I have often preached this passage around Christmas Eve...many times at that evening service, so I come to the passage with a little reluctance—is there anything new for me to preach? I can preach a well-known, well-used passage, but it’s always better if I find something new or discover a fresh approach. So, I come to John 1:1-14 hoping to find a nugget not seen before. Of course, something new is not always what’s needed. I have long argued that what we really need to do in a sermon, in a preaching moment, is respond to the world around us, provide answers to the questions people are asking (see this article). So, even if what I find is not new or fresh or clever, may it be something that speaks to the needs, fears, or hopes of the people.
We have been following the prophets of the Old Testament for the last few weeks...all the time preparing for the One who was to be born. John, I argue, is the last prophet...at least the last “Old Testament” prophet. And, as any good prophet, John comes to reveal the mind of God, to call the people of God back to faithful living, and possibly to foretell some coming event. Yet, his task is bit more focused—John comes to proclaim the arrival of the Promised One...Isaiah’s “child” (Isa.9), Jeremiah’s “hope” (Jer.29), Ezekiel’s resurrection (Ezek. 37). In this Word that John introduces in 1:1, we find the fulfillment of 700 years of prophecy.
What do we
find in this passage?
v.1-5
– "In the beginning...." This echoes the opening words of
Genesis, the beginning words of Creation. John wants us to know that God is
doing something new, creative in Jesus. And, this Jesus is no ordinary
person—he is the pre-existent one, he was there at Creation, he is the
Creator...he is life so needed in our dying world, and he is light so craved in
the darkness of this broken world. As we come through a pandemic, as we live in
an increasingly shadowed world, we need life and light perhaps more than ever.
v.6-8 – John clarifies that he is NOT the One...he’s just someone announcing the One.
v.9-13 – The light coming into the world “gives light to everyone.” Even though he is co-Creator, the creation and the creatures fail to recognize him. But, for those who do recognize him and put their trust in him, they are welcomed into the family of God, made “children of God.”
v.14 – This is the message of Christmas right here. The co-Creator, the Word, the Idea of God, God...became one of us. How do we wrap our minds around that?
Imagine a watchmaker...a person who painstakingly pieces together a time-piece, getting all the ratchets, swivels, weights, springs, pins, and jewels in place to form a watch. Then, that person magically becomes a watch. They want to experience what it is like to be what they’ve created—no more arms, legs, eyes, mouth...no longer able to move on their own...strapped to someone’s wrist, tied there...bumped into furniture...covered for extended periods with a long sleeve...seemingly forgotten, taken for granted...then changed out with another watch, thrown in a drawer until the owner decides to pull this watch out again for some occasion.
Or, think of the carpenter who makes the fine pews or benches we sit on. He planes the wood, sands it...cuts and fits together the pieces with glue, screws, finishing nails...stain is carefully applied...and varnish over that. Finally, the pew is ready. The carpenter magically becomes one of his pews. Placed in a sanctuary, he sees people two or three hours a week; the rest of the time he sits in silence. He cannot move, cannot turn. Kids play under, over and around him before the service starts. Sometimes no one sits on him; sometimes Mr. Gordo and the whole Gordo family sit on him...and it strains his joints. Finally, someone stands before the congregation and decides it’s time to replace the pews with chairs...and he’s stacked in the basement until someone can figure out what to do with him and the others.
God—the Creator of all things—becomes a creature within the Creation. All is given up—unlimited freedom, incomprehensible power, omnipotence, omnipresence, omniscience...all given up. Suddenly, God experiences something new for the first time. Before this moment, God had never known what it was like to be a human. God does something completely new in the person of Jesus...and history is changed forever. Now, we know that God—who often seems far, distant, different, other—this God knows what it is like to wrestle with very human decisions, to deal with family and friends...and enemies, to experience hunger, exhaustion, and stress. Suddenly, we have a God who truly loves us and who truly knows us and our lives. In the coming of Jesus in the manger on that first Christmas, everything changed—everything. And, this is good news for us....
The Word became flesh ...
14The
Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us….
The Word became
flesh…
The Idea became Reality
The Promise became
fulfilled
Thought
became Thing
Unseen became Seen
Unreachable embraced us
Unimaginably distant sat
down beside us
Highest become
lowest
Richest become poorest
Divine became ordinary
God became a
human – God became one of us….
Merry
Christmas.
US/Mexico border. He is author of Making Sense of It All: Reflection on the Ancient Narratives of Genesis and A Journey through Suffering: A New Reading of Job in the 21st Century.
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