A Christmas message from the Bishop of Connor, the Rt Rev Alan Abernethy
It is something that is indelibly marked on my memory. One of those unforgettable experiences that still makes me so thankful.
I
am referring to the birth of our two children; I can still hear their
first cry and the feel the sheer wonder of new life. There is something
wonderful and innocent about a tiny helpless baby. They bring a smile
and reduce most adults to baby noises.
Babies are so vulnerable
and helpless, totally dependent on someone to care for them. In time
this dependence is challenged and eventually parents have to learn the
painful lesson of letting go – it is our role as parents to give them
wings and enable them to fly.
As I reflect upon that first
Christmas I am staggered by the vulnerability of God. The image I am
forced to recognise in this tiny helpless baby is a God who took the
most amazing risk.
The mother was a peasant girl and this
happened in a lean–to in Bethlehem. There were visitors that must have
been confusing. Shepherds who were not the rich and famous and a few
strangers from the east.
A great scene for a nativity play but the enormity of what happened can be lost in the tinsel and trappings.
I
believe that what happened that first Christmas was a moment that
changed the world forever, when God took the amazing risk of declaring
his love for the world in a tiny helpless, vulnerable baby.
May the love and vulnerability of God be something we celebrate this Christmas.