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Christmas

“And the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.” Jn. 1:13

“… the time came for her to have her child, and she gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn.” Lk. 2:5

Some 2000 years ago, a baby was born.

What is amazing is that this baby could not have chosen a more remote, insignificant, impoverished place to “dwell among us” than Bethlehem of Judea, a backwater nothing of a town.

Nor could this baby have surrounded himself with a more motley crew: shepherds noted for being dangerous outsiders, “pagan magicians” who today we call Magi, animals sharing a ramshackle manger.

And yet this very same child has been given the loftiest and the most radical of all titles:

Lord of the universe, Savior of the world, Prince of Peace – titles that only the emperor Caesar Augustus was allowed to claim.

The writer of the gospel of John even goes so far as to describe this child named Jesus:

“the glory of the Father’s only son, full of grace and truth.”

The day of Jesus’ birth has since been honored as Christmas – a day that changed history; a day that initially defied the mighty Roman empire; a day that told the most marginal and discounted people: “Good News, a rescuer has arrived on the scene;” and a day that challenges each of us in the most profound ways.

Because what Christmas still dares each of us to do is to make room in our hearts, carve out a space in our lives. It challenges us to be like this child: vulnerable, powerless, fully open to God’s infinite grace.

It unseals our eyes so that we can see something that we so often miss: the need for loving care of the most destitute, the loneliest, the most dismissed, the most burdened by heartaches.

Ultimately, though, what Christmas stands for is a cry for peace and reconciliation, and an end to war and interminable conflict.

One of the best examples of this is the time when Christmas stopped a war.
It happened on December 24, 1914. The Germans were fighting a horrifyingly brutal trench offensive against the English in the “war to end all wars.” But that winter night the Germans began lighting up their Christmas trees. Then they began singing Christmas songs, like Stille Nacht, Silent Night.

Soon, the English began to join them in song. And, as one writer put it afterwards, “Peace permeated the land as ‘in two tongues one song filled up that sky.’”

John McCutcheon’s haunting ballad, which can be heard in full on YouTube, beautifully captures the miracle of that moment. Here are just a few snippets:

Soon one by one on either side walked into No Man’s Land
         With neither gun nor bayonet we met there hand to hand
         We traded chocolates, cigarettes, and photographs from home
         These sons and fathers far away from families of their own
         ‘Twas Christmas in the trenches where the frost, so bitter hung
         The frozen fields of France were warmed as songs of peace were sung
         For the walls they’d kept between us to exact the work of war
         Had been crumbled and were gone forevermore.

Some have suggested that, in its entirety, this is the most moving Christmas song they have ever heard.

Christmas created a miracle in that terrible war. The truce between the soldiers on either side went on for days. They simply refused to go back to killing. Eventually, their leaders had to replace the troops to get the war going again.

That same feast of Christmas that worked so astonishing a wonder is back with us. And it asks of us some hard questions:

What miracle, what dream, what wonder will you allow this Christmas to create in your lives? What “work of war” that you’re involved in will be ended?

What peace will it initiate?

Or, as McCutcheon’s song puts it, what “walls (we’d) kept between us to exact the work of war had been crumbled and were gone forevermore?”

Perhaps, today, as we present ourselves to the Christ Child, the answers to these questions will best be determined by what kind of manger will be created in our hearts.

Hopefully, it will be one that will bring us to our knees, and encourage each of us to join in with the angels singing, as they did on that first Christmas so long ago:

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace.”

Wishing each of you, a very merry and blessed Christmas!!!

Ted Wolgamot, Psy.D.


NOTE:    A  Christmas message from Meister Eckhart, a 14th century mystic:

Christ is Born!
What good is it to me
        For the Creator to give birth
         To his/her Son
If I do not also give birth to hm
         In my time and my culture?
This then is the fullness of time
         When the Son of God
         Is begotten in us.
May our hearts be his home!

Art by Jim Matarelli
Sister Rachel’s Quote of the Week

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