Christmas Octave (Monday, 31 December 2018)
1 John 2:18-21. Psalm 96:1-2, 11-13. John 1:1-18. (Please click the following link for the above readings http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/123118.cfm.)
“He came to his own, and his own people did not accept him. But to all who did accept him he gave power to become children of God.”
What if we’ve missed the point of who Christ is, what Christ is, and where Christ is? A Christian is simply one who has learned to see Christ everywhere, and in everyone. Understanding the Universal or Cosmic Christ can change the way we relate to creation, to other religions, to other people, to ourselves, and to God.
The prologue to John’s Gospel is part of our reading today. John here is not talking only about Jesus; he’s referring to Christ. This great Universal Christ Mystery since the beginning of time now becomes specific in the body and the person of Jesus of Nazareth. The Word (Blueprint) has become personified and visible as a human being. Christ is present even before the birth of Jesus; Christ is present from all eternity.
Christ is not Jesus’ last name. The word Christ is a title, meaning the Anointed One, which many Christians so consistently applied to Jesus that to us it became like a name. But a study of Scripture, Tradition, and the experience of many mystics reveals a much larger, broader, and deeper meaning to “the Christ.”
Everything was made in Christ and through Christ. “Not one thing had its being but through him.” Similarly Hebrews 1:3 says that Christ “sustains the universe”: Christ is the radiant light of God’s glory and the perfect copy of God’s nature, sustaining the universe by God’s powerful command.
Like Saul’s experience on the road to Damascus (see Acts 9), we won’t be the same after encountering the Risen Christ. Many people don’t realize that Saul (Paul) never met the historical Jesus and hardly ever quotes Jesus directly. In almost all of Paul’s preaching and writing, he refers to the Eternal Christ Mystery or the Risen Christ rather than Jesus of Nazareth before his death and resurrection. The Risen Christ is the only Jesus that Paul ever knew! This makes Paul a fitting mediator for the rest of us, since the Omnipresent Risen Christ is the only Jesus we will ever know as well (see 2 Corinthians 5:16-17).
It is formally incorrect to say “Jesus is God,” as most Christians glibly do. Jesus is a third something which is the union of "very God" with "very man." For Christians, the Trinity is God, and Jesus came forth to take us back with him into this eternal embrace, which is where we first came from (John 14:3), and this is what it means to have an eternal soul.
The following New Testament passages give a clear cosmic meaning to Christ: Colossians 1, Ephesians 1, John 1, 1 John 1, and Hebrews 1:1-4. Jesus is the union of human and divine in space and time, and the Christ is the eternal union of matter and Spirit from the beginning of time.
Whenever the material and the spiritual coincide, there is the Christ. Jesus fully accepted that human-divine identity and walked it into history. Henceforth, the Christ “comes again” whenever we are able to see the spiritual and the material coexisting, in any moment, in any event, and in any person. All matter reveals Spirit, and Spirit needs matter to “show itself”! Therefore, “the Second Coming of Christ” happens whenever and wherever we allow this to be utterly true for us. This is how God continually breaks into history—even before the first homo sapiens stood in awe and wonder, gazing at the stars.
In reality we may not at all be loving the Christ who is the Alpha and Omega of history; instead we love a little Jesus whom we can stick in our pocket. We fell in love with the symbol instead of what Jesus fully represented. To love “Jesus, the Christ” is to love both the symbol and everything that he stands for—which is precisely everything. (In fact, Christ is another name for Everything.)