Skip to main content

Christmas is for weeping people

Who is Christmas for? Happy families? Children? 

Is Christmas for those who have just lost loved ones in a bus crash? Or for those who lost parents or children in the horror of the Westgate massacre. Does Christmas mean anything to South Sudan as the bullets fly and chaos and fear escalates daily?

How can we talk about Christmas when we’re surrounded by that sort of pain and sadness and mayhem? How can Christmas and death fit together?

Well if Christmas is all about fun and family and eating and drinking and cute nativity plays then it obviously doesn’t fit with massacres and funerals and pain and suffering.

But that’s not the real Christmas.

There is NOTHING sweet about the real Christmas.  There is NOTHING sentimental or cute about the real Christmas story.

Pick up a Bible and read Matthew 2:1-18.

That is a dark story isn’t it?

There’s the nice bit about the star and the gold, frankincense and myrrh but basically it’s about a mad king hunting down a small child and in the process massacring all the baby boys in a town. That is the context for the first Christmas.  Christmas happens in the midst of a massacre. In the midst of evil and fury and blood and darkness.

Do we usually remember that at Christmas time?

Do we want to think about the mess and pain and horrors of our world at Christmas time?

Of course we don’t – we want fun and food and escapism – we want to escape the real world for a day or two and just rest and enjoy the good things in life.

But the Bible is not escapist – it doesn’t let us forget reality – it says to us – let’s be honest, the world is a complete mess – full of darkness and pain and tears.

Do you feel able to be sad at Christmas?

Look at Rachel.

"A voice is heard in Ramah, weeping and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they are no more.”

Have you ever been with someone who is so distraught they just won’t let you near them? Have you been in that place of such grief and anguish where you don’t even want anyone to try to say anything. Inconsolable. At Christmas.

And God steps down into that pit of grief and pain and mess and mayhem.

The Light of the world steps down into darkness.

The Christian message is NOT that we are in this pit and God comes along looks down into the pit and says ‘You need to take some responsibility for yourself and get out of there – here are ten steps to get yourself out of this hole’ – No – he jumps into the pit – into the mud and the filth.

And he doesn’t go in like one of those SWAT guys with bullet proof vest and helmet, armed to the teeth – he goes in as a naked baby – defenceless, vulnerable, not even able to walk, let alone put up a fight.
He’s hunted down by hit-men, smuggled away as a refugee, for thirty years he is ‘the man of sorrows’.  He weeps, he sweats, he thirsts, and then he is massacred. He is the perfectly innocent child slaughtered on the Cross.

No-one can say to Jesus – “You don’t know how I feel” “You haven’t been there” – he does know – he has been there – he took on our human flesh – he took on our sorrows and griefs. At Christmas God fully connected himself to us, welded himself to humanity – he suffered our temptations, our worries, our pain – he suffered hell itself for us. And right now he is still fully man – he still has scars on his hands – and he is still with us – still welded to humanity.

There is no distant God.

Christmas shouts to us - Immanuel.

Where is God? There he is – in the dirt of a stable, still covered in blood and fluid, gasping for breath – God with us in the darkness and dirt and pain and tears.

Christmas is for weeping people.

Have a deeply, truly, even-through-the-tears happy Christmas...

Comments

  1. Thought provoking peace. Thanks Andy Harker.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank You Andy, The Living God cannot be more amazing....
    Just when I thought I had the worst Christmas, God healed my pain through reading your Article... I am all smiles and back to normal happiness, I just realised this is what I was looking for- He always makes sure I find what I am looking for even without loudly asking lacking the right words because- He knows the deepest of our hearts...

    ReplyDelete
  3. Amen Smile Africa.
    Jacob - loving your blog brother - be great to have you at Raising the Bar (Kisumu or Nairobi) - karibu sana.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Holding together restlessness and optimism

Piper has a great section in his Marks of a Spiritual Leader  where he holds together two vital biblical leadership virtues: 1. RESTLESS Spiritual leaders have a holy discontentment with the status quo. Non-leaders have inertia that causes them to settle in and makes them very hard to move off of dead center. Leaders have a hankering to change, to move, to reach out, to grow, and to take a group or an institution to new dimensions of ministry. They have the spirit of Paul, who said in Philippians 3:13, “Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead. I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” Leaders are always very goal-oriented people. God’s history of redemption is not finished. The church is shot through with imperfections, lost sheep are still not in the fold, needs of every sort in the world are unmet, sin infects the saints. It is un...

Matt Perman on Management and Leadership

These are quotes from the What's Best Next Toolkit ( mobi file ) - a free resource of online extra chapters and articles that accompanies Matt Perman's must read book “Leadership is not about you. It is about serving others, building them up, and making them more effective. “if you keep trying to do the sorts of things you did as an individual contributor, you simply won’t have time to lead at all.” “Now, the leaders should sometimes, frequently even, pitch in directly by working along side the people on his or her team. But this shouldn’t be the main thing the leader does. He needs to be setting direction, looking out ahead, and aligning people.” “Leadership in the pastoral role is practiced primarily  through  the ministry of the word and prayer.” “every week or so, review the org chart and reflect what actions you can proactively take to keep things going in the right direction, or to help make someone more effective, and so forth.” “There is a significa...

What's Next? Consider the range of training possibilities

It has always been important to be trained in gospel work. Priscilla and Aquilla mentored Apollos and corrected his doctrine (Acts 18:26). Barnabas and Paul practiced a form of ministry ‘apprenticeship’, taking a succession of ‘ministry trainees’ along with them on their missionary church planting journeys. In particular we've talked before about Paul's mentoring of Timothy (Phil. 2:22 and 1 & 2 Tim). Doing a ministry traineeship year or two would certainly be something to strongly consider if you haven’t already done one.  Be aware that across the UK there is a variation between different ministry trainee programmes, with the proportions of practical service, mentoring, formal training and opportunities for Word ministry differing considerably. In addition, there are a wide range of theological and ministry training options now available – some online, some residential, some full-time, some part-time. In fact we live in an age of amazing opportunities to access excellent...