Christmas (Vigil Mass); Christ the King parish.
Video (homily begins at 13:30)
Our readings tonight
started with a statement of protest. “I will not be silent; I will not keep
quiet.” Our lector brought to us the Spirit-inspired proclamation of a prophet
who wrote around 2,500 years ago, over 500 years before the birth of Christ, a
prophet who refused to sit down and shut up, a prophet whose words were a
rebellion against hopelessness and despair, a prophet who had good news to
proclaim. You might be thinking, “aren’t we here to talk about the baby Jesus?”
Well, we are. But we’re here to talk about the baby Jesus not as someone cute
or tame, but as God’s daring proclamation of good news, God’s protest against
human despair. And we get to hear what God is saying in the baby Jesus more
clearly if we spend a little time first with the words we opened with from the
book of the prophet Isaiah.
Isaiah uses such rich images for how good the
good news he has to share is. And these images are so powerful, so universally
human, that they work even if you don’t know how this oracle fits into
Israelite history. But a brief refresher perhaps on that can make these
prophetic words pack even more of a punch, give them even more weight in our
ears. About 70 years before these words were written, the Babylonians had come
to Israel and destroyed everything. Everything the people had, everything that
showed them God, was gone. The temple was destroyed, the kings were replaced by
puppet rulers, the people were death-marched away from their Promised Land. But
then, after a lifetime of exile, the next powerful empire, the Persians, had
conquered the Babylonians, and had not just let the Israelites return home, but
were giving them a little help to rebuild. This oracle probably comes from
during that rebuilding, which the people had started to find really really
hard.
They had their vindication and their victory, but
it didn’t feel so shiny. So, the prophet starts with that, crying out that he
will not be silent until Jerusalem’s victory shines forth like a burning torch.
In the nighttime of their fear and trepidation, the prophet longs for the good
news that God has brought them home to shine. Imagine a fire in the cold night
to come an hour from now, revealing the way forward, warming those who tremble
from cold, delighting the eye. Oh, what a holy night, to have such fire in it.
Oh, night divine.
Next, the prophet talks about giving the people a
new name. What did people used to call you? What did you used to call
yourselves? Forsaken? Desolate? No, God now calls you “my delight,” now calls
you “espoused,” a daring promise where God commits to the people of Israel as a
husband commits to his wife. The prophet encourages the people to see
themselves not as poor downtrodden former exiles still dusty from the walk
home, but as cherished, beautiful, adorned as a bride. Sometimes it takes
someone authoritative to come and name something in us that we dare not accept
in ourselves. Well, to the Israelites God comes and says, you are my delight,
just as at each of our baptisms, God came to us and said, “You are my beloved
daughter, you are my beloved son, in you I am well pleased.” Long lay the world
in sin and error, pining, ‘till He appeared and the soul felt its worth. Oh,
night, oh night divine.
The most powerful image in this whole oracle
though, may lie in the middle, when the prophet describes the people as “a
glorious crown in the hand of the Lord.” This is how precious you are, he says.
Precious and dignified like a crown. Treasured, securely, lovingly, tenderly
held in God’s hand.
Friends, we need that too. After this year, this
year of fear, of isolation, of grief, we need someone to not be silent, we need
a fire to light up our darkness, we need someone to call us by our new name,
remind us we are not forsaken, we are beloved, we need someone to hold us in
the palm of their hand and connect with us that closely when we feel alone or
isolated. And God does. God is with us. The stars are brightly shining on this
holy night because it is the night of our dear savior’s birth. The angel
promises Joseph, this child that is born is not just an assurance that God is
with, he is God with us. He is with us when we feel alone. He is with us
when feel like we’re not enough. He is with us when it feels too hard. He has
appeared, and the soul has felt its worth.
God kept on saying that to his people through the
prophets, but on that night in Bethlehem, God said it in a new way. He said it
through his Son. He said, this is how precious you are to me, my people, I want
to take on the fullness of humanity to be with you. And in a few months, on
Good Friday, we’ll gather here to remember how he took on the fullness of the
human condition by accepting even death. And then, just three days later, on
Easter, we’ll celebrate God’s conquering of death. We’ll celebrate that God
loved us so that not even death, death at our hands, could keep Him from being
with us. But tonight, we celebrate something different. We celebrate that God
loves us so much that He took on the smallness, the vulnerability of being a
baby for us.
So we know, if ever we are lonely, afraid, if we
feel that we’re not enough, not powerful enough, God can say: I’m with you. I
took on the littleness of a baby for you. Here in this place, God takes on the
fragility of bread for us, breaking for us at this altar, feeding us. God cups
us tenderly in the palm of His hand, and at the same time bids us receive Him,
hold Him, be warmed and nourished by Him, and know that we are never alone, we
are never not enough, because God’s got us. Oh night divine; it is the night of
our dear Savior’s birth.
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