Nancy Ferree-Clark - "The Best and the Brightest" (January 6, 1985)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| - | An extraordinary multi-national dialogue | 0:08 |
| was held this past Thanksgiving between scientists | 0:11 | |
| and theologians, | 0:17 | |
| convened by the International Council of Scientific Unions | 0:19 | |
| this prestigious circle formulated a common agenda | 0:22 | |
| for making our entire planet a nuclear free zone. | 0:26 | |
| There has been a rather remarkable convergence of studies | 0:31 | |
| over the past two years of the nuclear winter hypothesis | 0:34 | |
| by U.S. and Soviet scientists alike. | 0:39 | |
| Indeed there appears to be a robust solidarity | 0:43 | |
| developing among many enemies in this field. | 0:47 | |
| They are convinced that war with multiple nuclear explosions | 0:51 | |
| would set of devastating environmental disasters, | 0:56 | |
| as if radioactive debris, | 1:00 | |
| and the prospect of ozone depletion were not enough | 1:02 | |
| cold, and darkness caused by the intercontinental spread | 1:06 | |
| of smoke and dust in such a scenario | 1:11 | |
| is projected to destroy or impair life | 1:14 | |
| throughout the entire planet. | 1:17 | |
| What to make of this, on this day of epiphany? | 1:21 | |
| A chance within our own lifetime for encountering | 1:26 | |
| the ultimate darkness? | 1:29 | |
| An opportunity to pierce straight down | 1:31 | |
| the misfit's gun barrel, make that missile silo. | 1:34 | |
| Our own or anyone else's. | 1:39 | |
| It's certainly not a situation we'd like to think about | 1:42 | |
| for very long, it's too much like taking an endless journey | 1:45 | |
| into the darkness, | 1:49 | |
| yet as arms talks resume this week | 1:52 | |
| in Geneva, it seems that some brave soul | 1:55 | |
| has to think about it, or better yet, pray about it. | 1:58 | |
| For thus far very few seem able to even envision | 2:03 | |
| a way out of this mad race towards extinction. | 2:07 | |
| Meanwhile, we all go on living our lives almost naively | 2:12 | |
| under the shadow of the prospects of a darkness | 2:18 | |
| which shall cover the earth. | 2:21 | |
| One which surpasses even | 2:24 | |
| the prophet Isaiah's wildest imagination. | 2:25 | |
| Revelations don't often come easy, | 2:31 | |
| especially for those of us who don't venture very readily | 2:35 | |
| into strange places, | 2:38 | |
| yet as Christ himself has shown us, | 2:41 | |
| there is no epiphany | 2:45 | |
| without encountering the darkness head on. | 2:47 | |
| There is no starlight without the blackness | 2:51 | |
| of the sky which surrounds it. | 2:54 | |
| There is no prince of peace in a manger | 2:57 | |
| without a savior of the world on the cross, | 3:01 | |
| and that's the good news, | 3:06 | |
| that even death wasn't enough to overcome | 3:09 | |
| the light of the world, the best and the brightest of all. | 3:12 | |
| Let us then on this epiphany lay aside | 3:18 | |
| our fear of the darkness | 3:23 | |
| and venture forth with Christ | 3:26 | |
| into the dimly lit places in our lives, | 3:28 | |
| that there, we may truly receive the light, | 3:33 | |
| amen. | 3:39 | |
| (somber organ music) | 3:49 | |
| (chorus harmonizes with the music) | 4:24 | |
| - | Let us unite in this historic confession | 7:39 |
| of the Christian faith. | 7:42 | |
| I believe in God the Father almighty, | 7:45 | |
| maker of Heaven and Earth and in Jesus Christ | 7:49 | |
| his only son, our Lord who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, | 7:52 | |
| born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, | 7:58 | |
| was crucified dead and buried. | 8:03 | |
| The third day he rose from the dead, | 8:06 | |
| he ascended in to heaven, and siteth at the right hand | 8:09 | |
