Discourse
On the Nativity of Christ
St.
Gregory Thaumatourgos, Bishop of Neo-Caesarea
Brethren, we behold now a great
and wondrous mystery. Shepherds with cries of joy come forth as messengers
to the sons of mankind, not on their hilly pastures with their flocks conversing
and not in the field with their sheep frolicking, but rather in the city
of David Bethlehem spiritual songs exclaiming. In the highest sing Angels,
proclaiming hymns Archangelic; the heavenly Cherubim and Seraphim sing
out praises to the glory of God: "Holy, Holy, Holy..." Together all do
celebrate this joyous feast, beholding God upon the earth, and mankind
of earth amidst the heavens. By Divine providence the far distant are uplifted
to the highest, and the highest, through the love of God for mankind, have
bent down to the far distant, wherefore the MostHigh, through His humility,
"is exalted through humility." On this day of great festivity Bethlehem
hath become like unto heaven, taking place amidst the glittering stars
are Angels singing glory, and taking the place of the visible sun -- is
the indefinable and immeasurable Sun of Truth, having made all things that
do exist. But who would dare investigate so great a mystery? "Wherein God
doth wish it, therein the order of nature is overturned", and laws cannot
impede. And so, of that which was impossible for mankind to undertake,
God did aspire and did descend, making for the salvation of mankind, since
in the will of God this is life for all mankind.
On the present joyous day God hath
come to be born; on this great day of arrival God is become That Which
He was not: being God, He
hath become Man, so to speak as though removed from Divinity (though His
Divine Nature be not divested of); in being made Man, He hath remained
God. Wherefore, though He grew and flourished, it however was not thus
as it were by human power to attain to Divinity nor by any human ability
to be made God; but rather as the Word, by miraculous sufferance, wherein
He was incarnated and manifest not being transformed, not being made something
other, not deprived of that Divine Nature which He possessed previously.
In Judea the new King is born; but this new and wondrous nativity which
pagan Gentiles have come to believe, the Jew have eschewed. The Pharisees
comprehended incorrectly the Law and the prophets. That which therein was
contradictory for them, they explained away mistakenly. Herod too strove
to learn of this new birth, full of mystery, yet Herod did this not to
reverence the new-born King, but to kill Him.
That One, Who did forsake the Angels,
Archangels, Thrones, Dominions, and all the constant and luminous spirits
-- He alone having come a new path, does issue forth from an inviolate
of seed virginal womb. The Creator of all comes to enlighten the world,
indeed not leaving His angels orphaned, and He appears also as Man, come
forth from God.
And I, though I see by the NewBorn
neither trumpets (nor other musical instruments), nor sword, nor bodily
adornments, neither lampadas nor way-lamps, and seeing the choir of Christ
composed of those humble of birth and without influence -- it doth persuade
me to praise of Him. I see speechless animals and choirs of youth, as though
some sort of trumpet, songfully resonant, as though taking the place of
lampadas and as it were shining upon the Lord. But what shall I say about
what the lampadas do light? He -- is the verymost Hope and Life Itself,
He is Salvation Itself, Blessedness Itself, the focal point of the Kingdom
of Heaven. He is Himself borne as offering, so that there would in power
transpire the proclamation of the heavenly Angels: "Glory to God in the
Highest," and with the shepherds of Bethlehem be pronounced the joyous
song: "And on earth peace, good-will to mankind!" Born of the Father, in
His Person and in His Being passionless, now in a manner dispassionate
and incomprehensible He is born for us. The praeternal birth, He alone
Who was born dispassionately doth know of; the present birth, is supernaturally
known only by the grace of the Holy Spirit; but in both the first birth
truly, and in the present birth in kenotic humbling, actually and immutably
God was born from God, but He -- is also Man, having received flesh of
the Virgin. In the highest of the One Father -- He is One, the Only-Begotten
Son of the One Father; in kenotic humbling Unique of the unique Virgin,
the Only-Begotten Son of the one Virgin... God suffereth not passions,
in being born God of God; and the Virgin did not suffer corruption, since
in a manner spiritual was born the Spiritual. The first birth -- is inexplicable
and the second -- is insurmiseable; the first birth was without travail
and the second was without impurity ... We know, Who now is born of the
Virgin, and we believe, that it is He, born of the Father praeternally.
