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"When the Time Had Fully Come, God Sent Forth His Son"
Galatians 4:3-7 I:
-- "We
were slaves to the elemental spirits of the universe."
The apostle Paul reminds the Christians in Galatia United Church that at
one time they were slaves to the elemental spirits of the universe.
They were. They are no
longer.
What about us in Streetsville
United Church? Were we ever slaves
to these spirits? Are we now?
What are the "elemental spirits", anyway?
At one time the Greek word
"elemental spirits", STOICHEIA meant the alphabet, "A,B,C..."
By extension "A,B,C..." came to mean "the
ABCs"; the ABCs of anything at all. The
ABCs of baseball are the most basic aspects of baseball, the first principles,
the rudiments -- as with sewing or music-making or arithmetic.
The ABCs are the basic information about anything, the elements of
anything, the sort of thing children learn in elementary school.
By the "elemental spirits of
the universe" Paul means the most basic understanding of how the universe
operates.
Think of bodily health.
"Eat well-balanced meals. Wash
your hands frequently. Avoid
excessive fat in your diet." The
most elemental stuff. Living by it
won't turn you into a super-athlete or a beauty contest winner.
Living by it doesn't mean you are extraordinarily virtuous.
Living by merely helps you survive.
Think of social situations.
"Don't criticize the boss so as to make him lose face.
Don't criticize your parents-in-law at any time.
Don't wear a Hallowe'en mask into a bank."
Observing these principles merely lets us survive socially.
The STOICHEIA, the elemental
principles of the universe, are the principles by which order is maintained in
the universe. These elemental
spirits, the ABCs of life, facilitate survival, but no more than survival.
Yet there is a second meaning to STOICHEIA, the elemental spirits
of the universe. In the ancient
world the STOICHEIA were also the forces that course through everyone's
life, the forces that shape us socially, psychologically, politically.
These forces determine eversomuch about how we think, what we expect, how
we react, what we do.
Think about me. I am a male.
That means my thinking, my reacting, the social possibilities open to me
are ever so largely determined by the centuries old force of patriarchy.
The fact that I am a male also means that I must nowadays contend with
the force of aggressive feminism.
I am also an affluent westerner.
This fact forces me into the strictest mould as surely as the
impoverished Arab is forced into his mould and the Communist Chinese peasant is
forced into her mould.
The forces that shape us as they
compress us and constrict us are legion. These
forces too are part of what is meant by the "elemental spirits of the
universe".
The apostle Paul, in his customary terseness, states that all humankind
is in bondage to these spirits. These
spirits -- whether the mechanisms that let us survive but no more than survive,
or whether the forces surging over us at all times -- these forces don't merely
shape us. They limit us.
They restrict us, constrict us, confine us.
They defy that "abundant life" which Jesus insists is alone
worth calling "life". II:
-- We
should have been in bondage forever except -- except that God sent forth
his Son at Christmas. "When the
time had fully come", Paul writes, "God sent forth his Son."
Immediately the apostle adds that
this Son was "born of woman, born under the law".
"Born of woman" means that Jesus is genuinely human, not merely
apparently human. "Born under
the law" means he shares our frustration, our futility, our
self-contradiction, our condemnation.
Our frustration, futility,
self-contradiction and condemnation? Is
this our predicament in addition to our bondage to the elemental spirits?
Not only are we compressed suffocatingly by the forces all around us; we
are condemned as well! How did this
happen?
It all has to do with the law.
The law has to do with the claim of God upon us.
The claim of God upon us has issued somehow in the worst form of
enslavement: a condemnation before God that we cannot escape.
The law is the claim of God.
Think of the claim or command of God that we commonly call the eighth
commandment, "Thou shalt not steal".
(We could have selected any command of God to illustrate our point, but
the eighth commandment will do.)
The commandment of God is spoken to us for our blessing; it is meant to
promote our freedom. Yet in the
moment of hearing the command of God we who are fallen creatures hear it with
ears and hearts that pervert it instantly. To
be sure, we hear it said we are not to steal and therefore we don't steal.
Good. Yet even as we don't
steal we glory in our self-congratulation.
We don't steal. And isn't
fine that we aren't like those disgusting wretches who do steal!
We don't steal. No wonder we
thank God we aren't like those weak, self-deluded, irresponsible people who
deserve everything they bring down upon themselves.
