Sermon. 01/01/2023. The Naming and Circumcision of Jesus.
Numbers 6:22-27
Luke 2:15-21
I sometimes wonder how disappointed a
person would be, if they listened to the Church. Let me clarify: I sometimes
wonder how disappointed a person would be if they listened to the Church in
one regard. I mean if they really followed the Church and its pronouncements
on Advent.
You know the claim, the contrast, I
think.
While the world starts celebrating
and feasting and otherwise keeping Christmas from mid-November,
in the Church, Christmas does not
begin until the evening of Christmas Eve, and Advent is a season in its own
right, one marked by self-reflection, silence, and going without.
So imagine you stuck to that. Not a
mince pie, not a slice of stollen, not even a shepherd or an angel, before the
evening of 24 December. And then?
And then you come to the main service
on Christmas Day, and even here (if your church is being obedient) you don’t
hear of angels or shepherds, but rather what may seem to be rather abstract
stuff about (GOD), and the Word, and flesh, and so on
– the Prologue to John.
And then?
And then already on the second day of
Christmas you are thrown straight into the story of death. The Feast of Stephen,
the first Christian martyr.
A few days later, the most horrific
story in the New Testament, the story of the slaughter of the innocents. The
slaughter. Of innocents.
This is hard.
You may well think that you should
have enjoyed all the mince pies and slices of stollen you were offered in
November and December.
Surely, at the beginning of the
second week of Christmastide, then we can return to a story which fits a season
of feasting and celebration?
Well, let us see.
The first thing to say is that the
Church Catholic keeps different feasts on 1 January.
For most Orthodox, it is the Feast of
St Basil (who by the way often wears red and goes from house to house
distributing presents, but that’s for another time).
For modern Roman Catholics, it is the
Solemnity of Mary the Mother of (GOD).
For Anglicans (being Anglicans), we have
a choice.
But all Christian calendars carry an
awareness that the eighth day of Christ’s life was/is/is/was the day of the
Naming and Circumcision of Jesus.
So here your preacher can play safe,
and speak about the naming and the name of Jesus, Yeshua, meaning (GOD) saves, or (GOD) is
salvation, and let the feasting commence!
Or your preacher can play not-safe,
and actually mention the less-discussed, the undiscussed, act of the
circumcision of Jesus, an act which brings us back (we may as well say it) to
the theme of blood.
You will have guessed that your
preacher is going to play not-safe.
Let us mark the circumcision of
Jesus.
There are a number of reasons for doing this. The first is that the circumcision of Jesus is one of those things even sceptics can be reasonably sure really happened. Now, if you get your information from social media ((GOD) help you), you will have a sense that it is controversial to say that Jesus even existed. But within proper historical studies, there is no real argument. Jesus (whoever he was) really existed. Someone called Yeshua was born, had a role as teacher and healer which impacted upon some, and was crucified by the Romans. And his followers were somehow energised after his death. These things are historical facts. And I say that another fact we can set alongside these is that Jesus was circumcised on the eighth day, in accordance with Jewish custom. (If there were any sense that Jesus might not have been circumcised, we can be sure that his opponents would have brought this up at every occasion.)
This brings us to the second reason
to mark the circumcision. It is one obvious way of bringing to the centre of
the stage something we may forget. Jesus was a Jew. And he wasn’t only a Jew
“ethnically” (whatever that means). He was a Jew “religiously”. He was a Jew
religiously, and, brothers and sisters, we have to face it: he was not
a Jew who became a Christian (think about it)!
The story of the circumcision of
Jesus occurs only in Luke. Luke has much more to say about the baby-and-child,
Jesus, than the other gospels. And, in the stories Luke brings,
his parents are presented as devout
Jews,
Jews really at home in the religion
of Judaism,
Jews who relished Jewish ways of
connecting with (GOD).
And I dare to say this applies to
Jesus too.
This is something we Christians might
usefully treasure and ponder in our hearts, like the Jewish mother, Mary.
I’m really not sparing you, am I?
