Epiphany #10 of 14: Reflection
God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law.
(Galatians 4:4)
The purpose of my reflections on the Christian Calendar
is to hand on to my children and my children’s children the content of my
faith—that Christmas and Easter are really true and that changes everything. I
wouldn’t want them, or anyone, to live without Christmas and Easter. To live,
as Lewis puts it, as if it were “always winter but never Christmas” (LWW).
So we have moved from Advent through Christmastide and
now well into Epiphany. Tradition has it that during Epiphany we should at
least tell again the stories of the Magi and the flight into Egypt, and of
Christ’s baptism, and of Christ’s first miracle. So far, we’ve told two, with
one to go. There’s always more to be told about how “Jesus went about doing
good and healing the oppressed” (Ac 10:38).
I’ve been struck by
the humanity of these stories. It brings me back to the Apostle reminding us
that Jesus, though “God sent”, was “born of a woman, born under the law, to
redeem.” We tend to think of the virgin birth as signifying Christ’s divinity:
“conceived of the Holy Spirit.” But the Apostle speaks of the humanness of
Christ’s birth: “born of a woman, born under the law.” He does not just drop
from the sky. He enters fully into human life.
The Jesus of
Epiphany is always and already both the Son of God and the Son of Man. Unlike the
Jesus of the gnostic gospels, like the Gospel of Thomas, who never quite
touches the ground. For the gnostic gospels, Jesus is far above us with no need
to heed the Law. Isn’t it interesting that Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John tell
us of the humanity of the Son of God beginning with baby Jesus taken to the
temple to participate in all the rituals “required by the Law” (Lk 2:39), to that scary escape into Egypt, to his
insistence for John to perform the ritual of baptism. He has human feelings of
hunger and thirst, of indecisiveness, even ignorance (“Not even the Son knows” Mt
2:36). He really did enter into
our world. That’s why today “Christ is able to empathize with our weaknesses” (Hb 4:15).
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