REFLECTION ON THE INCARNATION
The Word became flesh and
dwelt among us.
~ John 1:14
“And while they were there, the time came for her to
give birth. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in
swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them
in the inn.” Luke 2:6-7. I love this verse of Scripture. I love the traditional image of the nativity,
with Christ in the manger, Mary and Joseph keeping close watch over Him, magi
offering their gifts, shepherds approaching, and sheep, oxen, cows, donkeys,
and camels calmly looking on. Here, at
the very start of the story of Christ, the animals take their place among the
witnesses of God made flesh, among the first to be blessed by the presence of
Christ. The story starts with the Word
of God in the presence not just of humans of low and great estate, but also in
the presence of a variety of animals.
Of course scripture doesn’t actually tell us that any animals
were present in the stable at the time of Christ’s birth, but there is no
disputing that Christ makes his initial appearance as flesh in a place where
animals live; his crib is a trough where the animals feed. Long-standing tradition has the animals firmly
in place (nor, it seems to me, is there any reason to think the animals were
not present in this, their dwelling place).
There is symmetry here: the beginning of Christ’s life
is with animals while angels herald His arrival in song, and the beginning of
Christ’s ministry is with animals while angels tend to him. There is also foreshadowing here: He rides
into Jerusalem on a donkey in His moment of triumph, and it is as a sacrificial
lamb that Christ goes to the cross. If
we have but eyes to see, Christ’s life in flesh, while human in form, is
intertwined from beginning to end with the animals.
So it should come as no surprise, really, to think of
the implications of the incarnation as being far-reaching enough to encompass
those very animals who are with Him at so many pivotal moments of His
life. The church’s focus has
traditionally been on the fact of Christ’s human form; indeed, for much of its
history, the emphasis has been on Christ’s male human form. So, in the Nicene Creed, we recite that “For
us men and for our salvation he came down from heaven, and by the Holy Spirit
was incarnate of the Virgin Mary, and became man.” Churches choosing more inclusive language,
will often say, “For us and for our salvation he came down from heaven, and by
the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary and became human.” But, while it is true that Christ was both
male and human, the gospel tells us more broadly that Christ became flesh.
The Greek word in the Gospel of John is sarx, a word that refers to both human and non-human animal
flesh. David Clough has explained, “God
became a Jew rather than a Gentile, a man rather than a woman, an inhabitant of
Palestine rather than one of South America, a creature alive in the first
century AD rather than the twenty-first, a human being rather than a dog” (On Animals, p. 83). We do not suppose, however, that God’s saving
work is restricted to Jews, to men, to Palestinians, or to those alive in the
first century AD. There is no reason,
therefore, to suppose it is restricted to human beings. This is particularly true in view of the
breadth of the language of the gospel (“the Word became flesh”) and in view of scripture’s insistence on
the cosmic significance of work of Christ, who rules over "all things" (Ephesians 1:9-10 and 1:22, Hebrews 1:2-3, 1 Corinthians 8:6,
John 1:3) and for whom the whole creation "waits with eager longing" (Romans 8:18). Thus, as Clough explains, “The fundamental New Testament
assertion concerning the incarnation, therefore, is not that God became a
member of the species Homo sapiens,
but that God took on flesh, the stuff of living creatures” (p.85). (I discuss
Clough’s views more extensively in this earlier post.)
William Greenway, in
his book, For The Love Of All Creatures:
The Story of Grace in Genesis, posits the incarnation as reaching so far as
to encompass even that most sinful of all creatures, the creatures therefore
furthest from God: humans. “In thus
proclaiming divinity’s most intimate unifying embrace of the furthermost limit
of creation, humans, the doctrine of the incarnation proclaims that all the
rest of creation, which is relatively near, lies within the all-encompassing
embrace of divine grace” (p. 96). Daniel
K. Miller, in Animal Ethics and Theology:
The Lens of the Good Samaritan, reflecting on John’s pronouncement that the
Word became flesh and dwelt among us, assures us that “by drawing near to
animal life in this way, Christ’s incarnation and resurrection provide the
basis for our own drawing near to animals as neighbor” (p. 96).
It
is, in the words of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, “a kind of theological folly to suppose that God has made the entire
world just for human beings, or to suppose that God is interested in only one
of the millions of species that inhabit God’s good earth” or, I would add, to
suppose that God’s incarnation matters only to humans.
During this Christmas season, let us celebrate the
extraordinary love of God in Christ, let us recognize the depth, breadth, and
extravagance of this love, which reaches to all of creation, and which will not
let even one sparrow fall without Him (Matt. 10:29). Let us stand near the manger in wonder,
together with the sheep and the oxen, and let us seek to love and care for what
He loves and cares for, in gratitude for the love and care we have received. Merry Christmas.
Photo credits:
All creche photos via Wikimedia Commons,
1. "Weihnachtskrippe 2008" by L.Kenzel - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
2. "Presépio no Santuário de Fátima" by No machine-readable author provided. Juntas assumed (based on copyright claims). Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
3. "StWendelKrippeMissionshaus" by Lokilech - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Cat in Christmas tree is my own photo.
Photo credits:
All creche photos via Wikimedia Commons,
1. "Weihnachtskrippe 2008" by L.Kenzel - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
2. "Presépio no Santuário de Fátima" by No machine-readable author provided. Juntas assumed (based on copyright claims). Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
3. "StWendelKrippeMissionshaus" by Lokilech - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Cat in Christmas tree is my own photo.
2 comments:
Very nice, Lois, thank you!
I read this again, Lois, this year; so very good! Merry Christmas (belated) and here is praying for a better 2021; 2020 will go down in our history books, I'm sure, as quite unprecedented; but from a historical context, maybe not so much! :) God Bless.
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