Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

To: Salvation
Reflections from Scott Hahn

New Song: Scott Hahn Reflects on the Readings for Christmas Day

Posted by Nate Roberts on 12.23.14 |

Nativity 3

December 25th, Christmas Day

Isaiah 52:7–10  
Psalms 98:1–6
Hebrews 1:1–6  
John 1:1–18

The Church’s liturgy rings in Christmas with a joyful noise. We hear today of uplifted voices, trumpets and horns, and melodies of praise. 

In the First Reading, Isaiah foretells Israel’s liberation from captivity and exile in Babylon. He envisions a triumphant homecoming to Zion marked by joyful singing.

The new song in today’s Psalm is a victory hymn to the marvelous deeds done by our God and King.

Both the prophet and psalmist sing of God’s power and salvation. God has shown the might of His holy arm, they say. This language recalls the Exodus, where the people first sang of God’s powerful arm that shattered Israel’s enemy Egypt (see Exod. 15:1, 6, 16).

The coming of the Christ child into the world fulfills all that the Exodus and the return from exile prefigured. In Jesus, all nations to the ends of the earth will see the victory of God over the forces of sin and death.

Jesus is the new King. He is the royal firstborn son and Son of God promised to David, as we hear in today’s Epistle (see Ps. 2:7; 2 Sam. 7:14).  And as our Gospel reveals, He is the Word of God, the one through whom the universe was created, the one through whom the universe is sustained.

In speaking to us through His Son, God has unveiled a new age, the last days.

The new age is a new creation. In the beginning, God spoke His Word and light shone in the darkness. Now, in this new age, He sends us the true light to scatter the darkness of a world that has exiled itself from God.

He is the one Isaiah foretold – who brings good tidings of peace and salvation, who announces to the world that God has come to dwell and to reign (see Rev. 21:3–4).

So we sing a new song on Christmas. It is the song of those who have believed in the Christ child and been born again – by grace given the power to become children of God.


50 posted on 12/25/2014 5:56:27 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies ]


To: All

 

God Reaches Down -- Christmas

 

Readings for Mass during the night:

 

Is 9: 1-6

Titus 2: 11-14

Lk 2: 1-14

The Word for Christmas:  http://usccb.org/bible/readings/122514-night-mass.cfm



Not long ago I happened to browse an issue of the newspaper, USA Today. As I turned the page I was intrigued by a full page add taken out by an Evangelical Church reminding readers of the Christmas holidays.  The image was of an arm reaching down to earth. The caption said:  “When man reaches for God we call it religion.  But when God reaches for man, we call it Christmas.”

Did you ever consider that this beautiful annual remembrance of the birth of Christ is truly the ultimate act of God reaching out to us?  In the opening lines of John’s Gospel, normally read at the Christmas morning Mass, John writes:  “The Word became flesh and dwelled among us.” (Jn 1: 14).

 

Scholars translate those lines from the original Greek to literally say: God pitched his tent among us.  In ancient Hebrew memory those folks went immediately to their experience in the desert as they wandered in search of home.  But the pitching of a tent in that harsh environment was a sign of hospitality and also a sign of God’s presence in the midst of his people as they journeyed on his promise. 

 

In the birth of Jesus so many centuries ago, the world has the reassurance that God has reached down and pitched his tent on this planet in order to journey in our midst in what seemed a lightning flash of time.  A mere 30 or so years and he was gone with a promise to return again but the work of Christ forever has changed the world. His tent continues to be pitched among us in space and time.  In Church, in sacraments, in his Word, in the faith of all gathered, in the way we live our lives as formed by the Gospel and in the hope of eternal life. 

 

The reaching down of God to us is an exciting image.  It reveals the truth of God’s nature and his desire for humanity, the highest and most complex form of his creation.  Yet, there must have been a reason for his intervention. Why would God seemingly interrupt our lives?  What might have been his reason and his intent?  It seems, as we believe, that Jesus is the word of God made flesh so God must have desired to reveal himself to us; to “lift the veil off his face” as has been said. Not wanting to remain hidden in clouds and mystery, this living and true God decided to enter his own creation and to establish forever a relationship with us fickle humans.

 

Maybe Isaiah the prophet, so often heard during Advent, offers us a clue as to why God would come to us in our first reading for the Christmas Mass at night.  “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom a light has shone.” (Is 9:1).  The entire purpose of light is so that we can see.  To stumble in the darkness is confusing, tense, or even frightening.  Only a candle, flashlight, or overhead lamp will make the difference.

 

Isaiah implies that humankind stumbled in the darkness.  We were confused and lost hoping against odds that we could find a way.  God had already revealed himself to a disparate group of Hebrews in the desert but they too often felt abandoned through their weak faith and limited understanding from a hope based on their prophets that God would someday unfold even more. 

 

In time, the Word of God is made flesh in the womb of Mary.  Only through the private and personal visit of an angel did Mary alone hear of God’s final plan.  While we normally put the birth of Jesus at night as we hear in our familiar Gospel story from Luke 2: 1-14 it certainly adds to the “light” theme that Jesus is the great light of God which shines brightly in darkness. 

 

When Jesus was born we might say that God reached down to humanity, grabbed us by the collar, and lifted us up to stand straight and tall to see the light without obstruction or confusion. As the angels sang to the shepherds: “For today in the city of David a savior has been born for you who is Christ and Lord.” (Lk 2)

 

In other words Jesus’ coming was entirely a willful act of God on our behalf. This understanding of a benevolent God whose justice is tempered by mercy was a new revelation to ancient people. A God who did not live on Mt. Sinai or on Olympus or show his power in wind, fire and natural disasters in order to win over the submission of humanity, or who would forever remain distant and mysterious was shaken to the root by the coming of Christ. A God whose law was the great law of love rather than an unachievable restriction based on obedience rather than mercy.

 

God reached down to us in silence and obscurity and the nativity stories of shepherds, Magi, and singing angels all reinforce the future destiny of God’s intent.  That all would be welcome, invited, and gathered like lost sheep and only THE light of Christ would lead us in the right direction. We no longer need to wander aimlessly but now in Christ Jesus we have the ultimate truth of what God is like and what he desires of us.

 

As we celebrate our Christmas season in song, word and sacrament, not to mention fruitcakes, cookies, egg nog and carols, maybe we can all reach out to someone who may be among the abandoned, the poor, the forgotten or unloved.  Nothing is more painful than the pain of loneliness or poor self-worth.  The mercy extended to all humankind by a God who grabs us by the collar and gently lifts us up is the same mercy that we must extend to all.

 

Whether they are dirty, smelly shepherds on ancient hillsides or magi living in luxury and with great wisdom esteemed by all, God’s reach is far and wide.  So can ours be as well.

 

 

 

O God, who have made this most sacred night

 

Radiant with the splendor of the true light,

 

grant, we pray, that we, who have known the mysteries

 

of his light on earth,

 

may also delight in his gladness in heaven.

 

Who lives and reigns with you

 

In the unity of the Holy Spirit,

 

one God, forever and ever.

 

 

 

(Collect for Christmas Mass at night)


51 posted on 12/25/2014 6:00:58 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson