SOLEMNITY OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI Saint Peter's Basilica Saturday, 24 December 2011
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
The reading from Saint Paul’s Letter to Titus that we have just heard begins
solemnly with the word “apparuit”, which then comes back again in the
reading at the Dawn Mass: apparuit – “there has appeared”. This is a
programmatic word, by which the Church seeks to express synthetically the
essence of Christmas. Formerly, people had spoken of God and formed human
images of him in all sorts of different ways. God himself had spoken in many
and various ways to mankind (cf. Heb 1:1 – Mass during the Day). But now
something new has happened: he has appeared. He has revealed himself. He has
emerged from the inaccessible light in which he dwells. He himself has come
into our midst. This was the great joy of Christmas for the early Church: God
has appeared. No longer is he merely an idea, no longer do we have to form a
picture of him on the basis of mere words. He has “appeared”. But now we ask:
how has he appeared? Who is he in reality? The reading at the Dawn Mass goes
on to say: “the kindness and love of God our Saviour for mankind were revealed”
(Tit 3:4). For the people of pre-Christian times, whose response to the
terrors and contradictions of the world was to fear that God himself might not
be good either, that he too might well be cruel and arbitrary, this was a real
“epiphany”, the great light that has appeared to us: God is pure goodness.
Today too, people who are no longer able to recognize God through faith are
asking whether the ultimate power that underpins and sustains the world is truly
good, or whether evil is just as powerful and primordial as the good and the
beautiful which we encounter in radiant moments in our world. “The kindness and
love of God our Saviour for mankind were revealed”: this is the new, consoling
certainty that is granted to us at Christmas.
In all three Christmas Masses, the liturgy quotes a passage from the Prophet
Isaiah, which describes the epiphany that took place at Christmas in greater
detail: “A child is born for us, a son given to us and dominion is laid on his
shoulders; and this is the name they give him: Wonder-Counsellor, Mighty-God,
Eternal-Father, Prince-of-Peace. Wide is his dominion in a peace that has no
end” (Is 9:5f.). Whether the prophet had a particular child in mind,
born during his own period of history, we do not know. But it seems
impossible. This is the only text in the Old Testament in which it is said of a
child, of a human being: his name will be Mighty-God, Eternal-Father. We are
presented with a vision that extends far beyond the historical moment into the
mysterious, into the future. A child, in all its weakness, is Mighty God. A
child, in all its neediness and dependence, is Eternal Father. And his peace
“has no end”. The prophet had previously described the child as “a great light”
and had said of the peace he would usher in that the rod of the oppressor, the
footgear of battle, every cloak rolled in blood would be burned (Is 9:1,
3-4).
God has appeared – as a child. It is in this guise that he pits himself against
all violence and brings a message that is peace. At this hour, when the world
is continually threatened by violence in so many places and in so many different
ways, when over and over again there are oppressors’ rods and bloodstained
cloaks, we cry out to the Lord: O mighty God, you have appeared as a child and
you have revealed yourself to us as the One who loves us, the One through whom
love will triumph. And you have shown us that we must be peacemakers with you.
We love your childish estate, your powerlessness, but we suffer from the
continuing presence of violence in the world, and so we also ask you: manifest
your power, O God. In this time of ours, in this world of ours, cause the
oppressors’ rods, the cloaks rolled in blood and the footgear of battle to be
burned, so that your peace may triumph in this world of ours.
