The Adventurous Lectionary – The First Sunday after Christmas Day – December 27, 2016

The Adventurous Lectionary – The First Sunday after Christmas Day – December 27, 2016 December 19, 2015

The Adventurous Lectionary – The First Sunday after Christmas Day – December 27, 2016

I Samuel 2:18-20, 26
Psalm 148
Colossians 3:12-17
Luke 2:41-52

This Sunday the key words are “growing in wisdom and stature.” As I ponder today’s passages, I am reminded of one of my teachers Bernard Loomer’s notion that S-I-Z-E is an essential theological concept. According to Loomer:

By size I mean the stature of a person’s soul, the range and depth of his love, his capacity for relationships. I mean the volume of life you can take into your being and still maintain your integrity and individuality, the intensity and variety of outlook you can entertain in the unity of your being without feeling defensive or insecure. I mean the strength of your spirit to encourage others to become freer in the development of their diversity and uniqueness.

Loomer believed that if a policy or theological position, regardless of how articulate, lacked size, it was not worth considering. We see theologies of small stature influencing the terrorist actions of ISIS and in response, politicians succumbing to xenophobia in their response to potential Syrian refugees and immigration policies regarding Muslims. Such xenophobic approaches betray the spirit of Christmas and the realities of two refugee parents who fled to Egypt to protect their young child Jesus.

Loved by his parents, and yet dedicated to the Temple, Samuel grows in wisdom and stature. In his faithful attentiveness, he is unconsciously preparing for a nocturnal visitation from the Holy One and his response, “Speak, God, your servant is listening.”

Psalm 148 describes a world of praise. The universe is chockfull of divinity. All creatures are voices of God, each in her or his own way praising God. The interdependent non-human world praises God simply by being itself in all its diversity. In the spirit of Romans 8, the creation not only groans, it rejoices. Every moment can be holy in this magical world. There is a point of contact between the wisdom of the Jewish and Christian sages and the earth-oriented, pagan, religions of our time, and that point of contact is the recognition that Spirit dwells in all things. The panentheistic vision, championed by the process theologians and creation mystics, affirms “God in all things and all things in God.” Or, as the Christ of the Gospel Thomas asserts, “Cleave a piece of wood and I am there; lift the stone, and I am there.” (For more on process theology, see Bruce Epperly, Process Theology: A Guide for the Perplexed and Process Theology: Embracing Adventure with God.)

The reading from Colossians, lifts up a practical mysticism, joining the inner and outer dimensions of life. Let God’s wisdom and word dwell richly in you. Let your life become a prayer. Out of that inner life, you will clothe yourself in Christ – in love, patience, joy, healing, and compassion. You will be Christ to one another, mediating God’s Spirit in your daily life.

At the end of the Christmas season, people ask, “Why can’t we celebrate Christmas every day?” Colossians provides a template for a perpetual Christmas, for the birthing of Christ all year long. Open to God’s wisdom flowing through us, we grow in stature and sensitivity, and make a commitment to embody Christ in every season of life: “And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.”

The passage from Luke’s gospel reveals a bit of adolescent spiritual rebellion. Confronted by his anxious parents, Jesus responds, “Why were you searching for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?” Jesus’ response confounds his parents. They just don’t understand – and understandably so – that their son has just crossed a spiritual threshold, claiming his rabbinical vocation. He asks and he answers, he learns and he grows. Many modern translations note that Jesus grew in “wisdom and years.” I prefer the alternative, “wisdom and stature.” You can grow older and not grow in spirit; there is no guarantee that spiritual maturity comes with age. But, “stature” encompasses our whole being, and describes Jesus’ growing attunement with God’s vision for his life. This young man, who will become our healer, teacher, and savior, will experience divine wisdom – the sense of holiness in the quotidian events of life – and divine stature – openness to the image of God in unexpected and contrasting places.

Yes, stature is what we need in church and in the body politic. We need large visions and the ability to see divinity in contrasting places. We need to go beyond parochialism to embrace divinity in its many manifestations. We need to move from self-interest to world loyalty and nationalism to globalism, and care for the good Earth. In every moment, God’s spirit urges us “grow, grow,” become a large soul, and let God’s sight guide your path in ways that welcome the world in all its wondrous diversity.


Browse Our Archives