{"id":2757,"date":"2022-10-15T15:12:00","date_gmt":"2022-10-15T20:12:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/john-11-14-christmas-according-to-john-wigmore-bible-study\/"},"modified":"2022-10-15T15:12:00","modified_gmt":"2022-10-15T20:12:00","slug":"john-11-14-christmas-according-to-john-wigmore-bible-study","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/john-11-14-christmas-according-to-john-wigmore-bible-study\/","title":{"rendered":"John 1:1-14 Christmas According to John (Wigmore) &#8211; Bible study"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Sermon John 1:1-14 Christmas According to John <\/p>\n<p>By Fr. Bill Wigmore<\/p>\n<p>(This sermon was delivered to a group recovering from alcohol and drug addiction.)<\/p>\n<p>Some of you might remember a movie from way back<br \/> that was called &#8220;Marathon Man&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>It starred Dustin Hoffman and in it,<br \/> Lawrence Olivier plays a Nazi dentist who&#8217;s escaped right<br \/> after the war and is now hiding out in South America.<br \/> The doctor&#8217;s afraid that his secret cover&#8217;s been blown,<br \/> so he comes out of hiding to find out if he&#8217;s still safe.<\/p>\n<p>And there&#8217;s a scene in this film that&#8217;s always stayed with me <br \/> maybe cause I hate going to the dentist<br \/> or maybe because with my alcoholic paranoia,<br \/> that dentist could so easily turn out to be a Nazi! <\/p>\n<p>But in this scene  Hoffman&#8217;s strapped to a chair<br \/> and the bad guy&#8217;s coming after him with this really huge drill <\/p>\n<p>Over and over, he drills into Hoffman&#8217;s teeth <br \/> No Novocaine! No whiskey to dull the pain!<br \/> And after each drilling, when all the screaming stops <br \/> he pauses and he asks Hoffman just one question:<br \/> &#8220;Is it safe? Is it safe?&#8221;<br \/> Over and over that&#8217;s all he asks: &#8220;Is it safe?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The scene is powerful!<br \/> Maybe it&#8217;s powerful because the question he asks<br \/> is a question that sooner or later we all come to ask:<br \/> Is it safe?<\/p>\n<p>Last week we went over to spend Christmas<br \/> with my daughter and her husband in South Austin<br \/> We brought presents for our granddaughter <br \/> a little red chair and a white rocking horse<br \/> She just turned one in September and so this was her first real Christmas <\/p>\n<p>But over on the next block there was a very different gathering going on <br \/> Over there, a few days earlier<br \/> a young mother had gone to wake up her two-year old daughter from her sleep <br \/> The young child never awoke.<br \/> She had died in her sleep that very night  and no one knew why.<br \/> Is it safe?<\/p>\n<p>The grief those parents felt broke through my defenses <br \/> I felt at least a small touch of the terror they must have felt inside.<br \/> Maybe it was the fact that our two little girls were so close to the same age <br \/> Maybe the fact that it could have been our precious one that was gone <br \/> Whatever the reason, I felt feelings I don&#8217;t like to feel.<br \/> Feelings I usually manage to keep repressed <br \/> buried inside until they break through when they can&#8217;t be denied any longer.<br \/> This physical world is a dangerous place.<\/p>\n<p>And in a way, that&#8217;s what I think<br \/> the Old Testament reading we heard tonight is asking about.<br \/> Is the world safe?<\/p>\n<p>The reading tells the ancient Jewish story of creation <br \/> where man, in his consciousness, finds himself in a very different<br \/> place from all the other animals &#8211;<br \/> He feels different from all of the other parts of God&#8217;s<br \/> creation.<br \/> The story says: Man knows.<br \/> The story says Man&#8217;s made in God&#8217;s image<br \/> and so unlike the lions and tigers and bears &#8211; man is aware.<\/p>\n<p>And part of what he&#8217;s aware of<br \/> is all the death and destruction and disease that are all around him<br \/> And so he asks the un-seeable God:<br \/> &#8220;Is it safe? Is it safe?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This story is ancient Israel&#8217;s way of assuring him that no matter how dark and how frightening<br \/> this world may appear  underneath it all &#8211;<br \/> God has pronounced it good <br \/> Indeed God&#8217;s verdict says it&#8217;s very good.<\/p>\n<p>But the truth is:<br \/> very few of us are really satisfied with God&#8217;s answer!<br \/> Enter the human ego!<br \/> Maybe I&#8217;m the only one I can trust to rule the world!