"Christ is born, glorify Him!
Christ from
heaven, go out to meet Him.
Christ on earth; be exalted.
Sing unto the Lord all the whole earth; and that I may
join both in one word,
Let the heavens rejoice, and let
the earth be glad, for Him Who is of heaven and then of
earth.
Christ in the flesh, rejoice with trembling and
with joy;
with trembling because of your sins, with joy
because of your hope.
Christ of a Virgin; O you Matrons
live as Virgins,
that you may be Mothers of Christ.
Who
does not worship Him That is from the beginning?
Who
does, not glorify Him That is the Last?"
Again the darkness is past; again Light is made; again
Egypt is punished with darkness; again Israel is enlightened
by a pillar.
The people that sat in the darkness of
ignorance, let it see the Great Light of full knowledge. Old
things are passed away, behold all things are become new.
The letter gives way, the Spirit comes to the front.
The
shadows flee away, the Truth comes in upon them.
The laws of
nature are upset; the world above must be filled.
Christ
commands it, let us not set ourselves against Him.
O clap
your hands together all you people, because unto us a Child
is born, and a Son given unto us, Whose government is upon
His shoulder (for with the Cross it is raised up), and His
name is called The Angel of the Great Counsel of the Father.
Prepare the way of the Lord: I too will cry the power of
this day. He Who is not carnal is Incarnate; the Son of God
becomes the Son of Man, Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and
today, and for ever.
Let the Jews be offended, let the
Greeks deride; let heretics talk till their tongues ache.
Then shall they believe, when they see Him ascending up into
heaven; and if not then, yet when they see Him coming out of
heaven and sitting as Judge.
Of these on a future occasion; for the present the
Festival is the Theophany or Birthday, for it is called
both, two titles being given to the one thing. For God was
manifested to man by birth. On the one hand Being, and
eternally Being, of the Eternal Being, above cause and word,
for there was not word before The Word; and on the other
hand for our sakes also Becoming, that He Who gives us our
being might also give us our Well-being, or rather might
restore us by His Incarnation, when we had by wickedness
fallen from well-being. The name Theophany is given to it in
reference to the Manifestation, and that of Birthday in
respect of His Birth.
Celebrating the birthday of
Christ
This is our present Festival; it is this which we are
celebrating, the Coming of God to Man, that we might go
forth, or rather (for this is the more proper expression)
that we might go back to God -that putting off the old man,
we might put on the New; and that as we died in Adam, so we
might live in Christ, being born with Christ and crucified
with Him and buried with Him and rising with Him.
For where
sin abounded grace did much more abound; and if a taste
condemned us, how much more does the Passion of Christ
justify us? Therefore let us keep the Feast, not after the
manner of a heathen festival, but after a godly sort; not
after the way of the world, but in a fashion above the
world; not as our own, but as belonging to Him Who is ours,
or rather as our Master's; not as of weakness, but as of
healing; not as of creation, but of re-creation.
And how shall this be? Let us not adorn our porches; nor
arrange dances, nor decorate the streets; let us not feast
the eye, not enchant the ear with music, nor enervate the
nostrils with perfume, not prostitute the taste, nor indulge
the touch, those roads that are so prone to evil and
entrances for sin; let us not be effeminate in clothing soft
and flowing, whose beauty consists in its uselessness, nor
with the glittering of gems or the sheen of gold or the
tricks of color, belying the beauty of nature, and invented
to do despite unto the image of God. Not in rioting and
drunkenness, with which are mingled, I know well, chambering
and wantonness, since the lessons which evil teachers give
are evil. Let us not appraise the bouquet of wines, the
kickshaws of cooks, the great expense of unguents; and let
us not strive to outdo each other in temperance, and this
while others are hungry and in want, who are made of the
same clay and in the same manner.
Let us leave all these to the Greeks and to the pomp and
festivals of the Greeks. But we, the object of whose
adoration is the Word, if we must in some way have luxury,
let us seek it in word, and in the Divine Law, and in
histories; especially such as are the origin of this Feast;
that our luxury may be akin to and not far remove from Him
Who has called us together.
Or do you desire (for today I am
your entertainer) that I should set before you, my good
guests, the story of these things as abundantly and as nobly
as I can, that you may know how a foreigner can feed the
natives of the land, and a rustic the people of the town,
and one who cares not for luxury those who delight in it,
and one who is poor and homeless those who are eminent for
wealth?
