Here are excerpts from Pope Francis’
Christmas message. The full text can be
found at http://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2017-12/pope-homily-christmas-night-mass-full-text.html#.WkAc49ux0ig.twitter I highly
recommend reading the full homily.
Mary “gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in
bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them
in the inn” (Lk 2:7). ….
Let us go back a few verses. By decree of the Emperor, Mary
and Joseph found themselves forced to set out. They had to leave their people,
their home and their land, and to undertake a journey in order to be registered
in the census. This was no comfortable or easy journey for a young couple about
to have a child: they had to leave their land. At heart, they were full of hope
and expectation because of the child about to be born; yet their steps were
weighed down by the uncertainties and dangers that attend those who have to
leave their home behind.
Then they found themselves having to face perhaps the most
difficult thing of all. They arrived in Bethlehem and experienced that it was a
land that was not expecting them. A land where there was no place for them.
*****
So many other footsteps are hidden in the footsteps of
Joseph and Mary. We see the tracks of entire families forced to set out in our
own day. We see the tracks of millions of persons who do not choose to go away
but, driven from their land, leave behind their dear ones. In many cases this
departure is filled with hope, hope for the future; yet for many others this
departure can only have one name: survival. Surviving the Herods of today, who,
to impose their power and increase their wealth, see no problem in shedding
innocent blood.
*****
The faith we proclaim tonight makes us see God present in
all those situations where we think he is absent. He is present in the
unwelcomed visitor, often unrecognizable, who walks through our cities and our
neighbourhoods, who travels on our buses and knocks on our doors.
….. Christmas is a time for turning the power of fear into
the power of charity, into power for a new imagination of charity. The charity
that does not grow accustomed to injustice, as if it were something natural,
but that has the courage, amid tensions and conflicts, to make itself a “house
of bread”, a land of hospitality. ….
In the Child of Bethlehem, God comes to meet us and make us
active sharers in the life around us. He offers himself to us, so that we can
take him into our arms, lift him and embrace him. So that in him we will not be
afraid to take into our arms, raise up and embrace the thirsty, the stranger,
the naked, the sick, the imprisoned (cf. Mt 25:35-36). ….
Moved by the joy of the gift, little Child of Bethlehem, we
ask that your crying may shake us from our indifference and open our eyes to
those who are suffering. May your tenderness awaken our sensitivity and
recognize our call to see you in all those who arrive in our cities, in our
histories, in our lives. May your revolutionary tenderness persuade us to feel
our call to be agents of the hope and tenderness of our people.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.