Sermon for the Feast of the Holy Innocents

“These were redeemed from among men, being the first-fruits unto God,
and unto the Lamb”

No feast is more disturbing and disquieting than the Feast of the Holy Innocents and yet it belongs necessarily and inescapably to the mystery of Christmas. It reminds us in no uncertain terms of the radical meaning of Christ’s holy birth. He comes to redeem and to save by means of his sacrifice on the Cross.

The story is graphic and disturbing but points us in the direction of the doctrine of substituted love. The little ones of Bethlehem are killed in the name of Christ, the one whom Herod fears as a rival to his reign. In his wrath he “slew all the children that were in Bethlehem” and beyond. They are killed in the place of Christ. As the Collect suggests, “out of the mouths of babes and sucklings thou hast ordained strength and madest infants to glorify thee by their deaths.” How are we to understand such disturbing words that speak to the disturbing forms of the destruction of the little ones in our world and day?

The theological point is that their sufferings and deaths participate by anticipation in the sacrifice and death of Christ by which we have eternal life. They are seen in the lesson from Revelation as defined by Christ, as “they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth.” He goes to the Cross for the salvation of the world, the whole world, we might say, which includes the past and the future. At the very least, this feast suggests that their lives and deaths are not meaningless but find their truth and meaning in Christ. And so for us.

The Gospel story of the slaughter of the Innocents also highlights the reality of our human griefs and sorrows: “Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted because they are not.” There is no human comfort that will satisfy and overcome our griefs at loss and sorrow. The only comfort is found in Christ and in our being found in him. Such is the radical meaning of Christ as Saviour. He is “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.”

Christ’s “whole life was a continuall Passion … his Christmas-day and his Good Friday are but the evening and the morning of one and the same day,” John Donne observes. Christ’s life is but “a continuous cross.” The Feast of the Holy Innocents reminds us of the serious nature of Christ’s holy Nativity. Christ’s life is but “a continuous cross,” as Lancelot Andrewes notes; the Cross is present even in Bethlehem, he says, referring precisely to this feast. He marks the parallels between Herod’s wrath and Pilate’s indifference towards the innocent. The Holy Innocents share in the innocence of Christ, falsely accused and falsely condemned. But they also share in his glory and life, in the redemption which his sacrifice brings.

“These were redeemed from among men, being the first-fruits unto God
and unto the Lamb”

Fr. David Curry
Feast of the Holy Innocents
Xmas 2023

Print this entry

The Innocents’ Day

The collect for today, The Feast of the Holy Innocents, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

O ALMIGHTY God, who out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast ordained strength, and madest infants to glorify thee by their deaths: Mortify and kill all vices in us, and so strengthen us by thy grace, that by the innocency of our lives, and constancy of our faith, even unto death, we may glorify thy holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Lesson: Revelation 14:1-5
The Gospel: St. Matthew 2:13-18

Guido Reni, Massacre of the InnocentsWhen wise men from the East visited King Herod in Jerusalem to ask where the king of the Jews had been born, Herod felt his throne was in jeopardy. So, he ordered all the boys of Bethlehem aged two and under to be killed. On this day, the church remembers those children.

The Massacre of the Innocents is recorded only in St. Matthew’s Gospel, where it is said to be fulfillment of a prophecy of Jeremiah.

The church has kept this feast day since the fifth century. The Western churches commemorate the innocents on 28 December; the Eastern Orthodox Church on 29 December. Medieval authors spoke of up to 144,000 murdered boys, in accordance with Revelation 14:3. More recent estimates, however, recognising that Bethlehem was a very small town, place the number between ten and thirty.

This episode has been challenged as a fabrication with no basis in actual historical events. James Kiefer has a point-by-point presentation of the objections with replies in defence of biblical historicity.

This is an appropriate day to remember the victims of abortion.

Artwork: Guido Reni, Massacre of the Innocents, 1611. Oil on canvas, Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna.

Print this entry

Sermon for the Feast of St. John the Evangelist

“That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you”

The Feast of St. John the Evangelist is part of the mystery of Christmas. It echoes and amplifies the meaning of the great Christmas Gospel from the Prologue both in the reading from his first Epistle and from the last Chapter of his Gospel. They illuminate the deeper teaching and understanding of what we have come to call the Incarnation.

