Sermon for the Octave Day of Christmas

by CCW | 1 January 2019 12:00

And all they that heard it wondered at those things which were
told them by the shepherds.

I hope that we are among those who having heard it, wonder at those things told to us by the shepherds. Even more, I hope and pray that we will be like Mary and “keep all these things, and ponder them in [our] hearts.” Such is, I think, the radical meaning of the Christmas of the Shepherds.

Things told to them by angels set them in motion to “see this thing which is come to pass,” they say, and with a proper theological sophistication of the kind which belongs to the little ones of the world, they know that this is something “which the Lord hath made known unto us.” They come and find it so. Splendid. Good on them but even better, even a greater good is that they do not keep this to themselves. It is not “good tidings of great joy”, just for themselves. No, it concerns us all. “They made known abroad the saying which was told them concerning this child.” We know that saying. We heard it on Christmas morn. The “good tidings of great joy” is that “unto you is born this day in the city of David, who is Christ the Lord.” And as a sign of this truth, “ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.”

All this has remained with them and belongs to their conversation among themselves. It sets them in motion, moved by more than what they or we can possibly conceive. They come and see and it is as they had been told. They wonder at what they behold and made it known abroad and others wonder too. But how many keep all these things and ponder them in their hearts? The shepherds “returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard and seen, as it was told unto them.” There is the constant emphasis upon the idea of what has been told and seen and then told to others.

All of this belongs to the sweet wonder of the Christmas mystery. On The Octave Day of Christmas it all comes to a kind of crescendo, paradoxically enough not with the Angels nor with insight of John but with the lowliness and humility of the shepherds. They have the kind of rural honesty that used to be part of our communities. A way of simple directness and humble honesty. It is much needed in our age of smug arrogance and ignorant assertions. The Octave Day gathers up the fullness of images that Christmas presents and concentrates them on our thinking about Jesus, especially about his being named Jesus by angels, by Joseph, and now, wonderfully by Mary.

His naming appears in the context of the Jewish ritual of circumcision, itself a profound sign of identity with the God of all creation who cannot be reduced to the created order itself. His name is critical to the understanding of the Christmas mystery. It means Saviour; it implies sacrifice through the shedding of blood. The Christmas mystery unfolded throughout the Octave serves to bring out the radical nature of sacrificial love. There is blood in Bethlehem, the blood of Christ at his circumcision and the blood of the holy Innocents. These mysteries confront us with the greater mystery of God who uses the things of our world to open us out to his wonder and truth. But only because of the things that have been told us.

And all they that heard it wondered at those things which were
told them by the shepherds.

Fr. David Curry
The Octave Day of Christmas, 2019

Source URL: https://christchurchwindsor.ca/2019/01/01/sermon-for-the-octave-day-of-christmas-10/