<\/p>\n<p>We look around us and we see all the pain &amp; suffering <br \/> And self-centered creatures that we are,<br \/> it&#8217;s probably not so much the pain and suffering of others that<br \/> troubles us  that would be compassion &#8211;<br \/> No, it&#8217;s more the pain and the suffering and the fears we all face<br \/> ourselves.<br \/> The fears that make us all sooner or later ask: Is it safe?<\/p>\n<p>Part of me said thank God it wasn&#8217;t our child who died.<br \/> My little family was safe for another day.<br \/> We&#8217;d dodged the bullet &#8211;<br \/> Maybe now I could shove that fear down again <br \/> down where I don&#8217;t have to be aware of it <br \/> at least not until the next time.<\/p>\n<p>Now I know I&#8217;m preaching a real downer here tonight <br \/> And here we are, the first Sunday after Christmas<br \/> and this guy&#8217;s talking about death and destruction <br \/> So why can&#8217;t we just stretch the Christmas story out a little bit<br \/> longer <br \/> and not go looking for what&#8217;s hiding there under the bed?<\/p>\n<p>And that&#8217;s all a very long introduction to what I hope<br \/> brings us to tonight&#8217;s gospel.<\/p>\n<p>Now I know it may not have sounded like it,<br \/> but this gospel reading is really one of the three Christmas<br \/> stories that we find in the Bible.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, to most people, it doesn&#8217;t sound anything at all like Christmas.<br \/> There aren&#8217;t any shepherds <br \/> no manger scene &#8211; no wise men following a star <br \/> and the cute &amp; cuddly little, baby Jesus is nowhere to be found!<\/p>\n<p>But this gospel tells the Christmas story in a very different way.<br \/> And it does it in a way that maybe addresses<br \/> some of our most basic and most terrifying fears.<\/p>\n<p>The gospel writer John is known as the most mystical of all the gospel writers.<\/p>\n<p>If one of those four gospel writers was an alcoholic or an addict, my money&#8217;s on John <br \/> And that&#8217;s not just because he&#8217;s the only one of the four who writes about Jesus turning water into wine! Although I always like that one!<br \/> No, my money&#8217;s on John because: John felt  he felt things deeply.<br \/> I believe he probably felt far more deeply than the other 3.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes us addicts are accused of being un-feeling <\/p>\n<p>But I think it might be closer to the truth to say we feel <br \/> But some of those feelings scare the hell out of us!<br \/> Some of those feelings we feel maybe more intently than the earth people do<\/p>\n<p>and so we find our ways to block em out<br \/> We become addicts<br \/> We try to not feel at all. It isn&#8217;t safe!<\/p>\n<p>Now, as I said, John&#8217;s gospel doesn&#8217;t read like the other three.<br \/> John wants us to know who Jesus is in the grander scheme of things<br \/> and so this is what his Christmas story tries to do.<\/p>\n<p>John says that in the life of Jesus,<br \/> God was doing something new in the world <br \/> God was addressing that basic human anxiety <br \/> that fear that goes to the very heart of the human condition.<\/p>\n<p>He tells his readers that what God was doing in and through Jesus<br \/> didn&#8217;t just begin in Bethlehem.<\/p>\n<p>It didn&#8217;t begin with the physical birth of a Jewish baby boy.<br \/> But it really began long before the world ever was.<br \/> At the moment of creation, God saw &amp; felt our fear<br \/> and the instant he spotted it,<br \/> he answered it.<\/p>\n<p>So John&#8217;s Christmas message is this:<\/p>\n<p>God is no longer to be found  out there  or up there <br \/> God&#8217;s no longer to be thought of and experienced as<br \/> disconnected &amp; far removed from the world<br \/> as some of us can sometimes feel God to be <\/p>\n<p>John says He&#8217;s heard the cry of his own frightened children<br \/> and he&#8217;s come to be with us  come to humble himself <br \/> come to live in time to share in our humanity<br \/> so we can share forever in his divinity <br \/> God&#8217;s come to be fully human <br \/> to know all our fears and to experience first-hand all our terrors.<br \/> He&#8217;s come to tell us that underneath it all &#8211; we really are safe.<\/p>\n<p>John says before the Christmas event,<br \/> it was as if the world was living in darkness <br \/> But now: a LIGHT has appeared.<br \/> The LIGHT came to its own people  to the Jewish people <br \/> To the people God had been speaking to &amp; preparing<br \/> for this event for five thousand years <br \/> but when it came, its own people failed to recognize it.