GLORY TO YOUR REVELATION, LORD
During these joyful holidays, the greatest commemoration is God’s
revelation to humankind through the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ. God’s love with His perfection and warmth brought us closer to
God; God visited us so His pure and graceful love would become
contagious and spread to those who are human beings like us. We no
longer ask, “Who is my neighbor?” (Luke 19:29); the revelation of
Jesus, our God, once and for all established the commandment that we
must express our love of God by loving our neighbor.
God’s revelation was the greatest news the world received since the
creation up to the birth of Jesus. It was greater than any discovery or
invention by humans, incomparable and even unfathomable to the human
mind and comprehension. Currently in our everyday lives we enjoy using
new inventions and concepts that are introduced. The true Christian
regards these to be the manifestation of the creative spirit given to
them by God; the same strength with which God created the universe and
humans. He gave to us His grace enabling us to continue his creation
in this world. All wisdom and power belong to Him. God gave that power
to humans so that on the eighth day of creation humans should make
worthy the grace and power that belong to God and which weave the
glory of God. It is with this understanding that we must look at our own
creation in the “likeness of God” (Genesis 1:26). We must praise God;
give Him our thanks for His boundless creative power and for his good
grace. On the occasion of the birth and
revelation of Christ, when the celebrations bring spiritual joy to all
of us, it is necessary to reflect on what God gave us with His
revelation. Was it an ordinary visit that ended with His ascension, or
a new way of life that is an inseparable part of our nature, from our
birth until our unification with Him in the Kingdom prepared for
Christians? First, God revealed to us His
love. The Apostle John very clearly defines God’s nature when he says,
“God is love,” (1 John 4:8). That is the embodiment of Supreme Power.
God was incarnated so that Christians would be like Him and find the
way and the secret that leads to the road to humanity’s deification.
We will find that road when we honor that commandment—the first and
greatest—that Christ reminded us of: “Love your Lord God with all your
heart and soul, with all your mind, all your power” (Mark 12:30-31).
The second command is a continuation: “Love your neighbor as
yourself.” Only then will we be filled with the grace that will make
us God-like. Second, God’s revelation to
humankind is a reminder of the freedom He gave to us. It is a freedom
that raises humans above mere mechanical created beings, and who are
able to recognize and select that which leads to the road worthy of
salvation. Freedom is not anarchy, but rather it is that condition
when by respecting others we can cleanse our souls, especially by
remaining free of the chains of sin, and the threat of the death of
the soul. The first man, Adam, was unable to utilize this freedom in
its proper manner. The opposite of freedom is disobedience to God’s
will. Freedom’s reward is eternal life, while the wages of
disobedience and sinfulness is death (Romans 6:23). Christ was
revealed to give us life, abundant life (John 10:10).
Third, trust in God’s intervention and role in our lives. Humility
and modesty are expected virtues of Christians and prods us to attribute
all our discoveries and inventions to God’s wisdom—His image that is
within us. Otherwise, arrogance and boasting distance us from that
feeling of modesty, and instead of recognizing God as the source of
our grace, talent and ability, we attribute our accomplishments solely
to ourselves, only to our skill and ability, and our material brain.
Self-confidence in human ability, and modern-day humanism and
secularism, have greatly distanced us from God. They have removed us
from the spiritual inner world of faith. Creating new idols on stages
and screens, turn us bankrupt of moral and family values and holiness.
As Christians we cannot perceive the world, and its new inventions,
without recognizing God’s will and power. As Christians we cannot
attribute purely to our own ability the things we create, invent, and
discover, since for Christians the source of everything is God
Himself. The revelation of Christ reminds us of God’s eternal
presence, accomplishment, and ability. Christians cannot forget that
they bear the image of God that was given to them when God formed man of
dust from the ground, and gave His breath of life, creating a living
being, a creative being (Genesis 2:7). On
the occasion of the great holy day of God’s revelation, let us praise
our Lord’s graceful visitation—His revelation from the modest manger.
May His grace spread into our homes so that we will be strengthened in
His love, emancipated from sin, and be worthy of our freedom. Christ is Born and Revealed. Glory to Your Revelation, Lord. ARCHBISHOP OSHAGAN Prelate Armenian Apostolic Church of America Eastern Prelacy
Holy Nativity 2012
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