By bringing our lights into the church on Candlemas we halt the Promethean myth: our technology is not something we develop without limit so as to achieve a collective godhood. The liturgy sets the limits and boundaries of our technological development. Liturgy also establishes the biblical purpose for technology. Our songs, our instruments, our lights, and our technology, are find their meaning by being brought in the liturgy to God, who speaks to us from his Word.
Read moreThe call of Candlemas and the popper's offering
They realize their nakedness and are ashamed. Of what are they ashamed? Of everything. It’s not merely the sight of the naked body (something they were probably used to) but of its new nakedness when exposed as sinful, separate from God, and fallen. Their nakedness now stands as witness to their existence against God, as does all of the creation. If all of creation points back to the Creator, then all of the voices of the created world are aflame with the reminder of the One they’ve left. They have made the Lord their enemy. And they are in a garden where everything sings the name of the Lord.
Read moreShe came so close to death
Candlemas remembers the presentation of Christ in the Temple –that day when Mary and Joseph brought the Christchild to the temple, to offer sacrifices in accordance with the Law, and were hailed by Anna and Simeon (Lk. 2.22-40). Historically this was a very important feast, particularly for women. Stories flood medieval texts of miracles, visionary encounters, and mystical encounters experienced by women who understood that this day was a day in God’s story uniquely celebrating their role in it.
Read moreThe Sublime has stooped to enter this house
You see? Mystery of all mysteries: the Sublime has become a baby, and not just a baby, but this baby with all of the particulars that make him beautiful: cheeks, eyes, coloration, toes, knots of hair, DNA, unique kinds of stink, etc.
Read moreIt begins with paganism and ends with riots: 12 theses on Christian Feasting
Christianity, you see, is chock-full of foolery, one might even say we invented it: from the at least as early as the Flood, God has thrown the folly of our wisdom into boisterous relief against the wisdom of his (seeming) foolishness. For the flood was the one of the first moments in scripture where a pattern emerges that is neither tragic nor epic, but comedic: the strong with all of their seriousness (so miserably serious) try to drown-out the voice of God, but are themselves drowned-out. It is a kind of dark-comedy waaaay before dark comedy was a thing. One arrives at Genesis 9 shaking and a little overwhelmed, and yet filled with a kind of hopeful wonder: “Oh my, it worked… the Ark worked… I didn’t think it would, but it did… perhaps… perhaps this whole human-story thing might actually turn-out okay in the end afterall.”
Read moreA blood-red Christmas
[…] Christmas is pregnant with the Cross. That delightful red painted on all of our candy-canes, and ribboned bows, and wrapping paper, and ugly sweaters, and Santa hats, and holly berries, is of course blood red. And even around the manger we gather to sing “nails, thorns, shall pierce Him through, the Cross be born for me for you” […]
Read moreAdvent prayers culminate in the royal exercises of Christmas
Advent is about the coming of the King.
Yes, that this King is fully God and fully man is properly part of the Advent proclamation. But we mustn’t exclude the fact of Christ’s Kingship from the gospel news.
Read more40 Theses on Christmas
Every Advent witnesses the gruesome reanimation of the voice that whispers “you know , Christmas is just a pagan holiday…” with that sort of conversational ellipsis that does not so much invite further reflection but halts and forecloses it. The claims are several and equally spurious: Jesus wasn’t born on the 25th, it’s really just an ancient [INSERT CIVILIZATION] practice, it’s just the winter solstice, it’s gone too commercial, it’s become an idol in its own right, Christianity is not about the manger it’s about the Cross, etc.
Read moreShadows give way to solidity and brightness
[…] it is not without meaning that Jesus prays this prayer of desire in a garden, at night. For he is the true and greater Adam, in a Garden, in the cold of the (very early) morning […]
Read moreWaiting for the one who comes in glory
In particular, I want to consider “glory” as a thing that shapes the quality of Christian waiting. The Nicene Creed teaches us that Christ will not merely come again, but that “He will come again in glory…” And this word “glory” is more than an imaginative lacquer applied to the otherwise dull and rasping theology of the creeds. It is substantial.
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