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Nor could Mary's
story have been easy for Joseph. No matter how great his faith,
no matter how vivid the angel's message, no matter how good his
heart, he still likely struggled with very human temptations to
doubt and confusion. In fact, the Eastern Church captures his humanity
beautifully in her traditional iconography of the Nativity. The
icons often portray Joseph apart from the manger scene, turned slightly
away from the mother and child, deep in thought.
The road to
Bethlehem would have been dangerous and physically demanding. Bandits
and guerrillas were common. The Roman occupiers could be brutal.
The inability to find shelter at an inn would have been more than
inconvenient; it would have been life-threatening. And few of us
today can really imagine the squalor of giving birth in a stable
or a cave.
Yet, this is
what Pope St. Leo the Great called the "birthday of life." This
is what we celebrate every Christmas. The wonder of Christmas is
the humility God chose for Himself, purely out of love —love for
us.
God loved us
enough to send us His only Son. He loved us enough to take on our
poverty, our indignities and fears, our hopes, joys, sufferings
and failures — and in our flesh, to speak to us as one of us. He
became man to show men and women how much God loves them. He was
born for that purpose. He lived for that purpose. He died and rose
again for that purpose.
In these last
few days of Advent, give yourself, your friends and your family
an early gift of the season: Read and pray over the first two chapters
of the Gospel of Luke. The real story of Christmas is earthier,
truer and more powerful than anything in a department store window.
Jesus is Emmanuel,
which means "God is with us." Jesus is Yeshua, which means "God
saves." When Jesus later preaches in His public ministry that "I
am the way, the truth and the life," He is only restating the miracle
that begins in Bethlehem. Our redeemer is born in a stable; He is
born to deliver us from sin and restore us to eternal life. This
was the meaning of the birth on that first Christmas. This is what
we remember in 2001. And that is a birthday worth celebrating.
May God grant
you and all those you love a very blessed and merry Christmas! |