John 1:1-18 · The Word Became Flesh
God’s Body Language
John 1:1-18
Sermon
by Donald B. Strobe
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Presbyterian preacher Thomas Hilton tells of watching Billy Graham on television a few years back, when his small daughter Karin came into the living room and looked at the television set and exclaimed, “Dad, what is he so mad about?” To a small child the body language of a person is often more important than the verbal language.  She saw the raised arm, heard the loud voice, saw the intense face, and assumed anger.  I have an idea that was not the message that Billy was trying to get across, but children are especially good at reading the body language of adults.  And sometimes our actions speak much louder than our words. 

This familiar fact has opened up a whole new realm of study.  We call it “body language,” and it was popularized by a book of that title written by Julius Fast.  The book highlights the well-known fact that we are known by others as much by how we look and act as by what we say.  One researcher has come up with the estimate that feelings are expressed to others 7% through words, 38% through vocal tone, and 55% through facial expression.  (I always wondered why I hate telephones so much.  Now I know: I can’t see what people are saying!)

“Body language.” That’s what the author of the Fourth gospel was talking about when he sat down to write the first chapter.  In fact, that was the primary reason that he wrote the Gospel in the first place.  Biblical scholar William Barclay says that the entire Gospel of St.  John was written to enshrine these words: “And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.” (John 1:14)

With that simple sentence, John alienated most of his readers.  We have heard it so long and so often that we take it for granted.  We forget that when it was written it was about the most shocking thing that anyone could say.  Remember that John was writing primarily for an audience familiar with Greek philosophy.  His readers had heard about the famous “Logos” of God, or “Word” of God.  Philosophers had called the Divine Logos the dynamic power which was the agent of creation, the power that guided, directed, and controlled the world, the power that puts purpose into the universe and reason into the minds of people.  Both Jews and Greeks were familiar with this concept.  But John says about the most incredible thing he could have said about the Logos: “This Word which created the world, this reason which controls the order of the world, has become a Person, and with our own eyes we have seen Him, with our own ears we have heard Him, and with our own hands we have touched Him!” This is where John parted company with all who had gone before him.  This was the entirely new thing which the Fourth gospel brought to the Greek world.  A few centuries later St.  Augustine said that in his pre-Christian days he read and studied the great pagan philosophers and had read many wise things, but he had never read anywhere that “the Word became flesh.” To the Greek that was the most impossible thing.  The one thing that Greek philosophy would never have dreamed of was the notion that God could have a body.  To the Greek mind, the body was evil, a prison-house in which the soul was shackled, a tomb in which the spirit was confined.  To them God would never have anything to do with something as gross as a body. 

The concept of God which we find in the Fourth Gospel is so startlingly new that there were even some in the early Church who could not believe it.  When John says that the Word “became flesh” he used the Greek word sarx, which is the very word that St.  Paul uses over and over to describe what he called “the flesh” - that is, human nature, with all of its weakness and faults and tendencies toward sin and evil.  There were some in the early Church who rebelled against any such notion.  This created within the Church its very first heresy.  As I said in the introduction to this series of sermons, the major heresy facing the Church in John’s day was that of “Gnosticism.” The Gnostics believed that God could never have gotten His hands dirty by touching something as mundane as matter, and so they believed that God did not create this world.  Instead, God sent forth a series of “emanations”...and the one farthest away from Him created this nasty old world.  John begins his Gospel by saying “All things came into being through him...” (John 1:3).  No Gnostic would have agreed with that.  And later on, John gave us the most famous verse in the New Testament: “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.” (John 3:16)

In the early years of the Church Gnosticism gave rise to the heresy of “Docetism,” from the Greek dokeo which means “to seem.” This heresy taught that Jesus never had any real human body, but just sort of flitted over the earth like a ghost.  It is interesting to note that in the familiar “Apostles’ Creed” the phrase “born of the Virgin Mary” was inserted in the first place not to emphasize the word “virgin,” but rather to emphasize the word “born.”

Lest you think that this theological debate is all long, long ago and far away, may I hasten to suggest that there are still a lot of happy Gnostics and Docetists among us.  The theology of Mary Baker Eddy which forms the basis of Christian Science certainly leans in the direction of Gnosticism.  Most popular piety has a Gnostic Christ who never really quite touches this earth.  When British mystery writer and lay theologian Dorothy Sayers’ famous cycle of plays “The Man Born to be King” was first performed on the radio in England in 1941, there were strong protests.  Mr.  J.W.  Welch, then director of Religious Broadcasting for the BBC had this to say of the critics: “The disturbing feature of the opposition was its revelation of a widespread and seriously defective theology of the Incarnation.  The Word was made flesh’- how many of us dare believe that?  Some listeners were quite incapable of believing that Christ laughed, said Good Morning,’ or was in any sense fully human.”

