God's coming as a baby highlights what he's like and what he prioritizes. The following are random thoughts about what this means; you will have other insights to add:
Dependent on flawed creatures: a baby doesn't chafe about
needing others nor about their imperfections. God genuinely wants to
partner with flawed humans; he shows this by his lowly birth in which he
emptied himself completely and relied on the protection and upbringing
of a poor Jewish family and community of the first century. He never
quit relying on others as an adult.
Unself-conscious: a baby is delightfully unself-conscious.
God is not so caught up with himself that he has to have praise from
his creation to bolster his sense of importance; he is secure in
himself, not obsessed with his own glory but seeks to put others in the
spotlight. This attitude carried on into his adult life where, rather
than seeking to elicit praise from others or one-upping others we see
him downplaying his own acts and uplifting others.
Not in charge: a baby doesn't even think in terms of who's
in charge but simply is who she is, and as Jesus matured into manhood,
He maintained this childlike posture; he lived and taught that in his
kingdom there is no hierarchy where humans "lord it over" other humans.
Indiscriminate: a baby doesn't categorize people nor see
some as superior to others; Jesus demonstrated by action and word that
he saw all people as equal in God's kingdom. After Jesus' death, one of
his followers (Paul) wrote eloquently that in Jesus there is no Jew or
Greek, slave or free, male or female.
No agenda: goals and productivity are not what concern a
baby but rather relationship. God cares more about relationship than
about mission statements and strategic goals. Jesus did not establish an
institution or corporation or religion but lived his life in simple and
profound relationship with God and with people.
Non argumentative: a baby doesn't engage in the
energy-draining exercise of attempting to prove himself "right" and the
other person "wrong". God cares more about life (tree of life) than
about who's right and who's wrong (tree of knowledge). As an adult human
God didn't engage other humans at the level of knowledge but of wisdom.
Approachable, winsome, delightful: a baby is the safest
and most approachable creature there is; in fact, she is approachable to
the point of being delightful and magnetic, drawing people to her. God
is delightful and winsome - easy and safe to approach for all humans; if
we really knew this, we would desire him and be drawn to him.
God is like the childlike Jesus. He operates in an
entirely different realm and prioritizes partnering with imperfect
humans over acting independently, other-consciousness over self
aggrandizement,
organic over organization, inclusion over exclusion, relationship over
agenda, giving life over winning debates, and approachability over
rules.
Because the kingdoms of this world require independence,
self-aggrandizement, hierarchy, tribalism, personal agendas, winning,
rules and regulations in order to survive, Jesus' life and teachings and
actions were a threat to their existence, and so they murdered him. We
who follow him are called to deny the false 'adult' self that is easily
seduced by earthly kingdom values and take up the cross of childlikeness
as Jesus did. This is how we incarnate God in the eyes of others.
No comments:
Post a Comment