Micah 5:2-5a (NRSV)
But you, O Bethlehem of Ephrathah,
who are one of the little clans of Judah,
from you shall come forth for me
one who is to rule in Israel,
whose origin is from of old,
from ancient days.
Therefore he shall give them up until the time
when she who is in labor has brought forth;
then the rest of his kindred shall return
to the people of Israel.
And he shall stand and feed his flock in the strength of the Lord,
in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God.
And they shall live secure, for now he shall be great
to the ends of the earth;
and he shall be the one of peace.
who are one of the little clans of Judah,
from you shall come forth for me
one who is to rule in Israel,
whose origin is from of old,
from ancient days.
Therefore he shall give them up until the time
when she who is in labor has brought forth;
then the rest of his kindred shall return
to the people of Israel.
And he shall stand and feed his flock in the strength of the Lord,
in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God.
And they shall live secure, for now he shall be great
to the ends of the earth;
and he shall be the one of peace.
The early Celtic people believed that there were certain
places where you could go to be closer to God.
These places
have long been called "thin places."
Thin places are geographical locations where a person
experiences only a very thin divide between the past, present, and future.
Celtic Christians sought after what they called “thin
places,” spots where the “membrane between mere physical reality and the
reality of God’s presence thins out to where it can seen, touched, tasted, or
sensed in some unmistakable way.”
The Celts often found these “thin places” at shorelines,
fjords, rivers, and wells.
Later, (after their conversion to Christianity by St
Patrick) they experienced them in cathedrals, prayer gardens, sacred groves and
plots of ground –
places where “the veil was so
sheer, one could almost step through it” into the presence of God.
Someone once said:
“There is a Celtic saying that
heaven and earth are only three feet apart, but in the thin places that
distance is even smaller. A thin place is where the veil that separates heaven
and earth is lifted and one is able to receive a glimpse of the glory of God.”
When Christianity spread into the British Isles, the Celtic
Christians preserved aspects of this ancient folklore for revering thin places.
They broadened the understanding to encompass not only
geographical places, but also moments when the holy became visible to the eyes
of the human spirit.
Thin places, then, took on Christian meaning, where a person
is somehow able to encounter a more ancient and eternal reality within the
present time.
Thomas Merton once wrote that thin places are even more
prevalent than the ancient Celts believed, but we just don't see them.
"Life is simple," he
wrote. "We are living in a world that is absolutely transparent, and God
is shining through it all the time ... if we abandon ourselves to God and
forget ourselves, we see it sometimes ... the only thing is that we don't (let
ourselves) see it."
It is unfortunate that we often miss those glimpses of the
kingdom of God, breaking in on the earth.
But, perhaps you have a particular place that is holy to
you:
·
the beach you've walked countless times where
water rolls onto the sand in a familiar way,
·
a place of reunion where God seems always close
by and all's right with the world,
·
a mountain vista that has taken you close to the
stars and seemingly closer to God,
·
a church
·
or family cemetery,
·
or even your own yard and garden.
Do you have a place where you can go and feel especially
close to God?
"What is significant about sacred places turns out not
to be the places themselves," someone has written.
"Their power lies within their
role in marshaling our inner resources and binding us to our beliefs."
While places can bind us to our beliefs,
so can memory,
a piece of
music,
a special
story,
a word spoken
at just the right time -
my guess is, if we think about it, most of us have
experienced a "thin place" in which we can remember God seeming very
close and very real.
Perhaps one of the most significant thin places and thin
spaces we miss on a regular basis is the celebration of Christmas.
In the midst of all the last-minute preparations for
Christmas, we can be caught up in thinking that this is just another Christmas
season with the same traditions and myriad obligations (most of them
self-imposed) that require all of our attention.
We can miss the fact that Christmas really calls us to
consider the thinnest place the world has ever seen
·
not an island, but a manger
·
and not a feeling, but a person in whom heaven and Earth both fully
dwell.
In our scripture this morning, the Prophet Micah is calling out to the people of Judah to focus on finding a thin place.
To understand the context of Micah's comments you must
understand that the Assyrian army was closing in on Judah.
They would avoid destruction at the hands of the Assyrians
---- but they would not escape the Babylonians.
Yet, even in the midst of all this impending doom, God
offers a word of hope through the prophet with a promise to create a new thin
place for his people -- a remote, out of the way place.
In Bethlehem, in a place few expected, God was going to
bring the life of heaven to Earth in a very personal way.
Bethlehem was, of course, King David's hometown
Bethlehem was, of course, King David's hometown
Despite all that was about to happen to the remnants of
David's kingdom in Micah's day, the prophet assures the people that God was not
going to abandon the promise that a king was coming from David's hometown to
rule Israel, one
"whose
origin is from of old, from ancient days" (Micah 5:2).
This king, in other words, would represent God himself.
Interestingly, most people in Micah's day thought that the ultimate thin place in the world was the temple in Jerusalem, which was the place where it was thought that God dwelled with his people.
Interestingly, most people in Micah's day thought that the ultimate thin place in the world was the temple in Jerusalem, which was the place where it was thought that God dwelled with his people.
They believed that Jerusalem ---
and maybe the Temple specifically --- was God's belly button
But the Temple was not to be Israel's salvation
Just 40 years after Jesus --- the Temple was utterly destroyed.
