“A DIFFERENT VISION – ROSA PARKS DAY”
The
Christmas season now begins in September, as our consumer culture seeks to
tweak the heartstrings earlier in order to sell more products. Because of this development, it is easy to
become cynical about Christmas and the Christmas story. Many of us are cynical and tend to become
jaded in this season – we long to find some respite from its frantic nature. As we begin another Advent season, leading up
to Christmas, let us take some time to reflect upon this ancient story, because
at its best, and even at its least, the story itself offers us some
opportunities to see a different vision of ourselves, of others, and of life
itself.
I am one of
those who tends to be jaded about this season, but in my early years I was
given a great gift regarding Christmas.
My mother loved all things Christmas, and she passed that affinity on to
me. We were poor, abandoned by husband and father, and living
with my great-great aunt, who refused to celebrate Christmas for religious
reasons. “Gran,” as I called her, was an
Associate Reformed Presbyterian, a very conservative branch of the Presbyterian
family. Coming out of the Puritan
tradition, she felt that the cultural trappings of Christmas were an evil that
needed to be avoided – no tree, no decorations, no mirth, no presents, although
a big Christmas meal was both allowed and celebrated. When
we first moved in with Gran, my mother and I shared a small bedroom with two
twin beds. Gran would not allow Mother
to put up a Christmas tree in the common living area, so for several years, we
had a tree in our already crowded bedroom.
My mother was a Christmas season evangelist, however, so eventually she
won Gran over, and the tree moved in to the common area, along with a growing
number of decorations (and most important from my child’s point of view,
presents under the tree were also allowed).
So, I am
grateful to my mother for her imbibing me with the Christmas spirit. Her enthusiasm pointed me and others to see
the Christmas season as a time to look for another vision, a vision of life
that is deeper and broader and more connected than the current capitalistic,
money-is-god vision. The church uses the
Advent season as a time to prepare us to be able to re-focus our perceptual
apparatus so that this new vision can come into view and take root. Writers like Howard Thurman (“The Mood of
Christmas”) have encouraged us to understand the Christmas story as a powerful
time of re-engaging our imaginations about who we are and what life is. The Christmas stories in Matthew, Luke, and
John urge us to see where God’s preferences are and where God’s energies
are. These Biblical Christmas stories
place God’s emphasis on the margins of life:
a teenage girl pregnant before marriage by someone other than her
fiancé, the fiancé being forced to engage his patriarchal privilege and make a
decision on it, the baby born on the streets, the holy family greeted by
working class people and then exotic foreigners, then forced to flee political
persecution as immigrants who illegally crossed the border with Egypt. These stories are not about God at the center
of celebrity culture – these stories are about God at the margins. That should be the first thing that we
notice, as we begin this Advent and Christmas season. Whoever you think is marginalized – that is
where God is appearing in 2019.
Second, we
should notice that a central characteristic of these Christmas stories is
resistance. God is resisting the Roman
Empire and the powers that be. The
Romans are mentioned in Luke’s version but only as an aside that requires the
holy family to go to Bethlehem. Mary
will resist male patriarchal power, and so will Joseph. It is as if God is saying in these Christmas
stories: “There’s another view of life –
look at it and find your way in to it.”
At best, our culture begrudgingly acknowledges the power of love in
these stories, but it is the sweet, sentimental kind of love, not the
institution-challenging, life-changing love found in these Biblical stories. They emphasize that this event will challenge
us to engage and confront institutions of oppression and injustice.
I don’t
know if Rosa Parks thought about these Christmas stories or not, as she decided
to resist the unjust segregation laws on that bus in Montgomery years ago on
December 1, 1955, but she did have resistance on her mind and heart. She wasn’t the first to do it – Claudette
Colvin and Homer Plessy and Ida Wells and Frederick Douglass and others had
preceded her in challenging the separate accommodation laws. But, her resistance caught fire, mainly
because some other women like Joanne Robinson picked up her witness and
resistance and helped it to spread in Montgomery and around the South. I don’t know if Rosa Parks framed it in just
this way, but it is easy in retrospect to hear the angel of the Lord telling
her: “Keep your seat, Rosa – God is with
you.” “But, I’m just one small black
woman – how can this be?” The reply: “With
God, nothing is impossible.” And, a new
vision was born and seen, out of her resistance. This is the different vision – this is the
meaning of the Christmas stories. Let us
find our voice also in this crazy season – God is inviting us in.
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