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MIDNIGHT MASS
SOLEMNITY OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
Vatican Basilica Saturday, 24
December 2005
"The Lord said to me: You are my son; this day I have
begotten you". With these words of the second Psalm, the Church begins the
Vigil Mass of Christmas, at which we celebrate the Birth of Jesus Christ our
Redeemer in a stable in Bethlehem. This Psalm was once a part of the coronation
rite of the kings of Judah. The People of Israel, in virtue of its election,
considered itself in a special way a son of God, adopted by God. Just as the
king was the personification of the people, his enthronement was experienced as
a solemn act of adoption by God, whereby the King was in some way taken up into
the very mystery of God. At Bethlehem night, these words, which were really more
an expression of hope than a present reality, took on new and unexpected
meaning. The Child lying in the manger is truly God’s Son. God is not eternal
solitude but rather a circle of love and mutual self-giving. He is Father, Son
and Holy Spirit.
But there is more: in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, God
himself, God from God, became man. To him the Father says: "You are my son". God’s
everlasting "today" has come down into the fleeting today of the world
and lifted our momentary today into God’s eternal today. God is so great that
he can become small. God is so powerful that he can make himself vulnerable and
come to us as a defenceless child, so that we can love him. God is so good that
he can give up his divine splendour and come down to a stable, so that we might
find him, so that his goodness might touch us, give itself to us and continue to
work through us. This is Christmas: "You are my son, this day I have
begotten you". God has become one of us, so that we can be with him and
become like him. As a sign, he chose the Child lying in the manger: this is how
God is. This is how we come to know him. And on every child shines something of
the splendour of that "today", of that closeness of God which we ought
to love and to which we must yield – it shines on every child, even on those
still unborn.
Let us listen to a second phrase from the liturgy of this holy
Night, one taken from the Book of the Prophet Isaiah: "Upon the people who
walked in darkness a great light has shone" (Is 9:1). The word
"light" pervades the entire liturgy of tonight’s Mass. It is found
again in the passage drawn from Saint Paul’s letter to Titus: "The grace
of God has appeared" (2:11). The expression "has appeared", in
the original Greek says the same thing that was expressed in Hebrew by the words
"a light has shone": this "apparition" – this
"epiphany" – is the breaking of God’s light upon a world full of
darkness and unsolved problems. The Gospel then relates that the glory of the
Lord appeared to the shepherds and "shone around them" (Lk
2:9). Wherever God’s glory appears, light spreads throughout the world. Saint
John tells us that "God is light and in him is no darkness" (1 Jn
1:5). The light is a source of life.
But first, light means knowledge; it means truth, as
contrasted with the darkness of falsehood and ignorance. Light gives us life, it
shows us the way. But light, as a source of heat, also means love. Where there
is love, light shines forth in the world; where there is hatred, the world
remains in darkness. In the stable of Bethlehem there appeared the great light
which the world awaits. In that Child lying in the stable, God has shown his
glory – the glory of love, which gives itself away, stripping itself of all
grandeur in order to guide us along the way of love. The light of Bethlehem has
never been extinguished. In every age it has touched men and women, "it has
shone around them". Wherever people put their faith in that Child, charity
also sprang up – charity towards others, loving concern for the weak and the
suffering, the grace of forgiveness. From Bethlehem a stream of light, love and
truth spreads through the centuries. If we look to the Saints – from Paul and
Augustine to Francis and Dominic, from Francis Xavier and Teresa of Avila to
Mother Teresa of Calcutta – we see this flood of goodness, this path of light
kindled ever anew by the mystery of Bethlehem, by that God who became a Child.
In that Child, God countered the violence of this world with his own goodness.
He calls us to follow that Child.
Along with the Christmas tree, our Austrian friends have also
brought us a small flame lit in Bethlehem, as if to say that the true mystery of
Christmas is the inner brightness radiating from this Child. May that inner
brightness spread to us, and kindle in our hearts the flame of God’s goodness;
may all of us, by our love, bring light to the world! Let us keep this
light-giving flame, lit in faith, from being extinguished by the cold winds of our time! Let us
guard it faithfully and give it to others! On this night, when we look towards
Bethlehem, let us pray in a special way for the birthplace of our Redeemer and
for the men and women who live and suffer there. We wish to pray for peace in
the Holy Land: Look, O Lord, upon this corner of the earth, your Homeland, which
is so very dear to you! Let your light shine upon it! Let it know peace!
The word "peace" brings us to a third key to the
liturgy of this holy Night. The Child foretold by Isaiah is called "Prince
of Peace". His kingdom is said to be one "of endless peace". The
shepherds in the Gospel hear the glad tidings: "Glory to God in the
highest" and "on earth, peace...". At one time we used to say:
"to men of good will". Nowadays we say "to those whom God
loves". What does this change mean? Is good will no longer important? We
would do better to ask: who are those whom God loves, and why does he love them?
Does God have favourites? Does he love only certain people, while abandoning the
others to themselves? The Gospel answers these questions by pointing to some
particular people whom God loves. There are individuals, like Mary, Joseph,
Elizabeth, Zechariah, Simeon and Anna. But there are also two groups of people:
the shepherds and the Wise Men from the East, the "Magi". Tonight let
us look at the shepherds. What kind of people were they? In the world of their
time, shepherds were looked down upon; they were considered untrustworthy and
not admitted as witnesses in court. But really, who were they? To be sure, they
were not great saints, if by that word we mean people of heroic virtue. They
were simple souls. The Gospel sheds light on one feature which later on, in the
words of Jesus, would take on particular importance: they were people who were
watchful. This was chiefly true in a superficial way: they kept watch over their
flocks by night. But it was also true in a deeper way: they were ready to
receive God’s Word through the Angel's proclamation. Their life was not closed in on itself; their hearts were
open. In some way, deep down, they were waiting for something; they were waiting
for God. Their watchfulness was
a kind of readiness – a readiness to listen and to set out. They were waiting
for a light which would show them the way. That is what is important for God. He
loves everyone, because everyone is his creature. But some persons have closed
their hearts; there is no door by which his love can enter. They think that they
do not need God, nor do they want him. Other persons, who, from a moral
standpoint, are perhaps no less wretched and sinful, at least experience a
certain remorse. They are waiting for God. They realize that they need his
goodness, even if they have no clear idea of what this means. Into their
expectant hearts God’s light can enter, and with it, his peace. God seeks
persons who can be vessels and heralds of his peace. Let us pray that he will
not find our hearts closed. Let us strive to be active heralds of his peace –
in the world of today.
Among Christians, the word "peace" has taken on a
very particular meaning: it has become a word to designate communion in the Eucharist. There Christ’s
peace is present. In all the places where the Eucharist is celebrated, a great
network of peace spreads through the world. The communities gathered around the
Eucharist make up a kingdom of peace as wide as the world itself. When we
celebrate the Eucharist we find ourselves in Bethlehem, in the "house of
bread". Christ gives himself to us and, in doing so, gives us his peace. He
gives it to us so that we can carry the light of peace within and give it to
others. He gives it to us so that we can become peacemakers and builders of
peace in the world. And so we pray: Lord, fulfil your promise! Where there is
conflict, give birth to peace! Where there is hatred, make love spring up! Where
darkness prevails, let light shine! Make us heralds of your peace! Amen.
© Copyright 2005 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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