So generally, I just like to summarize Yancey’s thoughts and reflect on them a little, but for this Christmas post I liked his words so much, I’m just going to give them to you straight up.  I think this is one of the more profound things I’ve read this Christmas.  So reflect on how amazing it was that God was willing to empty himself in the incarnation, but also reflect on why he was willing to do this, why the risk and limits were so worth it.

“What could be less scary than a newborn baby with jerky limbs and eyes that do not quite focus?  The King had  cast off his robes.

Think of the condescension involved: the incarnation, which sliced history into two parts had more animal than human witnesses.  Think, too, of the risk.  In the incarnation, God spanned the vast chasm of fear that had distanced him from his human creation.  But removing that barrier made Jesus vulnerable, terribly vulnerable.

“For those who believe in God, it means, this birth, that God hiself is never safe from us, and maybe that is the dark side of Christmas, the terror of the silence  He comes in such a way that we can always turn him down, as we could crack the baby’s skull like an eggshell or nail him up when he gets too big for that. (Frederick Buechner, The Hungering Dark)”

How did Christmas day feel to God? Imagine for a moment becoming a baby again.  God as a fetus!  Or imagine yourself becoming a sea slug- that analogy is probably closer.  On that day in Bethlehem, the Maker of All That Is took form as a helpless, dependent newborn.

Kenosis is the technical word theologians use to describe Christ empyting himself o the advantages of detiy.  Ironically, while the emptying inovlved much humiliation, it also involved a kind of freedom.  I have sometimes podnered the “distandvatages” of inifinity. A physical body freed Christ to act on a human scale, withouth those “disadvantages”.  He could say what he wanted without his voice blasting the treetops.  He could express anger by calling King Herod a fox or by reaching for a bullwhip in the temple, rather than shaking the earth whith his stormy presence.  And he could talk to anyone- a prostitute, a blind man, a widow, a leper- without first having to announce, “Fear not!”"

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