THE SONG AND THE STORY
No child born into a family has had
or will ever have so many songs sung on its birthday as the infant Jesus. Every
nation, community and culture has a song for him: the Christmas song. The songs
of Christmas always make for joyful singing. The happy acclamation of “Joy to
the World”, the sweet sublimity of
“Silent Night”, the placid depth of “While Shepherds watched…”, the
tinkling gentleness of “Sweet Chiming Bells”, and the haunting echo of “O Holy
Night”, all mark the season with their message that there yet is hope for the
age of peace, as foretold in the Scriptures.
The songs keep alive the story, and the story
gives substance to the songs, for without the story the songs would ring
hollow.
“Once upon a time.” That’s how it
began. Our faith did not come to us initially as theology, but as story. “Tell
me about God.” “Well, once a time, there was a beautiful garden, and in the
middle of the garden there was a tree. A man and a woman lived in that garden.
The owner of the garden was very friendly with
them and allowed them to eat any fruit except from the tree in the centre of
the garden. And you know what they did
?” “Tell me about Jesus.” “Once upon a time there lived a boy in a
little town of Palestine called Nazareth. His mother’s name was Mary.” “Tell me about salvation.” “Well, when the boy grew up, he loved people
so much that the rulers began to get frightened of him. And you know what they
did ?”
Think of what it would be like if
there were no Christmas story, and no one to tell it. How it began with that
childless old couple, Zechariah and Elizabeth, marvellously conceiving and
bearing a son, named John, who would herald the long awaited Messiah. We would
miss the sense of hope in God’s goodness, in spite of appearances, which this
story arouses.
No one would hear of the angel’s announcement
to the maid of Nazareth, the hush of the universe, sweetly punctuated by the
twittering of birds, as it held its breath for an answer, and the sigh of
relief when it heard her say, “I am the handmaid of the Lord…” Who would tell
us the story of the Virgin Mary and Joseph who went to be enrolled in the great
census, little knowing that the One in the womb would in turn enrol the whole
world to himself ? Who would tell us of the Infant King on the manger throne,
swathed in circumstances of utter poverty, his royal chamber a stable, his
canopy the loose spread cobwebs, the reek of the beasts the incense, his
courtiers two homeless human beings, and his first subjects the rough and ready
shepherds ? We would not hear the story of the Child in the Temple, the
carpenter’s son of Nazareth, his kindness, his strength and honesty, his
single-hearted devotion to God’s kingdom and God’s people.
But
for the story, we would never know that the desire of the everlasting hills and
the hope of ages has appeared and has surpassed all expectations. We would not
know that our death has lost its sting and been swept up into the vibrant joy
of the Resurrection. We might have experiences of our hearts burning within us
when we meet a stranger and would not know what to make of it, were it not for
the Emmaus story.
We must recover the story, if we are
to recover the faith for our day. Each of us has their story. Alongside them is
the Christian story, the stories of the heroes and heroines of the faith. Could
the pair of stories impact upon one another ?
Sometimes we hear another person’s story in biography, fiction or a
movie, and we say, “Ah, that’s my story, too.” “That’s my story too. In hearing
about them, I’m learning about myself.”
We are discovering that the Bible stories are
not just what happened “way back then,”
but our own story as well, firmly planted in “the here and now.” In
losing the story, we lose the power and the beauty in the very midst of
oppression. A very simple Christmas carol invites “all poor folk and humble” to
come to the Bethlehem stable. They are “not to feel afraid, for Jesus our
treasure, with love past all measure, in lowly poor manger was laid.” Poor, humble folk, crude surroundings,
makeshift cribs, child of poor and oppressed people. There is the oppression
side of it laid out clearly. But as the carol continues, and the poor present
their gifts, there is an unexpected line: “…and Jesus in beauty, accepted their
duty.” This is the beauty side of it laid out equally. The Christmas story will
never be lost !
We need people to tell us the story
of Jesus and of their experiences of him to help us make sense of our own, to
feed our imagination, give body to our songs, and warm our hearts for God and
his peace. Without the story’s power and the teller’s feeling, we would be
sadly locked in a stuffy Noah’s ark, looking out on to a bleak world. But once
we have the story and are warmed by it, we become storytellers ourselves, each
one becoming a piece of the Good News for those we meet. We can be hearty
tellers without being compulsive, and tell an important tale without
self-importance; because, after all, we are children, commuting between
singsong and prose, one sliding into the other
- the story and the song.
And what shall we sing and tell
about ? About the helpless Child among the helpless, about dispossessed
infinity, naked and cold, that we may give him the universe for the stable, and
for his manger our hearts and their warmth. We want to listen to him and hear
that nothing greater he puts before us to achieve than that we love him, love
one another for him, and bear him faithful witness always. But today let there
be only the story and the song, and leave out the large talk about this
“omniscient, omnipresent and immutable” God.
We have the Baby, and there is no need yet to twist ourselves into
intellectual knots, figuring how to squeeze the “divine attributes” into him. After
all, when babies are born, we don’t force an identity on them; we let them tell
us who they are as their lives gradually unfold and their personalities, dreams
and goals take shape.
Today, we have the Baby !
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