Christmastide Musings, 2018
The
first Noel the angel did say
Was to certain poor shepherds
Was to certain poor shepherds
in
fields as they lay…(The
First Noel, 1833)
At our Christmas Eve service, while singing “The First
Noel”, I noticed that word “certain” that appears in the second line of the
hymn: “Was to certain poor shepherds”. There were all sorts of shepherds
“tending their sheep on that cold winter’s night.” But only “certain poor
shepherds”, heard the fear-not-angel say, “I bring you good tidings of great
joy which will be to all people.”
Why were these “certain poor shepherds” chosen to hear
the angels’ song? What about the other shepherds keeping watch over their
flocks by night? Why where these “certain poor shepherds” chosen to hear such
“good tidings”? It has to do with the doctrine of election. It’s a troublesome
doctrine of itself, but at this Christmas Eve gathering, as we sang the hymn,
this troublesome doctrine turned into something beautiful. I teared up. That’s
what hymns do.
After having its way in my heart, let me move the
doctrine of election back into my head and think it through in light of how the
hymn moved me. It’s the doctrine about God choosing particular shepherds—particular
folks to be saved, while others are passed by. It leads to discussions and arguments
about predestination. Are we simply predestined to salvation? And, if we have
nothing to say about it—if we have no “Yes” to God’s “Yes” to us, then are we
simply automatons fixed by God’s decrees? If we have no say, and all history
has been set in place “before the foundation of the world” (Eph
1);
then how does this differ from the stoic’s notion of fatalism, or current
scientific ideas of determinism?
Back, to those “certain poor shepherds”—those elected
shepherds, chosen shepherds, predestined shepherds. Did they have a say? They
did discuss it all: “When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the
shepherds talked it over.” I suppose they could have questioned, doubted, gone
back to their business and dismissed it all as an illusion. “Let us go now,” the
shepherds decide, “and see this thing the Lord has made known to us.” And, “so
they went with hast and found Mary and Joseph, and the child lying in the
manager.” They journeyed, like all believers, by faith and found “the child
lying in a manager.”
All the while “Mary pondered these things in her
heart”. Maybe it’s best that we, like Mary, humbly ponder such wonders in our
hearts. The story ends with how “the shepherds returned, glorifying and
praising God.” That’s a good place to end up (Lk 2:20).
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