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MIDNIGHT MASS
SOLEMNITY OF THE NATIVITY OF THE LORD
HOMILY OF HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
Saint Peter's Basilica Friday, 24 December
2010
(Video)
Photo Gallery
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
“You are my son, this day I have begotten you” – with this passage from
Psalm 2 the Church begins the liturgy of this holy night. She knows that this
passage originally formed part of the coronation rite of the kings of Israel.
The king, who in himself is a man like others, becomes the “Son of God” through
being called and installed in his office. It is a kind of adoption by God, a
decisive act by which he grants a new existence to this man, drawing him into
his own being. The reading from the prophet Isaiah that we have just heard
presents the same process even more clearly in a situation of hardship and
danger for Israel: “To us a child is born, to us a son is given. The government
will be upon his shoulder” (Is 9:6). Installation in the office of king
is like a second birth. As one newly born through God’s personal choice, as a
child born of God, the king embodies hope. On his shoulders the future rests.
He is the bearer of the promise of peace. On that night in Bethlehem this
prophetic saying came true in a way that would still have been unimaginable at
the time of Isaiah. Yes indeed, now it really is a child on whose shoulders
government is laid. In him the new kingship appears that God establishes in the
world. This child is truly born of God. It is God’s eternal Word that unites
humanity with divinity. To this child belong those titles of honour which
Isaiah’s coronation song attributes to him: Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace (Is 9:6). Yes, this king does not
need counsellors drawn from the wise of this world. He bears in himself God’s
wisdom and God’s counsel. In the weakness of infancy, he is the mighty God and
he shows us God’s own might in contrast to the self-asserting powers of this
world.
Truly, the words of Israel’s coronation rite were only ever rites of hope which
looked ahead to a distant future that God would bestow. None of the kings who
were greeted in this way lived up to the sublime content of these words. In all
of them, those words about divine sonship, about installation into the heritage
of the peoples, about making the ends of the earth their possession (Ps
2:8) were only pointers towards what was to come – as it were signposts of hope
indicating a future that at that moment was still beyond comprehension. Thus
the fulfilment of the prophecy, which began that night in Bethlehem, is both
infinitely greater and in worldly terms smaller than the prophecy itself might
lead one to imagine. It is greater in the sense that this child is truly the
Son of God, truly “God from God, light from light, begotten not made, of one
being with the Father”. The infinite distance between God and man is overcome.
God has not only bent down, as we read in the Psalms; he has truly “come down”,
he has come into the world, he has become one of us, in order to draw all of us
to himself. This child is truly Emmanuel – God-with-us. His kingdom truly
stretches to the ends of the earth. He has truly built islands of peace in the
world-encompassing breadth of the holy Eucharist. Wherever it is celebrated, an
island of peace arises, of God’s own peace. This child has ignited the light of
goodness in men and has given them strength to overcome the tyranny of might.
This child builds his kingdom in every generation from within, from the heart.
But at the same time it is true that the “rod of his oppressor” is not yet
broken, the boots of warriors continue to tramp and the “garment rolled in
blood” (Is 9:4f) still remains. So part of this night is simply joy at
God’s closeness. We are grateful that God gives himself into our hands as a
child, begging as it were for our love, implanting his peace in our hearts. But
this joy is also a prayer: Lord, make your promise come fully true. Break the
rods of the oppressors. Burn the tramping boots. Let the time of the garments
rolled in blood come to an end. Fulfil the prophecy that “of peace there will
be no end” (Is 9:7). We thank you for your goodness, but we also
ask you to show forth your power. Establish the dominion of your truth and your
love in the world – the “kingdom of righteousness, love and peace”.
“Mary gave birth to her first-born son” (Lk 2:7). In this
sentence Saint Luke recounts quite soberly the great event to which the
prophecies from Israel’s history had pointed. Luke calls the child the
“first-born”. In the language which developed within the sacred Scripture of
the Old Covenant, “first-born” does not mean the first of a series of children.
