Chetwynd Shared Ministry
December 17, 2017
"Longest Night" Service
Scripture: Isaiah 9:2, 6-7
In northern parts of
the world, the month of December is a very dark time. One morning earlier this week, I watched the
sun rise behind the hills out that window there at 10:10 in the morning, and
just over 5 ½ hours later, I watched it set behind the hills at 3:50 in the
afternoon. With so few hours of daylight
each day and so many hours of darkness each night, it is very easy to start
feeling down.
And then on top of it
all, we are in the middle of the season of Christmas. Every time we go into a store or turn on the
radio, we hear songs telling us to have a holly, jolly Christmas, or songs
about a reindeer named Rudolph, or songs telling us that the world is full of
Joy. Turn on your TV and you’re likely
to come across Christmas movies with their predictable happily-ever-after
ending. For anyone who is having a
difficult time in life, this forced jolly-ness can feel like a slap in the
face; a constant reminder that we don’t or can’t feel jolly.
Chetwynd isn’t the
only place in the world that sits in darkness at this time of year. There is a town in northern Norway named
Rjukan; and like Chetwynd, Rjukan sits in a valley surrounded by mountains. But because this town is further north and
the mountains are higher, and up until 4 years ago, Rjukan used to not see the
sun for almost 6 months of every year – from late September until mid-March.
But the town now has
sunlight in the winter. They have built
and installed giant mirrors on top of the mountains around town, and these
mirrors track the sun and reflect light down into the town. The people in town describe it as warming –
not physically warming but mentally warming.
The interesting thing
is that there was a lot of resistance to building these mirrors. An artist who lives in Rjukan, Martin
Andersen, was the one who initiated the project, and when he was asked about
the resistance to the project, he had a very profound response. He said, “What it was, I think, is that living
in the shade must make you afraid to dream of the sun.”[1]
Living in the shade or
the shadows makes us afraid to dream of being in the sunlight again.
I learned this week
from a friend in Nova Scotia that tonight, December 17 2017, is the Celtic
Christmas celebration. Tonight is the
new moon – there will be no moonlight tonight, even if the sky is clear, making
tonight the darkest night in the darkest month.
And so tonight is the night when we can remember and celebrate God’s
light, the light that is Christ, coming into a darkened world.
We heard words read
this evening from the prophet Isaiah, words that are often read at Christmas –
“The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who lived in
a land of deep darkness – on them light has shined.”
This idea is echoed in
the opening of the gospel of John which we didn’t read this evening. John wrote, “In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and
without him not one thing came into being.
What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of
all people. The light shines in the
darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.”
That is a powerful
thought – that the light of Christ shines into a darkened place, and the
darkness can never overcome the light.
Think of a darkened room, or a dark cave. If you light just one candle, or even a
match, or these days the screen of a cell phone, you break the darkness. As long as the match or the screen stays lit,
you can never be in darkness.
At Christmas, we
remember the birth of the infant Christ.
We remember the time when the God who created the heavens and the earth
was born as a vulnerable human baby. But
if we look forward to the other great Christian festival, Easter, we can see a
time when the world tried to put out the light of Christ. On Good Friday, we remember the trial and the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ; and if we
were to stop at Good Friday, it might seem as though the world had won. It might seem as through the darkness had
managed to extinguish the light of Christ.
But the good news is
that the story doesn’t end on Friday.
The good news is that on the third day, on Easter Sunday, the tomb is
empty and Christ is risen. The darkness
hasn’t had the final word; the light of Christ can never be extinguished.
And this is the hope
that we can cling to, even when the darkness in our lives threatens to
overwhelm us. This is the hope that we
can cling to in the midst of pain or grief or suffering or loss.
When we are living
through these shadow times, it is often easy to feel like the people in that
town of Rjukan, Norway. It is often easy
to feel afraid of the light because we have become so used to living in the darkness.
But as we approach
Christmas, I invite you to let go of this fear, even for a short time. I invite you to allow the light of Christ to
enter into your darkness. Remember that
even when we are living through the Good Friday times of our lives, that Good Friday
doesn’t last forever. Easter is
coming. The light shines in the
darkness, and the darkness can never overcome it. Thanks be to God.
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/06/rjukan-sun-norway-town-mirrors
(Our tealights shining in the darkness after the service)
Kate, this is so beautiful. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts here!
ReplyDeleteBlessings to you and your family in this Christmas season!
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