direct
access to God - The letter as a whole is a homily predicated on the idea that
through Christ, faithful Christians have direct access to God. In this sermon, Jesus is
portrayed as the unique mediator between God and humankind; the reader is urged to follow
Christs example-loving, hopeful, and patient in the face of persecution.
Gods timetable of human history - This writer shares the
pauline hope that Christs death, burial and resurrection started a new clock
ticking-the eschatological clock that marks Gods timetable of human history.
nib - Traditionally, the liturgy of Christmas Day was
dominated by the desire of the early church to affirm the uniqueness of Jesus Christ, the
incarnation of the eternally preexistent Word. At the time of the author of the letter to
the Hebrews there were some who suggested that angels were the unique mediators of Gods
graciousness to humankind. As the celebration of Christmas developed, the church found
that it needed to affirm its full belief in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, the
incarnation of the preexistent Word against a powerful heresy that argued that this was
not the case.
. . . Reading the letter to the Hebrews on Christmas days summons us to assess our
personal and community understanding of the person of Jesus Christ: Who is he, and what
has he done for0us? Why do we celebrate the day on which we recall his birth?
Quote-
The old sentimental image of the early church as a huddle of the poor and unlettered at
the margins of society is shattered by the artistry and sophistication of Hebrews 1:1-4.
Here is a creedal formula, perhaps framed for the liturgy of the congregation to be sung
long before it became official dogma, in which is distilled the heart of the Christian
faith. Within it is a christological hymn not unlike others in the New Testament (verse
3).
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