“Who are my mother
and my brothers?” Jesus asked. Then he looked at those seated in a circle
around him and said, “Here are my mother and my brothers! Whoever does God’s
will is my brother and sister and mother.” Mark
3:33-35
... to all who
received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become
children of God... John 1:12
When it comes to Christmas I
am not (please believe me!) the “Bah! Humbug!” type. Not at all. A spot of fun
and laughter, some nice food and drink, a present or two, not to mention some
crackers and silly hats - you can count me in, no problem.
But I must admit that there
are one or two things that I get a bit fed up with.
One of them is an
over-emphasis on family. Anyone would think that the whole point of Christmas
is the big jolly get-together round a table heaving with food, with at least
half-a-dozen generations represented. This image is projected on card after
card, in advert after advert, and on television show after television show.
Fair enough, Christmas does
have a bearing on families. The story in the Bible is precisely the story of
one - the family of Jesus. And, fair enough again, there can be great joy in
families coming together to share a special time.
But if it gets out of hand,
this emphasis is simply wrong. And that’s exactly what often happens. Painful
questions arise...
What about people who have
no family? I know someone, now in old age, who has never had, so far as she is
aware, a single relative. How do people like her feel?
What about families where
there is a painful gap, an emptiness? - someone has gone away, or has to be in
hospital, or simply has to be at work. Or, of course, someone has died...
What about the single, the
divorced, the widowed? - rendered acutely aware of their solitude, their
outsider status, in this merry atmosphere.
And what about families
which are full of tension and even animosity? I knew a family once who had a
door-mat with the message, not “Welcome to our home” or something similar, but
“Oh no, not you again!” Only a joke, of course (they were lovely, welcoming
people). But isn’t that exactly how many people feel as Christmas draws near
and they face the prospect of having to be falsely nice to someone they really
don’t like?
And, of course, reality
never measures up to expectations. You eat and drink too much, so you get
bloated, sluggish and tetchy, someone is felt to have taken the Scrabble game a
touch too seriously, that bracing afternoon walk becomes a duty (insisted on by
an infuriatingly bright uncle) rather than a pleasure - and the weather is cold
and damp anyway. Oh dear...!
In the Bible, families are
certainly important. But they are not all-important. Christianity is often
mindlessly said to “uphold family values” (whatever they are). But is that
really true? Not if we take the words of Jesus seriously - look back at the
verses I have quoted from Mark 3.
And what about the boy Jesus
in the Jerusalem temple? He spoke about “my father’s house” - but it wasn’t
Joseph he was referring to. Worst of all (so to speak) are his words in Luke
14:26 - I’ll leave you to look them up; but be warned, the word “hate” appears
in the context of family. Family values?
Yes, families matter,
marriages matter, parenting matters, the mingling of different generations -
all these things matter. But the family the Bible mainly focuses on is of a
different kind altogether. It is “the family of God”, to which all who love and
trust in Jesus belong. “To all who received him, who believed in his name, he
gave the right to become children of God,” as John 1:12 puts it.
Those two words - received
and believed - are key. Literally, indeed, they are the key which opens the
door into God’s eternal kingdom, God’s family which know no bounds.
So... if you are part of an
ordinary human family, I do of course wish you great joy this Christmas. But if
your family is far from the kind of ideal portrayed on the cards and in the
adverts (and, in fact, even if it is that perfect), I remind you that you have
a loving Father in heaven. He wants you to be part of his great family here on
earth - and he has sent his own Son to make that possible.
May you and all yours
- yes, including the grumpy ones - know God’s love and peace this
Christmastime. Amen!
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