The Christmas season is full of music – concerts – chorales, choirs, cantatas, symphonies, presentations of Handel’s Messiah. Church choirs spend much time preparing for this night, to joyously add their voices to the choirs of angels; to give glory and praise to God. The Church has a compendium of Christmas carols and music that spans centuries. Churched people generally have beautiful memories of the music of Christmas. At Resurrection in Halifax a shared memory is: O Holy Night, sung by a soloist, supported by an accompanist; and Silent Night sung as a congregation accompanied by candlelight.
Now
can you imagine, O Holy Night sung without accompaniment? Or Silent
Night, sung without the accompaniment of candlelight?
So
too, Handel’s Messiah -and the Hallelujah Chorus,
without the symphony orchestra and choir supporting the soloists? Can you
imagine celebrating Christmas without the accompaniment of sacred music?
Accompaniment,
according to the Cambridge dictionary, is defined as something done in
support of something else. The classic example is musical accompaniment, music
that supports someone who is singing or playing an instrument.
Accompaniment
is the Greatest Gift, the gift of Christmas; something done in support of
something else.
Is
this not incarnation? God chose to become human. God chose to set-aside
God-self, to accompany humankind by literally entering humanity and physically walking
the land with human beings, side-by-side through the messiness of life. This is
the wonder and mystery of Christmas – the gift of incarnation- the gift of
accompaniment.
Circa
1513, German painter and architect, Albrecht Altdorfer, painted The Birth of
Christ. His painting has the Holy Family snuggled in beside a crumbling
brick wall, with the structure of a wooden beamed house above, empty of walls.
Web-gallery describes the scene, the stable in the lower level of the building
with the house above in a state, so ruinous, that an additional miracle may
be found in its not having collapsed upon the Holy Family. Centuries later,
on the First Sunday of Advent 1943, Bonhoeffer writes in a letter from prison
to his parents: Altdorf’s ‘Nativity’ is very topical this year, showing the
Holy Family and the crib among the ruins of a tumbledown house. However did he
come to paint like that, against all tradition, four hundred years ago? Perhaps
he meant that Christmas could and should be kept even in such conditions; in
any case, that is his message for us.
Because
of war with its destruction and chaos, because Bethlehem is within the occupied
Palestinian territory, because all roads into Bethlehem are closed; a trend
this Christmas has been for nativity scenes to be placed in or covered with
rubble, tumbled bricks, chunks of concrete, and broken boards. God is once
again born into a place with no room or no access, into extenuating and
uncomfortable circumstances, and into a land shadowed in conflict and
oppression. This year, Altdorfer’s nativity, like it was for Bonhoeffer in the
throws of WWII, is poignantly current.
The
ELCIC has been and is an accompaniment church with the Evangelical Lutheran
Church of Jordan and the Holy Land. Accompaniment has been the Canadian church
hearing and sharing the ELCJH’s story; walking and learning from each other
about peace, the practice of faith, the interpretation of scripture,
theological reflection from an unexplored perspective; it has been advocating
for the return of land and open borders through letters to the Prime Minister.
Accompaniment is working with the Anglican Church of Canada on joint
declarations and on the ground, supporting schools, hospitals, peace initiatives;
it has been delegates attending the ordination of the first Lutheran
Palestinian woman minister; it has been raising a month of expenses to pay for
the salaries of ELCJH’s school staff who can not work in the war-torn chaos.
Accompaniment is holding a people in our heart – our breaking hearts - and not
growing weary of praying for peace in Jerusalem.
Accompaniment
is remembering a baby born in Bethlehem and holding that Mystery and hope for a
people, in a time and place where it is difficult to see the star, to hear the
angels, to be excited as the shepherds, to pause at the manger, and to witness
Emmanuel, God-with-us. Accompaniment is holding Mystery and hope for those who
may not be able to at this time, keeping Mystery and hope alive for today.
The
gift of incarnation, the gift of accompaniment on God’s part, is astonishing
and radically lavish. What love! What grace! Imagine a love so unconditional: that
God chose to become human to show humans to what length God will go to love
them; to accompany them, to love and accompany us.
Often
in Christmas carols, the symbols and lyrics boldly speak of the end of Jesus’
life. An example of accompaniment from the end of the Gospel of Luke is the
walk on the road to Emmaus. The disciples have found the tomb empty – Jesus was
crucified and laid to rest, and now, is said to have been raised from the dead.
Two friends are on the road talking of this mystery, when a stranger on the
road joins them. The stranger accompanies the two friends, listens to their
incredible story, and speaks words from Moses and the prophets that have direct
bearing on the events of the past few days. The stranger – in the breaking of
bread- at the end of the walk, is recognized as the Christ. Christ accompanied
the two friends, walking with them in their grief, in their quest for
understanding, and in their hopes of the fulfilment of the promises of God.
Accompaniment addressed and ministered to the broken heart and loneliness of
the friends following the death of their teacher; accompaniment made that which
was broken, whole. The friends comment on how their hearts were warmed in the
stranger’s presence.
On
Christmas Eve, we hear the angels proclaim, Glory to God in the highest, and
on earth peace, good will toward all. The First Nation’s Version of the New
Testament interprets the angels’ words in a profound way, having the heavenly
hosts of Luke 2: 14 give thanks saying, ‘All honour to the One Above Us All,
and let peace and good will follow all who walk upon the earth.’ Let peace
and good will follow all who walk upon the earth – that certainly sounds like accompaniment,
a blessing of the angels who ask for peace and good to follow, as in accompany,
all who walk upon the earth.
How
does this sit with you? The thought, - the blessing of the angels- that peace
and good accompany you, accompany communities of faith, and accompany
humankind? The nativity story, witnessed and experienced as the Holy Family, with
the gift of new life while sheltered in a precarious place in a troubled world,
is the gift to be received this night. It is God’s gift of incarnation. God’s
accompaniment with us – in all the chaos and trouble of the world. That makes
tonight special, it produces that warm feeling we have in your hearts. This
gift of incarnation, God’s accompaniment, elicits feeling, elicits a response.
Over the coming weeks as we hear stories of Jesus being taken to the Temple by
his parents, his baptism, first miracles, the calling of disciples, these
stories illustrate that being around Jesus changes people and their lives. God
incarnate changes us too; when our hearts are open to receiving that which is
around us- like tonight relaxed and joyous in this space.
The
angels’ blessing in some ways is a prayer that humans will turn around and see
the peace and good that are following them, that are right there accompanying
them. God is present! This changes everything.
American
psychologist and author Rolo May wrote: Joy, rather than happiness, is the
goal of life, for joy is the emotion which accompanies our fulfilling our
natures as human beings. It is based on the experience of one’s identity as a
being of worth and dignity.
The
feeling that Christmas Eve elicits – our warmed hearts and the joy of being
here together – accompanied by sacred music and candlelight… accompanied by
Emmanuel; this emotion fulfils our nature as human beings. It is this joy found
in the fulness of our nature as human beings that responds, that wants to carry
on beyond tonight to birth hope in the rumble and struggle of life around us,
to go into a hurting world and bring some form of peace, goodness, and
wholeness. Christmas Eve reminds us that accompaniment is the heart of God’s
relationship with us, and how it is that we experience God’s unconditional
love. And so it is that our gift to
hurting world is accompaniment – the Greatest gift.
Merry
Christ mass to you, as you
accompany
people – where they are- as they search for love, acceptance, welcome,
forgiveness, whatever is good and true and beautiful. With joy hold each of
these, along with hope and faith, for those whose hearts and circumstances can
not witness the miracle of tonight. Continue to accompany the world around you
with the peace of Christ. Amen.