<\/p>\n<p>But then John goes on to says: now here&#8217;s the good news of Christmas  he says: for those who did recognize it <br \/> whether they were Jew or non-Jew <br \/> for those who opened themselves to this LOVE IN THE FLESH<br \/> and received this LOVE in their hearts <br \/> this LOVE had the power to actually transform them <br \/> This LOVE had the power to make them children of God.<\/p>\n<p>This is the Christmas story for John.<br \/> Love overcoming Fear <br \/> Light overcoming darkness.<br \/> Life overcoming death &#8211;<br \/> The world is safe &#8211; because God&#8217;s with us in it.<\/p>\n<p>Christmas is a story that&#8217;s been told for two thousand years.<br \/> But it can be an old story that stays in a book and gathers dust;<br \/> or it can become a new story <br \/> it can become our own story &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>A story that we addicts can relate to in our Second Step<br \/> when we too have to ask: &#8211; Is it safe?<br \/> God, is it really safe to put down my bottle &amp; my drugs?<br \/> God, is it safe to turn my will and my life over to your care??<br \/> Can we really believe you&#8217;re there for us <br \/> To catch us if we fall<br \/> To hold our hands and to comfort us as we walk through this sometimes very terrifying land?<br \/> And this time  God  This time &#8211; we need to do it all sober!<br \/> This time we&#8217;re gonna feel the pain.<br \/> I heard a lot of lectures when I was in treatment,<br \/> and most of them I&#8217;ve long forgotten.<br \/> But one of the counselors gave us a talk that&#8217;s always stayed with me.<br \/> It was about a man named Viktor Frankel.<\/p>\n<p>Frankel was a Jewish psychiatrist who&#8217;d landed in the death camp<br \/> at Auschwitz during the Holocaust.<br \/> Maybe he and that Nazi dentist were among of the very few who<br \/> survived the camp and lived to tell their stories.<\/p>\n<p>That counselor said that, in a way,<br \/> maybe Frankel was a lot like us<br \/> in that death &amp; darkness were all around him.<\/p>\n<p>What Frankel did was he turned to God <br \/> Not to a magical, miracle, up in the sky kind of God <br \/> but to a God who met him and lived with him where he was.<br \/> A God who asked him above all to find new meaning and<br \/> purpose in his life  right where he was &#8211;<br \/> To find LIGHT &#8211; where to all outward appearances,<br \/> only death &amp; darkness appeared.<\/p>\n<p>That&#8217;s exactly what Frankel did.<br \/> He found his meaning and purpose by loving and by serving<br \/> the other terrified men and women and children in that camp.<\/p>\n<p>Frankel survived because he discovered something really important <br \/> and the guy who delivered that lecture said that<br \/> those of us there in treatment that day had better do the same.<br \/> He said: if we didn&#8217;t find<br \/> more meaning &amp; purpose in our lives of sobriety<br \/> than we found in our addictions,<br \/> then sooner or later,<br \/> we&#8217;d go back to them.<\/p>\n<p>After he was released,<br \/> Frankel wrote a book called Man&#8217;s Search for Meaning.<br \/> In it, he develops a school of therapy that he called<br \/> LOGO therapy.<br \/> It can&#8217;t help but remind us of John&#8217;s gospel <br \/> In Greek, LOGOS means WORD &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>How do we find the LOGOS <br \/> How do we find the Word of God calling to us from inside our own darkness?<\/p>\n<p>Frankel has a quote in his book that helped see him through <br \/> and it helped me see a very different image of God.<br \/> The quote was from Nietzsche and it says:<br \/> &#8220;He who has a why to live-for \/ can bear with almost any how.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Hear that one again:<br \/> &#8220;He who has a why to live-for \/ can bear with almost any how.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Most of the men around Frankel lost their reason to live <br \/> One by one they gave up the fight.<br \/> Frankel could see it coming in their faces long before it came.<br \/> They lost sight of the why to live <br \/> and so they couldn&#8217;t find the how.<br \/> Frankel had tried hard to carry the message to them<br \/> before they got overwhelmed in their darkness.<\/p>\n<p>He writes:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Whenever there was an opportunity for it,<br \/> I tried to give them a why  an aim for their lives,<br \/> in order to strengthen them to bear the terrible how of their existence.<br \/> Woe to him who saw no more sense in his life,<br \/> no aim, no purpose, and therefore no point in carrying on.