Tuesday, 25 December 2007

TWO CHRISTMASES

Abbot Raymond at Christmas Day Mass

THE TWO CHRISTMASES

If we think of Christmas as the celebration of the Incarnation; the celebration of the Word of God becoming Flesh, then it is right and fitting that the event should be celebrated publicly by the whole world. It should be proclaimed aloud on the housetops for everyone to hear; for everyone to learn about and rejoice in.

But it is also right and fitting that there should be another celebration; a secret and hidden one. One that would acknowledge quietly the ineffable wonder of this Great Mystery; a wonder too great for words; a wonder to great f or any kind of adequate celebration; too great even for God’s angels to appreciate. And in fact there is such a celebration. And this celebration is found not only in the liturgy of the Church but in the liturgy of the living events of salvation history and even in the liturgy of heaven itself.

This other and hidden celebration of the Incarnation is what I would like to call, the “Other Christmas.” Note that I don’t call it the “Second Christmas” because, in fact, it was the first of the two. It was, in fact, that most precious moment when the Most Blessed Virgin Mother conceived the Word of God in her sacred womb. This moment was the very highest point in human history. No matter what happened after that, nothing could ever equal the sublimity of it. It was the very moment when Heaven touched the earth; when the Creator bestowed his most loving kiss upon us his creatures. So let’s compare these two very different celebrations of the Incarnation.

At the first, the annunciation, it was most intimate and private and secret. Not only was no one else in the world present, but not even the angel Gabriel was present for this most sacred of moments. We read that the angel Gabriel announced: “Behold you will conceive and bear a Son” and then to assure the frightened little Maid he says: “For nothing will be impossible to God” then comes that most significant phrase, “and the angel left her”. Yes not even the greatest of the angels was worthy to be present at the moment of that conception. It was the most intimate and sacred, one to one event of all human history. How fittingly it is said then that “The angel left her”.

The second celebration, the Bethlehem Scene, is open to all the world and to heaven itself. There are myriads of angels in the skies above singing “glory to God in the highest and peace on earth to men of goodwill” and the representatives of all peoples, the shepherds, the magi, are there. Then the whole of Christian society down the centuries openly proclaims and exults and rejoices in Mary’s bringing forth of the Divine Babe.

This is all most fitting, of course, but, as we join with the whole world and with the angels of heaven themselves in the joy of our public celebrations on this Christmas of the year 2007 let us remember also that most silent and intimate moment of the incarnation when only two were there: God and Mary. And let us beg her that she may share something of the sublimity of that moment with us her children.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

This is a beautiful reflection with an important point. Thank you.