Reflection by Paul Dudley*
Walking up to a door as an invited guest among a new group of people can bring a whole range of emotions. Will I be welcomed? Who will I talk with? Have we got the right place? What if there is nothing I like to eat? What if no one else is dressed up in Hollywood glamour fancy dress? Do I kiss on the cheek, hug or shake hands with the hosts at the door? Emotions can run high in those last few steps, from feelings of curiosity and excitement to wanting to turn and flee in panic, for fear of being rejected.
How terrible would it be if it was your party… and they were your loved family… and they reject you with hard hearts.
Jesus, the Word who was light, was in the world. Not just dropping into a Christmas party, but as John would go on to say, coming to make his dwelling among us (1:14). How extraordinary that the creator, ruler and sustainer of all should take on human flesh and walk in our shoes. How scandalous that the world that was created by him should not recognise him. Even worse, it was not only the pagan world, but his own people – Israel – who would reject him with calloused hearts. In these verses, John prepares his readers for the shock of the ultimate rejection of Jesus – at the time of his death.
When God comes knocking at our door in this Christmas season, what will our hearts be captured by? The rejection of Jesus by ‘the world’ and ‘his own’ should not deter us from belief in God’s purpose in sending the Word, the one who alone is able to bring life and light into the darkness.
Prayer
Dear Father, just as you proclaimed the coming of your Son by the praise and adoration of angels, so too may we receive your Son with praise. But more we pray, that by his suffering and death, we may rise with him to the glorious resurrection. Amen.
* Paul Dudley works part time as an Assistant Minister at St Thomas North Sydney and for the Anglican Schools cooperation, combining his great loves: speaking about Jesus in parish and schools ministry