| of God the Father almighty, from thence he shall come | 8:13 | |
| to judge the quick and the dead. | 8:17 | |
| I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Holy Catholic Church, | 8:20 | |
| the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, | 8:24 | |
| the resurrection of the body, | 8:29 | |
| and the life everlasting, amen. | 8:31 | |
| The Lord by with you. | 8:35 | |
| - | [Audience In Unison] And with you. | 8:38 |
| - | Let us pray. | 8:39 |
| Let us pray for the church and for the world. | 8:51 | |
| Grant almighty God that all who confess your name | 8:56 | |
| may be united in your truth live together in your love, | 9:00 | |
| and reveal your glory in all the world. | 9:06 | |
| Lord, in your mercy hear our prayer. | 9:18 | |
| Guide the people of this land, | 9:23 | |
| and of all the nations in the ways of justice | 9:25 | |
| and peace that we may honor one another | 9:29 | |
| and serve the common good. | 9:32 | |
| Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 9:46 | |
| Give us all a reverence for the earth, | 9:52 | |
| as your own creation that we may use its resources rightly | 9:54 | |
| in the service of others and to your honor and glory. | 9:59 | |
| Lord in your mercy, hear our prayer. | 10:13 | |
| Bless all those whose lives are closely linked with ours, | 10:18 | |
| grant that we may serve Christ in them | 10:23 | |
| and love one another as he loves us. | 10:26 | |
| Lord in your mercy hear our prayer. | 10:43 | |
| Comfort and heal all those who suffer in body, | 10:48 | |
| mind or spirit, give them courage, | 10:52 | |
| and hope in all their troubles, | 10:55 | |
| and bring them the joy of your salvation. | 10:57 | |
| Lord in your mercy hear our prayer, | 11:13 | |
| through Jesus Christ our Lord, amen, | 11:17 | |
| and now as an enlightened, as a forgiven | 11:22 | |
| and reconciled people let us offer ourselves | 11:26 | |
| and our gifts to God. | 11:30 | |
| (audience rustling quietly) | 11:33 | |
| (bright music) | 12:10 | |
| (inspiring organ music) | 16:58 | |
| - | Oh God because your light has (electronic screeching) | 19:05 |
| into our darkness, we give you thanks. | 19:08 | |
| For the gifts which are ours in Jesus Christ | 19:11 | |
| we praise your name and your glory. | 19:14 | |
| Praying as we have been taught, | 19:18 | |
| our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, | 19:21 | |
| thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth | 19:26 | |
| as it is in Heaven, give us this day our daily bread | 19:29 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those | 19:34 | |
| who trespassed against us, | 19:37 | |
| and lead us not into temptation but deliver us | 19:40 | |
| from evil, thine is the kingdom and the power | 19:44 | |
| and the glory forever, amen. | 19:48 | |
| (bright organ music) | 19:53 | |
| (chorus harmonizes) | 20:19 | |
| - | And now may the grace of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, | 22:08 |
| the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit | 22:12 | |
| be with you now and always, amen. | 22:15 | |
| (bright music) | 22:25 | |
| (music fades) | 24:45 | |
| (upbeat music) | 24:57 | |
| (audience applauds) | 31:09 | |
| (audience murmuring) | 31:14 |
| (harpsichord music) | 0:03 | |
| (harpsichord music) | 3:59 | |
| We welcome you to Duke Chapel | 13:26 | |
| this morning, this Epiphany Sunday. | 13:27 | |
| We're glad to have you, particularly our visitors. | 13:31 | |
| We always appreciate our visitors on Recess Sundays, | 13:35 | |
| and we're glad you're here with us. | 13:39 | |
| We also welcome those who worship with us | 13:41 | |
| on the radio, on WDNC. | 13:44 | |
| We have, as our guest musicians this morning, | 13:48 | |
| the Tintinnabulators. | 13:52 | |
| I practiced that, trying to say that. | 13:55 | |
