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No Disguises

December 25, 2025 By Pr. Joseph Crippen

If you want to see what the Triune God is really like, look at Jesus. If you want to know what you could really look like, start there, too.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Nativity of Our Lord, Christmas Day
Texts: Hebrews 1:1-4, John 1:1-14 (adding v. 18) (also referring to Luke 2:1-20 and other Scriptures)

Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen

We assume God is in disguise on this day.

The almighty and eternal Triune God hides all that glory and God-ness inside a little baby, born to a poor refugee family in the Middle East. The Trinity hides in a human infant, with human DNA, vulnerable, weak, threatened. As Martin Luther taught us to sing and to wonder: “O Lord, you have created all! How did you come to be so small, to sweetly sleep in manger-bed where lowing cattle lately fed?”[1]

But today the writer to the Hebrews declares a different wonder: “The Son is the radiance of God’s glory,” they write, “and the exact imprint of God’s very being.”

The Triune God isn’t in disguise in Jesus at all. In Jesus everything true about God is known.

It isn’t how we’ve usually understood Christmas, for good reasons.

One is John’s proclamation: the Word of God from before all time, through whom all things were made, without whom not one thing was created, took on human flesh, lived among us. Isn’t that God hiding all God’s glory in that little baby?

And Paul has told us that Christ did not consider equality with God a thing to be grasped but took on our human flesh, became obedient even to death. (Philippians 2) Isn’t that God setting aside all God-things to become one of us?

Hebrews doesn’t quarrel with either John or Paul. What Hebrews declares is that being born among us is not God changing, or hiding God’s true essence. It is God revealing the exact truth about God. “Not regarding equality with God as something to be grasped” is actually God’s deepest nature, not a new thing. God taking on human flesh, living among us, is the only way to truly know and see God. John tells us that himself today.

Because the Son is the exact imprint, literally the exact engraving, of God’s very being.

If you want to see what God looks like, Hebrews says, look at Jesus. Look at this vulnerable, weak, poor, oppressed baby – it’s the exact imprint of God. It’s who God is. Follow this vulnerable baby to adulthood and see Jesus, the one who guides all to the heart of God. Who continues to be vulnerable, and apparently weak. Who reveals God’s deepest love in dying on the cross. All this is God’s true identity.

And, Hebrews says, the Son is – is – the reflection of God’s glory. Not a hiding of it. Not something we have to wait till Transfiguration to see. Risky, vulnerable, self-giving love, willing to die for another, willing to trust us enough to be a fragile baby in our midst, that is – is – the reflection of God’s glory, not a disguise covering God’s glory.

This completely changes our talk of God.

Everything that we wonder about God, ask about God, fear about God, are confused about God, is answered in Jesus, the Son, Hebrews says.

So, is God just? Look at Jesus and you find the answer: yes. Does God care for and identify with those who are on the margins, those who hunger and thirst both physically and spiritually? Look at Jesus and you find the answer: yes. Can God forgive and love those who hurt and harm, who sin, even greatly? Look at Jesus and you find the answer: yes.

Does God believe power and force and violence are the way to heal the creation, make things right? Look at the baby Jesus and you find the answer: no. Look at the adult Jesus, the life he taught, the path he walked, and you find the answer: no. Can God overcome evil and death without power and force and violence? Look at the crucified and risen Christ and you find the answer: yes.

The Son reveals the truth of the Trinity.

This completely changes how you can see yourself, too.

In Genesis 1, God says, “let us create humanity in our image, according to our very being.”

You are, I am, all people are, made in the very image of God, too, created according to God’s very being. When you see Jesus, you see the completion of that image, God in God’s fullness. The exact imprint, the reflection of God’s glory.

But you, and I, and all people, are created according to that same divine blueprint, that same divine Logos as John calls it. And God said, “it is good,” when God made us, remember?

We certainly live in ways that debase that image, that aren’t good. The evil humans have done grieves us and grieves God. It builds up and corrupts over time to the point where this world is overrun by systems and structures that perpetuate evil and oppression. And each of us is capable of doing our own harm, our own evil. Living against our true nature.

But never forget: you are made in God’s image. Your true nature cannot be denied.

And if you’ve covered up that image, or marred it, or need to remember what God really looks like and what you could really look like, well, start today.

In the manger. Here you see the exact imprint of God’s very being. The reflection of God’s glory. All you need to know about the Triune God is shown here. And in the love and path Jesus taught and walked all the way to the cross, all you need to know about your love and path are shown. In rising from the dead, the Son revealed God’s vulnerable, self-giving love can never be overcome. Not even by death. Not even by you.

God’s not in disguise today. Neither does your God-image need to be hidden. Look to the manger and see God’s glory. See God’s truth and yours. And rejoice, because God only can be known in someone small and fragile and weak like you. Like me.

It’s who God really is. And who you really are. And it will change the world.

In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

[1] From ELW 268, “From Heaven Above,” stanza 9, Martin Luther, 1483-1546; tr. Lutheran Book of Worship, copyright 1978.

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MOUNT OLIVE LUTHERAN CHURCH
3045 Chicago Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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  • Home
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    • Welcome Video
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  • Music
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