The Living Word
“The lion was pacing to and fro about that empty land and singing his
new song... Polly was finding the song more and more interesting because she
thought she was beginning to see the connection between the music and the
things that were happening. When a line of dark firs sprang up on a ridge about
a hundred yards away she felt that they were connected with a series of deep,
prolonged notes which the Lion had sung a second before. And when he burst into
a rapid series of lighter notes she was not surprised to see primroses suddenly
appearing in every direction. Thus, with an unspeakable thrill, she felt quite
certain that all the things were coming (as she said) “out of the Lion’s head” (C.S. Lewis Magicians
Nephew
p.126).
Lewis was thinking a bit like Plato, the Greek philosopher, who reasoned
there must be an “idea” (or “form”) behind
every object in the material world, one that preceded its existence. And if
that idea exists, there must be a mind that conceived it and spoke it into
being. These three transcendent realities—a divine mind, an idea, an utterance—Plato
combined into one absolute and named it the “Logos” (the
Word).
Plato was very near the truth, so near, in fact, that early Christians
referred to him as “one of our own.” But though he caught a glimpse of “the
true Light that gives light to every man coming into the world” (John
1:9), he did not fully comprehend it. Something more was needed, something
tremendous, something yet to come, something the wisdom of man could not
conceive: “The Word (Logos) became
flesh and dwelled among us …” (John 1:14). The divine Logos and a
mortal man together bore one name: Jesus. This is what we Christians call The
Incarnation, the final, irrefutable proof that God really, really cares.
American Theologian Frederick Buechner had this to say: “We all
want to be certain, we all want proof, but the kind of proof that we tend to
want — scientifically or philosophically demonstrable proof that would silence
all doubts once and for all — would not, in the long run, I think, answer the
fearful depths of our need at all. For what we need to know, of course, is not
just that God exists, not just that beyond the steely brightness of the stars
there is a cosmic intelligence of some kind to keep the whole show going, but that
there is a God right there in the thick of our day-to-day lives who may not be
writing messages about himself in the stars, but who in one way or another is
trying to get messages through our blindness as we move down here knee-deep in
the fragrant muck and misery and marvel of the world. It is not
objective proof of God’s existence that we want, but whether we use religious language for it
or not, the experience of God’s presence. That is the miracle we are really after, and that is also, I think, the miracle that we really get” (Secrets in the Dark, p.16).
All through the Old Testament we read that God has been doing his best
to get next to us, humbling himself, condescending to make himself known, but
nothing can match what happened that night in that cave. It was there that the Logos became
the little Lord Jesus, a helpless infant with unfocused eyes and uncontrollable
limbs, needing to be breast–fed, swaddled, cuddled and cared for, “the
infinite made infinitesimally small,” G. K. Chesterton said. That is indeed the
miracle we’re really
after and the miracle that we got: The Logos become
Immanuel: God with us.
John speaks of the Logos in a very personal way: “That which was from the
beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have
looked upon, and our hands have handled—the Word of Life (the eternal living
Logos).” (1 John 1:1).
John was astounded by the thought that he had heard and seen Plato’s Logos, and held
him in his hands. The Greek word suggests something more than a touch.
It has the thought of familiarity and affection—perhaps a hug. The one who made
up the universe “out of his
head” and spoke
it into existence was “pleased as man with men to dwell.” Why did He do it?
It was love—pure and simple.
David Roper
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