We don't steal. Little wonder
we exalt ourselves and despise others. In
despising others we hate them ("hate" in the biblical sense of the
word, the only sense that matters before God).
In hating our fellow-creature s we blind ourselves to our own spiritual
condition. After all, aren't they
obviously depraved where we are transparently exemplary?
We glow over the fact that we don't
steal. Our glowing puffs up into
gloating. And our gloating, now
pridefully stupid, voices itself in boasting.
Boasters now, we tell God (albeit usually unconsciously) that it's a good
thing he got his act together at Christmas and sent forth his Son.
He got his act together just in time for all those wretches who need a
special Christmas present just because they are spiritual underachievers and
require extra help. Achievers like
us, on the other hand, don't need gifts; we'll be content with recognition!
We don't steal.
We are extraordinary achievers. Our
accomplishment is that we have seemingly honoured the eighth commandment.
But in our swollen, sin-blinded conceit we have profoundly dishonoured
the command of God as a whole. For
in "honouring" the eighth commandment in our perverse way we have
dishonoured the command of God concerning our neighbour; we have also
dishonoured the command of God enunciated in the first commandment: that we have
no gods before him. Plainly,
we are our own god. We are the
measure of everyone, including ourselves.
Then what have we finally
accomplished? We haven't
accomplished what we set out to achieve. We
set out to keep the eighth commandment and therein justify ourselves before God;
justify ourselves as those who do not need him and shouldn't have to bother with
him. We set out to justify ourselves
before God, yet have managed only to condemn ourselves before God.
After all, as Martin Luther pointed out tirelessly, the first commandment
-- that we have no god but God himself -- is the first.
The first commandment (it controls all others, Luther reminds us) is that
we place our faith in God, honouring him for his truth, wisdom, patience, and
mercy. Mercy?
We don't need his mercy; we don't steal!
Faith is a prop for those who need help.
We don't need help. How many
times do we have to tell the world that we don't steal?
Luther, of course, insists the claim of God finally is a claim on our
heart, on our devotion, our faith, our trust, our gratitude -- not merely a
claim on middleclass, suburban moral nicety.
But what does Luther know?
The truth is, Luther's heart beats
in time with the heart of the Hebrew prophets, in time with the heart of that
Hebrew who is more than a prophet. Our
achievement is that we don't steal. Our
accomplishment is that we stand condemned before God, in desperate need
of the Christmas gift we think to be a prop for those weaker than we.
Our attempted self-justification before God has accomplished our
self-condemnation before God.
"When the time had fully come,
God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law."
We already knew that our lives were shrivelled inasmuch as we are in
bondage to the elemental spirits of the universe.
We thought that the Christmas gift was going to do something for us about
that. But the Christmas gift,
the Son given to us, has made us aware that our predicament before God is
infinitely worse. It's bad enough to
be enslaved by the elemental spirits; it's worse to be condemned before God.
The bad news about us is getting worse. III:
-- But
the news at Christmas is good, good without qualification.
God has sent forth his Son ultimately not to acquaint us with the bad
news about ourselves. God has sent forth his Son in order to redeem those
under the law.
The Oxford English Dictionary has many meanings for "redeem",
but in the dictionary that supplies Paul's meaning (the Hebrew bible) there is
only one meaning: to redeem is to release those in bondage.
God's purpose in the gift of Christmas is to release us from the confines
of the elemental spirits and from the condemnation of the law.
We are released as Jesus Christ
draws us into his own life. As our
Lord draws us into his own life, the life he lives in us frees us from the
stifling confines of the elemental spirits.
To be sure, we never get away from them entirely (the health rules still
apply), but the life he lives in us can never be reduced to something so
minimalist.
Yes, I am still a male with a
history of patriarchy behind me, but I know the apostle to be correct when he
says that in Christ Jesus there is now neither male nor female: the abyss
between patriarchy and feminism has been bridged.
As our Lord draws us into his own
life, the life he lives in us renders us different; and different just
because what he brings us the world can never generate of itself, and what he
gives us the world can never take away by itself. Who we profoundly are, what we
are henceforth to be about, where we are headed ultimately, how rich our future
is to be; all of this is ours upon our release; all of this is ours as we
abandon our attempted self-justification and receive the Christmas gift whose
forgiveness justifies us before his Father.
"Too abstract", someone complains, "it's all so very
abstract." No, it's not.