We will begin from this point; and let me ask of you who
delight in such matters to cleanse your mind and your ears
and your thoughts, since our discourse is to be of God and
Divine; that when you depart, you may fade not away. And
this same discourse shall be at once both very full and very
concise, that you may neither be displeased at its
deficiencies, nor find it unpleasant through wearisomeness.
The Divine nature of
God
God always was, and always is, and always will be. Or
rather, God always is. For was and will be are fragments of
our time, and of changeable nature, but He is Eternal
Being.
And this is the Name that He gives to Himself when giving
the Oracle to Moses in the Mount. For in Himself He sums up
and contains all Being, having neither beginning in the past
nor end in the future; like some great Sea of Being,
limitless and unbounded, transcending all conception of time
and nature', only adumbrated by the mind, and that very
dimly and scantily . . . not by His Essentials, but by His
Environment; one image being gotten from one source and
another from another, and combined into some sort of
presentation of the truth, which escapes us before we have
caught it, and takes to flight before we have conceived it,
blazing forth upon our Master-part, even when that is
cleansed, as the lighting flash which will not stay its
course, does upon our sight . . . in order as I conceive by
that part of it which we can comprehend to draw us to itself
(for that which is altogether incomprehensible is outside
the bounds of hope, an not within the compass of endeavor),
and by that part of it which we cannot comprehend to move
our wonder, to, become more an object of desire, and being
desired to purify, and by purifying to make us like God.
The Divine Nature then is boundless and hard to
understand; and all that we can comprehend of Him is His
boundlessness; even though one may conceive that because He
is of a simple nature He is therefore either wholly
incomprehensible, or perfectly comprehensible. And when
drawing a conclusion from the whole it calls Him Eternal.
For Eternity is neither time nor part of time; for it cannot
be measured.
But what time, measured by the course of the
sun, is to us, that Eternity is to the Everlasting, namely,
a sort of time-like movement and interval co-existence with
their existence. This, however, is all I must not say about
God; as my present subject is of the Incarnation.
But when I
say God, I mean Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This then is
the Holy of Holies, which is hidden even from the Seraphim,
and is glorified with a thrice repeated Holy, meeting in one
ascription of the Title Lord and God.
When His first creation was in good order, He conceives a
second world, material and visible; and this a system and
compound of earth and sky, and all that is in the midst of
them an admirable creation indeed, when we look at the fair
form of every part, but yet more worthy of admiration when
we consider the harmony and the unison of the whole, and how
each part fits in with every other, in fair order, and all
with the whole, tending to the perfect completion of the
world as a Unit. This was to show that He could call into
being, not only a Nature akin to Himself, but also one
altogether alien to Himself.
For akin to Deity are those
natures which are intellectual, and only to be comprehended
by mind. Perhaps some one who is too festive and impetuous
may say, What has all this to do with us? Talk to us about
the Festival [the Birth of Christ], and the reasons
for our being here today. Yes, this is what I am about to
do, although I have begun at a somewhat previous point,
being compelled to do so by love, and by the needs of my
argument.
The fashioning of man
Mind, then, and sense, thus distinguished from each
other, had remained within their own boundaries, and bore in
themselves the magnificence of the Creator-Word, silent
praisers and thrilling heralds of His mighty work. Not yet
were the whole riches of Goodness made known. Now the
Creator-Word, determine to exhibit this, and to produce a
single living being out of both - the visible and the
invisible creations, I mean - fashions Man; and taking a
body from already existing matter, and placing in it a
breath taken from Himself which - the Word knew to be an
intelligent soul and the Image of God, as a sort of second
world.
He placed him, great in littleness on the earth; a
new Angel, mingled worshipper, fully initiated into the
visible creation, but only partially into the intellectual;
king of all upon the earth, but subject to the King above;
earthly and heavenly; temporal and yet immortal; visible and
yet intellectual; half-way between greatness and lowliness;
in one person combining spirit and flesh; spirit, because of
the favor bestowed on him; flesh, because of the height to
which he had been raised; one that he might continue to live
and praise his Benefactor, the other that he might suffer,
and by suffering be put in remembrance, and corrected if he
became proud of his greatness.
