a Time magazine supplement with the
engaging title “The Luxury Index.” The advertisements
were elegant, exquisite: Cartier, Hermes, Dior. I learned
in the introduction that “luxury is no longer about
being the biggest. It’s about being intimate and unique.” Michael
Burke, CEO of Fendi’s Flagship, at its 5th Avenue opening,
surveyed the two-story store full with handmade furs and
trendy bags and said, “In the past few years we’ve
seen bling-bling luxury evolve into more personal luxury.
Now there’s small scale luxury.” Examples of
small scale luxury: a personalized special edition white
cell phone with precious stones in the case, a canvas Ralph
Lauren Ricky Bag, and, my favorite, a Dyson DC 15 Animal
Vacuum for your cat or dog.
Greatly comforted, I headed out for the uniquely personal,
intimate, and small scale gift. And I pondered, as I suppose
many of us do at this time of year, the original gift that
prompted this astonishing phenomenon of Christmas, a gift
personal, intimate, and small, the gift of love in the person
of a child, the newborn baby of Bethlehem.
Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National Council of Churches
and a former member of the House of Representatives, was
part of a group of American religious leaders who, last Christmas,
visited Baghdad. They went to mosques, hospitals, schools,
and churches. There are Christian churches in Iraq. At ten
o’clock in the evening, the delegation attended the
candlelight service at the Presbyterian Church of Baghdad.
There were 400 people present, among them a child, Caroline.
She was about four years old. Bob describes how she was “all
dressed in red with a red hat, and on her backside were the
words, ‘Let it Snow.’ She flirted with all of
us from the religious delegation, bringing to us a cracker
or a pretzel. Just as it got to our face she would take it
away and pop it in her mouth.” Bob and the others had
seen some difficult things in Iraq: violence, enormous suffering,
the wounded in hospitals, destroyed homes, businesses, makeshift
morgues. He writes, “That little Caroline is the picture
I have of true love in a little child not knowing what was
going to happen in the next few weeks as she faced war, turbulence
and pain” (Chicago Sunday Evening Club, News, Nov./Dec.
2005).
It is what the Christmas story is about. It is what Christmas
is about: love coming into the world, the real world where
people live and die and wars are fought and life is lived
joyfully and sometimes tragically, love coming into the world
in a humble stable behind a crowded inn, the picture of love
in a little child, the perfect gift.
The theologians teach us that the uniquely Christian idea
is that the essence of God is love. It’s there in
a remarkable little letter an elderly man wrote twenty
centuries
ago to a beleaguered, persecuted church in Asia Minor,
not far from Iraq actually, the First Epistle of John.
Beloved,
let us love one another, because love is from God. .
. . God is love and those who abide in love abide in God,
and God abides in them.
God
is love? Where did that come from? That’s not how
people understood God. God is power. God is the intimidating,
awesome force humans experienced in volcano, storm, and
earthquake. God is mystery. God is the unimaginable, incomprehensible
Other who lives in the heavens. God is justice. God sits
on a throne, judging—dispensing rewards for good
behavior, punishment for evil. Those are the ways people
have thought
about God down through history: power, mystery, judgment.
The Greeks, whose thinking dominated the world at the
time of the birth of Jesus, taught that God is perfect.
By that
they meant that God has no needs, no hopes, no aspirations,
certainly no feelings. God is complete in Godself.
God doesn’t
need anything. God’s perfection, the Greeks taught,
was an isolated, unchanging, unfeeling essence. The Greek
word for it is apatheia, from which we get the word apathy. If God had feelings—became angry or happy, hated or
loved—God would be as needy and weak and vulnerable
as any human being—a ridiculous thought.
God is love, love with all the messiness, the heartbreak
and vulnerability that go along with love. That’s a
new thought. That’s a powerful thought. That’s
a thought that changes everything.
Douglas John Hall, distinguished Canadian theologian
who teaches at McGill University, says that God is
not unfeeling,
uncaring; in fact, the Christian assertion is that
it’s
the opposite. God cares deeply, loves so passionately it
hurts. Hall writes, “God is God only in relationship.
God is, means God loves” (Imagining God, p. 119).
And American Presbyterian theologian Howard Rice puts
it elegantly and simply: “The heart of our experience
of God is an inner knowing that ‘I am loved,’ loved
beyond my comprehension, beyond my earning or deserving” (Reformed
Spirituality, pp. 164–166)
As I read the newspapers last week, with the President
of Iran questioning whether the Holocaust happened
and suggesting
that Israel, a Jewish state in the midst of Muslim
countries, be removed from the map, as Israel assassinated
Palestinians
and Palestinians attacked Jews, as Christians were
hunted down and killed in Sudan, and as Sunni and Shiite
Muslims
contended with one another in Iraq, I couldn’t think
of a more important or more relevant idea than “God
is love,” that the salvation of this world, its preservation
in some way that remotely provides for peace and security
and health and enough to eat, depends not on who has the
biggest armies and the most weapons, but on love.
