IN THIS CHILD
The
greatest things are accomplished in silence; not in the clamour of superficial
display but in the deep clarity of inner vision, in the almost imperceptible
start of decision, in hidden sacrifice and quiet conquest. It is in silence
that the heart is quickened by love, and the free will stirs to action. The
silent forces are the strong forces. The greatest events are accomplished in
silence. And the greatest event of all was the descent of the Son of God from
his throne on to this earth. It was the most silent event because it came from
the infinite remoteness beyond the noise of any possible intrusion.
The Son of
God became man, - “the Word was made flesh” (Jn. 1) in the womb
of an unknown virgin, and it hardly echoed in the upper circles of the time,
ignored by the Roman historians. No one but the young virgin knew that Divinity
had set up its tent among men.
In this
Child, God, having spoken at sundry times through the prophets, chose to reveal
to man the mysteries hidden from all eternity.
In this Child the infinite made an advance into the finite, a personal
intervention, a divine transfusion by which we are transformed, elevated,
redeemed; for whereas we were blind, now we see. In this Child, God and man
have a purchase on each other. He breathed our air, felt our pain, hungered,
thirsted, laboured and loved, and by doing so gave our life meaning.
The
Incarnation was a descent into the temporal, into the material, into this world
of births and generations, into this world of buying and selling, this world of
housing and education, to this world of leisure and hard work, this world of
unemployment and taxes. The Lord Jesus Christ, who is the Son of God, took upon
himself all this in order to elevate and transfigure. Therefore, our salvation does not consist in
a flight or retreat from this world; not a flight of the alone to the Alone;
not an escape from our fellowmen and our day to day burdens. It is an injustice
to the Incarnation to confine its effectiveness merely to internal graces. In
every line of progress, spiritual, intellectual and material, the Incarnation
must be the enabling leaven. And if that is so, it should be the rule and not
the exception to have saintly workers and peasants, saintly statesmen and
judges, merchants and soldier. All stages of life are graced, from childhood to
adolescence, from marriage to retirement, up to the last day of our life. “All
flesh shall see the salvation of our God” (Luke 6).
Wherever
the Christ Child is adored there is at least some sense of mystery. Ignore that
birth, and the road to power runs straight as a ruler to the death camps. Focus
on that birth, and the road to a healthy humanity cannot be missed. This Infant
touched off a revolution, a quiet prolonged thunder, from the recesses of the
cave of his birth, founding a kingdom that is known by unconditional love and
undiscriminating service. The centre of this dynamic process is the human
heart; and the source - the Son of God, born in the heart of every man and
woman today.
This Child
the simple and the sinner come to worship. The Magi and we pay our loving
adoration. He is not an ideal or abstraction, a gaunt empty figure beyond
description; but a person in whom is the fullness of the Godhead, the most
beautiful among men, victor over death and hell. Nothing great he puts before
us to achieve except to love him, to be faithful to him and to give faithful
testimony to him when challenged.
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