Homily: The fulfilment of the Promises of God

Rev. Fr. Eugene Lobo
By Fr. Eugene Lobo, S.J –

Christmas Midnight Mass December 25, 2024
Readings: Isaiah 9:1-6 Titus 2:11-14 Luke 2:1-14

Christmas is a celebration of joy, hope, peace, and light. It is a feast of joy as we celebrate the greatest moment in history and announce that the saviour is born, the good news is given and newness is proclaimed. The whole atmosphere is also suffused with joy, the joy of the angels and of the shepherds as they hasten to Bethlehem to find the new-born child. Joy is a theme that goes right through Luke’s gospel. It is one of the characteristics of a true Christian. On this day we greet each other, exchange cards, gifts, and sweets. We share with each other this happy moment that even enemies speak to one another and those who are fighting the war will call it a day of truce. They cannot fight on a Christmas day for sure. They will continue the next day. It is a joy of love when God showed his love for us by sending his own beloved son who will continue to live with us forever.

Christmas is the ultimate expression of God’s love as he gives his own son to us. It is the day when the earth is transformed as God is close to us. Hope is given to the world that exists in a hopeless situation and is looking for liberation. The saviour has entered the world; the creator has become a creature, to give the world a new dignity. God has emptied himself to fill us with the newness of life. It is a day of peace to the world that is struggling with conflicts and disturbance. This message of peace was proclaimed by the angels at the birth of Jesus as they announce the good news to the shepherds. Jesus the God of peace will give his peace to us and this peace will remain forever. The birth of Jesus has transformed the whole world.

Christmas is God’s special and personal gift to humankind. On this day we celebrate the birth of Jesus, born in utter poverty and destitution in the eyes of the world but in obedience to God to establish his kingdom on earth. Today the Christmas message is proclaimed to the entire world and the church recaptures it in three stages. First, there is the anxious expectancy expressed by Prophet Isaiah that those who walked in darkness have seen a great light. The king will come and bring peace and justice to the world. The people have been given new hope and joy. Second is the actual coming of Jesus in time, expressed in the simplest narratives of a journey, the helplessness of Mary and Joseph, the birth of a child, and the angels singing and the lowly shepherds being chosen as the first recipients of the good news. The third is the theological reflection that the child expected has come and in him, the Grace of God is revealed and salvation has been made possible for all. God chooses to become part of the human because he loves us and he wants to share himself with us.

Christmas presents us with a situation much different from other divine situations. It is an event that brought about total change and transformation, yet it remained a hard reality for humanity. It is a day when we realize that the whole world has changed with the birth of this divine person. It is a day of happiness and sharing, of love and forgiveness, joy and acceptance. Jesus has come to our humanity to infuse transformation in every segment of life. Today God tells us that we have to change and respond to the one who has become a man. For Mary and Joseph, it was a hard reality. They had to leave their home and go to a strange, totally unknown place. They had to put up with all difficulties and struggles while moving along with the crowds. Even God does not change anything to help his own son. When the child, who is the divine person is born there is no celebration of any sort. There is only simple and meditative silence. Their visitors are the shepherds, simple ordinary persons. We have beautiful statues carved and them carrying the sheep on their shoulders. But they were actually the outcasts of the society, the hired ones as Jesus says, with little concern for the sheep. They were specially chosen by God to be his messengers.

The readings resonate with the theme of light and the baby in the manger is the Light of the World. Light surrounds the shepherds as the angels sing their praises of God: “Glory to God in the highest and, on earth, peace to all who are favoured by God.” The Gospel of Luke tells us about the birth of Jesus placing him at the centre of secular Roman history. Caesar Augustus had called for a census and he expected each adult male to report and register in his home country. Hence Joseph had to go to Bethlehem along with Mary to his native country. There Jesus was born in a manger or a cave because there was no room for them in the inn. The creator of the universe could not find a place for his own son on earth. Today’s Gospel very carefully sets the tone. The town of Bethlehem was filled with people who had come to register themselves for the census. Here Mary and Joseph could not find a decent place to stay. They had to move to an empty stable, a dirty and smelly place. The child is placed in a feeding box as the only available cot. There was no place for the creator of the universe in this little world.

