THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF
BETHESDA-BY-THE-SEA,
PALM BEACH, FLORIDA

ADVENT II - December 10, 1995
CANON RICHARD T. NOLAN

Dear Santa:

      This year I want a nice story about a Christmas Baby from a distinguished family; a comforting report about a child whose actual father is not a debatable issue; a report of an infant well clothed, born in a stately home or splendid hospital suite. I long for a tasteful announcement of his Nativity sent to a selected list of family and friends, with a communique exclusively to the Times. I expect a refined Messiah who will measure up to our standards of dress and behavior, including a suitable marriage with an appropriate number of children. Furthermore, Santa, I hope for an elegant, understated conclusion to his earthly ministry, neither unsightly nor spectacular.

      I also want a Church that guarantees for its members an inner glow of serene holiness accompanied by worldly successes; a Church which provides instant and worthwhile associations - and perhaps - though optional, some genuine friendships. I prefer a Church that provides simple, infallible teachings in all matters. I dream of a Church with Services as inspiring as the movies E.T. and The Ten Commandments - with clergy and laypeople above criticism. I yearn for a Church that will never change and will be available to me whenever I require - comparable to the Florida Light and Power Company or to a hospital emergency room.

      A further word about clergy: kindly provide some priests like the lovely cleric played by Bing Crosby in The Bells of Saint Mary's - and if we must, like the saintly nun played by Jennifer Jones in The Song of Bernadette. Moreover, Santa, you might inform the clergy that if they want to be successful [you know, substantial membership with a lavish budget], they must imitate the current virtues of fast and cheap; they must become a McChurch of sorts!

      Finally, Santa, I really pine for some changes on God's part! I favor a more easily understood deity with a tasteful degree of majesty, a God who will dictate some new, intelligible, and unambiguous Scriptures. I long for a Creator who will refashion the universe without hurricanes, illness, and human cruelty. I prefer a God who will always reward us good people with victories and who will not permit bad things to happen to good people. I can fully endorse a God who will meet my very reasonable expectations.

      In other words, Santa, all I want for Christmas is a Christ, a Church, and a God designed to my specifications. That's all!

Love, Richard

Memo to: Richard

From: John the Baptist

      Your letter to Santa, who is known here as Nicholas of Myra (a former bishop), has been referred to me for a reply.

      At the outset I want to make it clear that my vocation as a prophet does not include putting a damper on the coming holiday season. I'm not even going to suggest "putting Christ back into Christmas," because that exhortation has become one of the stock clichés of these weeks. Instead, as a prophet, I am called to cite the discrepancies between God's purposes and the loyalties and actions of most people. My job description includes a charge to all human beings to reflect upon their corporate and individual lives, to reconsider and reorder some of their priorities and allegiances. In theological language, I call upon all women and men to "repent," to make an about-face on some aspects of their lives, to alter their ways of looking at life, to take on God's viewpoint, to feel genuine regret for some of what they have done and left undone, and, to align their hearts and minds with God's intentions.

      In that context, I must inform you that your Christmas wishes fall very short of God's purpose for Christmastide. You might recall that when I was in prison and heard about the ministry of my cousin Jesus, known to us as "Joshua," my own disciples went to determine whether he was the Messiah. It was not clear one way or the other, because he was not promoting a new, peaceful, political order expected of the Messiah. Yet his ministry went deeper; through Him, lives are changed for the better, even made whole. A few realized that if people would truly accept him as God's Word, we would be saved from the false promises of pretenders, and that a new political order would emerge naturally from hearts and minds aligned with God's Word.

      Richard, I mention all of this, because we won't rewrite history. Jesus was born neither under the circumstances you'd prefer nor to the family you'd select. (Not all that is good comes from the British Isles.) Moreover, the less-than-elegant conclusion to his earthly ministry, both unsightly and spectacular, has had a lasting impact upon history. Be grateful that his Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension mean, at the very least, that your life can be transfigured over and over again to a greater alignment with the Creator's intent.

      Furthermore, shame on you for your self-serving notions of the Church. The Church is the assembly of God's ordinary and imperfect people, all of whom - including you - are on a pilgrimage, a journey of becoming closer and more faithful in love to God and each other. You seem to want a Church of perfected puppets somehow oozing a sappy religiosity. That's just plain shallow!

      Regarding a more exact Bible, we here are convinced that the one you have incorporates the Word of God within its words. Part of the human journey includes efforts to interpret its meanings for each age.

      Richard, how dare you request changes in God's Ways to meet your requirements! Read again the "Who do you think you are?" chapters in the Book of Job! Review the passages where God reprimands Job; those passages also speak to your request. To jog your memory here is a paraphrased sampling of God's rebuke: "Who are you to give advice without knowledge? ... I'll ask the questions, and you'll answer. ... Where were you when I created the universe? You give me answers, when and if ever you have the understanding to do so."

      A Blessed Advent to you, Richard, and may you grow in love and wisdom as you await Christmas Day. And, by the way, Nicholas sends his love, too.

      My fellow parishioners, is the New Testament Jesus of Nazareth, heralded by John the Baptist, the One you and I eagerly affirm as God's Messiah? Or, would we prefer a Christ more palatable to our individual wants? Is the coming Feast of the Incarnation merely a holiday of sentimental piety? Or, is the Nativity of Christ a celebration of God's gift of His Word? Are we invited to fit sentimentally contrived Bethlehems into our lives? Or are we invited to fit our lives gracefully within the real Bethlehem's borders? Advent challenges us to rethink and answer honestly these questions - and perhaps others about our expectations of God and the Church. We have two weeks remaining to face up to the gaps between the Creator's Ways and our own, and perhaps to make a revitalized commitment to God's Truth "that we may greet with joy the coming of Jesus Christ our Redeemer." Amen.