The Epistle reading testifies to the humanity and divinity of Christ: “that which was from the beginning” echoes “in the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.” It is the Word, he says, “which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon and our hands have handled,” the word which he terms here “the Word of life.” It is a strong affirmation of “the Word made flesh,” an affirmation at once of Christ’s essential divinity and his essential humanity. In that Word, he says is “eternal life, which was with the Father, and was manifested unto us.”

This captures the meaning of Christmas in terms of our fellowship with one another through our fellowship with God. What is declared unto us by John is for the sake of our fellowship with one another and with God. The Epistle goes one step further and states that “these things write we unto you, that your joy may be full.” God seeks our joy in our fellowship with him and with one another. The reading ends with an echo of the light that shines in the darkness “and the darkness overcame it not.” Here God is light, and in him is no darkness at all. All a kind of commentary on the Christmas mystery and its witness to the true humanity of Jesus united to his true divinity. But it also underscores for us its meaning for us: our fellowship and our joy.

The Gospel reading for this feast is John’s witness to his writing about Christ but with a certain note of humility and caution. He does not pretend to have captured all the things which Jesus did (and said), suggesting that “even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.” Christ, the Word and Son of the Father, cannot be contained or exhausted in the writings of even the evangelists. What they open out to us are the truths to which they bear witness and the teachings which illuminate our souls in grace. They belong to the fellowship of the Church, which is itself, as John himself indicates elsewhere, the body of Christ in which we participate sacramentally. “Truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ.”

Word and light. Word made flesh. Word as eternal life. These all speak to the true meaning of the Church and our fellowship in the body of Christ; he in us and we in him as we pray in the Prayer of Humble Access.

“That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you”

Fr. David Curry
Feast of St. John the Evangelist
Xmas 2023

Print this entry

Saint John the Evangelist

The collect for today, the Feast of St. John the Evangelist, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

MERCIFUL Lord, we beseech thee to cast thy bright beams of light upon thy Church, that it being enlightened by the doctrine of thy blessed Apostle and Evangelist Saint John may so walk in the light of thy truth, that it may at length attain to the light of everlasting life; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: 1 St. John 1:1-5
The Gospel: St. John 21:19-25

Andreas Ritzos, Christ Giving the Benediction to Saint John the EvangelistJohn and his brother James (St. James the Greater) were Galilean fishermen and sons of Zebedee. Jesus called the two brothers Boanerges (“sons of thunder”), apparently because of their zealous character; for example, they wanted to call down fire from heaven on the inhospitable Samaritans. John and James, together with Peter, belonged to the inner group of the apostles who witnessed the Transfiguration and the agony in Gethsemane. It was John and Peter whom Jesus sent to prepare the final Passover meal.

In the lists of disciples, John always appears among the first four, but usually after his brother, which may indicate that John was the younger of the two.

According to ancient church tradition, St. John the Evangelist was the author of the New Testament documents that bear his name: the fourth gospel, the three epistles of John, and Revelation. John’s name is not mentioned in the fourth gospel (but 21:2 refers to “the sons of Zebedee”), but he is usually if not always identified as the beloved disciple. It is also generally believed that John was the “other disciple” who, with Peter, followed Jesus after his arrest. John was the only disciple at the foot of the cross and was entrusted by Christ with the care of his mother Mary.

After Christ’s resurrection and ascension, John, together with Peter, took a leading role in the formation and guidance of the early church. John was present when Peter healed the lame beggar, following which both apostles were arrested. After reports reached Jerusalem that Samaria was receiving the word of God, the apostles sent Peter and John to visit the new Samaritan converts. Presumably, John was at the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15). He is not mentioned later in the Acts of the Apostles, so he appears to have left Palestine.

(more…)

Print this entry

Sermon for the Feast of St. Stephen

“Lord, lay not this sin to their charge”

Christ’s “whole life was a continuall Passion,” John Donne notes, echoing perhaps Lancelot Andrewes’ observation that “all his life long was a continuous cross.” We forget that we really only come to Christmas, paradoxical as it might seem, by way of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ; “a continuall Passion,” “a continuous cross.” We easily overlook this in the sensuous and sentimental features of our contemporary hedonism that overwhelm the festivities of Christmas. The three great holy days that follow Christmas Day are a great wake-up call and a necessary reminder of the radical meaning of Christ’s holy birth.

