For the last month Bing Crosby, the quintessential crooner, has been treating us to “White Christmas” almost everywhere we turned. We heard him in grocery stores, shopping centers, elevators, and even when we were put on “hold” after calling places too busy to talk to us.
Let’s give “der Bingle,” as the Germans call him, his due: until Elton John’s remake of “Candle in the Wind” to honor the memory of Princess Di, “White Christmas” was the best-selling single recording in history.
The irony is that now that Christmas Day is behind us we don’t hear Bing sing anymore. The irony is only for Christians who have been observing Advent and who now are in the throes of Christmastide. On Christmas Day the white Christ Candle welcomed the flame that had been passed around the Candles of Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love. When the flame rested upon the Christ Candle all of the other became white, too. The purples and pink gave way to the Christ-white. The brightness of the Light of the World blanched the color out of the other candles on the wreath and we had a White Christmas, indeed.
On the Sunday after Christmas our readings challenge us to fan the flames of the Christ Candle. Christmastide is a time to cultivate our own version of candles in the wind. Through prophet, psalm, epistle and Gospel we have a chance focus upon the effect of the Light of the World that has come to us, again, at the darkest time of the year.
With the first reading from Samuel, reflective readers of the lectionary sigh deeply at the appearance of Samuel. “Aaahhhh!” they breathe; “now we know where Luke got his inspiration for telling the wondrous story of the births of John and Jesus!” They know that Hannah and Elkanah are both echoes of Sarah and Abraham and foreshadowings of Mary and Joseph. They know that Samuel prefigures both John (the Baptist) and Jesus. All three sons are described as growing in favor with God and humanity (see 1 Sam 2.26, and compare with Luke 1.80, Luke 2.40, and Luke 2.52).
In the Old Testament Samuel changed everything. He was the transition from judge to king, and was the first to define both priest and prophet in relationship to the king. For Christians Samuel represents a new beginning in the way God relates to us. For Christians celebrating Advent and Christmastide, Samuel focus both the hope and fulfillment of our waiting for the newness of life that God’s presence always brings.
The psalm (Ps 148) for this Sunday after Christmas has the widest embrace of any passage in Christian scripture. For ten verses the psalm stretches out to the very limits of creation, demanding that all creation join the chorus of “Praise the Lord.” The Hallelujah! echoes from the vastness of heavens, including “sun and moon . . . and stars” (v 3) all the way to the sting of the hailstone (v 8) and the unique sounds of herds of animals, clouds of insects, and flocks of birds (v 10). The final four verses invite “all peoples” to join in the song of praise.
White Christmas, indeed! The brightness of the Light of the World blanched the color out of the other candles on the wreath and “Praise the Lord” is what all of creation sings. The psalm reminds us that God the Redeemer is first of all God the Creator. Hallelujah! Let all creation sing.
InĀ the Christ-white brightness of the blazing Advent Wreath the epistle on the Sunday after Christmas moves us from the embrace of all creation to the effects of knowing the embrace of God in Christ. Hallelujah! is not only for our mouths: “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly; teach and admonish one another in all wisdom; and with gratitude in your hearts sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs to God. And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him” (Col 3.16-17). To know the embrace of God in Christ changes everything. Words and deeds and the stirrings of our hearts, all transformed by love and peace and thankfulness (Col 3.14-15).
On this Sunday after Christmas the Gospel reminds us that the birth of Jesus is but the beginning of a life of growing and maturing in the presence of God. Luke ends his narratives of the birth of Jesus with a brief glimpse of Jesus on the boundary between childhood and adulthood. As a twelve-year old Jesus begins to extend his reach beyond the limits of family and friends. He finds himself in the Temple in the company of the teachers, “listening to them and asking them questions” (Luke 2.46). The narrative ends with an echo of the prophet: “And Jesus increased in wisdom and in years, and in divine and human favor” (Luke 2.52; compare 1 Sam 2.26).
On the Sunday after Christmas we have the chance to fan the flame of the Christ Candle with the winds of hope, peace, joy, love, and gratitude. Let it be so.”Praise the Lord! Hallelujah! May the embrace of God in Christ transform our hearts and minds so that we, in turn, might grow in grace and find courage to embrace our world.
It is the prophets, the psalms, the epistles, and the Gospel.
Richard F. Wilson is Columbus Roberts Professor of Theology and Chair of the Roberts Department of Christianity at Mercer University in Macon, Ga.