Thursday, 25 December 2014

Raymond on Christmas Day Homily 2014 (Nativity Icon)

   Fr. Raymond on Christmas Day Homily.



CHRISTMAS  2014 

 “All the world’s a stage and all the people are the players”.  That’s how Shakespeare puts it.  And every stage, we know, has a painted backdrop to it; a painted backdrop that sets the scene and puts the characters in context.  The scene might be indoors in a quiet room, or outdoors in a forest.  It might be on the open sea or on a mountain top.  Whatever it is, the appropriate backdrop has a great role to play in creating the whole atmosphere of the scene.  So, this evening we can well imagine the events that took place on that first Christmas Night as being “A scene set on a stage”, a stage that was world-wide.
 
Centuries before the advent of the international television broadcast, this scene was destined by Divine Providence to be set on a world-wide stage, and it was to be set in fact, on a stage much greater than this world alone.  The backdrop to this scene reaches from the very dawn of our race to the end of time itself and it even reaches up into the very heavens themselves.  St Luke tells us: “Suddenly there was a great throng of the heavenly hosts praising God and singing: ‘Glory to God in the highest and peace to men of good will’. 

Here we have another very important part of the drama:  the musical accompaniment, the singing of the angels.  The musical score is always understood by the great film directors as something of the utmost importance in bringing the screen-play to life.   What kind of fee would Cecille B De Mille not have been prepared to pay for the heavenly chorus that the Babe of Bethlehem had?   And what kind of fee would he not have been prepared to pay for the centuries of world-wide publicity that this Christmas Story has had?  In all this, we are the audience to this wonderful play, this wonderful drama.  It’s a story thought up by the divine mind of God himself.  It is a play inspired by the Holy Spirit of God and produced by God the Father.  And we all know who the Hero, the leading character is, and who the Leading Lady is.   But noblesse oblige and we are bound to take this little scene very seriously and to analyse it, character by character and try to enter into the depths of their hearts, whether it be the principle characters, Jesus, Mary and Joseph themselves, or the choir, the angels in the  heavens, or supporting cast, the shepherds in the fields, and the magi from far away. 

We have all had the privilege of being invited to this great ‘First night’ of the play.  We have all been given free tickets to what is truly the ‘Greatest Show on Earth’.  So let us all, with the Shepherds, ‘hasten to Bethlehem to see this great thing that has come to pass’  and surely, if we hasten with faith, we will find the joy that comes from the inner conviction that it is all just as the angels have told us.   All the hype of the patriarchs and prophets of old was no exaggeration.  All the wonderful promises of old were so much less than the reality that has now come to pass amongst us.

In the beginning the  Word was with God.
And the Word was God
And the Word was made Flesh and came to dwell among us.


  

Shepherds and angels

 
   
In the picture, a couple of shepherds are on the right-hand side, and one of them is playing a flute. Below them, their sheep drink in a river. One of the shepherds looks up and is blessed by an angel looking down on him. The middle group of angels is kneeling or bowing in worship before Jesus, lying in his cave, while the angels on the left of the picture stand like a choir, singing.
  http://www.rejesus.co.uk/site/module/nativity_icon/P5/ 

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