| The hand bell choir, made up of college students | 13:59 | |
| from around North Carolina, and their director Mrs. Corbin. | 14:02 | |
| And we welcome them, and we have been enjoying their music | 14:07 | |
| during the first part of the service. | 14:11 | |
| Would you stand for the greeting? | 14:15 | |
| The grace of the lord Jesus Christ be with you. | 14:22 | |
| And also with you. | 14:27 | |
| The risen Christ is with us. | 14:28 | |
| Praise the Lord. | 14:31 | |
| (organ music) | 14:34 | |
| (hymnal singing) | 15:03 | |
| Join me in prayer. | 17:14 | |
| The lord be with you. | 17:17 | |
| And also with you. | 17:20 | |
| Let us pray. | 17:22 | |
| God of all glory, | 17:31 | |
| by the guidance of a star you led the wise men | 17:33 | |
| to worship the Christ child. | 17:36 | |
| By the light of faith lead us to your glory in heaven. | 17:39 | |
| We ask this through Jesus Christ our lord. | 17:44 | |
| Amen. | 17:49 | |
| (organ music) | 17:51 | |
| (hymnal singing) | 18:00 | |
| Let us pray. | 19:09 | |
| Open our hearts and minds oh God | 19:12 | |
| by the power of your holy spirit | 19:15 | |
| so that as the word is read and proclaimed, | 19:18 | |
| we might hear with joy | 19:21 | |
| what you said to us this day, amen. | 19:23 | |
| The first lesson is taken from Isaiah, | 19:28 | |
| chapter 60, verses one through six. | 19:31 | |
| Arise, shine, | 19:35 | |
| for your light has come, | 19:38 | |
| and the glory of the lord has risen upon you. | 19:40 | |
| For behold, darkness shall cover the earth | 19:44 | |
| and thick darkness the peoples, | 19:48 | |
| but the lord will arise upon you | 19:51 | |
| and the glory of God will be seen upon you. | 19:53 | |
| And nations shall come to your light, | 19:57 | |
| and rulers to the brightness of your rising. | 20:00 | |
| Lift up your eyes roundabout and see. | 20:04 | |
| They all gather together, | 20:08 | |
| they come to you. | 20:10 | |
| Your sons shall come from far, | 20:11 | |
| and your daughters shall be carried in the arms. | 20:14 | |
| Then you shall see and be radiant, | 20:17 | |
| your heart shall thrill and rejoice | 20:20 | |
| because the abundance of the sea shall be turned to you. | 20:23 | |
| The wealth of the nations shall come to you. | 20:27 | |
| A multitude of camels shall cover you, | 20:30 | |
| and the young camels of Midian and Ephah, | 20:33 | |
| all those from Sheba shall come. | 20:36 | |
| They shall bring gold and frankincense | 20:39 | |
| and shall proclaim the praise of the lord. | 20:41 | |
| This ends the first lesson. | 20:45 | |
| Psalm. | 20:54 | |
| Oh God let the king be righteous, | 21:00 | |
| let the heir to the throne be just, | 21:03 | |
| let him plead the cause of your people, | 21:06 | |
| the poor | 21:08 | |
| by the letter and spirit of your own law. | 21:10 | |
| Let the mountains declare | 21:14 | |
| God's people are innocent | 21:16 | |
| and the hills announce, | 21:18 | |
| we are setting them free. | 21:20 | |
| May you help the oppressed find justice, | 21:23 | |
| deliver the poor and crush the exploiter. | 21:26 | |
| Let him live as long as the sun and the moon | 21:30 | |
| through all generations to come | 21:34 | |
| and let him come down like rain on the grass, | 21:38 | |
| like gentle showers sprinkling the earth. | 21:41 | |
| Throughout his reign let justice bloom | 21:45 | |
| in peace and plenty as long as the moon shall last. | 21:49 | |
| Let him be king from sea to sea, | 21:54 | |
| from the river Euphrates to the earth's farthest end. | 21:57 | |
| Let his enemies kneel before him. | 22:02 | |
| Let his foes all lick the dust. | 22:05 | |
| Let kings to the north and east bring tribute. | 22:09 | |
| Let kings to the south and west bring gifts. | 22:12 | |
| Let all the kings bow before him. | 22:16 | |
| Let all the nations serve him | 22:19 | |