But what manner of birth it was we would not hope to explain. Neither with
words would I attempt to speak of this, nor in thought would I dare to
approach it, since the Divine Nature is not subject to observation, nor
approachable by thought, nor containable by the hapless reasoning. Needful
only is to believe in the power of His works. The laws of corporeal nature
are evident: a married woman conceives and gives birth to a son in accord
with the purpose of marriage; but when the Unwedded Virgin gives birth
to the son miraculously, and after birth remaineth a Virgin, -- then is
manifest and higher corporeal nature. We can comprehend what exists according
to the laws of corporeal nature, but afront that which is beyond the laws
of nature, we fall silent, not through fear, but moreso through sin-wrought
fallibility. We must needs fall silent, in silent stillness to reverence
virtue with a worthy reverence and, not going beyond the far limits (of
word), to be vouchsafed the heavenly gifts.
What to say and what shalt I proclaim?
To speak more concerning the Virgin Birth-Giver? To deliberate more on
the miraculously new birth? It is possible only to be astonished, in contemplating
the miraculous birth, since it overturns the ordinary laws and order of
nature and of things. About the wondrous works (of God) one might say in
brief, that they are more wondrous than the works of nature, since in nature
nothing begets itself by its own will, though there be the freedom thereof:
wondrous therefore are all the works of the Lord, Who hath caused them
to be. O, immaculate and inexplicable mystery! That One, Who before the
very creation of the world was the Only-Begotten, Without-Compare, Simple,
Incorporeal, is incarnated and descends (into the world), clothed in a
perishable body, so that He be visible to all. For if He were not visible,
then by what manner would He teach us to keep His precepts and how would
He lead us to the invisible reality? It was for this therefore that He
became openly visible, to lead forth those of the visible world to the
invisible. Far more so do people reckon their eyesight as more credible
a witness than mere hearsay; they trust that which they see, and doubt
that which they see not. God willed to be visible in body, to resolve and
dispel the doubts. He willed to be born of the Virgin, not to initiate
of Her something unneeded and wherein the Virgin knew not the reasons of
the matter, but rather the mystery of His birth is an immaculate act of
goodness, wherein the Virgin Herself asked of Gabriel: "How can this be,
in that I know not a man" -- to which She received in reply: "The Holy
Spirit shalt come upon Thee, and the power of the MostHigh shalt overshadow
Thee" (Lk 1:34-35). But in what manner did the Word, Who was God, therefore
issue forth from the Virgin? This -- is an inexplicable wonder. Just as
a goldsmith, having obtained the metal, makes of it a thing suitable for
use, thus did Christ also: finding the Virgin immaculate both in spirit
and in body, He assumed of Her a spirit-fashioned body conformable to His
intents, and was arrayed in it, as in clothing. On this wondrous day of
the Nativity the Word was neither afraid nor ashamed to issue forth from
the virginal womb, nor did He consider it unworthy of Himself to assume
flesh from His creation -- so that the creation, made the attire of the
Creator, should be esteemed worthy of glory, and so that mercy should be
made known when revealed, from whence God through His goodness hath descended.
Just as it would be impossible for an earthen vessel to appear before it
be clay in the hands of the potter, so likewise would it be impossible
for the perishable vessel (of human nature) to be renewed otherwise, to
make it the attire of the Creator, Who is garbed in it.
What more to say, what shall I expound
on? The new wonders do strike me with awe. The Ancient of Days is become
a Child, to make people children of God. Sitting in glory in the Heavens,
because of His love for mankind, He now layeth in a manger of dumb beasts.