Well, I say again: if the Church brings so many martyrs into the calendar so
soon after Christmas Day, then it must be telling us - against all the
assumptions - that Christmastide is for adults. But of course I know that as
adults (precisely as adults) we may have all kinds of moral or ethical
objections to the circumcision of baby boys (who cannot consent). And, for
sure, there are discussions to be had. If I say there are modern questions,
that is not to dismiss or minimise them. But it is to say that ethical concerns
were almost certainly not around for the Jews of Jesus’ day, for Jesus’ own
family.
So what, then, was circumcision, in
the day? What was it about? What was it for? Bluntly, we are not told. Nowhere
in the Bible are we told. Back in Genesis, (GOD)
commands Abraham to circumcise himself and his menfolk, and Abraham obeys. And
it becomes a mark of the covenant with (GOD)
from then on. It becomes a mark of (GOD)’s
call. Is there any reason for this? Well, later Jewish tradition is clear that
not all (GOD)’s commands have to be grounded in reason.
They don’t all have to show how they do us good. (GOD) is (GOD) and (GOD) can call us to pattern our lives as (GOD) chooses (save for real harm alone). However, speculative
rationales for circumcision abound:
it is about involving human beings in
the process of creation, by giving them a final little tidying-up task to
perform;
it is about moderating male sexual
desire;
it is about having an enfleshed
reminder of (GOD) every time a married couple has
intercourse.
And so on.
But I want to make another connection.
The fact that circumcision goes all the way back to Abraham means that it is essentially
and intimately linked to… to blessing. Remember (GOD)’s promise to Abraham at the very start of his story [Gen 12.2f]:
“I will make you into a great nation,
and I will bless you;
I will make your name great,
and you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
and whoever curses you I will curse;
and all peoples on earth
will be blessed through you
[or will bless
themselves in you].”
The later blessing of Aaron – “the
LORD bless you and keep you. The LORD make his face to shine upon you…” – this
blessing is something of an echo of this core blessing, this root blessing, the
blessing of faith, the blessing in Sarah and Abraham. (Whether that was actually
why it was chosen by the compilers of our lectionary for today, I cannot tell
you. But I suggest that the resonances are just plain there.)
Perhaps you are not used to think of
blessing as the central meaning of the Old Testament, from Abraham on. It would
be surprising if you were. After all, here is the more normal Christian summary
of the biblical story:
Creation – Fall – Redemption –
Consummation.
The Old Testament, in this account,
is overwhelmingly about the Fall.
So in the Old Testament Christians
look for flickers of light in a dark night, and little else.
Well, brothers and sisters, I offer
you another reading.
You can think of it as a parallel
rather than an alternative reading, if you like.
Think of the story of Bible as one of
blessing upon blessing, of grace upon
grace.
What happens if we think of the
biblical story as
-
the
blessing of creation (“very good”)
-
enriched
by the blessing in Sarah and Abraham
(by circumcision and all the marks of all the
covenants)
-
enriched
in turn by the blessing of Jesus
embodiment of
the covenants.
Whenever you have an Old Testament
reading, ask yourself:
How is the core blessing in Abraham
reflected here?
How is the new blessing of Jesus
anticipated here?
So we have reasons to celebrate
today.
We have the naming of Jesus - (GOD) saves!
And we have his circumcision too,
his circumcision into the blessing of
Abraham.
So Christmastide, yes. Feast, yes. Celebration,
yes.
In which spirit, you will find after
the service a mince pie, and a piece of stollen!
Amen.
INTERCESSIONS
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
bless your Church.
that it may find again the delight of
a child,
in its worship of you, and its
service of its neighbours.
(GOD)
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
bless your world,
that people of power and influence
will find again the fierce sense of
justice of a child.
(GOD),
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
bless this place,
that it be a source even of rest and
gentleness,
such as every child needs.
(GOD),
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
bless all who are unwell,
or in need of any kind
(among them those we name now in our
own hearts)
May we cry out for them with a
child’s urgency.
(GOD),
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
bless all who will die today,
and those who have shaped us and
died,
and those who mourn,
and give us a child-like trust that
you will remember them and us into life.
(GOD),
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
(GOD),
who comes to us as child,
come anew to each one of us in this
new year,
to show us the new next step you want
us to take.
(GOD),
in your mercy, hear our prayer.
Amen.
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