“Hail th’incarnate Deity”!

“Hail th’incarnate Deity”! December 22, 2023

 

A nice Mormon view of the Annunciation
James Christensen’s “Annunciation”

I published the following Christmas-themed article in Meridian Magazine last night:  “Mary’s Unique Role in Our Salvation”  I hope that some of you will find it acceptable.  In this connection, you might enjoy BYU’s female a cappella ensemble, Noteworthy, singing “Mary, Did You Know?” along with guest artist Peter Hollens.  I surely did.  And please take a quick look at this, too:  “Pres. Holland posts tender tribute to mothers: ‘Your sacrifice is not unnoticed’.”

Mary and Joseph en route to Bethlehem
From the official website of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Sants

The Interpreter Foundation’s 2023 Christmas message, which was written by Kent P. Jackson, has now appeared:  “Glory to God in the Highest.”

Abstract: What would it have been like to be among the shepherds who heard the angelic announcement of Jesus’s birth? Their story has special meaning for many of us because we feel a kinship with those shepherds through shared anonymity and shared hope and witness. By means of two favorite hymns, “Angels We Have Heard on High” and “Far, Far Away on Judea’s Plains,” Kent Jackson invites us to place ourselves in the role of those shepherds and join in singing: “Lord, with the angels we too would rejoice,” and “Come to Bethlehem and see.”

Aotearoa's first temple
Christmas at the Hamilton New Zealand Temple
(Wikimedia Commons public domain)

On a quite unrelated note:  I’m an enthusiastic admirer of David French, and this latest column of his has done nothing to dim my admiration:  “On Satanic Idols and Free Speech.”

Ankara Christmas display
Christmas decorations at a shopping mall in Ankara, Turkey
(Wikimedia Commons public domain image)

As I’ve recently pointed out here on this blog, Christmas resonates around the world, well beyond the body of Christian believers.  (See “Christmas beyond Christendom.”)  But its deepest significance, its core meaning, is uniquely Christian.  I published the column below in the Deseret News on 22 December 2016:

Behind the tinsel and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, beyond Santa Claus, Christmas represents an enormously serious claim — the incarnation of God or, literally, God’s “enfleshment.” “And the Word was made flesh,” says John 1:14, “and dwelt among us.”

It’s a proposition unique to Christianity among the Abrahamic religions; Judaism and Islam make no such claim about the divine.

In the first chapter of Genesis, God repeatedly observes that his creation is “good.” And finally, when he’s done, we’re told that “God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good” (1:31).

In the Christmas narratives, however, divine approval is registered even more remarkably. God himself enters into the physical world and takes flesh, matter, upon himself. As a lesser-known verse of the carol “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” exhorts:

Veiled in flesh the Godhead see;

Hail th’incarnate Deity,

Pleased with us in flesh to dwell,

Jesus our Emmanuel.

Thereafter, he redeems that flesh in the resurrection and claims it forever. The tomb is empty, but the body has not been abandoned. “Behold my hands and my feet, that it is I myself,” he tells his astonished disciples after his crucifixion. “Handle me, and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me have” (Luke 24:39).

This story stands in dramatic contrast to many other faiths and philosophies, which have historically taught that death represents a desirable deliverance from the body and the bondage of materiality.

“The true philosophers,” says Socrates in Plato’s fourth-century B.C. dialogue “Phaedo,” “are ever studying death.” Why? Because they aspire to live lives of pure reason, freed from fleshly limitations.

Thus, the great A.D. third-century Neoplatonic philosopher Plotinus, says his biographer Porphyry, was ashamed even to have a birthday, because it was on that day that his immaterial spirit had fallen into the swamp of matter. Even on the edges of Christianity itself — for example, in the ancient Gnostic heresies that threatened the mainstream Christian movement during the first centuries after Jesus — death was thought to offer an escape from the evil material world.

Not so in genuinely apostolic Christianity. “God,” wrote Paul to the Corinthians, “was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself” (2 Corinthians 5:19). This earth, physical reality, shouldn’t be rejected or discarded. Both long before the birth of Jesus and decades after his ascension into heaven, believers were promised “new heavens and a new earth” (Isaiah 65:17; Revelation 21:1).

Although fallen and flawed, our material world is fundamentally good and worthy of salvation. Indeed, it will be made worthy of those who eventually inherit heaven. “Blessed are the meek,” the Savior himself taught in his Sermon on the Mount, “for they shall inherit the earth” (Matthew 5:5).

Some worldviews would ask why anybody would even want it. Who would seek to drag this physical carcass of a body around forever?

But Jesus’ literal resurrection from the dead testifies that we’ll do so: “Ye men of Galilee,” ask the angels after Christ’s ascension, “why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven” (Acts 1:11).

“Beloved,” says 1 John 3:2, “now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.”

Matter itself, including our bodies, will be redeemed. Christ, the apostle Paul says, “shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself” (Philippians 3:21), “and the dead shall be raised incorruptible” (1 Corinthians 15:52). “He became man,” explained St. Athanasius of Alexandria (d. A.D. 373) in his treatise “On the Incarnation,” “that we might be made divine.”

Transcending mere sentimentality about “the Babe of Bethlehem,” Christmas commemorates the beginning of that redemptive process; the events associated with Easter guarantee it.

There can be no better news, no tidings more glad than these.

Hail the heav’n-born Prince of Peace!

Hail the Son of Righteousness!

Light and life to all he brings,

Ris’n with healing in his wings.

Mild he lays his glory by,

Born that man no more may die.

Born to raise the sons of earth,

Born to give them second birth.

Muslim Santa Claus?
I think it might plausibly be argued that the Muslim man shown praying in a mosque in this photograph, which was kindly sent to me by Matthew Wheeler, neither hates Christians nor despises Christmas.

As you’re aware, the Christopher Hitchens Memorial “How Religion Poisons Everything” File™ exists to chronicle, document, and preserve evidence of the unsleeping malice of theists and theism and the evils that are continually inflicted by religion and religious believers upon innocent, suffering humanity worldwide.  Here’s a new entry from the Hitchens File:  “How iron nets and tents are giving shelter, peace and security to displaced people: The Church of Jesus Christ and ShelterBox are supporting people displaced by conflict. See examples from Yemen, Sudan and Ethiopia”

And this enormity, too, comes (via Hong Kong) from the Hitchens File:  “Second Asia Area Christmas Devotional Showcases Diversity of How Members “Let Your Light Shine”: A new video presentation that spans nine Asia locations with a focus on Christ-like acts of service and goodness at Christmas and all times.”

 

 

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