On Rachel's Lament and Not Looking Away
Friday, December 28, 2012
http://intotheexpectation.blogspot.com/2012/12/on-rachels-lament-and-not-looking-away.html
The fourth day of Christmas is
the Feast of Holy
Innocents rooted in the story of Herod’s slaughter of baby boys of
Bethlehem in an attempt to annihilate the infant Jesus as recounted in the second chapter of the Gospel of
Matthew. It is also a reminder that many little ones continue to
suffer and die due to hunger, disease, neglect, abuse, and violence.
Fleming
Rutledge is an Episcopalian priest and renowned preacher and author. Her blog, GenerousOrthodoxy, is a
fine resource. The following is taken from one of her sermons, Monsters at the Manger. In the sermon
she refers to a sermon preached by a Roman Catholic priest, Father Lucic, at a
church in Sarajevo during the siege and bombardment there in the 1990’s:
The
priest’s final words were, “Jesus teaches us that human judgments are not the
last judgments, that human justice is not the last justice, and that power that
humans exercise over one another is not the final power”
How can
we believe this? How can we go on singing “Joy to the world, the Savior
reigns,” in view of the fact that the monsters continue to devour our children
with undiminished ferocity?
The
Christmas story is anchored to our lives and to the wickedness of this world by
the grief of Rachel, “weeping for her children, refusing to be comforted,
because they are no more.” The authors of Scripture did not turn away from the
unimaginable suffering of children. God the Father did not turn away. Jesus did
not turn away. We see in his death on the Cross and Resurrection from the dead
the source of our conviction that “human judgments are not the final judgments,
that human justice is not the final justice, and the power that humans exercise
over one another is not the final power.” But we must keep Ivan Karamazov’s protest
in our minds every day. The nativity story might as well be about reindeer and
snowmen for sure, if it has nothing to say about the small victims. I believe
that by putting Rachel’s lament at the heart of the Christmas story, Matthew
has shown us how to hold onto faith and hope until the Second Coming. Only as
we share in the prayers and the laments of bereaved families, not looking away,
can we continue to believe that the savior reigns even now in the faith and
tenacity of Father Lucic and all those who continue to stand for humanity in
the face of barbarity. Only by attending to the horrors of this world can we
continue tossing the words of that great eighteenth-century hymn-writer Isaac
Watts;
He comes
to make his blessings known
Far as
the curse is found
(Hymn, “Joy to theWorld”)
For only
a faith forged out of suffering can say with conviction that the angels and
monsters will not coexist forever, that Muslims and agnostics and Christians
and Jews will be drawn together in ways we cannot yet imagine, that the agonies
of victims will some day be rectified, and that the unconditional love of God
in Jesus Christ will be the Last Word.
(The Bible and
the New York Times, p. 59-60)
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