A shout out to my boy Xorey of Ellsworth, WI for passing along this quote:
GOD IN THE STRAW
"Theodosius Harnack, Luther scholar of note, said that for Luther the imperative was to have "God deep in the flesh." Christmas celebrates just that: God deep in the flesh. So great was God's longing for his creatures' redemption, says Luther, that God's preference for human nature over angelic nature might even have provoked the angels to jealousy! But Psalm 8 nudges that issue: what are human beings that you are mindful of them? They have been made a bit lower than angels but crowned with glory and honor. A preference for humans: in that lies the Christmas gospel …
There is God in the flesh, thriving in a placenta, protected by a water bag, bouncing on a donkey ride to Bethlehem where his folks had to meet the local IRS. No different than any other baby at the time. While God preferred human nature to the angelic, God asked no human favors and got none. When inns are full they are full. Sleep where one can. God deep in the flesh became God deep in the straw. Mary, the mother of the Creator, sustained the one who sustained all the living." —C. John Weborg in the Covenant Companion (Dec. 1994) |
Comments on "A Quote from our beloved Weebs"
UltraRev:
I don't know if you've ever seen the movie "Dogma" but it is a quirky delight. One of the interesting rants is one in which an angel, kicked out of heaven, talks about angels being made first, but humans being loved more and shown more grace. While a lot of the theology in the movie is questionable at best, and the humor is borderline heretical (as well as hysterical), there are some interesting points...