Sunrise on Keweenaw Bay

Sunrise on Keweenaw Bay

Saturday, December 25, 2010

A Christmas Eve Homily: Manger and Ciborium

Homily Outline for Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve

Today is born our Savior, Jesus Christ the Lord! Our hearts and minds swell with joy and wonder. God has taken on flesh and dwells among us! We were lost in sin and darkness, and the Light of the World leapt out of heaven down to earth to seek and find us!

Who are we to have been chosen by the Lord? Christ came for us, for each one of us particularly, personally. Our gospel tells us of the census of Caesar Augustus, when the people of the whole Roman Empire were counted. It was a worldly gathering for worldly reasons: power, money, fame. That is NOT why we gather tonight. If we are here in this church, it is because in some way, shape or form these joyful tidings have reached us: Jesus Christ is born in Bethlehem! Why us?

If God has called us to celebrate this feast, it is because of His immense and faithful love for us. We have been created in love, and in Jesus Christ we are to be redeemed in love. No one of us is an accident, a random occurrence. We were born and chosen because of God’s love for us.

The gospel for this later Mass speaks very explicitly of the shepherds who heard those tidings, “Do not be afraid; for behold, I proclaim to you good news of great joy that will be for all people. For today in the city of David a savior has been born for you who is Christ and Lord.” It is no small thing that these shepherds were among the first to hear this Good News. To be a shepherd was no great or honorable thing… it meant being out by yourself most of the year, wandering about in pasture lands, attacked by thieves and wolves, stinking as the sheep stank, cold in the winter, sweltering in the summer, wet when it rained, and no great pay at the end of all that trouble. People could smell you coming, and even if you were honest, you had the reputation of being a wanderer, a drifter, and a thief.

No shepherd thought of himself as being some great somebody. Yet it was upon the shepherds that the glory of the Lord shone and the angels spoke. Jesus did not come for those who needed no help, but precisely for us here tonight, who know, or should know, that we need God’s help very badly. We do not rejoice tonight because we are so great, but because God has loved us despite our brokenness. Listen to Paul again, “The grace of God has appeared, saving all and training us to reject godless ways and worldly desires and to live temperately, justly, and devoutly in this age…” This is the call of Christmas to each one of us: turn away from godless ways and towards Jesus Christ, who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Those shepherds heard these tidings and came to the Manger. Will we follow their example?


Christmas is not just a time of generic cheer and family warmth. Nor is this the commemoration of something that is simply past history. Jesus was born of Mary to save us, and His birth set off a series of events that brought about our salvation and continues to offer each one of us a different path, the path of love and virtue. In what town was Jesus born? It was the town of David, Bethlehem. Do you know what Bethlehem means in Hebrew? House of Bread. No one could have predicted that the Messiah would be God Himself, but even less could they have predicted that Jesus Christ, fully God and fully man, would sustain and extend and continue His presence with us under the appearance of Bread and Wine.

What is our feast’s common name? It is Christmas, the Mass of Christ! Many in our time want to forget that Christ is the reason for the season, but we can also forget that the only fitting response to God being born as a baby child is to offer and receive the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, the Eucharist. Jesus was born in a town called “The House of Bread”, and that was no accident, no mere coincidence.

So, tonight, we have been called together by faith, by family, perhaps even by force of habit or nostalgia. Perhaps you are here tonight mostly because it seems like a nice thing to do on Christmas. Perhaps you are here because it pleases your spouse or your parents or your grandparents. Whatever human reasons have brought us here, there is a deeper truer reason, God’s reason for bringing us here. The prophecy of Isaiah was fulfilled 2000 years ago in a little cave-stable in Bethlehem, “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom a light has shone…. For a child is born to us, a son is given us; upon his shoulder dominion rests. They name him Wonder-Counselor, God-Hero, Father-Forever, Prince of Peace.” That prophecy continues to be fulfilled, and at each Eucharist the Lord’s presence is just as real and surprising as it was in that little baby in the manger. How will we respond? Will we receive this unearned gift as the shepherds did? Will we continue about the eating and drinking and gift-giving without any deeper thought? A Child came down from heaven, and we still remember. Bread comes down from heaven, and it is that Child’s Body Blood Soul and Divinity. May we receive this gift with authentic joy. May it penetrate and change our hearts and lives.

No comments:

Post a Comment