The word “first-born” is a title of honour, quite independently of whether other
brothers and sisters follow or not. So Israel is designated by God in the Book of Exodus (4:22) as “my first-born Son”, and this expresses Israel’s
election, its singular dignity, the particular love of God the Father. The
early Church knew that in Jesus this saying had acquired a new depth, that the
promises made to Israel were summed up in him. Thus the Letter to the
Hebrews calls Jesus “the first-born”, simply in order to designate him as
the Son sent into the world by God (cf. 1:5-7) after the ground had been
prepared by Old Testament prophecy. The first-born belongs to God in a special
way – and therefore he had to be handed over to God in a special way – as in
many religions – and he had to be ransomed through a vicarious sacrifice, as
Saint Luke recounts in the episode of the Presentation in the Temple. The
first-born belongs to God in a special way, and is as it were destined for
sacrifice. In Jesus’ sacrifice on the Cross this destiny of the first-born is
fulfilled in a unique way. In his person he brings humanity before God and
unites man with God in such a way that God becomes all in all. Saint Paul
amplified and deepened the idea of Jesus as first-born in the Letters to the
Colossians and to the Ephesians: Jesus, we read in these letters, is
the first-born of all creation – the true prototype of man, according to which
God formed the human creature. Man can be the image of God because Jesus is
both God and man, the true image of God and of man. Furthermore, as these
letters tell us, he is the first-born from the dead. In the resurrection he has
broken down the wall of death for all of us. He has opened up to man the
dimension of eternal life in fellowship with God. Finally, it is said to us
that he is the first-born of many brothers. Yes indeed, now he really is the
first of a series of brothers and sisters: the first, that is, who opens up for
us the possibility of communing with God. He creates true brotherhood – not the
kind defiled by sin as in the case of Cain and Abel, or Romulus and Remus, but
the new brotherhood in which we are God’s own family. This new family of God
begins at the moment when Mary wraps her first-born in swaddling clothes and
lays him in a manger. Let us pray to him: Lord Jesus, who wanted to be born as
the first of many brothers and sisters, grant us the grace of true brotherhood.
Help us to become like you. Help us to recognize your face in others who need
our assistance, in those who are suffering or forsaken, in all people, and help
us to live together with you as brothers and sisters, so as to become one
family, your family.
At the end of the Christmas Gospel, we are told that a great heavenly host of
angels praised God and said: “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace
among men with whom he is pleased!” (Lk 2:14). The Church, in the Gloria, has extended
this song of praise, which the angels sang in response to the event of the holy
night, into a hymn of joy at God’s glory – “we praise you for your glory”. We
praise you for the beauty, for the greatness, for your goodness, which
becomes visible to us this night. The appearing of beauty, of the beautiful,
makes us happy without our having to ask what use it can serve. God’s glory,
from which all beauty derives, causes us to break out in astonishment and joy.
Anyone who catches a glimpse of God experiences joy, and on this night we see
something of his light. But the angels’ message on that holy night also spoke
of men: “Peace among men with whom he is pleased”. The Latin translation of
the angels’ song that we use in the liturgy, taken from Saint Jerome, is
slightly different: “peace to men of good will”. The expression “men of good
will” has become an important part of the Church’s vocabulary in recent
decades. But which is the correct translation? We must read both texts
together; only in this way do we truly understand the angels’ song. It would be
a false interpretation to see this exclusively as the action of God, as if he
had not called man to a free response of love. But it would be equally mistaken
to adopt a moralizing interpretation as if man were so to speak able to redeem
himself by his good will. Both elements belong together: grace and freedom,
God’s prior love for us, without which we could not love him, and the response
that he awaits from us, the response that he asks for so palpably through the
birth of his son. We cannot divide up into independent entities the interplay
of grace and freedom, or the interplay of call and response. The two are
inseparably woven together. So this part of the angels’ message is both promise
and call at the same time. God has anticipated us with the gift of his Son.
God anticipates us again and again in unexpected ways. He does not cease to
search for us, to raise us up as often as we might need. He does not abandon
the lost sheep in the wilderness into which it had strayed. God does not allow
himself to be confounded by our sin. Again and again he begins afresh with us.
But he is still waiting for us to join him in love. He loves us, so that we too
may become people who love, so that there may be peace on earth.
Saint Luke does not say that the angels sang. He states quite soberly: the
heavenly host praised God and said: “Glory to God in the highest” (Lk
2:13f.). But men have always known that the speech of angels is different from
human speech, and that above all on this night of joyful proclamation it was in
song that they extolled God’s heavenly glory. So this angelic song has been
recognized from the earliest days as music proceeding from God, indeed, as an
invitation to join in the singing with hearts filled with joy at the fact that
we are loved by God. Cantare amantis est, says Saint Augustine: singing
belongs to one who loves. Thus, down the centuries, the angels’ song has again
and again become a song of love and joy, a song of those who love. At this
hour, full of thankfulness, we join in the singing of all the centuries, singing
that unites heaven and earth, angels and men. Yes, indeed, we praise you for
your glory. We praise you for your love. Grant that we may join with you in
love more and more and thus become people of peace. Amen.
© Copyright 2010 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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