| for he saves the poor when they cry for help | 22:23 | |
| and saves the oppressed who no one believed them. | 22:26 | |
| He cares for the poor and the oppressed | 22:30 | |
| and saves the lives of the poor. | 22:34 | |
| Redeeming them from oppression and violence | 22:38 | |
| because he values their lives. | 22:41 | |
| The second lesson is taken from Ephesians, | 22:58 | |
| chapter three, verses one through 12. | 23:01 | |
| For this reason, | 23:06 | |
| I, Paul, a prisoner for Christ Jesus, | 23:07 | |
| on behalf of you gentiles, | 23:11 | |
| assuming that you have heard of the stewardship | 23:14 | |
| of God's grace that was given to me for you, | 23:16 | |
| how the mystery was made known to me by revelation, | 23:20 | |
| as I have written briefly. | 23:24 | |
| When you read this, | 23:26 | |
| you can perceive my insight into the mystery of Christ, | 23:28 | |
| which was not made known to the human race | 23:31 | |
| in other generations as it has now been revealed | 23:34 | |
| to Christ's holy apostles and prophets by the spirit. | 23:37 | |
| That is, how the gentiles are joined heirs, | 23:41 | |
| members of the same body, | 23:45 | |
| and partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus | 23:47 | |
| through the gospel. | 23:51 | |
| Of this gospel I was made a minister | 23:53 | |
| according to the gift of God's grace | 23:57 | |
| which was given me by the working of God's power. | 24:00 | |
| To me, though I am the very least of all saints, | 24:03 | |
| this grace was given. | 24:07 | |
| To preach to the gentiles | 24:10 | |
| the unsearchable riches of Christ | 24:12 | |
| and to make everyone see what is the plan of the mystery, | 24:15 | |
| hidden for ages in God, who created all things, | 24:19 | |
| that through the church, the manifold wisdom of God | 24:23 | |
| might now be made known to the principalities | 24:26 | |
| and powers in the heavenly places. | 24:29 | |
| This was according to the eternal purpose | 24:33 | |
| which God has realized in Christ Jesus our lord, | 24:35 | |
| in whom we have boldness and confidence of access | 24:39 | |
| through our faith in Christ. | 24:42 | |
| This ends the reading of the second lesson. | 24:46 | |
| (harpsichord music) | 25:19 | |
| The gospel lesson is taken from Matthew, | 28:49 | |
| chapter two, verses one through twelve. | 28:52 | |
| Now when Jesus was born | 28:57 | |
| in Bethlehem of Judea, | 29:00 | |
| in the days of Herod the king, | 29:02 | |
| behold, wise men from the east came to Jerusalem saying, | 29:04 | |
| where is he who has been born king of the Jews? | 29:10 | |
| For we have seen his star in the east | 29:13 | |
| and have come to worship him. | 29:16 | |
| When Herod the king | 29:18 | |
| heard this he was troubled | 29:20 | |
| and all Jerusalem with him. | 29:24 | |
| And assembling all the chief priests | 29:26 | |
| and all the scribes of the people, | 29:28 | |
| he inquired of them where the Christ was to be born. | 29:30 | |
| They told him, in Bethlehem of Judea, | 29:34 | |
| for so it is written by the prophet, | 29:38 | |
| And you, oh Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, | 29:40 | |
| are by no means least among the rulers of Judah. | 29:43 | |
| For from you shall come a ruler | 29:47 | |
| who will govern my people Israel. | 29:48 | |
| Then Herod summoned the magi secretly | 29:52 | |
| and ascertained from them what time the star had appeared | 29:55 | |
| and he sent them to Bethlehem saying, | 29:59 | |
| go and search diligently for the child | 30:02 | |
| and when you have found him, | 30:06 | |
| bring me word that I too may come and worship him. | 30:08 | |
| When they heard the king, they went their way, | 30:13 | |
| and lo, the star which they had seen in the east, | 30:16 | |
| went before them | 30:20 | |
