In the name of the Father, the Son
and the Holy Ghost.
I wish now to address myself to
those of you who do not speak Russian, and beyond the walls of this
church to all those who can hear our service and pray with us, and
be at one with us.
In a night similar to this one, a
winter night, in a manger was born the Son of God Who has come into
the world to bring us a new dimension of life, to proclaim to us
God's truth about Himself and God's truth about men, and not only
proclaim it, but to make it possible for us to participate in this
mystery of communion between God and man. He has brought us a word
about God which is a word of absolute truth, and has proclaimed the
greatness of man in terms that are greater than all the imagination,
which man had in the course of centuries, all the dreams: man called
to be united to God as God united Himself to men in the Person of
the Lord Jesus Christ. Man, in the words of St Ireneus of Lyon,
called in his perfection and fulfilment, to be the glory, the
shining, the resplendence of God on earth. We are called to proclaim
to the whole earth this good news that God is one of us, and that we
are the sons and daughters of our eternal Father.
But we must proclaim the Gospel in
its integrity, in an unadulterated manner because it is God speaking,
God proclaiming the truth, and there is no adjustment which can be
acceptable to the Gospel.
The wise men who came to the manger,
came with all the wisdom of the earth, all the knowledge that was
then possessed, but they could recognise in the Babe of Bethleem the
incarnated Son of God and worship Him as their King and their God
because they were prepared to allow divine wisdom to supersede all
wisdom of the earth. It is not in vain that saint Paul has said that
compared to wisdom Divine human wisdom is nothing but folly, a poor
thing compared to the greatness of the mind, and heart, and wisdom
of God. And we must have the determination to open ourselves to the
wisdom of God, be prepared to judge all things of the earth from the
point of view of the living God. Our thoughts, our feelings, our
ways fall under the divine judgment . My ways are not your ways, and
My thoughts are not your thoughts; My ways are so much above yours
as My thoughts are greater than yours, — says the Lord.
But it is not only wisdom, it is
also simplicity and singleness of heart that can both see God,
recognise Him and follow Him with infinite daring. The shepherds
came because the ir hearts were open, because they were prepared to
understand that there are things greater than anything they can
imagine, anything they could dream of. And dreams of men came true:
God became man. And He calls us to be a vanguard of His Kingdom. He
sends us into this world to proclaim His truth, pure, unstained, He
sends us into this world to live in such a way that anyone meeting a
Christian, looking into his eyes, into his life or meeting a
Christian community should recognise that these people are men and
women partaking already of the mystery of eternal life. Short of
this we betray our calling. We must each of us and all of us be a
revelation to the world of things eternal. We must learn from St
Paul both the daring and the wholeness, the integrity of our
Christian ways. He says to us: Be follower of me as I am of Christ...
He was a persecutor, an unbeliever, and having met Christ face to
face, the risen Christ, Who he knew had been killed on Calvary,
murdered by his own people, he chose for Him and all his life was
changed. Persecution, danger, beatings, rejection became his lot in
orfer for him to be Christ's only; and to be Christ's only as he
puts it means that all life is nothing but Christ, what he stands
for, what he teaches, what he lived for, what he died for.
And death has no terrors for us,
because nothing can deprive us of eternal life and the loss of
temporal life is of no account to St Paul. He says: To die is not to
divest myself of temporary life but to cloth myself with eternity...
He longs to be reunited with Christ, Whom he has persecuted on earth,
and for Whom, for Whose name, for Whose sake he lives and preaches
and warns us, into us not to subtract or add anything to God's own
message about man and about God. And he calls us in the face of our
longing for eternity to accept to live as long as it is necessary,
as tragically as necessary for others to discover life eternal, the
kingdom of God, which is the kingdom of love, of that love which
Christ has revealed into us, love to the end, love crucified and
love risen. Glory be to our Lord, to our God, to our Saviour for
ever and ever. Amen.