Friday 23 December 2011

Narratives and the Nativity


Quote
“I am not struck so much by the diversity of testimony as by the many-sidedness of truth.”  Stanley Baldwin, three times British Prime Minister.

News
David Cameron’s speech on the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible in Oxford last weekend, in which he stated that Britain was still a Christian country, was met with a predictably wide range of responses and comments. 

"I was surprised that he put his views so forcefully, it was an interesting political angle,” stated an Anglican vicar.  The President of the National Secular Society responded, “Mr Cameron's promotion of faith for other people when his own is so wishy-washy is typical of a politician who thinks religion is a useful means of social control.”  But a member of the Muslim Council of Britain declared enthusiastically, "It's very seldom I get excited by what our prime minister has to say and this is one of those times.”

Newsworthy events – especially those with political implications – can be reported in quite different ways depending on the purpose and viewpoint of the writer. Take the two different accounts of the Nativity in the New Testament – one written by Matthew (Jewish, used to work in the finance industry), and the other by Luke (Greek doctor-cum-historian).  Each told the story from a different angle, and their prudent editing reflected the audience they wrote for.

Matthew recounts the events for Jewish people to convince them that Jesus is indeed their Messiah-king, descended from King David and whose birth fulfils various Old Testament prophecies.  But Matthew’s inclusion of the Magi’s visit and Herod’s massacre of infants in Bethlehem underlines the radical political consequences of this.  The child born in Bethlehem had come to establish a kingdom, allegiance to which would challenge and supersede loyalty to any political authority on earth – especially the Roman Empire, who would later put Christians to death by their thousands.

Luke, on the other hand, writes for a non-Jewish audience – people from a diversity of races, cultures and backgrounds – showing that this Son of God was born for the whole world, a universal saviour.  Luke’s account reveals the radical social consequences of the Nativity: the story is told from Mary’s point of view and gives prominence to two other women – Elizabeth and Anna.  Then he introduces the shepherds – social outcasts – as the first people to be told of the birth of Jesus, and through the old man Simeon he declares the child to be “a light to the Gentiles”.  Luke thus introduces the infant Jesus in a way that starts to level out the deep social inequalities of the time based on gender, class, wealth and ethnicity.

At one level the Nativity is a story that any child can understand and marvel at.  At another, it heralds a seismic shift in the relationship between God and the human race, and between people of every status and creed.  David Cameron spoke of the historical influence of the Christian faith on British culture, but this story is not over.  Its power to transform hearts and relationships, and in turn the political and social order, has much life in it yet.

Read on
The full text of David Cameron’s speech about the influence of the King James Bible on English language, politics and society, can be read here.
  
Walk the talk
As you celebrate Christmas this weekend, why not take the opportunity to discuss the more subversive implications of the Nativity story with someone you are sharing the celebration with?

The last word
From the King James Bible, Luke 1, verses 52-53, Mary declares about God, “He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree. He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away.”

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