The Inpassionate, Incorporeal, Incomprehensible One is taken by human hands,
in order to atone the violence of sinners and the iniquitous and free them
of their slavery, to be wrapped in swaddling cloths and be nourished on
the knees of Woman, so that shame be transformed into honour, the impious
to be led to glory, and in place of thorns a crown. He hath taken on my
body, so that I be made capable to have within myself His Spirit -- He
hath appropriated unto Himself (my nature), being garbed in my body, and
doth give unto me His Spirit, so that I, giving and in turn receiving,
might discover the treasure of life.
What shall I say and what proclaim?
"Behold, a Virgin in womb shalt conceive and She shalt give birth a Son,
and they will call Him the name Emmanuel, in interpretation: God is with
us [S nami Bog / Meth' hemon ho Theos / Nobiscum Deus]" (Mt 1:23). The
saying here deals not with something for future whereof we might learn
to hope, but rather it tells us about something that already has occurred
and it awes us with something that already has been fulfilled. What formerly
was said to the Jews and fulfilled amidst them, is now thus amidst us realised
as an occurrence, whereof we have received (this prophecy), and adopted
it, and believed in it. The prophet says to the Jews: "Behold, a Virgin
shalt conceive" (Is 7:14); for Christians however, the saying devolves
upon the fulfilling of the actual deed, the full treasure-trove of the
actual event. In Judea a Virgin gave birth, but all the lands of the world
accepted Her Son. There -- was the root of the vine; here -- the vine of
truth. The Jews squeezed the wine-press, and the Gentiles have tasted of
the sacramental Blood; those others planted the kernel of wheat, and these
thrive by the grain harvest of faith. The Jews were pricked to death by
the thorns, the Gentiles are filled by the harvest; those others sat beneathe
the tree of desolation, and these -- beneathe the tree of life; those expounded
the precepts of the Law, but the Gentiles reap the spiritual fruits. The
Virgin gave birth not Herself of Herself, but as willed He needing to be
born. Not in corporeal manner did God act, not to the law of the flesh
did God subordinate Himself, but the Lord of corporeal nature manifested
Himself to appear in the world by a miraculous birth, in order to reveal
His power and to show, that in having been made Man, He is born not as
a mere man, -- that God is made Man, since for His will nothing be difficult.
On the present great day He is born
of the Virgin, having overcome the natural order of things. He is higher
than wedlock and free from defilement. It sufficed that He the preceptor
of purity should shine forth gloriously, to emerge from a pure and undefiled
womb. For He -- is That Same, Who in the beginning did create Adam from
the virgin soil, and from Adam without wedlock did bring forth for him
his wife Eve. And as Adam was without wife before that he had a wife, and
the first woman then was brought into the world, so likewise on the present
day the Virgin without man giveth birth to That One, about Whom spake the
prophet: "He -- is Man, who is he that doth know Him?" The Man Christ,
clearly seen by mankind, born of God, is such that womankind was needed
to perfect that of mankind, so that perfectly would be born man for woman.
And just as from Adam was taken woman, without impairment and without diminishing
of his masculine nature, so also from woman without man was needed to bring
forth a man, similar to the bringing forth of Eve, so that Adam be not
extolled in that without his means woman should bring forth woman. Therefore
the Virgin without cohabitation with man gave birth to God the Word, made
Man, so that in equal measure it was by the same miracle to bestow equal
honour to both the one and the other half -- man and woman. And just as
from Adam was taken woman without his diminishing, so likewise from the
Virgin was taken the body (Born of Her), wherein also the Virgin did not
undergo diminishing, and Her virginity did not suffer harm. Adam dwelt
well and unharmed, when the rib was taken from him: and so without defilement
dwelt the Virgin, when from Her was brought forth God the Word. For this
sort of reason particularly the word assumed of the Virgin Her flesh and
Her (corporeal) garb, so that He be not accounted innocent of the sin of
Adam. Since man stung by sin had become a vessel and instrument of evil,
Christ took upon Himself this receptacle of sin into His Own flesh so that,
the Creator having been co-united with the body, it should thus be freed
from the foulness of the enemy, and man thus be clothed in an eternal body,
which be neither perished nor destroyed for all eternity. Moreover, He
that is become the God-Man is born, not as ordinarily man is born -- He
is born as God made Man, manifest of this by His Own Divine power, since
if He were born according to the general laws of nature, the Word would
seem something imperfect. Therefore, He was born of the Virgin and shone
forth; therefore, having been born, He preserved unharmed the virginal
womb, so that the hitherto unheard of manner of the Nativity should be
for us a sign of great mystery.