| 'till it came to rest over the place where the child was. | 30:23 | |
| When they saw the star, | 30:28 | |
| they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy | 30:29 | |
| and going into the house, | 30:32 | |
| they saw the child with Mary, his mother | 30:34 | |
| and they fell down and worshiped him. | 30:37 | |
| Then opening their treasures, | 30:42 | |
| they offered him gifts, | 30:44 | |
| gold and frankincense and myrrh | 30:47 | |
| and being warned in a dream not to return to Herod, | 30:50 | |
| they departed to their own country by another way. | 30:54 | |
| This ends the reading of the gospel. | 30:58 | |
| Let's stand for the singing of the hymn. | 31:01 | |
| (organ music) | 31:06 | |
| (hymnal singing) | 31:37 | |
| Today, the church celebrates epiphany. | 33:31 | |
| The manifestation of God's word made flesh. | 33:36 | |
| The revelation of the light of the world | 33:41 | |
| as our altar so beautifully reminds us. | 33:45 | |
| Our prayers, our hymns, | 33:49 | |
| our lessons all point us toward the wise men | 33:52 | |
| as instrumental in that revelation. | 33:56 | |
| As gentiles from the east, | 33:59 | |
| they perhaps never would have heard of the birth of Christ | 34:01 | |
| had it not been for the star which rose above them | 34:05 | |
| and which they chose to follow. | 34:09 | |
| In the words of Simeon, | 34:13 | |
| which we heard in last Sunday's gospel lesson, | 34:14 | |
| Jesus was to be a light for revelation to the gentiles. | 34:18 | |
| Thus in the journey of the magi to the manger, | 34:24 | |
| this prophecy was fulfilled. | 34:27 | |
| Now the wise men have always been among my very favorite | 34:30 | |
| biblical characters. | 34:34 | |
| Ever since I saw my first Christmas pageant | 34:36 | |
| in the little church where I grew up as a small child, | 34:40 | |
| I've been fascinated by these exotic figures | 34:43 | |
| that appear so mysteriously | 34:47 | |
| from the darkest corners of the church. | 34:49 | |
| I always wanted to be one too. | 34:52 | |
| So that I could present one of those ornate boxes | 34:55 | |
| to the baby Jesus. | 34:58 | |
| Somehow I never seemed to fit the part. | 35:00 | |
| But I did get to make a pilgrimage one epiphany | 35:03 | |
| to the great Gothic Cathedral in Cologne | 35:07 | |
| where the relics of the wise men have been kept | 35:10 | |
| since the year 1162. | 35:13 | |
| In case you were wondering where they were before 1162, | 35:17 | |
| they were in Milan and before that, Constantinople | 35:20 | |
| and before that, Persia, I believe. | 35:23 | |
| If I didn't know it already, | 35:27 | |
| those enormous jewels which adorned that magnificent shrine | 35:29 | |
| said to me, these men are very special | 35:32 | |
| in the eyes of the church. | 35:36 | |
| Exactly what was their journey to Bethlehem all about, | 35:40 | |
| I wondered. | 35:43 | |
| T.S. Eliot spurs our imagination | 35:47 | |
| to picture their experiences in his poem, | 35:49 | |
| Journey of the Magi, where he writes, | 35:53 | |
| a cold coming we had of it, | 35:58 | |
| just the worst time of the year for a journey, | 36:01 | |
| and such a long journey. | 36:04 | |
| The ways deep and the weather sharp, | 36:07 | |
| the very dead of winter. | 36:10 | |
| And the camels galled, sore-footed, | 36:13 | |
| refractory, lying down in the melting snow. | 36:16 | |
| Then the camel man, cursing and grumbling and running away | 36:21 | |
| and wanting their liquor and women. | 36:25 | |
| And the night fires going out, | 36:28 | |
| and the towns, unfriendly and the villages dirty | 36:31 | |
| and charging high prices. | 36:34 | |
| A hard time we had of it. | 36:36 | |
| At the end we preferred to travel all night. | 36:40 | |
| Sleeping in snatches | 36:43 | |
| with the voices singing in our ears saying, | 36:45 | |
