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Shrouded in expensive cellophane, turkey dinners, knee-deep in presents,
absorbed by family and blinded by tinsel, most people can comfortably
celebrate the Christmas Season, as inebriated atheists; shrugging off
the Virgin Birth, by singing inane songs about a jolly obese man in a
red suit. Yet Easter is far more problematic.
For many in our materialistic society the inherent difficulty with Easter
is that despite the ever-increasing number of chocolate rabbits, Easter
is still too religious, its message too disturbing for many to even consider.
Easter has the unfortunate habit of raising difficult questions about
life, about living and dying. At Christmas the atheist, if they so wish,
can celebrate the birth of a famous person, at Easter, either this famous
person rose from the dead or not, and if He did, one can no longer be
an atheist.
So what is the meaning of Easter? Christians are called to be an Easter
people, that is to celebrate that "this
is how God loved the world: he gave his only Son, so that everyone who
believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life".
[John 3: 16, The New Jerusalem
Bible] The well-known passage from St. John's Gospel
holds within it, the keys to much of the Christian Faith: that there is
a God, that He loves us, that He loved us to the point of sharing our
physical conditon with all our sufferings, and that by His Resurrection
He wished to see us rescued from the finality of death. Easter demands
faith, for to fully celebrate the Easter message as handed down to us
by the Apostles, one must affirm that the man known even to the atheist
as Jesus of Nazareth, a Carpenter's son, was indeed fully man, but at
the same time, the anointed one, Jesus the Christ: "God
from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made,
one in Being with the Father. Through him all things were made".
[The Nicene Creed]
As adversity reveals character, so Easter defines the Christian.
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Rudolf
Bultmann (1885-1976)
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Yet we should also consider theologians such as Rudolf
Bultmann (1884-1976), a man who
fired an enormous broadside at Easter when he wrote and promulgated: "An
historical fact which involves a resurrection from the dead is utterly
inconceivable".
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St.
Gregory of Nazianzus (325-389)
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One of the most brilliant minds of the early Church, St.
Gregory of Nazianzus (325-389) in
Oration 28
came to the conclusion that: "Faith rather
than reason shall leads us, if that is, you have learned the feebleness
of reason to deal with matters quite close at hand and have acquired enough
knowledge of reason to recognize things which surpass reason".
For this Eastern Father, there are so many things in this life which we
do not know the cause, but still believe in, so why should we set ourselves
the task of giving to God only those attributes which are limited by our
own ability to comprehend. Any God that can be fully comprehended by an
individual, is in fact, a being less than human. In an earlier tract,
Oration 27, St.
Gregory even informs his audience that as too much rain can
drown the soil, and too much light blind the eye, so there are so many
things about God which we cannot fathom, which would overpower us, even
if we tried to grasp them. Perhaps that is why humanity needed the Incarnation,
God coming as one like us, so that we could in fact see the face of God
and live [cf: Exodus 33: 18 - 23].
Christ, God incarnate, was 'theophany'
or Divine Revelation in its purest sense, and the miracles which took
place, were in essence the steady revealing of the power and presence
of God in the world. The miracles, it would seem, were specifically graded
in order for those who witnessed them to understand, yet even so, the
Evangelists quote Christ saying with near exasperation: "Do
you still not understand? Do you not remember the five loaves for the
five thousand and the number of baskets you collected? Or the seven loaves
for the four thousand and the number of baskets you collected? 'How could
you fail to understand that I was not talking about bread?'"
[Matthew 16: 9-11, The New
Jerusalem Bible]. Eventually St. Peter understood that
Jesus' miraculous actions went far beyond those of mere mortals and that
in front of him now, stood now something greater than death, 'the living
God' [cf. Matthew 16: 13 - 17, The
New Jerusalem Bible].
