Christmas Midnight
2018
Everyone loves the baby Jesus, the Christ Child, in
the manger scene. There is something endearing about the story of Mary and
Joseph making the trip from Nazareth to Bethlehem only to discover that there
was no room in the inn. Even the most hardened heart is touched. The crèche is
not just a favourite among the children, one could consider it to be a
religious kind of doll house with almost life sized figures, but it also brings
out the ‘inner child’ in all of us adults.
The baby Himself is a threat to no one, eliciting
nothing but nostalgia and compassion. No wonder Christmas is so popular even
among those who would never think of themselves as Christians. No one is
offended by the Christmas story, as long as one does not get too preachy or
religious about it. But for us, the meaning of the manger is far from a
sanitised or romanticised depiction that we see in popular culture. For us
Christians, the significance of the manger is found only in the suffering of
the Child who was laid to rest within it. Eastern Christians depict the
Christ-child not wrapped in swaddling clothes but in funerary embalming strips
(making him look like an Egyptian mummy) and the manger is painted to look like
a coffin instead of a feeding trough for animals. Strange, you may think. But,
what the Eastern Christians wish to illustrate through their iconography is
that the manger has no particular significance apart from the cross. Though
many, following Lady Gaga’s anthem, would claim that they were “Born this way”,
our Lord was “Born Crucified.” The good news is not just that Jesus was born of
lowly estate, but rather that He was born to “bear the sins of many.”
We must celebrate this good news at Christmas as well
as on Good Friday and Easter. The "Passio Domini", the passion of our
Lord is not limited to the three paschal days, from the passion of our Lord at
the Mount of Olives until His death on the Cross. In the widest sense the
Passion of the Lord really begins with the Incarnation. What the world needs to
know is not just that Jesus was laid in a manger at Bethlehem, but that He was
laid in a tomb outside of Jerusalem only to rise the third day as proof that
His work on earth had been accepted by the Father.
Our Lord chose a manger because He had to face the
cross. As He would end His life by undergoing deep humiliation, so He began it.
From first to last, Jesus identified with the lowliest of men, for He did not
come into the world to command general admiration. Rather, He came to rescue
man from sin. Each of us, without exception, is a willful sinner incapable of
self-redemption. Our sin divides us from God, who is righteous, and renders us
unfit to live eternally in His presence. Yet because we are His own creation,
God loves us and desires to enjoy our fellowship forever, and because He loved
us, He was willing to send and sacrifice His Only Begotten Son to become one of
us, to die for us, in order to save us.
If we have come here for the Christmas mass, hoping to
catch a glimpse of the baby Jesus in the manger, have we lost sight of the one,
who is nailed to the crucifix that stands before us at the altar? Do we not
contemplate the infinite condescension and humiliation of the Lord, the
Creator's Son, the Son of God, who did not shrink back from becoming man or
from dying on the cross? Is not the search for shelter in an animal stable a
way of the Cross for the LORD, who is suffering as He comes into what is his
own , but his own people did not receive Him? Is Bethlehem not a Mount of Olives
as well, where the Lord and in a special way, the Blessed Virgin Mary and St
Joseph as well suffered an agony, as they were not able to find a lodging for
the Son of God who was entrusted to them? Is the stable of Bethlehem not a
Golgotha as well, where the Lord begins His life in a manger in order to yield
it thirty-three years later, on another wood, the wood of the Cross?
The Passion of the Lord began with the Incarnation and
continues until to the last chapter of His death on the Cross. The birth and death
of the Redeemer, one could say: the Manger and the Cross, are inseparable!
Theologically, Christmas needs Easter, and Easter needs Christmas as we put
into words our understanding of the Son of God who came amongst us and who died
for us. They make sense of one another. Born in the wood of the Manger, the
Lord died on another wood, the wood of the Cross - and all this is because of
the sin which was committed at the wood of the tree of knowledge in the earthly
Paradise. Yes, the child Jesus born this very night, was not just “Born the Son
of Mary and Joseph,” “Born King of the Angelic Hosts”. No, He is so much more.
He is “Born Crucified.” Let us never forget that in our revelries today.
You may have noticed that this year, our manger scene
seems to be competing with another major scene located in the newly refurbished
sanctuary of our Church. But technically, there is no competition. This is
because the manger points to the cross. Beside the manger stands his mother,
the Blessed Virgin Mary, and his adopted father, St Joseph. Beside our crucifix
we have created two tabors or niches to contain the statues of Mother Mary and
St Joseph. The position of Mary may make sense as the Fourth Gospel tells us
that she was present at the foot of the cross at the time of her son’s
crucifixion. But St Joseph’s presence is inexplicable. At the time of our
Lord’s crucifixion, St Joseph was according to tradition already dead. Why do
churches traditionally depict the parents of Jesus beside the main crucifix,
one on his right and the other on his left?
In regards to the placement of Mary, she is on Jesus’
right hand from “his point of view” — that is, from the point of view of
someone looking out from the sanctuary. This is in accordance with the Jewish
tradition of having the Queen Mother sit at the right hand of the King (1 Kings
2:19). Pope St Pius X confirms this tradition in Ad Diem Illum Laetissimum
by declaring “Mary sitteth at the right hand of her Son.” The left side of the
church, Mary’s side, was also known as the “Gospel Side” of the church, and the
connexion between Mary and the Gospel is explained by understanding that Mary
is the “New Eve,” she played a pivotal role in Salvation History. St. Joseph’s
presence on the right side is then seen in light of Mary’s privileged role. But
the juxtaposition of these two figures flanking the Crucifix is meant to draw
us back to the scene of the Incarnation, to the scene of the birth of Christ.
Both the manger and the cross are connected – one marks the beginning and the
other, the end of His earthly life – and to help us better visualise the
connexion of these two events, we have Mary and Joseph who both stand as the
principle witnesses.
So, this year as you do every year, enjoy the
Christmas season. Sing the carols with joy, and bless others with gifts and
laughter. But don’t forget that it is not just the manger that saves us; it is
not just the birth of a baby that reconciled us to God, but the death of a man,
the Son of God, who came to “save His people from their sins.” Only this
message, that offends so many in the world, will save the world. We can only
understand the manger, when we see the Cross.
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