| that this was all folly. | 36:48 | |
| One can't help being impressed by the fortitude | 36:54 | |
| of these night travelers | 36:57 | |
| as they ventured into foreign territory | 36:58 | |
| trusting only in a star unafraid to encounter the darkness. | 37:01 | |
| And that in itself | 37:07 | |
| was enough to demonstrate the extraordinary character | 37:09 | |
| of these men in the opinion of many. | 37:12 | |
| Can you remember the last time you decided to venture | 37:16 | |
| into strange territory in the dark, | 37:19 | |
| unsure of what to expect? | 37:22 | |
| Patrick McManus writes in a humorous fashion, | 37:25 | |
| though an accurate one I think, | 37:28 | |
| about his first such experience | 37:30 | |
| and that was while he was camping in the backyard alone. | 37:33 | |
| Though camping in the backyard | 37:39 | |
| is usually an experience reserved for children, | 37:40 | |
| we adults, nevertheless harbor our own anxieties | 37:44 | |
| about darkness and things that represent the unknown. | 37:47 | |
| See if you can't relate to this story. | 37:52 | |
| As Patrick McManus explains it, | 37:55 | |
| the first step in camping in the backyard | 37:57 | |
| is selecting the right spot | 38:00 | |
| far enough away from the house to be respectable | 38:02 | |
| but not so far away from the house | 38:06 | |
| that the distance cannot be covered in less than two seconds | 38:08 | |
| starting from a prone position | 38:12 | |
| just in case there should be reason | 38:15 | |
| to make a quick dash for safety, | 38:17 | |
| a wise youngster | 38:20 | |
| will have ready a few plausible explanations such as, | 38:21 | |
| I thought I smelled smoke and rushed in to wake the family. | 38:26 | |
| Or I nearly forgot | 38:31 | |
| that I'm expecting an important phone call this evening. | 38:34 | |
| McManus says the night he first slept out alone | 38:38 | |
| was probably typical for such undertakings | 38:41 | |
| except it was a little long. | 38:45 | |
| Roughly equal in length to the time required | 38:47 | |
| for the rise and fall of the Roman Empire. | 38:50 | |
| The only part of him that slept that night | 38:54 | |
| was his right hand and that was because it was | 38:57 | |
| wrapped so tightly around a baseball bat. | 39:00 | |
| Several times, | 39:04 | |
| off in the distance he thought he heard an ant cough. | 39:05 | |
| A pack of wolves had circled his camp, | 39:10 | |
| an ax murderer passed through the yard on his way to work. | 39:12 | |
| I sniffed the air for smoke, says McManus, | 39:16 | |
| hoping that the house would be burning down | 39:18 | |
| and I could rush in and save the family | 39:21 | |
| but my sister, I knew, the troll, | 39:24 | |
| lay awake listening for the thunder of my footsteps | 39:27 | |
| on the porch, sorting and polishing her horde | 39:30 | |
| of scaredy cat phrases. | 39:33 | |
| I slouched back down into the saddle of myself | 39:36 | |
| and grimly rode against the night. | 39:40 | |
| Perhaps none of us could be quite so descriptive | 39:45 | |
| in describing our own experience of the unknown | 39:47 | |
| but surely we've each been terrified by it | 39:52 | |
| at some point in our lives. | 39:55 | |
| And so, the wise men, | 39:59 | |
| brave souls that they were | 40:01 | |
| fearlessly journeyed onward into the darkness | 40:03 | |
| not only literally but figuratively as well. | 40:06 | |
| For you see, | 40:10 | |
| before they could kneel before the Christ child, | 40:11 | |
| they knelt before Herod. | 40:15 | |
| Having seen a star in the east that simply rose above them | 40:18 | |
| but that did not tell them where to go, | 40:22 | |
| the magi had to use their gifts of discernment | 40:25 | |
| to inquire in Jerusalem, as to exactly | 40:28 | |
| where is the king of the Jews. | 40:32 | |