So it seems that we still have Gnostics and Docetists among us.  A Christ who breathes the same air that we do, walks the same roads that we do, was subject to the same trials and temptations as we are...that sort of Christ is not for them.  I remember the stir that was created a few years back when a Presbyterian professor named William Phipps wrote a book titled “Was Jesus Married?” In the book he offered strong circumstantial evidence that the answer to his question was “Yes.” Most Jewish males of Jesus’ age would have been married, and marriage was considered such a high estate that if He had not been married, some of His critics would surely have mentioned it.  Now, I don’t know how seriously we have to take Dr.  Phipps’ “argument from silence.” Jesus may have forsworn marriage for the sake of the larger mission he came to accomplish.  Of Professor Phipps’ argument, I think we have to say non liquet, a category much used by New Testament scholar Fr.  John Meier which means something about which we do not have enough evidence to make a firm decision one way or another.  But what interests me is the large number of people who seem to be horrified at the very notion!  “How could Jesus be a holy man and be married?” they ask.  That says a lot about their theology of marriage, as well as their theology of the Incarnation, doesn’t it? 

The Christian Faith is built on the Incarnation.  Let’s translate that word into what it really means: “embodiment,” or, literally, “enfleshment,” if you will.  “The Word became flesh” -like this flesh that you and I wear, the covering that keeps our bones from falling out...”and lived among us.” That’s what the Gospel says.  Christian Faith does not rest upon general religious experience, nor some mystical vision of eternal verities, nor even upon some words written down in a creed, as important as creeds are.  It rests upon the simple story of a Baby born in a manger, a Man who grew up during the reign of Pontius Pilate, Herod the King, and Caesar Augustus...three rulers about whom we might never have even heard had this Child not been born!  “And the Word became flesh and lived among us!” That’s God’s Body Language, the way God speaks to us and meets us.  Through a human body.  Like ours.  A body which lived and died and lived again in a little two-by four land in the Middle East.  Yet, in and through that Body, that Life, men and women experienced the loving presence of God.  They felt His touch.  They saw His tears, saw His hands bless loaves and fishes and little children.  They heard His righteous anger when he drove the money-changers out of the Temple, they saw the scandalous company He kept: tax collectors, prostitutes, and fishermen.  They saw Him on His knees praying, saw His hands give sight to the blind and hearing to the deaf.  They saw those hands break bread and pass a cup around a table, saw those same hands nailed to a cross.  In the 4th Century Hilary of Poitiers asserted that our Lord “felt the force of suffering but without its pain.  The nails pierced His flesh, but as an object passes through the air, painlessly.” All I can say is, “That’s easy for him to say!” He wasn’t hanging there on that Cross on that awe-full day.  No, John comes closer to the truth: “And the Word became flesh and lived among us!” And that flesh felt pain just as our flesh does. 

In a Christmas sermon on the Incarnation, Martin Luther said, “I would not have you contemplate the deity of Christ, the majesty of Christ, but rather his flesh.  Look upon the Baby Jesus.  Divinity may terrify man.  Inexpressible majesty will crush him.  That is why Christ took on our humanity, save for sin, that he should not terrify us but rather that with love and favor he should console and confirm.” (“The Martin Luther Christmas Book,” translated and arranged by Roland H.  Bainton.  Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1948, p.39-40)

Christianity is a “sacramental” religion.  That means that we believe that God can use material things as the medium through which He comes to us.  God conveys His love to the world through tangible things: feeding, washing, touching.  Objects like bread and wine and water are packed with significance.  I once heard Martin Marty say that you only need three things in order to have a church: a loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and a river!  I would add that you need people, also, but he assumed that.  People often make the mistake of imagining that Christianity is a”spiritual religion,” as though our faith were mostly a matter of ethereal, otherworldly, intangible things.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  Jesus had a way of taking the very stuff of everyday life: coins, stones, mustard seeds, bread and wine, and using them as signs to help us to sense the presence of God in our midst.  As C.S.  Lewis once said, “God loves matter.  He invented it!” One of the primary differences between Christianity and most of the world’s other religions is the use of material things in its worship.  This is why William Temple, that great Archbishop of Canterbury once said that “Christianity is the most materialistic of the world’s religions.” As William Willimon says in his excellent little book on the Eucharist titled “Sunday Dinner,” “The difference between Christianity and religions which have no incarnation is the difference between receiving a letter from someone you love and having the loved one embrace you!” (p.25) Now, letters are nice.  But they are no substitute for a hug or a kiss.  Every time we look at Jesus we are reminded that God did not write us a letter (or even send us a sermon!) He came in a Word who was a Person.  Therefore, in order for us to meet God we do not need to withdraw from the world of persons.  It is precisely in this world that we meet God, if we are to meet Him at all.  In a book titled “Making All Things New” published by Harper and Row some years back, priest-theologian Henri J.  M.  Nouwen wrote: “To live a spiritual life does not mean that we leave our families, give up our jobs, or change our ways of working; it does not mean that we have to withdraw from social or political activities, or lose interest in literature and art; it does not require asceticism or long hours of prayer.” What, then, is different?  What is new?  Fr.  Nouwen says: “What is new is that we no longer experience the many things, people, and events as endless causes for worry, but begin to experience them as the rich variety of ways in which God makes his presence known to us.”