For to this, I think, tends
that Light of Truth which we here possess but in measure,
that we should both see and experience the Splendor of God,
which is worthy of Him Who made us. and wilt remake us again
after a loftier fashion.
This being (man) He placed in Paradise, having honored
him with the gift of free will (in order that God might
belong to him as the result of choice); naked in his
simplicity. Also He gave him a law, as a material for his
Free Will to act upon. This Law was a commandment as to what
plants he might partake of, and which one he might not
touch. This latter was the Tree of Knowledge.
But when the
Devil's malice and the woman's caprice, to which she
succumbed as the more tender, brought to bear on the man, he
forgot the commandment which had been given him, he yielded;
and for his sin he was banished, at once from the Tree of
Life, and from Paradise.
Yet here too he makes a gain,
namely death, and the cutting off of sin, in order that evil
may not be immortal. Thus punishment is changed into a
mercy; for it is in mercy, I am persuaded, that God inflicts
punishment.
And having been first chastened by many reasons (because
his sins were many), by word, by law, by prophets, by
benefits, by threats, by plagues, by waters, by fires, by
wars, by victories, by defeats, by signs in heaven and signs
in the air and in the earth and in the sea, by unexpected
changes of men, of cities, of nations, at last he needed a
stronger remedy, for his diseases were growing worse; mutual
slaughters, adulteries, perjuries, unnatural crimes, and
that first and last of all evils, idolatry and the transfer
of Worship from the Creator to the creatures. As these
required a greater aid, also they obtain a greater.
The Word Himself
And that was that the Word of God Himself - Who is before
all worlds, the Invisible, the Beginning, the Light of
Light, the Source of Life and Immortality, the Image of the
Archetypal Beauty, the immoveable Seal, the unchangeable
Image, the Father's Definition and Word, came to His own
Image, and took on Him flesh for the sake of our flesh, and
mingled Himself with an intelligent soul for my soul's sake,
purifying like by like; and in all points except sin was
made man.
Conceived by the Virgin, who first in body and
soul was purified by the Holy Spirit (for it was needful
both that childbearing should be honored, and that
virginity should receive a higher honor, He (Christ) came
forth then as God with that which He had assumed, One Person
in two Natures, Flesh and Spirit, of which the latter defied
the former.
O new commingling; O strange conjunction; the Self
Existent comes into being, the Uncreated is created, that
which cannot be contained is contained, by the intervention
of an intellectual soul, mediating between the Deity and the
corporeity of the flesh. And He Who give riches becomes
poor, for He assumes the poverty of my flesh, that I may
assume the richness of His Godhead.
He that is in full
empties Himself, for He empties Himself of His glory for a
short while, that I may have a share in His fullness. What
is the riches of His Goodness? What is this mystery that is
around me? I had a share in the image; I did not keep it; He
partakes of my flesh that He may both save the image and
make the flesh immortal. This is more godlike than the
former action, this is loftier in the eyes of all men of
understanding.
To this what have those cavillers to say, those bitter
reasoners about the Godhead, those detractors of all that is
praiseworthy, those darkeners of light, uncultured in
respect of wisdom, for whom Christ died in vain, those
unthankful creatures, the work of the Evil One? Do you turn
this benefit into a reproach to God? Will you deem Him
little on this account, that He humbled Himself for you;
because the God Shepherd, He who lays down His life for His
sheep, came to seek for that which had strayed upon the
mountains and the hills, on which you was then sacrificing,
and found the wanderer; and having found it, took it upon
His shoulders on which He also took the Wood of the Cross;
and having taken it, brought it back to the higher life; and
having carried it back, numbered it among those who have
never strayed. Because He lighted a candle - His own Flesh -
and swept the house, cleansing the world from sin. And He
calls together His Angel friends on the findings of the
coin, and makes them sharers in His joy, whom He had made to
share also the secret of the Incarnation?
He (Christ) was sent, but as man, for He was of a twofold
Nature; for He was wearied, and hungered, and was thirsty,
and was in an agony, and shed tears, according to the nature
of a corporeal being. And if the expression be also used of
Him as God, the meaning is that the Father's good pleasure
is to be considered a Mission, for to this He refers all
that concerns Himself; both that He may honor the Eternal
Principle, and because He will not be taken to be an
antagonistic God.