Is Christ God? Christ is God by nature,
but not by the order of nature did He become Man. Thus we declare and in
truth believe, calling to witness the seal of intact virginity: as Almighty
Creator of the womb and virginity, He chose an unshameful manner of birth
and was made Man, as He did will.
On this great day, now being celebrated,
God hath appeared as Man, as Pastor of the nation of Israel, Who hath enlivened
all the universe with His goodness. O dear warriors, glorious champions
for mankind, who did preach Bethlehem as a place of Theophany and the Nativity
of the Son of God, who have made known to all the world the Lord of all,
lying in a manger, and did point out God contained within a narrow cave!
And so, we now glorify joyfully a
feast of the years. Just as hence the laws of feasts be new, so now also
the laws of birth be wondrous. On this great day now celebrated, of shattered
chains, of Satan shamed, of all demons to flight, the all-destroying death
is replaced by life, paradise is opened to the thief, curses be transformed
into blessings, all sins forgiven and evil banished, truth is come, and
they have proclaimed tidings filled with reverence and love for God, traits
pure and immaculate are implanted, virtue is exalted upon the earth, Angels
are come together with people, and people make bold to converse with Angels.
Whence and why hath all this happened? From this, that God hath descended
into the world and exalted mankind unto Heaven. There is accomplished a
certain transposition of everything: God Who is perfect hath descended
to earth, though by Nature He remaineth entirely in the Heavens, even at
that time when in His wholeness He be situated upon the earth. He was God
and was made Man, not negating His Divinity: He was not made God, since
He was always such by His very Nature, but He was made flesh, so that He
be visible to everything corporeal. That One, upon Whom even the Heaven-dwellers
cannot look, chose as His habitation a manger, and when He came, all around
Him became still. And for naught else did He lay in the manger, than for
this, that in giving nourishment to all, He should for Himself extract
the nourishment of infants from maternal breasts and by this to bless wedlock.
On this great day people, leaving
off from their arduous and serious affairs, do come forth for the glory
of Heaven, and they learn through the gleaming of the stars, that the Lord
hath descended to the earth to save His creation. The Lord, sitting upon
a swift cloud, in the flesh wilt enter into Egypt (Is 19:1), visible fleeing
from Herod, on that very deed which inspires the saying by Isaiah: "On
that day Israel wilt be third amidst the Egyptians" (Is 19:24).
People entered into the Cave, thinking
not at all about this beforehand, and it became for them an holy temple.
God entered into Egypt, in the place of the ancient sadness there to bring
joy, and in the place of dark gloom to shed forth the light of salvation.
The waters of the Nile had become defiled and harmful after infants perished
in it with untimely death. There appeared in Egypt That One, Who upon a
time turned the water into blood and Who thereafter transformed these waters
into well-springs of the water of rebirth, by the grace of the Holy Spirit
cleansing away sins and transgressions. Chastisement once befell the Egyptians,
since in their errors they defied God. But Jesus now is come into Egypt
and hath sown in it reverence for God, so that in casting off from the
Egyptian soul its errors, they are made amicable unto God. The river waters
concurred worthily to encompass His head, like a crown.