Micah was telling us that security isn't found in the Temple
--- It is found in this future king.
God's true
King
Listen how Micah puts it (The Message)
He will stand tall in his
shepherd-rule by God’s strength,
centered in the majesty of God-Revealed.
And the people will have a good and safe home,
for the whole world will hold him in respect—
Peacemaker of the world!
centered in the majesty of God-Revealed.
And the people will have a good and safe home,
for the whole world will hold him in respect—
Peacemaker of the world!
Think about this for a moment:
Instead of a temple, the place
where heaven and earth came together --- the place where God would dwell with
his people, was going to be the feeding trough in a back alley of the tiniest
and most insignificant of places.
But, I will be honest with you: If you visit Bethlehem
today, you'll find that it doesn't have the same kind of pastoral, quiet and
mystical aura of a thin place.
Today getting into this little town is difficult because of
the security wall that surrounds it.
And once you succeed in getting to the Church of the
Nativity it is often anything but pastoral.
·
There are monks calling out for people to be
quiet
·
Security officers with large weapons across
their backs
·
People like me --- looking for the perfect
picture
·
There's jostling with a long line of pilgrims
waiting to touch the star in the cave below that church that marks the
traditional site of Jesus' birth.
Quite simply it's more hectic than holy in there on any
given day, which makes it hard to fathom that whole idea of a "Silent
Night."
Yet at the same time --- if one allows God to speak --- it
can become a very thin spot even to this day
But that is the key --- we have to learn to listen with
expectant hearts and ears.
One of my most profound experiences
of God was in the cave of the nativity --- as we sang Silent Night and another
group sang it in Portuguese
Dorothy Bass is a historian of American religion who tries
to bring the life of faith close to home in practical ways.
She notes how often we ask one another "How was your
day?"
I imagine all parents of school-aged children have greeted
their child with that question - "How was your day?" or one very much
like it.
It is a kind of question that usually comes from someone who
really cares, but is often met with a vague response like, "Not bad."
"Most days," Dorothy Bass remarks, "we probably forget to notice."
"Most days," Dorothy Bass remarks, "we probably forget to notice."
Then, she tells the story of a mother she knows who has
quite a different way of asking that question.
As she tucks her children into bed each night, their teeth
brushed and their hair still damp from the bathtub, she asks them this question:
"Where did you meet God
today?"
And they tell her, one by one:
·
a teacher helped me,
·
there was a homeless person in the park,
·
I saw a tree with lots of flowers in it.
Then
she tells them where she met God, too.
Before
the children drop off to sleep, the stuff of their day has become the substance
of prayer.
They enter a thin place and they
realize the presence of God is very near.
What this story reminds us, is that to seek and find thin
places --- places where we feel close to God --- requires practice.
It requires a disciplined rhythm to discover that places to
encounter the very presence of God are all around us.
They wait to be discovered.
You will find them down the corridors of schools and
hospitals, in places at work and the familiarity of home, places where it
becomes clear that God is very near.
In these last few weeks before Christmas, it's not the Bethlehem of modern-day Israel that we need to pilgrimage to in order to experience the thin place of Jesus' birth.
In these last few weeks before Christmas, it's not the Bethlehem of modern-day Israel that we need to pilgrimage to in order to experience the thin place of Jesus' birth.
We can do that right where we are by simply focusing
ourselves on the humble, obscure and yet powerful way in which God chooses to
bridge the gap between heaven and Earth.
He doesn't come with chariots rolling or guns blazing, but
in the soft skin and helpless posture of a baby, born to a family who number
themselves among the poorest of the poor.
Life was thin for Mary and Joseph, but the life Mary brought
forth in the manger was full of more than God's people and, indeed, the whole
world could have ever imagined.
In Jesus, God broke through the barriers between himself and humanity by becoming one of us.
In Jesus, God broke through the barriers between himself and humanity by becoming one of us.
We don't worship a God who is distant, cloaked in clouds,
and oblivious to our world.
Instead, we worship a God who has humble himself
Remember what Paul wrote in Philippians 2, (The Message)
Think of
yourselves the way Christ Jesus thought of himself. He had equal status with
God but didn’t think so much of himself that he had to cling to the advantages
of that status no matter what. Not at all. When the time came, he set aside the
privileges of deity and took on the status of a slave, became human! Having
become human, he stayed human. It was an incredibly humbling process. He didn’t
claim special privileges. Instead, he lived a selfless, obedient life and then
died a selfless, obedient death—and the worst kind of death at that—a
crucifixion.
So, as you prepare for Christmas, perhaps the best preparation is to take some time to go to a quiet place and consider that God is not far away, that the king is quite near and his kingdom is at hand.
Allow yourself to live in the reality of who God is and what
God has done in Jesus.
Take a pilgrimage into the heart of the biblical story of
Christmas and read it as if you're seeing it for the first time.
Serve someone who needs to experience the reality that God
has come to give them real hope.
May your Christmas be thin!
May your Christmas be thin!
2 comments:
I agree, wherever we go God is already there. as Jacob said,"Surely God was in this place and I knew it not. The whole world is the temple of God.
Beautiful: "Where did you meet God today?"
Thanks for reminding us to find God on a daily basis. The wonderful thing here is that there is no set prescription. Everybody can "find God" and discover their own "thin places" in their own way based on their own idea of what that means.
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