| Seems logical enough that someone in Jerusalem | 40:36 | |
| would've known about | 40:38 | |
| the king of the Jews. | 40:40 | |
| But herein lies the shadow of this story. | 40:43 | |
| Herod was troubled by their query | 40:47 | |
| and all of Jerusalem with him, the gospel account tells us. | 40:49 | |
| Assembling all the chief priests and scribes of the people, | 40:55 | |
| Herod asked them where the Christ was to be born. | 40:58 | |
| Turning to the prophet Micah, | 41:02 | |
| they quoted scripture which foretold the precise location | 41:05 | |
| of his birth. | 41:09 | |
| Herod then summoned the wise men, in secret no less | 41:11 | |
| and ascertained from them what time the star had appeared. | 41:15 | |
| Useful information for calculating the age of this child. | 41:21 | |
| Sending them on their way to Bethlehem, | 41:26 | |
| he instructed them to bring back word of the child. | 41:28 | |
| That he too might worship him. | 41:32 | |
| Already the forces of darkness were gathering themselves | 41:38 | |
| to ensure the rejection of Christ | 41:41 | |
| by authorities in Jerusalem. | 41:43 | |
| Matthew brings this theme of rejection | 41:46 | |
| to the forefront of his account of the nativity | 41:50 | |
| where it serves as a distant forerunner | 41:53 | |
| of the passion narrative itself. | 41:56 | |
| Placed in bold relief alongside the acceptance of Christ | 41:59 | |
| by the magi, | 42:03 | |
| it becomes apparent that the holy scriptures | 42:05 | |
| which provided the key for the gentiles | 42:08 | |
| to locate the messiah | 42:11 | |
| were not even accepted | 42:12 | |
| by the Jewish authorities themselves. | 42:15 | |
| While the magi sought to pay homage | 42:18 | |
| to the infant king, | 42:21 | |
| Herod and his coterie of advisers conspired | 42:23 | |
| to kill him. | 42:27 | |
| While the wise men must have been feeling | 42:30 | |
| more than a little vulnerable by this point, | 42:31 | |
| an expectation had been placed upon them | 42:35 | |
| by Herod himself to bring news of this child. | 42:38 | |
| Though no promises were made, | 42:42 | |
| surely the magi would've been rewarded generously | 42:44 | |
| for their efforts had they granted Herod his wish. | 42:47 | |
| Precious gifts, | 42:51 | |
| eloquent speeches, | 42:52 | |
| at least an elegant meal | 42:54 | |
| would've been offered on their behalf. | 42:56 | |
| Likewise, to fail to grant his wish, | 43:00 | |
| meant to incur his wrath | 43:04 | |
| and to trigger unspeakable tragedy. | 43:07 | |
| Surely they must have suspected the evil that | 43:11 | |
| Herod was possessed by | 43:13 | |
| as they faced him eyeball to eyeball | 43:16 | |
| but could they ever imagined, | 43:20 | |
| could they have ever imagined, | 43:23 | |
| that he was capable of the cold blooded murder | 43:25 | |
| of all the male children in Bethlehem | 43:28 | |
| in the surrounding area | 43:30 | |
| two years old and under. | 43:32 | |
| What terrible burdens, | 43:35 | |
| this knowledge of good and evil | 43:37 | |
| which was theirs to bear in the drama of the nativity | 43:39 | |
| and their choice for one side or the other, | 43:43 | |
| which was theirs to live. | 43:47 | |
| Eliot enlightens us to their imagined plight | 43:51 | |
| with these concluding words in Journey of the Magi. | 43:54 | |
| Were we led all that way for birth | 43:59 | |
| or death? | 44:03 | |
| There was a birth, certainly, we had evidence and no doubt. | 44:05 | |
| I had seen birth and death, | 44:09 | |
| but had thought they were different. | 44:12 | |
| This birth was hard and bitter agony for us, | 44:15 | |
| like death, our death. | 44:19 | |
| We returned to our places, these kingdoms, but | 44:23 | |
| no longer at ease here | 44:26 | |
| in the old dispensation | 44:29 | |
