The Wisdom of Man and the Foolishness of God

The Feast of the Nativity, known sometimes in Orthodoxy as “the Winter Pascha,” is one of the great examples in the story of our salvation where the “foolishness of God” defeats the wisdom of man. It is not the story of an underdog defeating the mighty, but a revelation of who God is, and who we are – and what our salvation is all about. Nothing in the story of our salvation is accidental or incidental. All of it proclaims the Gospel.

The story of the Nativity is utterly shrouded in the cloak of weakness. In our own time we understand just how vulnerable is the life of an unborn child – apart from extreme old age, it is the most vulnerable time of our existence. Christ is incarnate as an unborn child in a world where infant mortality would have been astronomical by our modern standards. He becomes the most vulnerable of all human forms. The God of the universe, to use modern scientific terminology, becomes a Zygote.

Nurtured and sustained through the pregnancy – itself fraught with anxiety and questioning – his birth becomes an event which must take second place to the needs of the state. A census was ordered, and his mother and foster father make a journey that is difficult in the best of times (the lay of the land between Nazareth and Bethlehem is a constant negotiation of desert hill country.

The greeting in Bethlehem is less than kind for a babe in the womb. In a crowded village, his mother is forced to take refuge in a barn – indeed, in a cave which is used to house animals. Nothing could be more removed from the modern cocoon of sterility that greets the newborn. Born into our world, his first bed is a manger – a place where animals take their food.

It is not for nothing that the icon of the Nativity is written in such a way that everything mirrors Christ’s later descent into Hades. The cave – everything – shares a common semi-non-existence with the shadow world of Hades. Indeed, He who would become the Bread of the World finds his first resting place in a manger (“manger” comes from the word for “to chew”). Bread of the world, He is born to be eaten.

Greeted by angels, shepherds and wise men, his birth goes largely unnoticed – except by the authorities who seek to kill Him.

I have stood near the cave of St. Jerome in Bethlehem, and seen the recently excavated graves of the Holy Innocents. There are a mass of infant burials, clearly made in haste, with evidence of violence, all dating to the first century. It is not a Biblical myth but a crime scene as gruesome as any that we could imagine.1 This is the Wisdom of Man.

The Wisdom of Man measures strength and power by the ability to administer brute force. Whether a sword or  nuclear weapon – power is defined by physics. Were the power that confronted us measured in the same manner, victory could be as simple as a mathematical equation. But the power of God, the Wisdom of God, that confronted King Herod and all the so-called “rulers” of this world, belonged to a realm that is wholly other.

The “beachhead”, if your will, of the coming of Christ and His kingdom, was the human heart – not territory nor judicial power. As noted by later Orthodox writers – the battleground between God and the devil is the human heart. It is into that human heart that Christ was born in Bethlehem: first into the heart of His mother – who “pondered” all these things. Then into the heart of His foster father, who provided a heart of welcome to a child not of his own fathering. Then into the heart of shepherds and wise men, who were simple and wise enough to hear the voice of angels and to obey the movements of the stars.

Joseph would take this weak Child into Egypt and await God’s direction before returning home. Mary would continue her motherly watch, uniting herself with her child in body and soul. She fed Him at her breast, as He fed her in her heart.

Years later, Pontius Pilate would face this Child/Man, and hear that His kingdom “is not of this world.” He did not believe and committed Him to crucifixion as if this world could destroy the Lord of heaven and earth. But in the most decisive manner the wisdom of man was shown to be foolishness – empty of strength and incapable of giving life.

Anybody can kill. The drive to non-being is a parasite – relying on Being itself to give it pseudo-credibility. The wisdom of man grows out of the barrel of a gun and always has (guns, arrows, swords, sticks and stones). Only God can give life and His gift always appears paradoxically weak in the eyes of the world. He is born in a manger and weeps in the night. He hides in Egypt and lies dead in a tomb. But as kingdoms crumble and the wise men of this world pass into dust, the Babe of Bethlehem reigns as God and continues to be born in the cave and emptiness  of human hearts – where the meek and the lowly find rest, and life everlasting.

