On the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ

Troparion, Tone I: O Jesus, Who in the highest dost sit with Thine unoriginate Father and the divine Spirit upon a fiery throne, thou wast well-pleased to be born on earth of Thy Mother, a Maiden who knew not man; wherefore, thou wast circumcised as a babe eight days of age. Glory to Thine all-good counsel! Glory to Thy dispensation! Glory to Thy condescension, O Thou Who alone lovest mankind!

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

As we celebrate the eighth-day circumcision of the Infant Saviour, we see His merciful willingness to suffer for us, even as a new born child whose innocent blood is shed in His self-emptying and self-denying humility.

Thus, we behold not only the reality that the Only-Begotten Word has been made man, clothing Himself in human flesh, born in Bethlehem and laid in the manger, but we see that within the first days of His earthly life, He willed to be subjected to pain and the shedding of blood – a fore-shadowing of His Cross and Passion, even though His earthly birth was so few days ago.

He suffered even in His infancy precisely because He chose to become incarnate – showing that His flesh and blood, and human nature are not an illusion and mere semblance of humanity, but that as the New Adam, He is truly clothed in Adam’s flesh, by which – as Lamb of God – He will redeem us by that same precious blood, restoring His image in the first-parents and the subsequent generations of those who follow Him.

Moreover, as the seed of Abraham, whom He not only created, but called from Ur and promised that he would become the father of a multitude, He conforms Himself to the circumcision that He Himself, as Yahweh the Lord, demanded of Abraham and his descendants.

The God-man, subjects Himself to the Law which He, Himself has given!

The Saviour Who will be obedient to the death of the Cross, is obedient to the Covenant He Himself established with the great patriarch, of whom He would later say, “Before Abraham was, I am.”

What paradoxes we see.

He Who created Adam and Eve, lies as a helpless Child to be circumcised with the shedding of blood and the pain of fleshly suffering.

He Who visited Abraham at the Oak of Mamre and promised him a son, not only becomes his child in the flesh, but subjects Himself to the sign of His human descent from the father of the covenant.

He Who spoke to Moses from the Burning Bush, and gave him the Law upon Sinai is now speechless as a babe – the Eternal Logos without words in the silence of submission to the Law.

He Whom Ezekiel saw borne upon the heavenly chariot-throne, seated upon the four-faced cherubim, and the wheels-within-wheels, full of eyes, is now circumscribed within the body of an eight day old child, borne in the arms of Joseph, a vulnerable baby before the knife of circumcision.

Just as the Incarnation itself is a scandal to the impious and infidels of the world, so this circumcision is also a scandal to the world, but its shocking reality is a demonstrative sign of God’s condescending and limitless love, and a challenge to modern day Docetism – that heresy which denies the Incarnation, reducing the Lord to a spiritual being with the mere appearance of a human being, nothing more than spectral avatar, whose flesh is nothing more than a symbol.

No! This feast shouts loudly that Christ’s humanity is real, as He bleeds human blood, just as He would on Golgotha.

It also challenges the sickly, saccharine, Victorian “Away in a manger”sentimentalisation of the Incarnation and Nativity, by contrasting it the with the vocation of the Word made flesh, Who came to be a sacrificial Lamb and sheep for the slaughter, and with the spiritual violence of Golgotha, the conquering of hell and the victory of the Cross.

The real baby who bleeds on the eighth day, will grow up to be the Redeemer of mankind Who bleeds upon the Cross, shattering the gates of Hades and opening the gates of heaven not only to the children of Abraham, but to all of the sons and daughters of Adam and Eve, as heirs of paradise and children of the promise.

With the circumcision of the Infant Saviour, and the shedding of His blood, the journey of redemption and the Way of the Cross begins.

O Jesus, how precious is Thy blood!

Amen.

Posted in Feasts, Homily/Sermon.