God Is Not Ashamed--January 1, 2026
"And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth." (John 1:14)
God isn't embarrassed to be seen with us.
God is not ashamed of being associated with us--not you, not me, not anybody.
God doesn't need to keep us at arm's length, or to stay up in the safety of heaven, hermetically sealed off from humanity, in order to avoid being tainted by our sin or disgusted with our messiness.
Whatever it means to talk about God's glory, it doesn't require some unearthly, ethereal bubble for God to live in far away where nothing unpleasant can get in. And for that matter, whatever it means when we talk about God being "holy," it can't mean some sort of allergy to sinful humans as though God can't stand to be in the presence of crooked, selfish sinners as we so often are. God comes right into the neighborhood, so to speak. More than that, God shares our humanity completely in Jesus--all the way down to the messy physicality of flesh and bone and blood.
We have to take that seriously if we are going to consider this powerful verse from the opening poem of John's Gospel, which sets the stage for the whole story of Jesus. John makes the audacious claim, not merely that God chose to communicate with humanity, and not even that God chose to appear in a vision or a dream to some lucky saint, but that God took on the utter fleshliness of human life.
We are, after all, basically walking, talking, bags of meat. We are made up of muscle and tissue and bone, viscera and blood and assorted pulsing organs. To be human isn't a neat and tidy experience--we are not simply minds who think lovely and tidy thoughts, but we are physical beings, with bellies that get hungry, bodies that get tired, emotions that range from fierce anger to deep sorrow to fear that makes us tremble. And as John tells it, God is not embarrassed to be associated with all of that--to experience it, to share it, and to take all of it into God's own being. Whatever else it means to be "God," it has to include the ability--and the willingness--to walk the dusty roads of Palestine, eating at dinner parties with the tax collectors and sinners, and weeping outside the grave of his friend Lazarus. All of it--the whole experience of being human, from sniffling noses and tear-stained cheeks, to gnawing hunger and bleeding vulnerability, is within God's life now, through Jesus.
And like I say, this makes a big difference in the way we understand the meaning of God's "glory" and God's "holiness." I don't know about you, but over the years, I've heard plenty of religious voices that would have us believe that God's glory primarily has to do with God being untouched and unsullied by the messiness of the material world. We think of it as God's radiance, like a blinding light that is undimmed and unaffected by the slings and arrows of mundane life--of eating and sleeping, of sweating and washing, and all the other stuff of our ordinary human routines. I've heard plenty of those same religious voices talk about God's holiness in similar terms--that being "holy" means that God must be distant and damning toward our sinfulness, and that a holy God cannot stand to be in the presence of sin, lest God's purity and perfection be offended. And to me, that always makes it sound like a flaw or a weakness on God's part--like some kind of allergic reaction to getting too close to scoundrels and sinners.
But again, if we take John at his word that in Christ Jesus, "the Word became flesh and lived among us," such that we "have seen his glory," then whatever that glory is, it can't be afraid of hanging out with the likes of us. Whatever God's "holiness" is, it can't be a limitation that keeps God from touching our broken places, washing our dirty feet, or embracing us even while we are sinners. God has chosen, not only to come close to all of our mess, but to identify with it--to share it as God's own. That's the scandalous truth of the Gospel.
As a new year begins on the calendar, there's a certain freshness we often find at the turning of the page. A new year often feels untainted and pure--no mess-ups yet, no broken resolutions yet, no disappointments or heartbreaks since the clock struck midnight. It is easy to tell ourselves that God can come near when a new year begins, because we are starting fresh without red-pen marks on our permanent record. But of course, the news John tells us is that God doesn't wait to come near only when we have a clean slate or a winning record. God has come even knowing all the unresolved baggage we are still lugging with us from last year. God has come to us in Christ, knowing full well that the selfishness and sin we struggled with last year will still trouble us this year. God has come to us, sharing the fullness of what it is to be human, because that is how God's love works.
And that sort of love--love that is willing to share with us the pains and the disappointments and the heartaches of life in this messy, physical, walking-meat-bag existence--well, that sort of love is nothing short of holy and glorious. Indeed, we have seen his glory, full of grace and truth--it is the way God shares our flesh.
Lord Jesus, enable us to recognize your presence among us, and to know you are unashamed to share life as one of us.






