Meditations on the Birth of Christ: Reflections for Advent in the Context of Chinese Culture
By You Bin and David F. Ford
()
About this ebook
You Bin
You Bin 游斌 is Professor of Religions at Minzu University of China (Beijing, China), where he directs the Academy of Religions and leads research projects on Comparative Scripture and Interreligious Dialogue. He is the founding editor of the Journal of Comparative Scripture and the author of Introduction to the Hebrew Bible (2007), Social Memory and Ethnic Construction of Ancient Israel (2011), Chinese Catechism on Apostles’ Creed, Lord’s Prayer, and Ten Commandments (2018–2020), Religions of Beijing (2020).
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Meditations on the Birth of Christ - You Bin
Meditations on the Birth of Christ
Reflections for Advent in the Context of Chinese Culture
You Bin
Translated by Johan Ferreira
Foreword by David F. Ford
Meditations on the Birth of Christ
Reflections for Advent in the Context of Chinese Culture
Copyright ©
2021
You Bin. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers,
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Resource Publications
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
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paperback isbn: 978-1-7252-9855-2
hardcover isbn: 978-1-7252-9856-9
ebook isbn: 978-1-7252-9857-6
09/17/15
Except where otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright ©
2001
by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Foreword
Preface
Part I: Christ Is Born into History
Chapter 1: O Lord, Come!
Chapter 2: My Spirit Rejoices in God
Chapter 3: The Descendants of Abraham
Chapter 4: Serving Him without Fear with Holiness and Righteousness
Chapter 5: Let It Be to Me According to Your Word
Chapter 6: Conceived through the Holy Spirit
Part II: Christ Is Born into the World
Chapter 7: Glory to God in the Highest
Chapter 8: My Eyes Have Seen Your Salvation
Chapter 9: They Named Him Jesus
Chapter 10: The Flight to Egypt
Chapter 11: My Father’s Business
Chapter 12: Prepare the Way of the Lord, Make His Paths Straight
Chapter 13: The Last Adam
Part III: Christ Is Born into Us
Chapter 14: The Poor
Chapter 15: Those Who Mourn
Chapter 16: The Meek
Chapter 17: Those Who Thirst for Righteousness
Chapter 18: The Merciful
Chapter 19: The Pure in Heart
Chapter 20: The Peacemakers
Chapter 21: Those Who Are Persecuted for Righteousness
Epilogue
Bibliography
Foreword
It has been my privilege to know Professor You Bin for over twenty years. During that time I have been increasingly impressed by his academic work in research and teaching; by his leadership—not only in his own university, but more widely, both within and beyond China; by his development of the practice of Scriptural Reasoning in China; and by his collegial relationships and friendships around the world. But until I read these meditations on the birth of Christ I had not read anything he had written about his faith and Christian commitment. It has been deeply moving to do so.
This is a book that embodies a mature Chinese Christianity. It has the depth of mainstream Christianity through two thousand years. It is richly scriptural, with a lively and sensitive interweaving of Old and New Testaments. It draws on classic Christian thinkers, such as Origen, Augustine, Anselm, St. Francis, Bonaventure, Brother Lawrence, St. John of the Cross, and St. Thérèse of Lisieux. It is hospitable to the wisdom of different Christian traditions—Orthodox, Catholic, and Protestant. Yet at the same time it is deeply Chinese, as is shown in the engagement with such thinkers and writers as Confucius, Mencius, Laozi, Lao Tzu, Zhang Zai, Zhu Xi, and Wang Yangming. This is a Chinese Christian wisdom that has much to teach the rest of the world.
The structure of each meditation is well crafted in order to enable readers to go as deeply as possible into each topic.
First, there are short opening quotations from the Bible, which can be meditated upon before anything else.
Then there are some questions. Most of these are the sort of questions that are worth taking through life: you never finish answering them. They remind me of many of the questions Jesus asked, such as his first words to this first disciples in the Gospel of John: What are you looking for?
Professor You Bin knows that any learning community has to be centered on good questions, and that for us to be disciples (which simply means learners
) we have to be gripped by the great questions of meaning, truth, and wisdom.