In order not to stretch out in length
our discourse and briefly to conclude what is said, we shall ask: in what
manner was the passionless Word made flesh and become visible, while dwelling
immutably in His Divine Nature? But what shall I say and what declare?
I see the carpenter and the manger, the Infant and the Virgin Birth-Giver,
forsaken by all, weighed down by hardship and want. Behold, to what a degree
of humiliation the great God hath descended. For our sakes "impoverished,
Who was rich" (2 Cor 8:9): He was put into but sorry swaddling cloths --
not on a soft bed. O poverty, source of all exaltation! O destitution,
revealing all treasures! He doth appear to the poor -- and the poor He
maketh rich; He doth lay in an animal manger -- and by His word He sets
in motion all the world. He is wrapped in tattered swaddling cloths --
and shatters the bonds of sinners having called the entire world into being
by His Word alone.
What still should I say and proclaim?
I see the Infant, in swaddling cloths and lying in the manger; Mary, the
Virgin Mother, stands before it together with Joseph, called Her husband.
He is called Her husband, and She -- his wife, in name but so and seemingly
wedded, though in fact they were not spouses. she was betrothed to Joseph,
but the Holy Spirit came upon Her, as about this the holy evangelist doth
speak: "The Holy Spirit shalt come upon Thee, and the power of the MostHigh
wilt overshadow Thee: and He to be born is Holy" (Lk 1:35) and is of the
seed of Heaven. Joseph did not dare to speak in opposition, and the righteous
man did not wish to reprove the Holy Virgin; he did not want to believe
any suspicion of sin nor pronounce against the Holy Virgin words of slander;
but the Son to be born he did not wish to acknowledge as his, since he
knew, that He -- was not of him. And although he was perplexed and had
doubts, Who such an Infant should be, and pondered it over -- he then had
an heavenly vision, an Angel appeared to him and encouraged him with the
words: Fear not, Joseph, son of David; He That shalt be born of Mary is
called Holy and the Son of God; that is: the Holy Spirit shalt come upon
the Immaculate Virgin, and the power of the MostHigh wilt overshadow Her
(Mt 1:20-21; Lk 1:35). Truly He was to be born of the Virgin, preserving
unharmed Her virginity. Just as the first virgin had fallen, enticed by
Satan, so now Gabriel bears new tidings to the Virgin Mary, so that a virgin
would give assent to be the Virgin, and to the Nativity -- by birth. Allured
by temptations, Eve did once utter words of ruination; Mary, in turn, in
accepting the tidings gave birth to the Incorporeal and Life-Creating Word.
For the words of Eve, Adam was cast out of paradise; the Word, born of
the Virgin, revealed the Cross, by which the thief entered into the paradise
of Adam. Though neither the pagan Gentiles, nor the Jews, nor the high-priests
would believe, that from God could be born a Son without travail and without
man, this now is so and He is born in the body, capable to endure suffering,
while preserving inviolate the body of the Virgin.
Thus did He manifest His Almightiness,
born of the Virgin, preserving the virginity of the Virgin intact, and
He was born of God with neither complication, travail, evil nor a separation
of forsaking the immutable Divine Essence, born God from God. Since mankind
abandoned God, in place of Him worshipping graven images of humans, God
the Word thus assumed the image of man, so that in banishing error and
restoring truth, He should consign to oblivion the worshipping of idols
and for Himself to be accorded Divine honour, since to Him becometh all
glory and honour unto ages of ages.
Amen!
Orthodox Christians
need to remain faithful to their traditions.
The Twelve
Days of Christmas
Johannes L. Jacobse
In the Christian tradition of both
east and west, the twelve days of Christmas refer to the period from Christmas
Day to Theophany. The days leading up to Christmas were for preparation;
a practice affirmed in the Orthodox tradition by the Christmas fast that
runs from November 15 to Christmas. The celebration of Christmas was reserved
for these twelve days.
