The season of Advent is almost over,
and the anticipated arrival of Christ, which we celebrate at Christmas, is
coming. For centuries, Christians have celebrated this blessed event as the
time in which God chose to be with humanity; “Emmanuel, God with us.” Yet, for
centuries Christians have continually reflected on this event, returning to
that story to rediscover what it means to say that God took on human existence.
It is certainly without debate that
the writers of the New Testament saw Jesus as human. And yet, despite all of
the evidence of his being flesh and blood, we struggle to see Jesus as a human.
Perhaps it is not that we struggle to accept that Jesus existed in a human
body. The problem is whether we accept his humanity.
In other words, while we embrace the
fact that Jesus did all the activities that humans do, we may find it very hard
to accept Jesus in his humanity, as someone who, at some level, was exactly
like us.
There are obstacles to our accepting
Jesus in his humanity, and I think two are significant. One obstacle is that we
somehow think we must see Jesus first as God and second as a human. When we
think of Jesus, we automatically think first of his divinity. We may more
readily gravitate toward the divine side of Jesus because not to do so may make
us seem irreverent and unbelieving.
The second obstacle to our accepting
Jesus in his humanity is because we cannot see humanity as good, but only as
sinful, weak, and evil. After all, the evidence we see around us proves to us
that humanity can be weak, sinful, and dreadfully evil. This view clouds our
understanding of Jesus as a human and can prevent us from accepting Jesus’
humanity.
The key to solving this, I think, is
not to look at humanity and then say that Jesus could not have been human like
us. The solution is to look at Jesus in his humanity and allow his humanity to
show us what it really means to be human. If Jesus was truly human, then we
ought to try and understand what it means to be human as he was human.
If Jesus was human, then he had a
body. This is an obvious point to make, but making it demonstrates an important
truth for us. If Jesus took on human flesh in the incarnation, then we must
affirm that human flesh, our bodies are good. This was the problem with many
Christians in the early church beginning in the second and third centuries.
They could not accept that Jesus was both divine and human, for perfect
transcendent divinity cannot take on imperfect and defiled flesh. Yet, this
seems to be exactly what the New Testament teaches us about the incarnation.
The human body became the home of God.
This has major consequences for how
we see ourselves. First, rather than seeing ourselves as souls trapped in
worthless bodies waiting to escape, we must affirm that our bodies are good. We
have somehow been convinced that our bodies are not good, that they are
defiled, and that our goodness as humans is only found in our souls that will
eventually escape our evil bodies. But the incarnation of God in Jesus loudly
proclaims that human bodily existence is good; we are still made in the image
of God. This has many implications for how we treat our bodies and how we see
life.
But to affirm the humanity of Jesus is also to affirm that Jesus faced the reality of being human. At every twist and turn in his earthly life, Jesus faced the temptation for power, security, and giving up on God’s will for him. And in each temptation there was always the possibility of his failure, and thus the failure of God’s plan for humanity.
But in loving us, God chose to face
life as we face life. In the incarnation, God became not only human flesh; God
also chose to face human vulnerability. While the mighty acts of God show us a
God who is powerful, the greatest power of God is seen in God’s vulnerability,
in God’s weakness, in God facing our human struggle.
Indeed, without this vulnerability,
God cannot truly love us, for to love another is always to become vulnerable.
If God has truly loved the world,
then God has become vulnerable to the struggles of this world. God, in the
incarnation of Jesus, has become vulnerable to the pain, suffering, weakness,
and rejection that humanity faces. And in doing so, God has redefined what it
means to be human.
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