Next come the meditations themselves, where one deep topic after another is explored. The three sections, Christ Born into History,
Christ Born into the World,
and Christ Born into Us,
show the breadth of reality within which Professor You Bin thinks and lives. Readers are invited into God-centered living that shapes us into persons more open to God, more open to other people, and more open to the world God loves, including the natural world and its present environmental crisis. We are encouraged to have a scriptural imagination, and to form our lives, our communities, and our societies in line with a worldview that is both indebted to the Bible and ongoing Christian tradition and also responsive to modern life.
Finally, there are short prayers that lead the meditation further into communion with God. Readers who incorporate these into their own pattern of prayer will find that they can be the basis of a well-balanced spirituality. It is a spirituality that is good for beginners but also has the capacity to draw one deeper and deeper.
The title says this book is about the birth of Christ, but in fact it embraces his birth, boyhood, baptism, teaching, transfiguration, passion, death, and resurrection, and also strongly emphasises the work of the Holy Spirit in the life of Jesus and in the lives of his followers.
One context in which I have collaborated with Professor You Bin is that of Scriptural Reasoning. In the Chinese practice of Scriptural Reasoning, in whose development Professor You Bin has played a leading role (especially through being director of the Institute for Comparative Scripture and Interreligious Dialogue, based in Minzu University), texts on a particular topic are chosen from Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Daoist, and Confucian writings, and then are intensively studied and discussed together in small groups. Professor You Bin is a leading practitioner and has also written extensively on it. Scriptural Reasoning is remarkable in the way it encourages participants to go deeper into their own scriptures and also deeper into the scriptures of others around the table, yet without requiring that that they agree with each other. It has the capacity to foster a healthily plural society. But it only works if each participant first of all goes deeply into the scriptures of his or her own tradition. The meditations in this book show Professor You Bin being deeply and wisely Christian, and they will be a precious gift not only to his fellow Christians but also to anyone else who wants to appreciate better what it can mean to be Christian in the twenty-first century.
David F. Ford
Regius Professor of Divinity Emeritus, University of Cambridge
Preface
Where Is Bethlehem?
Christmas, or the event of the Word becoming flesh,
could be said to be the core of the Christian faith. As the apostle John said, And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth
(John 1:14). The incarnation determines the Christian understanding towards the holy triune God, human nature, history, and all of life.
Speaking more vividly, Christmas is the birth of the God-man as a baby, born for us. The writers of the gospels used delicate brushstrokes to report the story to us. The story allows us to enter the world of the first disciples, seeing with our eyes, listening with our ears, touching with our hands, and feeling with our hearts: Jesus was born.
The worldwide church has fashioned a long tradition of preparing for Christmas. Every year four Sundays before Christmas, Christians begin to adjust their minds and hearts to the spirit of Christmas. This period is referred to as the season of Advent. This volume provides a series of thematic meditations for the season of Advent in order to immerse ourselves in the Scriptures, allowing us to adjust our minds and hearts step by step to recognize the significance of the birth of Jesus for our lives. As the five wise virgins, who took oil in their vessels with their lamps
(Matthew 25:4), we use the Word of God as our lamp and our hearts as the oil to wait for the arrival of the Lord.
Through meditation on the Christmas event, each one of us may learn from the example of the shepherds in the fields, who said, Let us go over to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has made known to us
(Luke 2:15). Every Christmas, our hearts may go to Bethlehem in a spiritual sense to see what the birth of this little baby means to us and what he has accomplished for us. The story also encourages us to follow the example of Mary, the mother of Christ, who treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart
(Luke 2:19). This quiet and thoughtful woman, when God’s mysteries had not yet been fully revealed, kept all these things in her heart, like hiding a great treasure, savoring it again and again, and by faith nourished the tree of life.
When we meditate on the Bible and use our hearts to relive the first coming of Jesus into history, we also direct our hearts to the future, looking forward to the second coming of Jesus at the end of the age. We simultaneously open our hearts and invite Jesus to enter our hearts, welcoming him on this day
of his coming into our lives.
Christ was born in Bethlehem, but where is Bethlehem? If our heart is Bethlehem, then Christ is born into our hearts. We know Jesus when our hearts meet with him. In him we meet the God of heaven and earth. He establishes the realm of our life.
