This is not a
silent night.
Shells fall in
Aleppo, presidents and politicians raise their clamorous voices, and
corporations preach from every altar where sacrifices are made to the idol of
consumerism. Crowds of self-absorbed Christmas shoppers are out in force on the
high streets, their noisy voices a narcotic to the sobs of pain ringing out
around the world this season.
In the midst of
this cacophony, we strain our ears to hear the voice of God. But he cannot be
heard above the clamour of war and the empty speeches of politicians and the
choirs of unholy angels bringing the season’s greetings of greed.
But this is the
very paradox of the Incarnation, the story of the invisible God making himself
known to humankind by putting on weak human flesh. His mouthpiece among us, his
son Jesus, is so unlike the great-and-mighty of this world in nature,
that if we do not seek him out like the magi of old, we will miss his voice
altogether.
He was born in a
festering cattle shed, in a backwater town of an insignificant region of an
oppressive empire. “There was nothing in his appearance that we should be drawn
to him,” said the prophets.
So it was that
the world continued to swirl in the chaotic tumult of empires bent on war and
the man-on-the-street continued to rush about his daily business, even as
exhausted Mary laid the head of the Messiah on her lap. The revelation of God
to man and the ushering-in of the Kingdom of Heaven went unnoticed, even as it
continues to do so today.
But it is in the
birth of this dependant little boy that the very nature of God was made known
to man. His little murmurs are the whisper of the Father calling out across the
cosmos to his broken world.
But why so discrete, why so unambiguous?
It is because the
power of God is not like the power of man – the abusive, oppressive, selfish
power of man.
The helpless cry
of this new-born child silences the dictator’s militaristic waffling and the
king’s commanding shout. No politician or governor or commander can give an
answer to his whimper. This is the very voice of God in the whisper of a baby.
Not in the wind or the earthquake or the fire, nor in the voice of the
megalomaniac administrator or the pompous statesman, but in the humble cry of a
powerless infant.
His cry of
surrender from a wooden trough is echoed in his cry of dereliction on a wooden
cross, the very power of God made known in the weakness of a dying man.
This Christmas,
you will not hear his voice in kings’ courts or amidst ranks of politicians.
Rather, his whisper will be heard, discretely, gently, amidst the falling
shells and rubble of Syria and Iraq, amongst the families of the poor and
disenfranchised, calling out amongst the weak and powerless and oppressed. He
will be heard gently wooing the broken-hearted to himself. His power is not the
power of Putin or Trump or Assad, abusive, selfish, and turned against the
powerless. His power is always for his people - loving, healing,
selflessly giving.
Amongst those
whose voices will not be heard amongst the clamour of the powerful of this
world on this un-silent night, I hear the soft voice of God, wooing and
restoring men and women to himself. And if you strain your ear, you too can
hear his tender whisper on this darkest of nights, among the hurting and
broken. For it is among them, especially them, that God is calling out
to humanity, with the murmur of a helpless baby and the cry of a suffering man.
Mike Walker
is an aspiring writer, student theologian, and avid coffee-drinker currently at
university in Nottingham, UK. He’s passionate about serving the church, and
enjoys creating graphics and art when he’s got some down-time.