The first reading from Prophet Isaiah speaks of the great light that will scatter all darkness. The Prophet was aware of the vulnerability and oppression of the kingdom due to the misguided policies of rulers. His words paint an image of darkness, gloom, heavy burdens trampling boots, and cloaks soaked with blood. But God has a plan for restoration. The time has come for people to walk with the light of faith. He reminds them of the many blessings the promised Messiah will bring to humanity. There will be a total transformation in society. Weapons of war will be smashed to pieces and military garments will be thrown into the fire. The prophet is confident that God will not leave them alone. The Light is on the way and the people will rejoice and their land will yield a rich harvest.

In the second reading Paul writing to his disciple, Titus, says that the grace of God the Father has appeared in a visible form in Jesus. God’s freely given love, God’s grace, is a power that has entered the lives of Christians and enables them to live a Christ-like life. It trains them to reject whatever would lead them away from God and practice virtue. We are able to reject evil and live for God. We have become people who belong to him eager to do what is good. This first took place at the birth of Jesus. It became more manifest when he gave himself on the cross for our salvation. It continues to manifest itself in the church in its eagerness to do well. The grace given in Jesus for us engenders hope with the conviction that God is willing to save us.

The Gospel tells us that the first to be invited to visit him is the shepherds: their status was much like the nomads found in nearly every society or any other marginalized group. They were the outcasts of society. They were regarded by most of the society people as outsiders, not fit to be part of society. This, in fact, is Luke’s way of setting the stage for Jesus’ future life. Luke likes to emphasize that Jesus came especially for the poor and the needy, for the weak and marginalized. Some people could understand Jesus being on the side of the poor, those rejected by society, the tax collectors, prostitutes, and sinners. But, as some scholars have pointed out, Jesus loved the poor not because they were good but because they were poor. Today he reminds us that material poverty is not the only kind that exists in the world today.

When Jesus first came into the world about two thousand years ago, his arrival was in fulfilment of the promises of God. Scriptures tell us that from the fall of the first parent’s God promised to send us a redeemer. The people of God waited eagerly for him. Sometimes they showed their fidelity to God and at other times they failed. In spite of this God sends his son to the world. The birth of Jesus is a reminder that God has not forgotten us. It is a reminder of how much God loves us. It is a reminder that God has reached down to us so we, in turn, may reach up to Him with praises and glory in thanksgiving for our salvation. God has become one with the human race and the human race has become one again with God.

Originally, the Romans celebrated a feast on this day, called the festival of the unconquered Sun. Today in the darkness of this night Jesus born as a child shines out as a wonderful light beckoning all of us to realize our full potential. He was born in the manger as wrapped in swaddling clothes as there was no room for them in the inn. He came to give hope to those living in difficult situations. He came to help those who have no one to help, guide, and support. He was present to transform the world.

The message of Christmas is very clear to us. Jesus who had no room saw that we all would secure room in his birth. The presence of Jesus gave room for everyone. Jesus found room for us all by emptying himself. A little girl asked the family’s dinner guest, “Do you like dolls?” The guest said that he indeed loves dolls. Then the girl asked him whether he wanted to see her collection of dolls. He said it would be wonderful and is willing to come with her. The little girl led him to her room and brought out her beautiful collection of dolls. The guest asked her which doll was her favourite. She hesitated for a while and from the collection picked out a well-worn, tattered doll. It was missing a button eye, obviously, it was sewn in many places several times, and its dress was faded and frayed. She hugged the doll to her chest and said: “This is Annie, and I love her more than anyone else.” The guest was surprised and asked her why she loved this doll so much. He was surprised with her touching reply: “Well, if I don’t love her, no one would.”

Once, the fourth-grade students of a school put up a short Nativity play during the time of Christmas. Among the actors there was a boy larger in size, yet kind at heart. He wanted to be a shepherd and carry the sheep on his shoulder; but the teacher made him innkeeper to drive out Mary and Joseph. As the play went on Joseph came in and pleaded with the innkeeper for some room. The little innkeeper loudly told them there is no room and they must leave. He started moving away. Then Mary turned to Joseph and started crying. This made the inn-keeper boy turn back and instead of moving away angrily as in the play, he came back, said softly to Mary and Joseph, look there is no room here in the inn but you can take my room. True the play went off the track but the showed the spirit of Christmas that there is room for everyone if we choose to give it.

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