He comes as redeemer and saviour because of the darkness of our sinful hearts and world. Our refusals of his grace are made part of the Christmas story. “He came unto his own and his own received him not,” a reference to his Passion. Thus the rejections of grace are made part of the story of grace and one which we desperately need to hear. Archbishop Thomas à Becket’s sermon in T.S. Eliot’s play, Murder in the Cathedral, highlights the profound point that “we rejoice and mourn at once, in the Birth and in the Passion of our Lord,” and so too “in the death of martyrs.” “Is it an accident, do you think,” he asks rhetorically “that the day of the first martyr follows immediately the day of the Birth of Christ?” A martyr is a witness to another, to Christ. “A martyrdom is never the design of man; for the true martyr is he who has become the instrument of God, who has lost his will in the will of God, not lost it but found it, for he has found freedom in submission to God.”

“Not my will but thine be done,” as Jesus prays in Gethesemane. “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven,” as Jesus teaches us to pray. “Be it unto me according to thy word,” as Mary prays.

St. Stephen’s day can only be celebrated in the context of the radical meaning of Christ’s holy birth. He has come to redeem and save through his Cross and Passion and those who are his followers and witnesses participate in his Cross and Passion. St. Stephen is the great proto-martyr who illustrates the meaning of that participation in Christ’s self-giving and sacrificial love. He is persecuted and stoned to death for being a follower of the way, of what will later become known as the Christian Faith. To be a Christian is to be a witness to the love of Christ. The story of his martyrdom in Acts illustrates this beautifully even as the Gospel reading from Matthew highlights Christ’s lament over the desolation of Jerusalem in its sinfulness and violence.

(more…)

Print this entry

Saint Stephen the Martyr

The collect for today, the Feast of St. Stephen, Deacon and Martyr, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

GRANT, O Lord, that in all our sufferings here upon earth, for the testimony of thy truth, we may stedfastly look up to heaven, and by faith behold the glory that shall be revealed; and, being filled with the Holy Spirit, may learn to love and bless our persecutors, by the example of thy first Martyr Saint Stephen, who prayed for his murderers to thee, O blessed Jesus, who standest at the right hand of God to succour all those that suffer for thee, our only Mediator and Advocate. Amen.

The Lesson: Acts 7:55-60
The Gospel: St. Matthew 23:34-39

Vittore Carpaccio, The Sermon of St. StephenAll that is known of St. Stephen’s life is found in the Acts of the Apostles, chapters 6 and 7. He is reckoned as the first Christian martyr–the proto-martyr. Although his name is Greek for “crown”, he was a Jew by birth; he would have been born outside Palestine and raised as a Greek-speaking Jew. The New Testament does not record the circumstances of his conversion to Christianity.

Stephen first appears as one of the seven deacons chosen in response to protests by Hellenist (Greek-speaking) Christians that their widows were being neglected in the distribution of alms. The apostles were too busy preaching the word of God to deal with this problem, so they commissioned seven men from among the Hellenists “of good repute, full of the Spirit and of wisdom”, then prayed and laid hands on them. Stephen, the first among the seven, is described as “full of faith and of the Holy Spirit”. A few verses later, Stephen is said to be “full of grace and power [and] doing great wonders and signs among the people”.

(more…)

Print this entry

Sermon for Christmas Morn

“For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
who is Christ the Lord”

The hustle and bustle of Christmas Eve gives way to the contemplative quiet and wonder of Christmas Morn. What seems long ago and far away is present and now. Everywhere is Bethlehem. “And so it was, that while they were there” – in Bethlehem – “the days were accomplished that she should be delivered. And she brought forth her first-born son,” Luke tells us. Here is the son who is “the only-begotten of the Father full of grace and truth,” as we heard last night from the heights of heaven in John’s Prologue. From the heights of heaven to the lowliness of little Bethlehem. This is the wonder of Christmas morning.

