From Catholic News Agency:
“Full text: Pope Francis’
homily for Christmas 2022”
What does this night still have
to say to our lives? Two thousand years after the birth of Jesus, after so many
Christmases spent amid decorations and gifts, after so much consumerism that
has packaged the mystery we celebrate, there is a danger. We know many things
about Christmas, but we forget its real meaning. So how do we rediscover the
meaning of Christmas? First of all, where do we go to find it? The Gospel of
Jesus’ birth appears to have been written precisely for this purpose: to take
us by the hand and lead us where God would have us go.
It starts with a situation not unlike
our own: everyone is bustling about, getting ready for an important event, the
great census, which called for much preparation. In that sense, the atmosphere
was very much like our modern celebration of Christmas. Yet the Gospel has
little to do with that worldly scenario; it quickly shifts our gaze to
something else, which it considers more important. It is a small and apparently
insignificant detail that it nonetheless mentions three times, always in
relation to the central figures in the narrative. First, Mary places Jesus “in
a manger” (Lk 2:7); then the angels tell the shepherds about “a child wrapped
in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger” (v. 12); and finally, the
shepherds, who find “the child lying in the manger” (v. 16). In order to rediscover
the meaning of Christmas, we need to look to the manger. Yet why is the manger
so important? Because it is the sign, and not by chance, of Christ’s coming
into this world. It is how he announces his coming. It is the way God is born
in history, so that history itself can be reborn. What then does the Lord tell
us? Through the manger, three things, at least: closeness, poverty and
concreteness.
Closeness. The manger serves as a
feeding trough, to enable food to be consumed more quickly. In this way, it can
symbolize one aspect of our humanity: our greed for consumption. While animals
feed in their stalls, men and women in our world, in their hunger for wealth
and power, consume even their neighbors, their brothers and sisters. How many
wars have we seen! And in how many places, even today, are human dignity and
freedom treated with contempt! As always, the principal victims of this human
greed are the weak and the vulnerable. This Christmas too, as in the case of
Jesus, a world ravenous for money, ravenous for power and ravenous for pleasure
does not make room for the little ones, for so many unborn, poor and forgotten
children. I think above all of the children devoured by war, poverty and
injustice. Yet those are the very places to which Jesus comes, a child in the
manger of rejection and refusal. In him, the Child of Bethlehem, every child is
present. And we ourselves are invited to view life, politics and history
through the eyes of children.
In the manger of rejection and
discomfort, God makes himself present. He comes there because there we see the
problem of our humanity: the indifference produced by the greedy rush to
possess and consume. There, in that manger, Christ is born, and there we
discover his closeness to us. He comes there, to a feeding trough, in order to
become our food. God is no father who devours his children, but the Father who,
in Jesus, makes us his children and feeds us with his tender love. He comes to
touch our hearts and to tell us that love alone is the power that changes the
course of history. He does not remain distant and mighty, but draws near to us
in humility; leaving his throne in heaven, he lets himself be laid in a manger.
Dear brother, dear sister,
tonight God is drawing near to you, because you are important to him. From the
manger, as food for your life, he tells you: “If you feel consumed by events,
if you are devoured by a sense of guilt and inadequacy, if you hunger for
justice, I, your God, am with you. I know what you are experiencing, for I
experienced it myself in that manger. I know your weaknesses, your failings and
your history. I was born in order to tell you that I am, and always will be,
close to you”. The Christmas manger, the first message of the divine Child,
tells us that God is with us, he loves us and he seeks us. So take heart! Do
not allow yourself to be overcome by fear, resignation or discouragement. God
was born in a manger so that you could be reborn in the very place where you
thought you had hit rock bottom. There is no evil, there is no sin, from which
Jesus does not want to save you. And he can. Christmas means that God is close
to us: let confidence be reborn!
The manger of Bethlehem speaks to
us not only of closeness, but also of poverty. Around the manger there is very
little: hay and straw, a few animals, little else. People were warm in the inn,
but not here in the coldness of a stable. Yet that is where Jesus was born. The
manger reminds us that he was surrounded by nothing but love: Mary, Joseph and
the shepherds; all poor people, united by affection and amazement, not by
wealth and great expectations. The poverty of the manger thus shows us where
the true riches in life are to be found: not in money and power, but in
relationships and persons.
And the first person, the
greatest wealth, is Jesus himself. Yet do we want to stand at his side? Do we
draw close to him? Do we love his poverty? Or do we prefer to remain
comfortably ensconced in our own interests and concerns? Above all, do we visit
him where he is to be found, namely in the poor mangers of our world? For that
is where he is present. We are called to be a Church that worships a Jesus who
is poor and that serves him in the poor. As a saintly bishop once said: “The
Church supports and blesses efforts to change the structures of injustice, and
sets down but one condition: that social, economic and political change truly
benefit the poor” (O.A. ROMERO, Pastoral Message for the New Year, 1 January
1980). Certainly, it is not easy to leave the comfortable warmth of worldliness
to embrace the stark beauty of the grotto of Bethlehem, but let us remember
that it is not truly Christmas without the poor. Without the poor, we can
celebrate Christmas, but not the birth of Jesus. Dear brothers, dear sisters,
at Christmas God is poor: let charity be reborn!
We now come to our last point:
the manger speaks to us of concreteness. Indeed, a child lying in a manger
presents us with a scene that is striking, even crude. It reminds us that God
truly became flesh. As a result, all our theories, our fine thoughts and our
pious sentiments are no longer enough. Jesus was born poor, lived poor and died
poor; he did not so much talk about poverty as live it, to the very end, for
our sake. From the manger to the cross, his love for us was always palpable,
concrete. From birth to death, the carpenter’s son embraced the roughness of
the wood, the harshness of our existence. He did not love us only in words; he
loved us with utter seriousness!
Consequently, Jesus is not
satisfied with appearances. He who took on our flesh wants more than simply
good intentions. He who was born in the manger, demands a concrete faith, made
up of adoration and charity, not empty words and superficiality. He who lay
naked in the manger and hung naked on the cross, asks us for truth, he asks us
to go to the bare reality of things, and to lay at the foot of the manger all
our excuses, our justifications and our hypocrisies. Tenderly wrapped in
swaddling clothes by Mary, he wants us to be clothed in love. God does not want
appearances but concreteness. May we not let this Christmas pass without doing
something good, brothers and sisters. Since it is his celebration, his
birthday, let us give him the gifts he finds pleasing! At Christmas, God is
concrete: in his name let us help a little hope to be born anew in those who
feel hopeless!
Jesus we behold you lying in the
manger. We see you as close, ever at our side: thank you Lord! We see you as
poor, in order to teach us that true wealth does not reside in things but in
persons, and above all in the poor: forgive us, if we have failed to
acknowledge and serve you in them. We see you as concrete, because your love
for us is palpable. Help us to give flesh and life to our faith. Amen.
^ A great speech. ^
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/253156/full-text-pope-francis-homily-for-christmas-2022
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