Theologians such as Bultmann may
in turn deny: water changing into wine, or a man walking on water, or
the curing of the lame, or the feeding of the five thousand, excusing
each as an allegorical device; but in so doing the point is missed behind
each of these supernatural events. God is in, and beyond nature, and these
miracles which Christ performed led eventually to the greatest of them
all a resurrection from the dead, the conquering of decay and senescence,
and the destruction of Time. Theologians who limit themselves to the material
and the rationale, carve images of God according to the arbitrary confines
of their own intellect. Too often they seek conspiracy theories in empty
tombs, rather than echo the hope that the greatest fear humanity has,
that of death, has in fact been conquered. For as Christ informs us: "for
God everything is possible". [Matthew
19: 26, The New Jerusalem Bible]
Further, my body and soul cry out to be saved, not allegorically, but
fully and in reality.
Belief in the bodily resurrection of Christ may be a matter of faith,
but as the Oxford scholar Ian Wilson
(1996) in Jesus
the Evidence writes, it is also a matter of common sense,
for there are more sources testifying to the Resurrection of Christ, than
as to sources attesting to the life of Julius Caesar. Wilson
(p. 152) concludes: "Overall
then, while there is undeniable reporting flaws regarding Jesus' claimed
resurrection, and at a time distance of nearly two thousand years knowledge
of exactly what happened is beyond us, the evidence that something like
it actually happened is rather better than sceptics care to admit. And
quite incontrovertibly, belief in it spread like wildfire very soon after
the crucifixion".
To deny the bodily resurrection of Christ, is in fact to reject the single
hope for humanity, that God is merciful, merciful to the point of partaking
in our suffering and rescuing us from despair. The best that those who
deny the Resurrection can offer in its place is a God disinterested in
the fears and sufferings of humanity; a God who began the world, but who
now sits idle.To deny the resurrection is also to say, that all that is
good, honest and beautiful in this world, comes eventually to nought and
is essentially futile. To accept that Christ resurrected is to join in
the chorus with those who witnessed first-hand his Resurrection and sing:
"Death, where is your victory? Death, where
is your sting". The sting of death is sin, and the power
of sin comes from the Law. Thank God, then, for giving us the victory
through Jesus Christ our Lord [1 Corinthians 55 -
57, The New Jerusalem Bible].
To accept the Ressurection of Christ is to live as an Easter people, a
people who live with trial and with tribulation, but who live in faith
and in hope.
As such, being an Easter people, Christmas is far more than the birth
of a famous teacher and preacher; Christmas is the commemoration of that
day in history when a child came into this world who was: "light
from light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being with
the Father; through him all things were made. For us men and for our salvation
he came down from heaven, was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin
Mary and became man. For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered death and was buried. On the third day he rose again in accordance
with the Scriptures; he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right
hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and
the dead, and his kingdom will have no end." It is because
of these tenets of Faith that Christmas is a celebration.
To celebrate Christmas without a firm belief in the Purpose of the Incarnation
is comparable to that individual who goes to a wedding merely in order
to eat the food, or attends a wake, motivated by free alcohol. Without
doubt these individuals are fulfilling some need, but that need is short-term
and not one that embraces the totality of a Mystery that goes beyond the
now, beyond the day, beyond themselves, beyond their family and friends.
To celebrate Christmas without a total acceptance of the purpose behind
the life of Jesus of Nazareth is like the man who on seeing a speck of
gold on the surface, rushes off with this pittance, forgetting to stake
a claim for the neverending stream of nuggets that lie just within his
reach - just below the surface.
Photo Credits:
Clicking on the images will take you to the original source and or further
information.
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Andrew
Thomas Kania is a visiting scholar at Blackfriars Hall at the
University of Oxford, where he is completing a book on Dag Hammrskjöld.
He has taken 12 months leave of absence from his position as Director
of Spirituality at Aquinas College, Manning in Western Australia
to complete this task. Prior to this appointment at Aquinas Dr.
Kania was a lecturer for the School of Religious Education at the
University of Notre Dame Australia as well as for the Catholic Institute
of Western Australia at Edith Cowan and Curtin Universities. Dr.
Kania belongs to the Ukrainian Church and is interested in ecumenical
issues as well as contemporary problems facing religious educators.
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©2007
Dr Andrew Thomas Kania
[Andrew Kania's Archive]
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