Christmas is an epiphany – the appearing of God and of his great light in a
child that is born for us. Born in a stable in Bethlehem, not in the palaces of
kings. In 1223, when Saint Francis of Assisi celebrated Christmas in Greccio
with an ox and an ass and a manger full of hay, a new dimension of the mystery
of Christmas came to light. Saint Francis of Assisi called Christmas “the feast
of feasts” – above all other feasts – and he celebrated it with “unutterable
devotion” (2 Celano 199; Fonti Francescane, 787). He kissed
images of the Christ-child with great devotion and he stammered tender words
such as children say, so Thomas of Celano tells us (ibid.). For the
early Church, the feast of feasts was Easter: in the Resurrection Christ had
flung open the doors of death and in so doing had radically changed the world:
he had made a place for man in God himself. Now, Francis neither changed nor
intended to change this objective order of precedence among the feasts, the
inner structure of the faith centred on the Paschal Mystery. And yet through
him and the character of his faith, something new took place: Francis discovered
Jesus’ humanity in an entirely new depth. This human existence of God became
most visible to him at the moment when God’s Son, born of the Virgin Mary, was
wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger. The Resurrection presupposes
the Incarnation. For God’s Son to take the form of a child, a truly human
child, made a profound impression on the heart of the Saint of Assisi,
transforming faith into love. “The kindness and love of God our Saviour for
mankind were revealed” – this phrase of Saint Paul now acquired an entirely new
depth. In the child born in the stable at Bethlehem, we can as it were touch
and caress God. And so the liturgical year acquired a second focus in a feast
that is above all a feast of the heart.
This has nothing to do with sentimentality. It is right here, in this new
experience of the reality of Jesus’ humanity that the great mystery of faith is
revealed. Francis loved the child Jesus, because for him it was in this
childish estate that God’s humility shone forth. God became poor. His Son was
born in the poverty of the stable. In the child Jesus, God made himself
dependent, in need of human love, he put himself in the position of asking for
human love – our love. Today Christmas has become a commercial celebration,
whose bright lights hide the mystery of God’s humility, which in turn calls us
to humility and simplicity. Let us ask the Lord to help us see through the
superficial glitter of this season, and to discover behind it the child in the
stable in Bethlehem, so as to find true joy and true light.Francis arranged for Mass to be celebrated on the manger that stood between the ox and the ass (cf. 1 Celano 85; Fonti 469). Later, an altar was built over this manger, so that where animals had once fed on hay, men could now receive the flesh of the spotless lamb Jesus Christ, for the salvation of soul and body, as Thomas of Celano tells us (cf. 1 Celano 87; Fonti 471). Francis himself, as a deacon, had sung the Christmas Gospel on the holy night in Greccio with resounding voice. Through the friars’ radiant Christmas singing, the whole celebration seemed to be a great outburst of joy (1 Celano 85.86; Fonti 469, 470). It was the encounter with God’s humility that caused this joy – his goodness creates the true feast.
Today, anyone wishing to enter the Church of Jesus’ Nativity in Bethlehem will
find that the doorway five and a half metres high, through which emperors and
caliphs used to enter the building, is now largely walled up. Only a low
opening of one and a half metres has remained. The intention was probably to
provide the church with better protection from attack, but above all to prevent
people from entering God’s house on horseback. Anyone wishing to enter
the place of Jesus’ birth has to bend down. It seems to me that a deeper truth
is revealed here, which should touch our hearts on this holy night: if we want
to find the God who appeared as a child, then we must dismount from the high
horse of our “enlightened” reason. We must set aside our false certainties, our
intellectual pride, which prevents us from recognizing God’s closeness. We must
follow the interior path of Saint Francis – the path leading to that ultimate
outward and inward simplicity which enables the heart to see. We must bend
down, spiritually we must as it were go on foot, in order to pass through the
portal of faith and encounter the God who is so different from our prejudices
and opinions – the God who conceals himself in the humility of a newborn baby.
In this spirit let us celebrate the liturgy of the holy night, let us strip away
our fixation on what is material, on what can be measured and grasped. Let us
allow ourselves to be made simple by the God who reveals himself to the simple
of heart. And let us also pray especially at this hour for all who have to
celebrate Christmas in poverty, in suffering, as migrants, that a ray of God’s
kindness may shine upon them, that they – and we – may be touched by the
kindness that God chose to bring into the world through the birth of his Son in
a stable. Amen.
Comments