TWAS THE NIGHT
BEFORE CHRISTMAS
I have been thinking about Christmas this week.
Actually, I have been thinking about Christmas
Eve, which is today. And which, it seems to me, captures more of the essence of
Christmas than even the day itself.
Christmas is about anticipation. About what will
happen, not what has occurred. It's about the future, whether that future is
mere hours in the offing or a millenia away. And it unites, in perhaps a way
that no other holiday can or does, the pedestrian with the profound. In fact,
it makes the pedestrian profound.
Kids will go crazy tonight. Most won't be able to sleep. Those
not afraid of some cosmic retribution will sneak a peak out the window or down
the stairs in search of Santa Claus. Others will become inveterate Holmes-es
(Sherlock, that is), carefully processing every errant sound from a squeaky
baseboard to determine if he has come down the chimney, with care or otherwise,
along with a satchel of goodies. A few years ago, a friend told me his son had
come into his bedroom in the middle of the night, swearing to his father that
"Rudolph was in the driveway."
Two thousand years ago, it was all about
anticipation too. We have encrusted that day with layers of theological
speculation, so much so that we are now almost in need of theo-archaeologists
to carefully remove the layers without destroying the initial insight. It was, after all, about
the future, about hope -- cosmic and otherwise. Lots of us call it salvation,
and tonight or tomorrow, when many of us cross the church
threshold (some for our biennial visit, others for the second time this week),
we will hear the ancient story of the incarnate One and be told it was the day
we were saved.
Which has, of late, got me to wondering.
What for?
And the best answer I can come up with is . . .
Tomorrow.
And so that's what Christmas is about for me.
Tomorrow. All the endless tomorrows. With their hopes and dreams and
disappointments. Their risings and fallings. And
tears and laughter. Even on the day I die, when tomorrow will be unpredictably
exciting. In fact, especially then.
A friend recommended a book earlier this year by a
theologian named John Haught. In it, Haught talked about the need to square
Christian theology with the fact of evolution. One point he made is that
theology should never compete with science, that the truths of the latter are
not to be denied by the former, and vice versa. So the
earth and all its inhabitants weren't created in six days, the universe (or multi-verse,
we really do not know) is billions of years old, the human story represents
hardly a nanosecond in this evolutionary time line, and the possibility of
intelligent life in spheres beyond our third rock from the sun is hardly
remote. The one thing certain is that, whoever and whatever we and our world
are, it will not be the same tomorrow.
In fact, in the deep time of our evolutionary
tomorrow, it's gonna be very different.
Which brings me back to Christmas. Or more
precisely Christmas Eve. The one day when we think about nothing but tomorrow.
And really look forward to it.
I am ready this year. All the presents are
wrapped. The house is clean (I vacuum). Charles Darwin and Jesus Christ have
become bosom buddies in my mind, the former telling me that nothing is forever
as the world and its inhabitants constantly morph into newer forms, the latter
teaching me that this in itself is a good thing and that somewhere over this
evolutionary rainbow there is still a tomorrow that embraces us all.
And I have a shovel ready.
In case Rudolph leaves something in the driveway
besides a missing sleigh bell.
Merry Christmas.
(This post was
first published on Christmas Eve 2008. A
lot has changed since then. But not my view of Christmas.)
No comments:
Post a Comment