C. S. Lewis on the incarnation
“The central miracle asserted by Christians is the
Incarnation. They say that God became
Man. Every other miracle prepares for
this, or exhibits this, or results from this. . . .
In the Christian story God descends to re-ascend. He comes
down; down from the heights of absolute being into time and space, down into
humanity . . . down to the very roots and sea-bed of the Nature He has created.
But He goes down to come up again and bring the ruined world
up with Him. One has the picture of a strong man stooping lower and lower to
get himself underneath some great complicated burden. He must stoop in order to
lift, he must almost disappear under the load before he incredibly straightens
his back and marches off with the whole mass swaying on his shoulders.
Or one may think of a diver, first reducing himself to
nakedness, then glancing in mid-air, then gone with a splash, vanished, rushing
down through green and warm water into black and cold water, down through
increasing pressure into the death-like region of ooze and slime and old decay;
then up again, back to colour and light, his lungs almost bursting, till
suddenly he breaks surface again, holding in his hand the dripping, precious
thing that he went down to recover. He and it are both coloured now that they
have come up into the light: down below, where it lay colourless in the dark,
he lost his colour, too.
In this descent and re-ascent everyone will recognise a
familiar pattern: a thing written all over the world. It is the pattern of all
vegetable life. It must belittle itself into something hard, small and
deathlike, it must fall into the ground: thence the new life re-ascends.
. . . So it is also in our moral and emotional life. The
first innocent and spontaneous desires have to submit to the deathlike process
of control or total denial: but from that there is a re-ascent to fully formed
character in which the strength of the original material all operates but in a
new way. Death and Rebirth–go down to go up–it is a key principle. Through this
bottleneck, this belittlement, the highroad nearly always lies.
The doctrine of the Incarnation, if accepted, puts this
principle even more emphatically at the centre. The pattern is there in Nature because it was first there in God. All the instances of it which I have
mentioned turn out to be but transpositions of the Divine theme into a minor
key. I am not now referring simply to
the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ. The total pattern, of which they are only the turning point, is the real
Death and Re-birth: for certainly no seed ever fell from so fair a tree into so
dark and cold a soil as would furnish more than a faint analogy to this huge
descent and re-ascension in which God dredged the salt and oozy bottom of
Creation.”
~C. S. Lewis (from Miracles)
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