• Current Students
  • News & Events
  • Library
  • Bookshop
  • Current Students
  • News & Events
  • Library
  • Bookshop
  • Study

    STUDY

    Start your study journey with St Mark’s today! 

    Explore our undergraduate, postgraduate, and research programs.

     

    We offer Theology, Ministry, Counselling, and Supervision courses, in partnership with Charles Sturt University.  

    • Our Courses
    • Research Degrees
    • Single Subjects
    • Study Online
    • Prospectus
    • Why St Mark's?
    • How to Apply
    • Fees & Loans
    • Scholarships
    • Credit Transfer
    • Key Dates
    • Apply Now

    partnering with

    Enquire
  • Research

    RESEARCH

    Explore our higher degrees by research!

    At St Mark’s, our research staff and students work together to systematically investigate biblical and theological issues.  Our aim is to to clarify the nature of these issues and/or provide solutions.

    • Our Research
    • Our Research Impact
    • Ethics & Integrity
    • Publications
    • St Mark's Review
    • Research Degrees
    • Fees & Cost
    • Scholarships & Grants
    • Supervision
    • How to Apply

    partnering with

    Enquire
  • About

    ABOUT

    St Mark’s — since 1957.

     We are passionate about the practical connection of theological principles to public and private life, while championing intellectual rigour in the pursuit of academic excellence.

    • About Us
    • Our Leadership Team
    • Vision & Mission
    • Strategic Plan
    • Maps & Parking
    • Library
    • Jobs
    St Mark's National Theological Centre
    • Contact Us
    • Getting to St Mark's

    15 Blackall Street, Barton ACT 2600

  • Community

    COMMUNITY

    At St Mark’s we highly value the connections we make.

    By partnering with Charles Sturt University, we are able to provide a better learning experience for our students. Contributions by alumni, volunteers, and doners, benefit both our students and the wider community.

    • Giving
    • Volunteering
    • Alumni
    • Partnerships
    • Venue Hire
    • Bookshop
    • Chapel
    • News & Events
    Instagram Facebook Youtube Linkedin
  • GIving

    GIVING

    We are truly grateful and humbled by your generosity!

    Donating to St Mark’s enables us to continually improve our courses and facilities. With your generous donation, we are able to develop richer and improved services for our students, teachers, alumni and the community.

    • Why give?
    • Ways to give
    • Areas to give to
    • Give now
    • Contact us
  • BLOG

    BLOG

    Most recent articles

    Read our most recent blog articles written by St Mark’s faculty members.

    Aerial view of St Mark's National Theological Centre

    A message from the new Director of St Mark’s National Theological Centre

    “Hell took a body, and met God face to face”

    The thirty-centimetre God: St Mark’s Christmas message

    St Mark’s Info Night – Mini Lecture 1

    Stan Grant gives the Sorensen lecture at Yale Divinity School – Geoff Broughton

    Biblical Languages – Jeanette Mathews

APPLY NOW
lightstock_77911_medium_chevelle

12 December 2022

Andrew’s Christmas Address Part 2

Happy Birthday Jesus (part 2)

This article is part 2 of an (edited) message Andrew Cameron gave at the Anglicare NSW Christmas Service on Wednesday December 7th 2022. The theme was ‘Happy Birthday, Jesus!’

 

In part 1 of what causes me to warm to the birth of Jesus, I pointed to three episodes where Jesus puts supposedly outcast women at the very centre of God’s love — where they were all along, of course. There are several other such moments, with several other women; and he does the same with children, leprous men, deranged people — and even with rich men who are brave enough to take their first tiny steps away from hierarchies of entitlement.

On top of even that, Jesus is brave and smart. Time and time again, and especially as more of the little people gravitate to him, political bad-actors menace him, trying to snooker him, or to make him look stupid, or to catch him out with some error for which to lynch him. Time and time again he outwits them, shows them up, sidesteps their games, and points to what actually matters in life. Time and time again I read the recollections of those original witnesses and feel with them the ‘ahah’ moment — that gasp of ‘how could I not have seen that, known that, felt that, before now!?

The historian Tom Holland has written a lot about how so much of what now matters to us, what we take for granted, is a beautiful echo of what Jesus Christ inserted into the world. Here is a short list:

  • that there is no such thing as a so-called ‘outcast’, because God really did make each of one of us precious;
  • that race, or status, or being healthy, or performance, are not what give us true connection and belonging;
  • that no relationship need ever be too broken for restoration — whatever the sin, or failure, or mess, there can be forgiveness and reconciliation;
  • and that no debacle, disaster, or even death, is beyond the power of redemption.

People did not know these things then, and people are forgetting them again now. But I love Jesus’ birthday because it – that is, he – gives these truths back to every human community, over and over, again and again.

It eventually emerges that in Jesus Christ, we meet the eternal Person of God (cf. Jn 1:1 –18). That has taken me a very long time to begin to get my head around and I won’t focus on it here, except to say two things.

  • That Jesus was human means we begin to see how to be human ourselves in ways that are true, beautiful, and good.
  • That Jesus brings God to us means the God who blazes with love remains totally for our species, and for this planet, despite how it looks some days.

We will hear again this season of a sequence of people who had somehow cottoned on that God would do something like this. It is hard to know exactly how that worked. They knew something that others didn’t, those shepherds, those men from Persia and beyond, the man Simeon and the old woman Anna. The moment they clapped eyes on the baby, they were ‘overjoyed’, the record keeps telling us. Another was Isaiah, who also intuited something like this coming down the pipe. I’ll slightly abbreviate what he said (Isa. 9:2–7):

The people walking in darkness
   have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness
   a light has dawned.

[. . .] [T]hey rejoice
   [like] people rejoice at the harvest,
   [like] warriors rejoice when dividing the plunder.

For [. . .] you have shattered
   the yoke that burdens them,
   the bar across their shoulders,
   the rod of their oppressor.

Every warrior’s boot used in battle
   and every garment rolled in blood
   will be destined for burning,
   will be fuel for the fire.

For to us a child is born,
   to us a son is given [. . .]
And he will be called
   Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
   Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. [. . .]

He will reign [. . .] with justice and righteousness
   The zeal of the LORD Almighty will accomplish this.

The zeal – that is, the determination – of the Lord Almighty did accomplish this, beginning on Jesus’ birthday.

Anyone who is sick at heart at the darkness, or anyone who is sick at heart hearing of people living under the bars and rods of oppression, or of them fleeing from the warrior’s boot, or wearing garments ‘rolled in blood’ – anyone heart-sickened by all that can pause, this season, and gaze at the amazing counsellor, the Prince of wholeness and peace, who continues to turn the mess around.

There are people at St Mark’s and in local churches whose vocation is to offer guidance on him, and on how he brings peace. Or any of us can simply google The Chosen, in the privacy of our own home, and see an amazing new serialization of Jesus’ life.

However we do it, and the more time we spend there, the more meaning this birthday will have.

Keep in touch with our eNews

© 2025  St Mark’s National Theological Centre

A PARTNER IN THE SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY AT

Charles Sturt University

Charles Sturt University,  CRICOS Provider: 00005F,  TEQSA Provider Identification: PRV12018 (Australian university)

Contact  |  Privacy  |  Safety  |  Disclaimer  |  Copyright  |  Accessibility  |  Shipping

  • Study
  • Research
  • About
  • Community
  • Giving
  • News and Events
  • Current Students
  • Library
  • Bookshop
Contact us