Footnotes for this article

  1. I was told this information as a pilgrim but have seen no academic articles that confirm it.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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12 responses to “The Wisdom of Man and the Foolishness of God”

  1. Cliff Avatar
    Cliff

    Excellently written article Father!

  2. David E. Rockett Avatar
    David E. Rockett

    Thanks be to Thee O Christ our God. Thanks be unto Thee

  3. John Mark Poling Avatar
    John Mark Poling

    Thank you. I needed to read this today.

  4. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    “But as kingdoms crumble and the wise men of this world pass into dust, the Babe of Bethlehem reigns as God and continues to be born in the cave and emptiness of human hearts – where the meek and the lowly find rest, and life everlasting.” – Fr. Stephen

    This is without a doubt the very best news I have ever heard. Thank you.

  5. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    The late Kenneth E. Baily, Protestant Middle Eastern scholar, wrote a book called “Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes”. The book attempts to place the life of Jesus Christ in its proper Middle Eastern context. About the birth of Jesus, Baily shared the following at a conference:

    “A simple village home in the time of King David, up until the Second World War, in the Holy Land, had two rooms—one for guests, one for the family. The family room had an area, usually about four feet lower, for the family donkey, the family cow, and two or three sheep. They are brought in last thing at night and taken out and tied up in the courtyard first thing in the morning. Out of the stone floor of the living room, close to family animals, you dig mangers or make a small one out of wood for sheep. Jesus is clearly welcomed into a family home,”

    In the west, there is a lot of tradition (often reflected in artwork) that doesn´t exactly line up with Holy Scripture or the culture norms of Jesus´ time in the Middle East. I certainly cannot speak for Orthodoxy and how it understands the where and when of Jesus´birth, but I thought this bit of information to be appropriate given the wonderful story Fr. Stephen shares with us today.

    Fr. Stephen´s story about the Feast of the Nativity makes me very pleased inside about the season we are entering. Thanks so much again. 🙂

  6. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Orthodox tradition is deeply committed to the birth place of Jesus having been in a “cave” where the animals were stabled. Frankly, the sort of reasoning that you quote on what would have been normative in the Middle East – is reasoning from the “general” to something very specific. Interestingly, the Bethlehem Church, which was built over the cave site, is one of the oldest remaining buildings in the Holy Land. Like most early shrines, the archaeology of the site is pretty much covered over by the later construction of a Church. The Christian sense of these, from the point of view of pilgrimages, was not at all of the “tourist” variety, in which we visit a place and expect it to look like it did when a historical event took place. It is connected to place – but the place is more like a “sacrament” of the event. Modern pilgrims are often bothered by this.

    The birth place of Christ is in a side chapel off of the main sanctuary, several steps down. There is a star framing a hole in the floor. Pilgrims can reach their hands through the hole and touch the rock beneath.

    Thinking of these things as sacraments is, I think, helpful.

  7. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks Fr. Stephen. I was there in 2005 (or 2006??). I loved being there, but as a Protestant at the time I wasn´t thinking anything sacramental.

    What a pity.

  8. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Matthew said:

    “This is without a doubt the very best news I have ever heard. Thank you.”

    Well … truth always being told … it is right up there with The Paschal Homily of Saint John Chrysostom! 🙂

  9. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    My wife and I were there in 2008. I intentionally waited until I was Orthodox before going (it was 10 years after our reception into the Church). It helped. Our first stop as pilgrims was to meet with Patriarch Theophilus to receive his blessing to serve in any of the Churches in his jurisdiction.

  10. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks for sharing about your trip to the Holy Land, Fr. Stephen. I do hope to visit it again someday … with a much more sacramental approach.

  11. Helen Avatar
    Helen

    Father, what a beautiful essay! He is born, sometimes daily in the heart, and the beasts of heart are sometimes ferocious, but He comes, He stays, He waits.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Pretty much every holy place has a Catholic as well as Orthodox presence – generally very cooperative. I’m glad I went, but I also think of St. Gregory of Nyssa’s caveats as well. Every altar is Golgotha – indeed, so is every heart. But it helped to stand at Golgotha and realize that.

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