And whereas it is written both that He was
betrayed, and also that He gave Himself up and that He was
raised up by the Father, and taken up into heaven; and on
the other hand, that He raised Himself and went up. Are you
then to be allowed to dwell upon all that humiliates Him,
while passing over all that exalts Him, and to count on your
side the fact that He suffered, but to leave out of the
account the fact that it was of His own will? See what even
now the Word has to suffer.
By one set He is honored as
God, but is confused with the Father, by another He is dishonored as mere flesh and severed from the Godhead. With
which of them will He be most angry, or rather, which shall
He forgive, those who injuriously confound Him or those who
divide Him? For the former ought to have distinguished, and
the latter to have united Him; the one in number, the other
in Godhead. Do you disbelieve in His Godhead? This did not
even the demons, O you who are less believing than demons
and more stupid than Jews.
A little later on you will see Jesus submitting to be
purified in the River Jordan for my Purification, or rather,
sanctifying the waters by His Purification (for indeed His
had no need of purification Who takes away the sin of the
world) and the heavens cleft asunder, and witness borne to
him by the Spirit that is of one nature with Him; you shall
see Him tempted and conquering and served by Angels, and
healing every sickness and every disease, and giving life to
the dead (O that He would give life to you who are dead
because of your heresy), and driving out demons, sometimes
Himself, sometimes by his disciples; and feeding vast
multitudes with a few loaves; and walking dryshod upon seas;
and being betrayed and crucified, and crucifying with
Himself my sin; offered as a Lamb, and offering as a Priest;
as a Man buried in the grave, and as God rising again; and
then ascending, and to come again in His own glory. Why what
a multitude of high festivals there are in each of the
mysteries of the Christ; all of which have one completion,
namely, my perfection and return to the first condition of
Adam.
Christ's Conception
Now then I pray you accept His Conception, and leap
before Him; if not like John from the womb, yet like David,
because of the resting of the Ark. Revere the enrolment of
account of which you were written in heaven, and adore the
Birth by which you were loosed from the chains of your
birth, and honor little Bethlehem, which has led you back
to Paradise; and worship the manger through which you, being
without sense, was fed by the Word . . .
If you are one of
those who are as yet unclean and uneatable and unfit for
sacrifice, and of the gentile portion, run with the Star,
and bear your Gifts with the Magi, gold and frankincense and
myrrh, as to a King, and to God, and to One Who is dead for
you. With Shepherds glorify Him; with Angels join in chorus;
with Archangels sing hymns.
Let this Festival be common to
the powers in heaven and to the powers upon earth. For I am
persuaded that the Heavenly Hosts join in our exultation and
keep high Festival with us today . . . because they love
men, and they love God ... just like those whom David
introduces after the Passion ascending with Christ and
coming to meet Him, and bidding one another to lift up the
gates.
One thing connected with the Birth of Christ I would have
you hate ... the murder of the infants by Herod. Or rather
you must venerate this too, the Sacrifice of the same age as
Christ, slain before the Offering of the New Victim. If He
flees into Egypt, joyfully become a companion of His exile.
It is a grand thing to share the exile of the persecuted
Christ. If He tarry long in Egypt, call Him out of Egypt by
a reverent worship of Him there. Travel without fault
through every stage and faculty of the Life of Christ. Be
purified; be circumcised; strip off the veil which has
covered you from your birth.
After this teach in the Temple, and drive out the
sacrilegious traders. Submit to be stoned if need be, for
well I want you shall be hidden from those who cast the
stones; you shall escape even through the midst of them,
like God. If you be scourged, ask for what they leave out.
Taste gall for the taste's sake; drink vinegar; accept
blows, be crowned with thorns, that is, with the hardness of
the godly life; put on the purple robe, take the reed in
hand, and receive mock worship from those who mock at the
truth; lastly, be crucified with Him, and share His Death
and Burial gladly, that you may rise with Him, and be
glorified with Him and reign with Him.
Look at and be looked
at by the Great God, Who in Trinity is worshipped and
glorified, and Whom we declare to be now set forth as
clearly before you as the chains of our flesh allow, in
Jesus Christ our Lord, to Whom be the glory for ever.
Amen.
edited by Fr George Mastrantonis,
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
See Also:
Christmas
Hymns in the Orthodox Church
Epiphany in Orthodox Tradition
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