Friday, December 24, 2010

CHRISTMAS MESSAGE TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND - SEÁN CARDINAL BRADY

For many people, Christina Rossetti’s Christmas Carol, ‘In the Bleak Midwinter’, will have a particular resonance this year.  Unfortunately many families are under pressure.  People have lost their jobs. The prospect of smaller incomes and enormous debt looms large over the country.  Of course, the snow and the big freeze have not helped.

Yes, there are questions to be answered.  How could the once prosperous Ireland have so quickly come to this?  But more importantly solutions have to be found.  I believe they can be found.  It will take time and a great effort but, hopefully, they will be found.

Of course it would be the height of insensitivity to offer glib reassurances. The difficulties ahead will be challenging. Yet the child who was born in the Manger on Christmas day invites us to look at our situation from another perspective, it is the perspective of hope: the joyful hope that comes from knowing that because of what happened on Christmas Day, ‘God-is-with-us and God is love’.  As that other wonderful Christmas Carol ‘Silent Night’, reminds us: Christ, the Saviour is born.  He is the light that darkness could not overcome.

Many of us know, from experience, how much we owe to the love and the support of family, friends and neighbours in times of sorrow and crisis.  Christmas is about families, but, above all, about the great family of Jesus.  
On the face of the Infant in the crib we see the face of every human being.  In their name He will say to us, “I was hungry”, and we will be judged by how we responded, especially in times of hardship.

Hardship, bereavements, natural disasters and failures, can either overwhelm and paralyse us or they can awaken our hope and rally our strength to help one another.  

The challenge we now face is to bring encouragement to one another. Just as an individual may spiral down into a state of depression, so too, a community can allow itself to be overwhelmed by negativity. Nobody wants to minimise the pain that many are suffering, but having a positive attitude and coming together to support each other, really can help us to get through these difficult times.  

At this time of year when darkness can fall so deeply in different ways it’s important to recall the brighter moments in life and human experience.  Perhaps the most inspiring story of the year was that of the 33 miners in Chile who were trapped for many weeks underground as they awaited rescue.  In the beginning a lot of experts said that the men would find it difficult to survive.  Many of them were friends but some didn’t know each other so it was thought that they’d have bitter fights and even work against each other in their desperation to survive.  Yet those who were worried turned out to be wrong for several reasons.  First of all the men were able to communicate with their families and their loved ones which gave them regular reassurance; then they decided to work together every day using simple tasks just to keep themselves busy and in harmony with each other, and finally they took the time to pray to God asking for his help in the many darker moments that they faced each day.  And so thanks to all those things; their families; their teamwork, and their prayers as well as the tireless efforts of the rescue services they got through a terrible situation and are all now safely home with their families.

One of the loveliest things about Christmas is the giving of gifts.  It brings the best out in all of us.  All gift-giving has its origins in a generous God – the giver of all good gifts.  God expects us to share among ourselves and especially, with the poor, the gifts we have received.  The greatest gift of God is the gift of Jesus his only Son – given to us so that we may have life.

Jesus himself gave few material things to people.  What he gave most was his personal presence, and treasures of the heart, such as compassion, forgiveness, self-belief, inner healing and dignity.  Christmas challenges all of us to do likewise.

Lots of people made heroic efforts to get home for Christmas.  Congratulations to those who were successful – our thoughts and our prayers are with those who failed.  What is it about Christmas that makes people so anxious to be at home and so distraught if this is not possible?  Home and family, love and parents and birth are natural signs of peace and new life.  They are natural gifts that take us to the heart of the meaning of Christmas.

However, to celebrate Christmas as if it were only a warm intimate family holiday does not do justice to Christmas.  Christmas is also the story of who we are and why.  It reminds us that God is our Father too.  If we accept the gift of existence, we also accept the fact that we depend.

Wrapped in warm clothes and needing food and shelter to keep us alive, that’s also the story of each one of us at the beginning and the end of our life.

The child in the manger, with his arms outstretched embraces the whole world with his love.  He reminds us of the greatness of the hope which God offers us on Christmas Day.  But that little child grew up to experience some of the greatest hardship ever known.  Out of love for each one of us, he even suffered death on a cross. But in rising victorious over that suffering he reminded us that even in the bleak mid-winter, the flowers are gathering strength for the spring – when they will bud again.

A happy Christmas to you all.
SIC: ADA/IE