| with an alien people clutching their gods. | 44:31 | |
| I should be glad of another death. | 44:36 | |
| To be no longer at ease with the old dispensation. | 44:41 | |
| A high price to pay for revelation | 44:46 | |
| but apparently not an uncommon one. | 44:49 | |
| For the wise men it meant going home another way | 44:53 | |
| but once they arrived, no longer feeling at home, | 44:57 | |
| they had encountered both a darkness and the light. | 45:01 | |
| Their eyes having been opened to all of reality, | 45:06 | |
| they would never be the same again. | 45:10 | |
| And when did you last experience a significant revelation | 45:14 | |
| that didn't bring about some disease with the old way. | 45:17 | |
| Often at a dear price. | 45:21 | |
| Like the terminally ill patient | 45:25 | |
| who when confronting his or her own death | 45:26 | |
| glimpses a whole new perspective on living | 45:29 | |
| that they had somehow missed before. | 45:32 | |
| Like the broken family, | 45:36 | |
| who in an outpouring of confrontation | 45:38 | |
| and then forgiveness to one another | 45:41 | |
| finally realized the sacred trust which was theirs | 45:43 | |
| to share all along. | 45:47 | |
| Flannery O'Connor writes that reality is something | 45:51 | |
| to which we must be returned at considerable cost. | 45:54 | |
| I like to put that in my own words by saying, | 46:00 | |
| revelations don't often come easy. | 46:03 | |
| She likes to drive this point home constantly in her stories | 46:08 | |
| and she considers it to be implicit to the Christian view | 46:12 | |
| of the world. | 46:15 | |
| In one of her most riveting short stories called, | 46:17 | |
| A Good Man is Hard to Find, | 46:20 | |
| the heroine experiences this sort of revelation | 46:23 | |
| under unlikely, | 46:26 | |
| not to mention extremely trying circumstances. | 46:28 | |
| This heroine known as the grandmother | 46:32 | |
| is in a very significant position for she is facing death | 46:35 | |
| and to all appearances, she like the rest of us, | 46:40 | |
| is not too well prepared for it. | 46:43 | |
| Having complained, connived and cajoled her way | 46:46 | |
| through most of life, | 46:50 | |
| she would like to see death postponed indefinitely. | 46:52 | |
| Through a series of mishaps, | 46:57 | |
| the grandmother and her family | 46:59 | |
| encounter face to face, the misfit. | 47:01 | |
| An escaped convict whom she was just reading about | 47:04 | |
| with horror in the newspaper that morning. | 47:07 | |
| He promptly disposes of the grandmother's son, | 47:11 | |
| her daughter in law and her two grandchildren | 47:14 | |
| until she was finally facing him alone. | 47:17 | |
| Understandably afraid for her life, | 47:20 | |
| she pleads with the misfit, | 47:23 | |
| pray, pray to Jesus, | 47:25 | |
| while she echoes the refrain, | 47:27 | |
| I know you're a good man. | 47:30 | |
| Just then as she looks into his face | 47:33 | |
| and notices he is about to cry, | 47:35 | |
| her head clears for an instant. | 47:39 | |
| She realizes even in her limited way, | 47:42 | |
| that she is responsible for the man before her. | 47:45 | |
| That she is somehow joined to him | 47:49 | |
| by deep ties of kinship rooted in the mysteries of a faith | 47:52 | |
| which she had been merely | 47:57 | |
| prattling about for her entire life. | 47:58 | |
| The grandmother reaches out | 48:01 | |
| to touch the misfit on the shoulder, | 48:03 | |
| calling him one of her own. | 48:05 | |
| But shocked by such a gesture, | 48:09 | |
| the misfit springs back like a snake and shoots her. | 48:11 | |
| The misfit takes off his glasses and begins to clean them. | 48:17 | |
| As he comments to his buddy, | 48:20 | |
| she'd a been a good-- | 48:23 |
Item Info
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