God Speaks to Darkness

Dec. 26, 2019
By Joel Carter

Some have said that John 1:1-18 is the best literary prologue of all time. It鈥檚 an easy claim to back up. These verses beautifully present images and themes that would pique the curiosity of any normal reader. The Word, life, light, darkness 鈥 these concepts, presented without any substantial details, have the makings of something more epic than Homer and more timeless than Shakespeare. Phrases appear that are begging for more explanation. What does it mean that 鈥渢he light was the light of men鈥? Or that 鈥渉e gave the right to become children of God鈥? The claim that 鈥渨e have seen his glory鈥 is certainly a bold one, isn鈥檛 it? And how in the world could 鈥済race and truth鈥 come through a person? John鈥檚 hope, of course, is that you鈥檒l keep reading to find out.The problem for many of us, though, is that we鈥檝e grown so accustomed to John鈥檚 opening verses that by now our eyes just scan through them, as if we鈥檝e already plumbed the depths of each word. Over time, the beautifully complex and thought-provoking phrases have become commonplace, the result being that we skim over the text instead of diving into it.The Christmas season is as good a time as any to hit the refresh button on passages like this, to consider the height and depth of biblical literature with the eyes of an eager student.

The Word Became Flesh

Consider anew one of the most striking statements in all of the Bible, found in verse 14 of this chapter: the Word became flesh.Grammarians might point out how simple the sentence is. Noun, verb, noun. No big words, no complex structures. Nothing fancy, and nothing you need an advanced degree to read. And yet it is a rich statement, a deep one. The Word became flesh.It means God is speaking. He鈥檚 done a lot of speaking before. In fact, he did it at the very beginning. The opening verses of Genesis tell us creation was void and darkness. Then God spoke. The darkness knelt to God鈥檚 command for light. He didn鈥檛 stop there. After creating man and woman God continues speaking, giving them the glorious mission to be fruitful and multiply.It鈥檚 when his image bearers actually choose the darkness that one would expect God to stop speaking. Instead he speaks on, seeking Adam and Eve in the garden like a parent would seek a stray children. He talks to them: words of judgment, yes, but words of hope, too. Proof positive that God is up to the task of speaking into darkness.And there鈥檚 a lot of darkness for him to speak into. In fact, it quickly becomes a trend. The entire Old Testament is a roller coaster of wreckage and recovery, striving and struggling. Darkness surrounds the people of God; darkness attacks them; darkness comes from within them. And yet he keeps speaking, 鈥渁t many times and in many ways.鈥 Leaders, laws, storms, and stories 鈥 God has used them all to speak.But as we read John鈥檚 opening we notice that this time it鈥檚 different for one simple reason: he鈥檚 never spoken through flesh. Moses and Isaiah were flesh and blood, sure, but they merely delivered God鈥檚 word. They weren鈥檛 the word themselves. And so John鈥檚 statement is suitably unexpected: the Word became flesh.The darkness is being spoken to again, and this time it鈥檚 the Light of the World himself. The Word that was 鈥渋n the beginning.鈥 The Word that was 鈥渨ith God.鈥 The Word that 鈥渨as God.鈥 It鈥檚 no wonder that 鈥渢he darkness has not overcome it.鈥漈he darkness of sin never stood a chance against the Word becoming flesh. This is a good thing because darkness is our home country. We were born there, raised there, and liked it there. We had no plans of leaving, and that darkness would have kept us until the end of time. But the Word became flesh. Christ dwelt among us. The true light broke through and pulled us out. Now we don鈥檛 walk in darkness but have the light of life.

God With Us

Are you thankful for that this Christmas? That God didn鈥檛 stop speaking when it looked like the darkness was going to win? That the 鈥淕od with us鈥 promise was kept when the 鈥淲ord became flesh鈥? That when darkness wrapped around your heart and you let it and enjoyed it God decided to speak through it?Christ born in the flesh will always and forever mean one thing: God speaks to darkness, and his word is final.

10450084_3000x2000_2500.jpg

Joel Carter