As our culture became more commercialized
however, the period of celebration has shifted from Thanksgiving to Christmas
Day. Christmas celebration increasingly conforms to the shopping cycle
while the older tradition falls by the wayside. It’s an worrisome shift
because as the tradition dims, the knowledge that the preparation imparted
diminishes with it.
Our Orthodox traditions – from fasting
cycles to worship – exist to teach us how to live in Christ. The traditions
impart discipline. These disciplines are never an end in themselves but
neither can life in Christ be sustained apart from them.
The traditions only make sense only
when they have the Gospel as their reference. If we forget that these traditions
are given to us to help us lay hold of Christ, then the traditions appear
to be superfluous and the disciplines they impart seem to serve no real
purpose. We start to evaluate them by the values of the dominant culture
– by a cost-benefit calculus, rather than seeing them as ways by which
we morally reorient ourselves towards Christ.
This is happening with Christmas.
Rather than preparing for the birth of Christ through inward reorientation
and discipline, we follow the direction of the dominant culture and skip
any preparation altogether. We party instead of fast. We get caught up
in the commercial energy of the season rather than waiting on the Spirit
of God.
It’s a dangerous path. Our culture
is becoming increasingly secularized; the sacred dimension of creation
is slipping from view. This loss of this sense of the sacred has grave
ramifications for society that are expressed in different ways such as
the desecration of religious art to reducing an unborn child to a commodity,
to name two. If this view prevails our culture will inevitably view man
as nothing more than an animal or machine.
But man is more than an animal or
machine. The scriptures reveal man as created in the image and likeness
of God, a phrase that means that man is not complete unless he partakes
of God – God must be part of his life. This longing – this innate knowledge
that man is created for God – never leaves man although a person can fight
against it if he chooses.
A secularized mind is blind to the
inherent holiness of life. Maintaining our traditions is one way to avoid
this debilitating blindness. Christmas is not just “Jesus’ birthday” (an
impoverished notion heard more and more even among Orthodox faithful),
but much more.
The birth of Christ and His baptism
ought never to be divorced. Both events define the Christmas season. It
imparts to the Christian the knowledge that Christ’s coming into the world
and Christ’s sanctification of the waters makes our new life possible --
a sonship by adoption accomplished through baptism.
When the link between Christmas and
Theophany is broken (and by neglecting the proper preparation we break
it), the cultural memory of the promise of new birth expresses itself in
weakened and ultimately insufficient cultural forms. These forms function
as a new tradition.
Take the way our society celebrates
New Year’s Day for example. More partying fills the space that is created
when celebration culminates on Christmas Day. At the same time, the start
of a new year is also the time for resolutions, which recalls the promise
of a new start that was the mainstay of the original tradition for many
years.
There is of course nothing wrong
with making resolutions, but their tie to New Year celebrations is blind
to the original promise that all new beginnings depend on the power of
God. Moral self-reflection is good and necessary. The secularized tradition
however, does not reveal from where the power comes that makes real and
necessary change possible.
Religion is not the product of culture;
religion is the source, writes philosopher Russell Kirk. “It’s from an
association in a cult, a body of worshipers, that human community grows…when
belief in the cult has been wretchedly enfeebled, the culture will decay
swiftly. The material order rests on the spiritual order.”*
Orthodox Christianity can contribute
to the recovery of the moral foundation of American culture by imparting
knowledge that can strengthen and deepen that foundation. It won’t happen
however, if the Orthodox faithful adopt the practices of the dominant culture
in place of their own tradition.
*Russell Kirk “Civilization with
Religion” The Heritage Foundation Report (July 24, 1992).
Copyright © 2002 Johannes L. Jacobse.
Rev. Jacobse is a priest in the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
Copyrighted
material. For private use only.
If you quote
material, please credit the publication from which it came.
It is not
necessary to credit this Web page for any print use of the material.
If any electronic
reproduction is made, please acknowledge the URL:
http://www.3saints.com
|