In the meantime, the newspapers remind us daily that
some evangelical Christians are on the warpath combating
what
they think is a crusade against Christmas. We’ve had
enough, Franklin Graham said on CNN. We’re fighting
back. We’re taking Christmas back. The American Family
Association is boycotting Target for saying “Happy
Holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas.” Wal-Mart
has been targeted by the Catholic League, and right-wing
TV personality Bill O’Reilly claims that Christmas,
and Christianity in general, are under siege. Even President
and Mrs. Bush are being criticized for the 2005 White House
Christmas card, a picture of the snow covered White House
lawn with their pets frolicking; inside a quote that includes
a verse from Psalm 28:7 and “With best wishes for
a holiday season of hope and happiness.”
I appreciated a Tribune editorial by Leonard Pitts
in which he observes that “what we’re seeing here is
an ever more pluralistic society struggling to balance
the faith
of the majority with the rights of and feelings of the
minority. . . . . Why is pluralism so hard for these people?”
For what it’s worth, I think Pitts is correct.
If you want to celebrate a Christian Christmas, go
to church, not
Lord and Taylor. From me to you it’s Merry Christmas,
Blessed Christmas, Christ-Filled Christmas. To Rabbi
Sternfield, it’s Happy Holidays. Our holiday
greetings are not, I would submit, an opportunity to
witness to our personal
faith or bludgeon our Jewish neighbors. We do Jesus
no honor by making our neighbors uncomfortable in his
name.
Holiday
greetings are an opportunity to respect, honor, and
love our neighbors.
Beloved,
let us love one another.
That’s the bottom line. God
is love. Those who abide in love, abide in God. It is a
powerful idea, not only about God but about our own humanness.
Because God is love, the highest and best of our humanity appears when
we love
one another,
when we care for and respect and honor and help one another.
Beloved, let us love one another. Sister Joan Chittister says that “it
is the simplest of Christianity—that we reach out to others. . . . To give
love, a person needs to have known love.” And then she makes the most interesting
suggestion: “The people who love us do for us what we cannot do for ourselves.
. . . They show us the face of our creating, caring God on earth. . . . Perhaps
the deepest spiritual understanding we can muster is that human love is the
only proof we have of the love of God.”
We are put here to love, Joan Chittister says, not for the sake of
the other alone, but for our sakes as well.
To be able to love, to have love planted in your heart, to have love
that may have been long dormant in your heart unearthed and called
out of you,
is to
be alive. It is to be the person you were created to be. “God is love.
Those who love abide in God and God abides in them.”
Psychiatrist Gerald May agrees: “Love,” he says is the most important
thing in life. Love is the one thing necessary: we are here on earth for the
sole purpose of deepening and furthering love, for God and for one another” (The
Sunday Evening Club, News, Nov./Dec. 2005).
And the late Langdon Gilkey, one of the great Christian thinkers of
our generation, University of Chicago professor: “To be enabled to love is the greatest
gift that can be given to us” (Message and Existence).
The perfect gift is a gift of love that awakens love in you, a gift
of love that draws out of you, perhaps against your will or better
judgment,
perhaps
challenges
your normal cautious reserve, your instinct for self-protection and
self-preservation that warns you to be careful, to not care too much,
to not become vulnerable—the
perfect gift, a gift so loving that it enables you to love.
That is what Christmas is: God coming, not in expected power and mystery
and judgment, but in love—humble, weak, vulnerable love. God coming, in of
all things, the birth of a child. God’s love changing us, calling love
out of us, refashioning us into the men and women God wants us to be, which
is to say people who know that we are here to love others.
God is love. That love, we believe, is the fundamental reality. That
love is at the heart of the universe.
Love, Gerald Mays says, is “the one thing necessary. Love is where we come
from and where we are meant to be heading.” This perfect gift, this vulnerable,
powerful love, is for us, now— to receive and to answer with
our own love.
But it is also beyond now. It is forever. It is the love from which
nothing will
ever separate us.
Tom Long, who teaches at Emory, tells about visiting a dear friend
who was very sick and declining at Christmastime.
It was
a cold Saturday morning; the neighborhood was brightly
decorated with lights and Frosty
the Snowman, and Rudolph and Jolly Santa Clauses.”
The
hospice people ushered Tom into the room. He sat down beside
his friend and
remembers,
There
was not much to say. This would be his last
Christmas
and we
both knew it. We sat mostly silent, a word passing between us
now and then.
Suddenly there was movement downstairs, the sounds of muffled
voices, the shuffle of feet. It was a choir from his church come
to sing
Christmas carols. We could
hear them whispering among themselves, trying to decide what
to sing. Indeed,
what do you sing to a dying man? Their voices started, softly
at first, “Lo,
How a Rose E’er Blooming.” My friend and I looked
at each other and waited as the choir slowly climbed the stairs,
their voices growing nearer and
stronger “to show God’s love aright.” The choir
was now standing in the doorway. My friend, deep into the darkness
of dying and still agonizing
hours away from the dawn, turned away so they would not see his
tears as he listened to them as they sang: “She bore for
us a savior, when half spent was the night.”
That
choir knew that it would be dishonest to sing something
cheery and
upbeat: “We
Wish You a Merry Christmas.” “They knew they needed
to sing truthfully and hopefully, to lament as well as rejoice
and so they sang of God’s love
coming ‘When half spent was the night’” (Testimony:
Talking the Faith, pp. 33–34).
Beloved,
let us love one another, because love is from God. . .
. God is love, and those
who abide in love abide in God,
and
God
abides
in
them.
The
perfect gift.
Amen.