+In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
This morning we celebrate a principal feast of the Church, which is actually the conflation of two themes we find, however briefly, in this morning’s Gospel. We call this day the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus, but for those of you who remember a prayerbook prior to 1979, you will perhaps remember the old name of the holiday: the Feast of the Circumcision of Jesus.
Indeed, both happen in this morning’s Gospel and both are of a piece:
And at the end of eight days, when he was circumcised, he was called Jesus, the name given by the angel before he was conceived in the womb.
I suspect the rationale for the name change had something to do with our discomfort for something as seemingly indecent as discussion of circumcision in a church. Even so, it is hard for me to understand why we do not acknowledge both themes in our church calendar. So, for this morning, let us rename the day to include both: The Feast of the Circumcision and of the Holy Name of Jesus.
My initial draft of this sermon covered both themes, but it ended up being far too long for those recovering from whatever festivities might have taken place last night, so, let’s focus this morning on the bit that I can say with some confidence will get less attention in pulpits today: namely, the circumcision. From this seemingly passing acknowledgment in Luke’s Gospel that Jesus was indeed circumcised we gain more insight into the person of Jesus than we might expect.
First, and most obviously, we see an affirmation of Jesus’ Judaism. Not only was he circumcised, but it was done on the eighth day, the proper time for a faithful Jewish family to have the rite performed for their child. It is notable that this is found in Luke’s Gospel, often hailed as the most gentile of the Gospels and written by the only New Testament writer who was a gentile himself. This apparently minor fact serves as a powerful rebuke against the purveyors of antisemitism, a backward worldview that has sadly seemed to have increased in recent years–note the recent Kanye West debacle. It should go without saying (though, increasingly, it must be said) that our salvation is founded upon a Covenant which came before us- a Covenant which God gave the children of Israel, just as truly as God gave us the New Covenant.
Secondly, the circumcision reminds us that Jesus is a man. By man I do not mean male (though we also have to assume that bit considering that he was circumcised). I mean that we are reminded that Christ was a human being. If this seems obvious, it is because we live in the twenty-first century rather than in the first. Christ’s humanity was just as hotly contested as His divinity in the early centuries of the Church. Very early in the church’s history (and I would argue even before the Canon of Scripture had been completely composed) there were various heretics (docetists and Gnostics) who denied the orthodox view of Christ’s Incarnation as it would later be defined in the Nicene Creed. The circumcision of Christ reminds us that Jesus wasn’t just some ghosty pretending to be a human, but that He was and is a flesh-and-blood human being. And, as St. Irenaeus reminds us, this is extremely important, because unless Christ were truly human he could not have saved humanity. The Cross would have been nothing more than play-acting if it weren’t for the fact that the body it bore bridged humanity and divinity.
Finally, we see in the circumcision a foreshadowing of Christ’s mission and, in some sense, a commencement of the sacrifice of His life. The Incarnation itself was a sacrifice of the highest caliber, as we are reminded in this morning’s epistle- very God of very God becoming frail and limited by taking on the form of a slave. But in the circumcision we find bloodshed. Forgive my very old-fashioned theology (it is of a sort which would preclude my receiving tenure on many theology faculties, believe it or not), but the atonement which was to be effected on the Cross, the substitution of the perfect man for sinful men through the blood of the everlasting Covenant, begins with the Christ child in St. Joseph’s arms undergoing the rite prescribed. In the arms of the man who would protect Him and His Blessed Mother from the wrath of Herod is the Christ Child given His first taste of the kind of pain which is borne through obedience and which is ultimately salutary.
And so, this day we greet the Christ Child again, but not only as the babe in the manger. We greet Him as an intermediary, an intercessor, a bridge: as the bridge between God’s two great Covenants, as the bridge between Godhood and humanity, and as the bridge between the old life of sin and death and the new life of redemption and Resurrection through his Precious Blood.
+In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.