<br \/> He soon was lost.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Frankel sounds just like the Big Book as he continues:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What was really needed was a fundamental change in our attitude toward life.<br \/> We had to learn ourselves, and furthermore we had to teach<br \/> the despairing men,<br \/> that it didn&#8217;t really matter what we expected from life,<br \/> but rather (now hear this) what life expected from us.<\/p>\n<p>He says:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life,<br \/> and instead to think of ourselves<br \/> as those who were being questioned by life <br \/> questioned daily and (sometimes) hourly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Frankel concludes:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Our answer must consist not in just talk but in right action.&#8221;<br \/> If that ain&#8217;t the program  I don&#8217;t know what is!<\/p>\n<p>As addicts, we can cry and we can whine about what life&#8217;s handed us.<br \/> Some of us have been handed a lot  and our sorrows are real and we need to grieve <br \/> This is a painful world  but we&#8217;re not in it alone and God grieves right along with us!<br \/> Maybe the two most powerful lines in all of scripture are the two that say: Jesus wept.<br \/> For John that translates: God wept.<\/p>\n<p>John says: &#8220;No one has ever seen God  but we have seen Jesus.<br \/> We&#8217;ve seen a man who carried God&#8217;s Light<br \/> and carried God&#8217;s Love into our very dark world.<\/p>\n<p>He carried it without complaint <br \/> He carried it to all the terrified and to all the lonely and to all abandoned children of God.<br \/> He carried it all the way to the cross.<\/p>\n<p>John says: Jesus is the Love of God that always was and always will be <\/p>\n<p>It took five thousand years for one man to open his heart wide enough to let that LOVE come in  but because he did<br \/> he&#8217;s here today <br \/> Because he did, he&#8217;s here to put his arms around that young mother and father <br \/> he&#8217;s here to weep with them <br \/> here to lead them to other grieving parents who also know their pain <br \/> lead them perhaps to other children who need their love.<br \/> God can be there for them only because he was here with us.<br \/> God&#8217;s LOVE had became flesh and it dwelt among us.<\/p>\n<p>We&#8217;re not alone  God is with us <br \/> God&#8217;s cast his fate with us humans forever.<br \/> He&#8217;s here and he&#8217;s now  no matter what.<br \/> No matter how dark it may seem to be.<\/p>\n<p>Someone asked one of the survivors of the death camps<br \/> if the holocaust had made him lose his faith in God.<br \/> &#8220;Lose my faith in God?&#8221;<br \/> &#8220;No,&#8221; he answered, &#8220;but it damn near destroyed my faith in my fellow man!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Is it safe? Yes, it&#8217;s safe.<br \/> But it&#8217;s our job to make it so for those who don&#8217;t yet know.<\/p>\n<p>As we do that,<br \/> as we do what Dr. Bob recommended <br \/> as we make love and service our code &#8211;<br \/> then we get to experience John&#8217;s more mystical,<br \/> more grown-up version of Christmas.<br \/> It ain&#8217;t a Christmas story for the weak of heart.<\/p>\n<p>But as addicts, we have a leg up on the earth people <br \/> We already know how dark this world can get <br \/> But now our light has come.<\/p>\n<p>Merry Christmas!<br \/> Amen.<\/p>\n<p>Copyright 2007 Bill Wigmore. Used by permission.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Sermon John 1:1-14 Christmas According to John By Fr. Bill Wigmore (This sermon was delivered to a group recovering from alcohol and drug addiction.) Some of you might remember a movie from way back that was called &#8220;Marathon Man&#8221;. It starred Dustin Hoffman and in it, Lawrence Olivier plays a Nazi dentist who&#8217;s escaped right &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/john-11-14-christmas-according-to-john-wigmore-bible-study\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;John 1:1-14 Christmas According to John (Wigmore) &#8211; Bible study&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2757","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2757","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2757"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2757\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2757"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2757"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2757"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}