If our life is Bethlehem, then Christ is born into our lives. We follow the principles of life that Christ has established for us, growing in faith, hope, and love; managing our families; and serving him in holiness and righteousness. He is restoring our life and our families.
If our society is Bethlehem, then Christ is born into our society. We establish his church in society. The church is his body. In the journey to the new heavens and the new earth, we expand the body of Christ. He establishes his kingdom for us within our social world.
If our universe is Bethlehem, then Christ is born into our universe. Everything in the universe finds its true meaning in the Holy One who became a man. The Word became flesh, the Creator became a part of the creation, and God sowed in this world a seed that is completely transforming all things. His divine redemptive work, through the sigh of the Holy Spirit in all things, is reviving nature that was impaired by human sin. He leads us together with all things to praise God.
This is how we celebrate and relive the mystery of Christ’s birth every year: he is accomplishing an eternal renewal. He is born into our hearts, he is born into our lives, he is born into our society, and he is born into our world.
At Christmas time, there is a birthing of Christ that takes place in each of our hearts; it is our encounter with Christ through the Holy Spirit. In the form of a feast, we are brought into the presence of Christ. We once again come to the fountain and drink the water of life. We come to the light and receive enlightenment.
In this period of Advent, let us come to meet the Word of God and witness the Christmas of Jesus with the New Testament saints.
Like Mary, who said, My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior
(Luke 1:46–47), let us also demonstrate joy.
Like Simon, who said, Lord, now you are letting your servant depart in peace, according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation
(Luke 2:29–30), let us likewise demonstrate peace.
Like Mary, who said, Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word
(Luke 1:38), let us likewise demonstrate submission.
Like John the Baptist, who said, Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight
(Mark 1:3), let us likewise demonstrate preparation.
Like Anna, who was worshiping with fasting and prayer night and day
(Luke 2:37), let us likewise demonstrate worship.
The Son of Man who was born in Bethlehem not only moves our hearts, but also wants to cheer our soul and nourish our nature. In these weeks of meditation, we come to Jesus to focus on him and to look at him in faith. I looked at him, and he looked at me,
and in each other’s eyes we commune together. In looking at God incarnated, we learn to die constantly to our old sinful self. At the same time, we also pray that the true light which gives light to everyone
(John 1:9) will illuminate the eyes of our hearts in the light of his gaze and teach us to look at all of life through his truth, integrity, and compassionate eyes.
May the Father and the Son together breathe the Holy Spirit into our lives so that we may share in his nature, love him more, follow him more, and become more and more like him.
You Bin
Beijing
Part I
Christ Is Born into History
1
O Lord, Come!
Scripture
O Lord, come!
(1 Cor 16:22 NKJ)
‘Yes, I am coming soon.’ Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.
(Rev 22:20)
Questions
1. Why do we focus on the theme O Lord, come!
during Christmas season?
2. Christ was born in Bethlehem more than two thousand years ago. Why do we still need to cry out O Lord, come!
?
3. What does the call O Lord, come!
mean for our personal lives today?
4. From the history of redemption in the Old Testament, how did the Israelites hope for the coming of the Lord?
5. In what ways do all things in the universe exclaim O Lord, come!
?
Meditation
As we prepare for the Christmas season, we adjust our hearts and minds to a short but powerful melody, O Lord, come!
(Maranatha, 1 Cor 16:22).
The prayer for the coming of the Lord has a double meaning. On the one hand, from a liturgical perspective, the season of Advent expresses the hope of the Lord’s coming. It uses the liturgical calendar to remember the coming of the Lord Jesus two thousand years ago. On the other hand, the season of Advent also encourages us every year to look forward to the second coming of the Messiah, just as the Israelites in the Old Testament did. This prayer reminds us of our intermediate identity (or dual identity). The Lord has already come in history and his coming into the world has enabled us to know God and to become God’s children. At the same time, as God’s children, we hope that he will return on the last day to bring heaven and earth together and to gather the people of the world into his eternal kingdom. Like Abraham, we are still travelers, embarking on the journey of hope. But Jesus has already been born, giving deep roots to our hope. From the testimony of Jesus’ birth, we are already members of the new covenant, but according to the hope of Christ’s second coming, we are like the