SOLEMNITY OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica
Our Parish Belen for 2014 |
Sunday, 24 December 2006
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
We have just heard in the Gospel
the message given by the angels to the shepherds during that Holy Night, a
message which the Church now proclaims to us: "To you is born this day in
the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord. And this will be a sign
for you: you will find a babe wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a
manger" (Lk 2:11-12). Nothing miraculous, nothing extraordinary, nothing
magnificent is given to the shepherds as a sign. All they will see is a child
wrapped in swaddling clothes, one who, like all children, needs a mother’s
care; a child born in a stable, who therefore lies not in a cradle but in a
manger. God’s sign is the baby in need of help and in poverty. Only in their
hearts will the shepherds be able to see that this baby fulfils the promise of
the prophet Isaiah, which we heard in the first reading: "For to us a
child is born, to us a son is given; and the government will be upon his
shoulder" (Is 9:5). Exactly the same sign has been given to us. We too are
invited by the angel of God, through the message of the Gospel, to set out in
our hearts to see the child lying in the manger.
God’s sign is simplicity. God’s
sign is the baby. God’s sign is that he makes himself small for us. This is how
he reigns. He does not come with power and outward splendour. He comes as a
baby – defenseless and in need of our help. He does not want to overwhelm us
with his strength. He takes away our fear of his greatness. He asks for our
love: so he makes himself a child. He wants nothing other from us than our
love, through which we spontaneously learn to enter into his feelings, his
thoughts and his will – we learn to live with him and to practise with him that
humility of renunciation that belongs to the very essence of love. God made
himself small so that we could understand him, welcome him, and love him. The
Fathers of the Church, in their Greek translation of the Old Testament, found a
passage from the prophet Isaiah that Paul also quotes in order to show how
God’s new ways had already been foretold in the Old Testament. There we read:
"God made his Word short, he abbreviated it" (Is 10:23; Rom 9:28).
The Fathers interpreted this in two ways. The Son himself is the Word, the
Logos; the eternal Word became small – small enough to fit into a manger. He
became a child, so that the Word could be grasped by us. In this way God
teaches us to love the little ones. In this way he teaches us to love the weak.
In this way he teaches us respect for children. The child of Bethlehem directs
our gaze towards all children who suffer and are abused in the world, the born
and the unborn. Towards children who are placed as soldiers in a violent world;
towards children who have to beg; towards children who suffer deprivation and
hunger; towards children who are unloved. In all of these it is the Child of
Bethlehem who is crying out to us; it is the God who has become small who
appeals to us. Let us pray this night that the brightness of God’s love may
enfold all these children. Let us ask God to help us do our part so that the
dignity of children may be respected. May they all experience the light of love, which mankind needs so much more than the material necessities of life.
Also we come to the second
meaning that the Fathers saw in the phrase: "God made his Word
short". The Word which God speaks to us in Sacred Scripture had become
long in the course of the centuries. It became long and complex, not just for
the simple and unlettered, but even more so for those versed in Sacred
Scripture, for the experts who evidently became entangled in details and in
particular problems, almost to the extent of losing an overall perspective.
Jesus "abbreviated" the Word – he showed us once more its deeper
simplicity and unity. Everything taught by the Law and the Prophets is summed
up – he says – in the command: "You shall love the Lord your God with all
your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind… You shall love your
neighbour as yourself" (Mt 22:37-40). This is everything – the whole faith
is contained in this one act of love which embraces God and humanity. Yet now
further questions arise: how are we to love God with all our mind, when our
intellect can barely reach him? How are we to love him with all our heart and
soul, when our heart can only catch a glimpse of him from afar, when there are
so many contradictions in the world that would hide his face from us? This is
where the two ways in which God has "abbreviated" his Word come
together. He is no longer distant. He is no longer unknown. He is no longer
beyond the reach of our heart. He has become a child for us, and in so doing he
has dispelled all doubt. He has become our neighbour, restoring in this way the
image of man, whom we often find so hard to love. For us, God has become a
gift. He has given himself. He has entered time for us. He who is the Eternal
One, above time, he has assumed our time and raised it to himself on high.
Christmas has become the Feast of gifts in imitation of God who has given
himself to us. Let us allow our heart, our soul and our mind to be touched by
this fact! Among the many gifts that we buy and receive, let us not forget the
true gift: to give each other something of ourselves, to give each other
something of our time, to open our time to God. In this way anxiety disappears,
joy is born, and the feast is created. During the festive meals of these days
let us remember the Lord’s words: "When you give a dinner or a banquet, do
not invite those who will invite you in return, but invite those whom no one
invites and who are not able to invite you" (cf. Lk 14:12-14). This also
means: when you give gifts for Christmas, do not give only to those who will
give to you in return, but give to those who receive from no one and who cannot
give you anything back. This is what God has done: he invites us to his wedding
feast, something which we cannot reciprocate, but can only receive with joy.
Let us imitate him! Let us love God and, starting from him, let us also love
man, so that, starting from man, we can then rediscover God in a new way!
And so, finally, we find yet a
third meaning in the saying that the Word became "brief" and
"small". The shepherds were told that they would find the child in a
manger for animals, who were the rightful occupants of the stable. Reading
Isaiah (1:3), the Fathers concluded that beside the manger of Bethlehem there
stood an ox and an ass. At the same time they interpreted the text as
symbolizing the Jews and the pagans – and thus all humanity – who each in their
own way have need of a Saviour: the God who became a child. Man, in order to
live, needs bread, the fruit of the earth and of his labour. But he does not
live by bread alone. He needs nourishment for his soul: he needs meaning that
can fill his life. Thus, for the Fathers, the manger of the animals became the
symbol of the altar, on which lies the Bread which is Christ himself: the true
food for our hearts. Once again we see how he became small: in the humble
appearance of the host, in a small piece of bread, he gives us himself.
All this is conveyed by the sign
that was given to the shepherds and is given also to us: the child born for us,
the child in whom God became small for us. Let us ask the Lord to grant us the
grace of looking upon the crib this night with the simplicity of the shepherds,
so as to receive the joy with which they returned home (cf. Lk 2:20). Let us
ask him to give us the humility and the faith with which Saint Joseph looked
upon the child that Mary had conceived by the Holy Spirit. Let us ask the Lord
to let us look upon him with that same love with which Mary saw him. And let us
pray that in this way the light that the shepherds saw will shine upon us too,
and that what the angels sang that night will be accomplished throughout the
world: "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among men with
whom he is pleased." Amen!
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