The Quiet, Beautiful Inspiration of the Christmas Season
The
Christmas season is beautiful and inspiring.
During Christmastide, many of us have more time for quiet contemplation,
and we are able to ponder images such as stables and shepherds and Magi and
gifts. This season’s stillness and quiet
allow us to realize that God showers abundant blessings on us, and that He is
preparing us for a dynamic mission. We need
to listen and ponder what God has in store.
The iconic images of Christmas are a window into beautiful trends in our
lives for the year ahead.
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Gaspare Diziani, Adoration of the Shepherds (ca. A.D. 1755) |
The
images of the Christmas season remind us to be more childlike in our faith,
gazing in wonder at the God who became man. The Incarnation is a central tenet of our
faith, and it is necessary for each of us to grow in our devotion to the
reality of God-in-Flesh. We could take
the whole year to ponder this truth and not exhaust its richness. Yet, secular modernity will tell us that it
is unreasonable to believe in a God who would lower Himself to our level. Indeed, they are correct! That is why Jesus tells us several times in
the Gospels that faith flourishes when we “become like children” (Mt. 18:3). In our life of faith, it is often necessary
to accept, like a child, that things are real even if they don’t quite make
sense. We will be better for it, because
we will be able to marvel and wonder at how God does such amazing things that
are beyond us. And, He will continue to
do them for us, in us, and through us, if we continue to approach Him with the
faith of a child.
The
images of the Christmas season help us to rejoice more, and to engage in
bringing the joyful tidings of the Gospel to others. At the birth of Jesus, the angels greeted the
shepherds in the field: “behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people” (Lk.
2:10). According to historical records,
we know that those shepherds had little reason to rejoice. They were among the lowest, least-respected
social groups in ancient Palestine. Yet,
God sent His messenger to them first.
God intends for the Good News to be handed on to “all the people,” not
just those who have money or power or education or other modern comforts. There are people in our parishes, our
workplaces, and our social organizations, who may seem comfortable and happy,
but who desperately need to experience the joy of the Gospel. It is up to us, Christians who have
encountered the Good News that transforms lives, to bring that joy to the
world!
The
characters the Christmas season prepare us to search more diligently for the
King of Kings, the Logos of the Father.
The Magi were the intelligentsia of the ancient Near East (they were not
kings, but astronomers, mathematicians, and cartographers). They certainly were on the cutting edge of
finding ways to create and enjoy a great life.
Yet, they also knew a centuries-old oracle about the star that would
rise from the line of the ancient patriarchs and overcome the powers of the
world (cf. Num. 24:17-19). So, they went
looking. Their search led them to
Bethlehem, the House of Bread, where Jesus lay humbly in a feeding trough. In our own day, the wisdom of the world tell
us that there are no higher truths, and that the good life is the result of a
robust economy and inter-personal influence.
Yes, our search truth, goodness, beauty, and wisdom should happen
through education, art, politics, and more, but it should not be limited to
these areas. Rather, our search should
culminate in that house where we find the Bread of Life, the Church. Specifically, it should culminate in the
Bread of Life, Himself, the Eucharist.
Like the Magi of old, our intellectual and social gifts should be laid
at the feet of Jesus Christ, the King of the Universe, especially in the
Church’s liturgical worship.
The
Christmas season reminds us that poverty and detachment are good things. Our modern world has recently become enamored
with this concept, especially since the 2016 documentary film, Minimalism. That film is a secular expression of the ancient
Christian teaching that “less is more”; that life will be more fulfilling if a
person is not possessed by possessions.
This is something that Jesus tried to teach long ago, in the Sermon on
the Mount. The very first Beatitude (cf.
Mt. 5:3) teaches that a blessed, joyful life is gained by giving up material
possessions as well as the all-pervasive ego.
Like viewers of the popular film, Christians who practice poverty and
detachment find that they have room in their lives for the most fulfilling
things, especially relationship with Jesus and with other people.
The
images of the Christmas season teach us that the Lord will bestow gifts for a
mission. The Magi brought gifts to the
nascent Messiah that corresponded to His mission of salvation. God has entrusted each of us the mission of
continuing to spread the Good News of salvation through Jesus Christ. To that end, God has granted each of us special
talents and spiritual gifts (called charisms;
see 1 Cor. 12 or Rom. 12) by which His love will be uniquely manifest in the
world. During this quiet season, it is
incumbent upon each of us to ponder which gifts God has granted; to accept them
in gratitude; and to make a zealous attempt to fulfill our mission by them
So,
let us gaze upon the beautiful images of the Christmas season and ponder the
ways that God desires to transform us. There
is no better time to encounter the Lord, to let that transformation begin, and
to live our mission than right now. The
next year, indeed any year, will be blessed beyond comprehension if we
incorporate the lessons we receive into our lives and live them with fervor.