I like working in CRC ministries because we tend to think and talk a lot about others and their needs. We address our prayers and work to those needs. As part of the church we act in
and support ministries that are supremely about others.
The conversations Iāve had today turned pretty quickly to others, even when I asked, āHow are you doing?ā Someone answered, āFine. I hope we see Norma soon. I miss her.ā Joel Hogan answered, āFine. The churches in Eastern Europe are really cold this time of year. . . .ā I also heard, āI hope the folks who are leaving [our printing plant] have a nice Christmasā and āIāve been on the phone with someone from Haiti. Itās toughā and āSuch-and-such church is in deep trouble. I donāt know if they will make it.ā You see what I mean. Weāre all about othersāwe hope that somebody besides us has a nice Christmas.
Not Natural
You may think being other-directed is pretty commonplace, but itās not. āThe notion of the āotherā is a tough one for Homo Sapiens,ā notes Time magazineās cover story on morality (Dec. 3, 2007). Mostly people are by nature self-directed and tuned in to the needs of family and clan, not much aware of or sympathetic toward truly āotherā others.
The most astonishingly cruel atrocities of our times have been perpetrated by people in the name of their own tribe against another. Says Time, āYugoslavia is the great modern example of manipulating tribal sentiments to create mass murder. You saw it in Rwanda and Nazi Germany too. Exploitation of tribalism (love of our own, fear of others) for evil purposes.ā
The hills around Bethlehem have been alive with the sound of contractors building 400 miles (644 km) of a 20-foot-high (6 m) wall that will fence off illegal Israeli settlements from Palestinian suicide bombers and everyone else. Us versus them. Each group is other-directed in a bad way: they hate āem.
A Motherās Example
If you have philoxenia (Greek for love of strangers/others) that overcomes our natural xenophobia (fear of strangers)āand I think you doāwhere did you get it?
Thatās worth thinking about in our calling of serving Christ by serving others. Worth thinking about at Christmastime when we hope the great story of āGod so loved the worldā will teach the great lesson āLove one another, love others.ā
I got philoxenia from my mother. Couldnāt miss it. For it was my motherās love of strangers that brought official scrutiny and even disfavor upon us Rozebooms for a while immediately after World War II. My mom (who was the head of our family with my dad off in the South Pacific in the Army Air Corps for years) not only preached concern for others and put into every prayer, āGod, please feed the starving children in Europeāāshe kept on writing letters and sending packages of food and clothes to the Wilkies, a bunch of strangers living in Germany, not even relatives, none of whom she or any of us had ever before met. It made an impression!
All we had by which to know the Wilkies was my grandmaās creased, faded black-and-white photo of a sad-looking guy, his sad-looking wife, and a bunch of kids who didnāt look real happy either. My mother, being of German descent, heard the Wilkiesā story of need in war-torn and post-war starving Europe through our church or her German relatives. When I asked her later, she couldnāt remember which. Didnāt matter. These people were desperately needy, often sick, lacked decent clothes, and didnāt have two pfennigs to rub together, so my mom sent them stuff via the Red Cross, assisted by me and my sisterāstuff packed carefully with love and accompanied by prayers.
My mother ignored the fact that weāliving in a cold apartment above a grocery store in Edgerton, Minn., with our father absentāwere really poor ourselves. She ignored the fact that after the war, the Wilkies, in their thank-you letters, sung the praises of their new communist state that we knew as East Germany.
The East German propaganda is what attracted official attention to my motherās care packages and the Wilkiesā responses. Seems all the mail from there was opened by some official snooper who informed the Edgerton postmaster and asked that all our mail be opened and scrutinized before my mother got it. It scared the postmaster, but not my mother. She said, āThe government reads all my correspondence with your dad. Why care about this?ā There wasnāt anyone or anyplace too much āotherā for my mother not to care.
We finally stopped hearing from the Wilkies, and with no sign that our stuff was reaching them, we stopped the relief effort. Mom found other āothers.ā
Thatās where I got it. Couldnāt miss.
More to the Story
Itās Advent, and we all look for signs that the direct, plain-language message of Godās love for the world somehow gets translated into ālove each other as I have loved youā (John 15:12)āspecifically, physically, sacrificially, intently, helpfully, beautifully, sustainingly. That itās as important to God that some people whoāve never really had a nice Christmas have one as it is that I have one.
The Bethlehem Christmas story in Luke has tremendous dramatic impact and a lot of appeal: shepherds, angels, music, the holy couple and Christ child in a barn with animals. But the āothersā part gets lost, or only comes in at the margins.
Maybe the story as we traditionally think of it is too comfortable, too exclusive
ānot explicit enough about the terrible battle Jesus stepped into at Bethlehem for the whole world, the fight to be the Lord whose battle flag, improbably, is the Love of God.
Thatās why I cited the Christmas story from the book of Jonah. Itās not hard for me to identify with Jonahās stubborn reluctance and his anger about being made uncomfortable. I can imagine some persons, neighbors, tribes, and nations who are as violent, indecent, and threatening as Nineveh, the archetype of āotherness.ā I cannot miss, though, the way God explicitly expresses deep care that, along with his whining prophet, more than 100,000 repentant Ninevites have a ānice Christmas,ā and their cattle too.
Your caring, mine, all of ours, expressed in our personal values and lives and work so that other people here and in hundreds of other places around the world have a really nice Christmasāthat is the heart of God.
Thanks. Merry Christmas!