One
of the most quoted Christmas sermons in Church history is a late 6th-century
homily by Pope Saint Gregory the Great (540-604)
that begins: “Since by the Lord’s favor we are to celebrate the Sacrifice of
the Mass three times today, we cannot speak at length upon the lesson of the
Gospel. Yet the Nativity of our Lord compels us to say something.”
And
so indeed it does! Even in this divisive time when it is so hard to get people
to agree on anything, I think we might all agree with Gregory about that!
On
the other hand, Christmas has been going on, all around us, for weeks now. Some
people perhaps are tired of it already! What is there that is new to say after
weeks of Christmas carols and cards and shopping? And anyway what is there that
is new to say some 2000+ years after the fact that we call “the 1st Christmas”?
The
Christmas story, as Saint Luke tells it, the same familiar story that we have
heard over and over again all our lives, begins by announcing who the Emperor
was and what was going on in the world at the time. Luke wants us to understand
that the story he is telling really happened as part of the history of the
world. Jesus was really born. God’s Son became Mary’s Son, a human being like
us.
What
if in fact it had never happened? Well, for one thing, we wouldn’t be here
tonight! Certainly we wouldn’t be celebrating Christmas! And we wouldn’t be here
either, because this beautiful church that has graced this hilltop now for 131
years would never have been built!
And,
whatever year this would be, it wouldn’t be 2017 – A.D. 2017, Anno Domini 2017, the year of the Lord 2017. Some try to avoid acknowledging that and
use other terminology to obscure the meaning of the calendar, but nothing can
change the number and its meaning. What happened that 1st Christmas
was so fundamentally important that, even now, we still calculate our calendar
and date our years from it.
But
more important than numbers and dates, if Christmas had never happened, the
whole history of the past 20 centuries would have been very, very different.
And, even more important than that, we ourselves would be very different. As
Saint Augustine (354-430) so famously said: “If [God’s] Word had
not become flesh and had not dwelt among us, we would have had to believe that
there was no connection between God and humanity and we would have been in
despair.”
But instead, because of Christmas, we
have an alternative to despair! Hence the angel’s reassuring words to the
shepherds: Do not be afraid! We heard
those same words just yesterday, spoken by the angel Gabriel to Mary and later
to Joseph. We will hear them again at Easter, from the mouth of the Risen Lord
himself, the same Risen Lord whom we encounter whenever we celebrate the
Eucharist.
Of course, all those people – Mary, Joseph,
the shepherds, the disciples at Easter – all really were afraid, and for some
very good reasons. And for all our holiday cheer, so perhaps are we as well, as
we come with anxieties we may be reluctant to name or even acknowledge,
buffeted by bad news of all sorts, to the end of another very difficult and
challenging year of political and social setbacks, economic and personal
struggles, and apocalyptic natural disasters that warn of even worse to come. We
watch Frank Capra’s great 1946 Christmas classic It’s a Wonderful life, and can hardly help noticing its terribly tragic
portrayal of a world in desperate need of heavenly help - America as
Potterville, where the rich get richer and the poor poorer.
Not for nothing do we pray every day at
Mass that we may be safe from all
distress, as we await the blessed hope and the coming of our Savior, Jesus
Christ. The world’s distress is real enough, as is our anxiety about it,
but so is the hope we celebrate tonight - the
blessed hope and the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ. Too many of those who call themselves Christians today seem trapped by fear. But
such fear is the opposite of the faith, the hope, and the love that Christ’s
coming into our world has made possible for us.
That is why we celebrate Jesus’ birth
not with a birthday cake but with the Eucharist, the Body and Blood of the
Risen Christ. For this is not some nostalgic holiday pageant, and the baby
whose birth we celebrate is not just some distantly ancient historical figure,
but God-with-us!
“Christmas comes but once a year,”
lamented the narrator in one of Charles Dickens’ Christmas stories. I have
often thought that Dickens may have put the emphasis on the wrong part of the
sentence. The point is not that Christmas comes only once a year, but
that it comes - year-in and year-out, in good times and in bad, in sickness
and in health, in prosperity and in recession, in war and in peace. Christmas
comes and is able (as Pope Francis reminded us just 10 days ago) “to warm the
coldest hearts, to remove the barriers of indifference to one’s neighbor, to
encourage openness to the other and free giving.”
Christmas comes because God comes. At
Christmas, God showed up in our world – in an out-of-the-way place amid the
poverty and political persecution that are still so often experienced by
refugees and immigrants, here and now even in our own society, as we are
regularly reminded whenever we turn on the news. At the time, only some
shepherds took any notice. But tonight we are there too.
Back when I was a little boy, in the
early days of television, my family would watch a weekly program called You Are There, which aired from 1953 to 1957.
Each show was a dramatic recreation of some event in history, with modern-day
reporters covering the event and interviewing the historical characters. At the
end of each episode. Walter Cronkite would conclude: "What sort of day was
it? A day like all days, filled with those events that alter and illuminate our
times... all things are as they were then, and you were there."
We are there tonight with those same
shepherds – not by some fantasy of technology but by the miracle of God’s
coming – because at Christmas God didn’t just show up, he stayed. He stays with
us, here and now, here in his Church! His showing up and staying with us is
what enables us, his Church, to show up and stay in our world today, to
continue what he started, without fear, this year, and every year.
We celebrate tonight what we profess
every Sunday: that the Only begotten Son
of God … for us and for our salvation came down from heaven, and by the Holy
Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary and became man. This is the
Christmas story. Tonight, we kneel when we say those words, to highlight the
fact and solemnize what we celebrate, but we say those words all year round.
The Christmas story is the Christian story – our story – all year round. It’s
the story of God showing up and staying with us – to free us from fear, once
and for all. And so, every time we come up this hill to hear this story of
God-with-us, we must be willing for it to become our story too, challenging us,
as we go back down the hill, to be remade by it ourselves and so to reimagine
our world – and so transform our frustration into fulfillment, our sadness into
joy, our hatred into love, our loneliness into community, our rivals and
competitors into brothers and sisters, and our inevitable death into eternal
life.
In showing up in his Son and staying
with us in his Church, God really has given us the greatest of all Christmas
presents. As Saint Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) so memorably expressed it in the 12thcentury:
“It is as if God sent upon the earth a purse full of mercy. The purse has been
burst open to pour forth its hidden contents.”
Merry Christmas!
Homily for Christmas Day (The Mass at Midnight) Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, December 25, 2017.