The wonder is the unity of God and Man in Christ with the whole of creation. The three great masses of Christmas present to us the fullness of this wonder and delight. There is the Christmas Eve proclamation and celebration of the eternal Sonship of Christ who is the Word made flesh. There is the story of his actual birth made known in the angelic “tidings of great joy” in this morning’s Gospel. There is the Christmas of the Shepherds to whom the angelic news from heavenly heights is proclaimed and made known to us in Christmastide. Bethlehem is the place of these great wonders. It is paradise restored but also something more. It inaugurates a new vision and a new life.

The new vision and the new life is what has been made known to us in God’s self-giving love. What is made known is God with us and God for us. “Unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour who is Christ the Lord,” the Angel says to the Shepherds. “The glory of God,” as Ireneaus says, is vivens homo, our “living humanity” but alive only by beholding the vision of God; for “the life of man is the vision of God.” Bethlehem is the place of the vision of our humanity alive in the shining glory of the Lord. Alive in Christ, “the word made flesh” whose glory we behold, “the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father.”

But it is not our humanity alone in itself. It is not just us. Nor is it just the mighty and the powerful of the world, the privileged elite. In the quiet of Christmas morning, we are in the company of shepherds and angels with “a multitude of the heavenly host.” And only so are we with the holy Child who comes to us, the one who is the union of God and Man and who “defines for us what it is to be God and what it is to be human, in one, at the same time”. The Angel proclaims something great and wondrous; strong words of proclamation that point to a wonder and mystery. Through what the Angel proclaims and makes known we see the unity of the whole of creation with its Creator. The Angels, too, are part of that order. They do simply what belongs to their office and being, to their ministry. They are the messengers, the audible and visible thoughts of God made known to us.

(more…)

Print this entry

The Nativity of Our Lord

The collect for today, the Nativity of our Lord, or the Birth-day of Christ, commonly called Christmas Day, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY God, who hast given us thy only begotten Son to take our nature upon him, and as at this time to be born of a pure Virgin: Grant that we being regenerate, and made thy children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by thy Holy Spirit; through the same our Lord Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the same Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

The Epistle: Hebrews 1:1-12
The Gospel: St. John 1:1-14

Ludwik Konarzewski, Christmas DayArtwork: Ludwik Konarzewski, Christmas Day (middle panel of triptych), first half of 20th century. Oil on canvas, Private collection.

Print this entry

Sermon for Christmas Eve

“And we beheld his glory”

We beheld. Yet we can only behold what we are given to see. What we are given to see is something made. It is not the Word but “the Word made flesh”. The shepherds say “Let us now go even unto Bethlehem and see this thing which is come to pass,” literally, this saying that has happened, this Word that is made flesh. For God is the poet of Christmas night. In Greek, the poet is maker.

The poet makes and makes known. We can only see “this thing which is come to pass,” because “the Lord hath [it] made known unto us.” We can only see in the light of God himself. Where God is, there will his light be also. By the light of God we are caught up into a greater understanding. We are born anew “not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God;” born from above into the company of the one whom we behold now with us. His light perfects our light.

For by our own lights, we see but do not see. Our light is darkness. “He came unto his own and his own received him not.” Our seeing is often without a beholding, without an embracing in faith and understanding what we are given to see; it is without a receiving. But by this greater light – the light of God’s Word – our light is taken up into something more. We are received into what we receive. “We beheld his glory”. The greater light is the light of grace, the grace to behold “the Word made flesh.”

What do we behold? It is almost as an after-thought that we are told in parenthesis that “we beheld the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.” We behold the glory of the Word and Son of the Father who is Light and Life. As the 2nd century theologian Irenaeus says, “the glory of God is man alive,” but only because “the life of our humanity is the vision of God.”

Word, Light and Son. These are the three great images which belong personally and essentially to Jesus Christ. They are the trinity of his essential divinity, as it were, without which all our celebrations are really nothing but our vain pretensions and protestations against the dying of the light – our light, our dying.

Yet, here is something more without which we are ever less than ourselves, less than what we ourselves would be, less than who we are in God’s sight. Here is God’s Word now with us. Here is God’s Light now illuminating our understanding. Here is God’s Son now become God’s Son for us and with us. For “unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given.” Not that we may possess him and keep him for ourselves, salvation cannot be so selfish, but rather that he might possess us and keep us with himself. He gives himself to all that all might receive him. Such is the divine mystery of love that Christmas makes known to us. Word, Light and Son are the essentials of love.

(more…)

Print this entry