“And the Word became flesh and lived among us!” And continues to dwell among us.  The Christian Faith began when the Word became flesh and lived among us.  It continues when that same Word becomes flesh and lives in us.  That is, when you and I incarnate the same kind of love which Christ brought into this world.  Thus, the “Incarnation” is not simply something which happened “back there.” It is still going on.  In a sermon on “The Image of God.”

Theodore Parker Ferris once said that the glory of God was revealed in “that one incredible Life, in whom the glory was once and for all revealed to all who have eyes to see it, and in every other life that reflects that glory.” That is where we come in.  Years ago at a meeting of the ministerial association in a small town where I served as a pastor, I happened to become involved in a theological discussion with another minister.  This doesn’t happen as often as you might think.  Ministers usually try to avoid theological discussions like the plague.  There is the story of a priest who greeted a fellow cleric by saying, “What a heavenly day!” Replied the other priest, “Let’s not talk shop.”

Well, this day we were “talking shop,” and I became involved in a discussion with a fundamentalist chap who was testing me to see whether I truly believed the “fundamentals” of the faith.  (I have often said that I am a “fundamentalist” - if you let me pick the “fundamentals.” Central to my fundamentals is faith in the Incarnation.  And the fact that God is love.  But I digress.) This fellow was suspicious of all other ministers’ theologies, and especially suspicious of Methodists who are famous for their warm hearts and weak minds.  I told him that I considered myself to be a classically orthodox Christian.  He then decided to quiz me about my orthodoxy.  His first question was, “Where is the body of Jesus now?” Being young and even more foolish than I am now, I very nearly said, “Don’t look at me; I haven’t got it,” but instead I replied, “I give up...where is it?” He replied, with great satisfaction, “Why, it is in heaven, of course!” I couldn’t restrain myself from asking whether he could give me the exact latitude and longitude, and he immediately dismissed me as a serious student of theology. 

He was wrong, of course.  The body of Jesus Christ is not in Heaven, but right here on earth.  That is what the New Testament calls the Church: “The Body of Christ.” With all of its faults and foibles, the Church is the extension of the Incarnation.  The Word became flesh in Bethlehem, and continues to become flesh in all of the other cities of the earth through that faithful band of people who dare to call themselves by Christ’s name, and who try, however imperfectly, to live out His love in this world.  That’s the purpose of the Church after all, isn’t it?  To somehow be Christ’s presence in the world.  That is the task of the Church - and not just of the clergy.  To be the Body of Christ is to love and care for the world that he loved and cared for, and died for.  That kind of caring is costly business, but it is to this which we are called.  There is an old poem by Annie Johnston Flint which is not great poetry, but it enshrines a pretty good doctrine of the mission and purpose of the Church:

Christ has no hands but our hands
To do His work today;
He has no feet but our feet
To lead men in His way;

He has no tongues but our tongues
To tell men how He died;
He has no help but our help
To bring them to His side.

I am not sure that I agree with all of her words, for it seems to me that history teaches us that when God’s people fail in their God-given task, God raises up a new people to continue His work.  That is the story which the Bible tells, over and over again.  But the poem does remind us of our task - to be the embodiment of that Love which came into the world on that first Christmas in Bethlehem, and continues to come into the world in and through us in the cities where we live.  In the words of Madeleine Sweeny Miller,

It isn’t far to Bethlehem Town!
It’s anywhere that Christ comes down
And finds in people’s friendly face
A welcome and abiding place.
The road to Bethlehem runs right through
The homes of folks like me and you.

So may it be.  Amen.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Words, by Donald B. Strobe