There is nothing at all abstract about the deepest-down, visceral
experience. A textbook on the
neurophysiology of pain is abstract; but a broken baby finger, or a broken baby
toe, a tiny broken bone that hurts beyond words to describe the pain, is not
abstract at all. Freud's
psychoanalytic explanation of humour is abstract; but the person doubled over,
laughing at a good joke, does not find humour abstract at all.
A treatise on the theological
notion of adoption or sonship (same word in Greek) is abstract, but not the
experience of being so intimately drawn into God's life that the cry,
"Father", is pulled out of us spontaneously.
Listen to the apostle once more. "God
sent forth his Son...so that we might receive adoption as sons.... God has sent
the Spirit of his Son into our hearts crying, 'Abba, Father'."
It's not that Jesus Christ frees us from the elemental spirits of the
universe and frees again from an attempted self-justification and its
accomplished self-condemnation in order to give us an abstract lecture on the
Fatherhood of God. He frees us from
all of this in order that we become sons and daughters of God, only to
find ourselves unable to help crying out, "Father, my father!"
Paul maintains that God's children
can't help the spontaneous cry -- in precisely the same way that a person in
pain can't help wincing, the person tickled by a good joke can't help laughing
(have you ever tried to stifle laughter? The
very attempt gives you away!), the person bereaved and grief-stricken can't help
weeping (it's a sign that we are sane!). And,
says the apostle those adopted into the household and family of God as their
elder brother, Jesus, hugs them and they hug him back (faith!); all who are
"at home" with their Father; we find our hearts swelling inside us and
find ourselves unable to stifle the cry, "Abba, Father."
"Abba".
It's an Aramaic word (Aramaic being a Hebrew dialect that people spoke
every day in Palestine). The New
Testament is written in Greek. Why
wasn't this Aramaic word translated into Greek along with thousands of other
Aramaic words? Because the twelve
who lived most intimately with Jesus overheard him crying,
"Abba", when he was at prayer.
The intimacy he knew with his Father he has bequeathed to his followers.
Since our experience reflects his, our vocabulary should reflect his --
said the writers of the NT. And so
this Aramaic word was left untranslated in a Greek testament.
"Abba".
It's an Aramaic word that was never used of God prior to the coming of
Jesus. The word was used only by a
child affectionately of his father; the word expresses immense affection without
a hint of disrespect. The word
expresses intimacy and warmth without a hint of mushiness.
This word is used of someone whom we should always trust yet whom we
could never presume upon; someone before whom we should be glad to unburden
ourselves yet whom we should dread to trifle with.
This word is used of someone whom we know to cherish us, yet whom we also
know never to indulge us; someone before whom we can always blurt out our need
or pain or confession of sin yet before whom we could never be flippant.
This word describes the deepest-down experience of God's children who
have pleaded with their Father for centuries yet always shrink from
impertinence.
This word -- "Abba,
Father" -- is the spontaneous cry of someone who loves him on whose knee we
can sit and whose heart we can hear beat, even as we know we cannot manipulate
him and don't care to try. This cry
is torn out of us when we are most intimate with our Father who continues to
favour us yet whose favour we can never curry.
Do we use this word just because we
know that Jesus used of it of his Father and we think it's a good idea to
imitate our Lord?
No child of God imitates
Jesus. We aren't copy-cats.
Rather, we are sons and daughters whom the Son has brought to his
Father. We don't imitate our Lord.
We stand so close to him in faith that the intimacy he knows with his
Father we are allowed to enjoy as well.
There is nothing abstract about all
of this. This is concrete, real,
vital, visceral. This is undeniable
experience as much as laughter and grief and pain and joy are undeniable
experience. IV:
-- "When
the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son."
To do what? To free us from
the elemental spirit and also to free us from our self-condemnation under the
law.
How did the Son do this?
By rendering us sons and daughters through faith.
What is the outcome of our
adoption? We are possessed of that
abundant life which can never be restricted to or reduced to those cramped
confines amounting to enslavement.
What evidence is there that this is
the truth about me? He who
sent forth his Son at Christmas, says the apostle, has also sent forth the
Spirit of his Son, so that we whom he makes sons and daughters cry out,
"Abba, Father", as he did before us, Son that he is upon whom the
Father's favour rests.
Is all of this too heavy for Christmas eve?
For what other reason could God have sent forth his Son, the Bethlehem
babe? For no other reason has he. Victor
A. Shepherd
Christmas 1994
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