“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.” John 1:14.
The Word came and this is Christmas. This is noel.
The One Word we needed came.
A world torn by words, full of hearts stabbed through with words and a world of souls who can feel desperate to offer words that will fix it.
Sometimes it can feel that when you have nothing else to give, at least you have words.
And it can feel that surely, though the broken words keep coming, surely the words we need are somewhere.
And the healing Word came.
The Word Himself entered the broke world, yet when the long-awaited Word came… He came as wordless as any newborn baby we’ve ever witnessed.
The long wait for the words that would heal and this… this is the gift. The Word to heal us.
This is the Word we have been starved for.
Adam McHugh offers this insight. “John’s famous picture of Jesus as the Word of God means that Jesus’ entire incarnated life, not only his parables and sermons, is the expression of God’s mind. His life is God’s speech to us.” **
Thinking this over at Christmastime breeds to wonder...
If Jesus is the Word, if His life is God’s great speech to us… it began as a wordless child who would yet learn to utter words the way that each of us once did.
The Word came as a wordless being. It’s how the speech began.
Where are we in the arrival of a Word like this? How does it feel in light of our own ideas of what kind of word this world needs?
What did we feel at the sound of a Christmas that came like this? A baby's breath as he sleeps. His cry. His feeding, and the sound of his sleeping breath again. Where a mother treasures it all in her heart as the little lambs bleat and the oxen feed and the noises of a full city surround in the world around while the child sleeps on.
How unsuspecting a miracle is it that the world wrecked with words gets to receive the wordless, needy presence of the healing Word Himself?
How much more does it say than anything we could have expected or braced ourselves for?
The Word Himself does not utter a word Himself, until He fully feels where we have come from, where we are, and learns how to utter words the same way we have learned ourselves.
And this: the Word that gave us life. If anyone had the words we needed, He did.
Yet, the first thirty years of God’s speech to us, is full of listening and learning (Lk 2:46), feeling our own weakness with us (Heb. 4:15), any spoken words hardly noted. *
How much does a speech like this say?
Eventually, the Word gave us words to hear and hold, but only after He spoke to us with thirty years of quiet living that words could never say.
Full of grace and truth. This is how He came. How would any of us in this stubborn old world, ever have had a chance of being open to truth in the slightest, if we didn’t get the grace of a speech that came to us as gentle as this?
Give us grace to hear the Word, not only in the words, but in the stillness of wordless with-ness.
Give us grace to know the Word, to know we are Loved by a God who lovingly comes to listen long, to learn long and to fully feel our weakness with us so He can come to us with truth, not as someone who stays up above us... but as someone who comes to be with us to feel the hardest places of it too.
Give us grace to bear the Word as people who keep finding the undeserved mercy of what we’ve been given. Build us together, those who’ve been broken apart by our own broken words. Join us and grow us up as Your people… “those who are gathered and formed by [Your] voice and held together by [Your] word.” **
~~~
Notes:
*All the words of Jesus noted during his first thirty years: two questions to his mother in Luke 2:49.
**The two quotes are from The Listening Life by Adam S McHugh, page 10 and page 18.
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