Hark the Herald Angels Sing: Beauty, Mystery, and the Incarnation
Luke 2:1-20 • John 1:14
The incarnation as the meeting of transcendence and immanence, the beauty of the liturgical Christmas, and the via media that holds mystery and reason together
Anglican / Episcopal
Scripture, tradition, and reason in balance
The Beautiful Scandal
Lessons and Carols at King's College
Every Christmas Eve since 1918, King's College Chapel in Cambridge has hosted the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. A boy chorister sings the first verse of "Once in Royal David's City" alone — one small voice in the vast chapel. Then the choir joins. Then the congregation. The single voice becoming a multitude is itself a parable of the incarnation: one voice — one baby — entering the world, and from that single point, a chorus that fills the earth. The beauty of the service is not mere aesthetics. It is the Anglican conviction that truth and beauty are inseparable, and that the incarnation deserves the most beautiful container the church can offer.
Source: King's College Cambridge, Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols tradition (1918-present)
The Via Media: Holding Mystery and Reason Together
The Incarnation Continues
Applications
- 1Attend a Lessons and Carols service or listen to one this Christmas. Let the beauty of the liturgy carry you deeper into the mystery of the incarnation.
- 2Hold the tensions. Christmas is both fact and mystery, both celebration and reverence, both joy and awe. Do not reduce it to one dimension.
- 3See yourself as the Body of Christ — the incarnation continuing. How will you make the invisible God visible to someone this week?
- 4Carry the light. After the Christmas Eve service, let the candle represent your commission: to take the light of Christ into the dark places of the world.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of beauty and mystery, we approach the manger with wonder. The Word became flesh — and the most beautiful story ever told is also the truest.
- Via media God — You hold grace and truth together in one person. Help us hold the tensions of faith without collapsing them into simplicity.
- Incarnate Lord, You are still present — in the Eucharist, in the gathered community, in every act of love. Open our eyes to see You.
- Send us out as the Body of Christ. The incarnation continues in us. Make us bearers of the light in a dark world. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
A Christmas Carol (various adaptations)
In every adaptation of Dickens' story, there is a moment when Scrooge — cold, isolated, hardened — hears a boy singing a Christmas carol outside his window. One small voice in the darkness. And something shifts. The music reaches past his defenses. That is what the incarnation does. God does not argue His way into our hearts. He sings His way in. The first Christmas announcement was not a lecture — it was a song: 'Glory to God in the highest.' Beauty is God's preferred mode of entry.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
"Veiled in flesh the Godhead see; hail the incarnate Deity." The veil of flesh both reveals and conceals. That is the mystery the Anglican tradition holds with reverence.
The incarnation did not end in Bethlehem. Christ is still present — in the bread, in the gathered community, in every act of love. You are the Body of Christ tonight.
One boy chorister sings alone in the vast chapel — one small voice against the silence. That is the incarnation: one baby, one cry, one life, and from that single point, a chorus that fills the earth.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols?
A Christmas Eve service originated at King's College Cambridge in 1918. Nine Bible readings trace salvation history from Genesis to John 1, interspersed with carols. It has become the model for Anglican Christmas worship worldwide and beautifully conveys the incarnation through both Scripture and song.
How does the Anglican via media approach Christmas?
The via media ('middle way') holds together what other traditions sometimes separate: historical fact and divine mystery, evangelical joy and Catholic reverence, beautiful liturgy and clear preaching. Christmas is approached through 'both/and' rather than 'either/or.'
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the christmas / nativity sermon.