Pope Benedict XVI led the Universal Church in joyous celebrations for
the birth of Our Lord Christmas Eve in Mass attended by thousands and
broadcast globally from St. Peter’s Basilica.
During his homily he
posed a question to believers and non-believers alike: Will people find
room in their hectic, technology-driven lives for children, the poor and
God?
He also prayed that Israelis and Palestinians live in peace
and freedom, and asked the faithful to pray for strife-torn Syria as
well as Lebanon and Iraq.
Below the full text of Pope Benedict XVI’s Homily at Christmas Mass 2012
Homily Christmas Vigil
Dear Brothers and Sisters!Again
and again the beauty of this Gospel touches our hearts: a beauty that
is the splendour of truth. Again and again it astonishes us that God
makes himself a child so that we may love him, so that we may dare to
love him, and as a child trustingly lets himself be taken into our arms.
It is as if God were saying: I know that my glory frightens you, and
that you are trying to assert yourself in the face of my grandeur. So
now I am coming to you as a child, so that you can accept me and love
me.
I am also repeatedly struck by the Gospel writer’s almost casual
remark that there was no room for them at the inn. Inevitably the
question arises, what would happen if Mary and Joseph were to knock at
my door. Would there be room for them? And then it occurs to us that
Saint John takes up this seemingly chance comment about the lack of room
at the inn, which drove the Holy Family into the stable; he explores it
more deeply and arrives at the heart of the matter when he writes: “he
came to his own home, and his own people received him not” (Jn 1:11).
The great moral question of our attitude towards the homeless, towards
refugees and migrants, takes on a deeper dimension: do we really have
room for God when he seeks to enter under our roof? Do we have time and
space for him? Do we not actually turn away God himself? We begin to
do so when we have no time for him. The faster we can move, the more
efficient our time-saving appliances become, the less time we have. And
God? The question of God never seems urgent. Our time is already
completely full.
But matters go deeper still. Does God actually have a
place in our thinking? Our process of thinking is structured in such a
way that he simply ought not to exist. Even if he seems to knock at
the door of our thinking, he has to be explained away. If thinking is
to be taken seriously, it must be structured in such a way that the “God
hypothesis” becomes superfluous. There is no room for him. Not even
in our feelings and desires is there any room for him. We want
ourselves. We want what we can seize hold of, we want happiness that is
within our reach, we want our plans and purposes to succeed.
We are so
“full” of ourselves that there is no room left for God. And that means
there is no room for others either, for children, for the poor, for the
stranger. By reflecting on that one simple saying about the lack of
room at the inn, we have come to see how much we need to listen to Saint
Paul’s exhortation: “Be transformed by the renewal of your mind” (Rom
12:2).
Paul speaks of renewal, the opening up of our intellect (nous),
of the whole way we view the world and ourselves. The conversion that
we need must truly reach into the depths of our relationship with
reality. Let us ask the Lord that we may become vigilant for his
presence, that we may hear how softly yet insistently he knocks at the
door of our being and willing.
Let us ask that we may make room for him
within ourselves, that we may recognize him also in those through whom
he speaks to us: children, the suffering, the abandoned, those who are
excluded and the poor of this world.There is another verse from the
Christmas story on which I should like to reflect with you – the angels’
hymn of praise, which they sing out following the announcement of the
new-born Saviour: “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace among
men with whom he is pleased.”
God is glorious. God is pure light, the
radiance of truth and love. He is good. He is true goodness, goodness
par excellence. The angels surrounding him begin by simply proclaiming
the joy of seeing God’s glory. Their song radiates the joy that fills
them. In their words, it is as if we were hearing the sounds of heaven.
There is no question of attempting to understand the meaning of it
all, but simply the overflowing happiness of seeing the pure splendour
of God’s truth and love.
We want to let this joy reach out and touch
us: truth exists, pure goodness exists, pure light exists. God is good,
and he is the supreme power above all powers. All this should simply
make us joyful tonight, together with the angels and the shepherds.
Linked
to God’s glory on high is peace on earth among men. Where God is not
glorified, where he is forgotten or even denied, there is no peace
either. Nowadays, though, widespread currents of thought assert the
exact opposite: they say that religions, especially monotheism, are the
cause of the violence and the wars in the world. If there is to be
peace, humanity must first be liberated from them. Monotheism, belief
in one God, is said to be arrogance, a cause of intolerance, because by
its nature, with its claim to possess the sole truth, it seeks to impose
itself on everyone. Now it is true that in the course of history,
monotheism has served as a pretext for intolerance and violence.
It is
true that religion can become corrupted and hence opposed to its deepest
essence, when people think they have to take God’s cause into their own
hands, making God into their private property. We must be on the
lookout for these distortions of the sacred. While there is no denying a
certain misuse of religion in history, yet it is not true that denial
of God would lead to peace. If God’s light is extinguished, man’s
divine dignity is also extinguished. Then the human creature would
cease to be God’s image, to which we must pay honour in every person, in
the weak, in the stranger, in the poor.
Then we would no longer all be
brothers and sisters, children of the one Father, who belong to one
another on account of that one Father. The kind of arrogant violence
that then arises, the way man then despises and tramples upon man: we
saw this in all its cruelty in the last century. Only if God’s light
shines over man and within him, only if every single person is desired,
known and loved by God is his dignity inviolable, however wretched his
situation may be. On this Holy Night, God himself became man; as Isaiah
prophesied, the child born here is “Emmanuel”, God with us (Is 7:14).
And down the centuries, while there has been misuse of religion, it is
also true that forces of reconciliation and goodness have constantly
sprung up from faith in the God who became man. Into the darkness of
sin and violence, this faith has shone a bright ray of peace and
goodness, which continues to shine.So Christ is our peace, and he
proclaimed peace to those far away and to those near at hand (cf. Eph
2:14, 17).
How could we now do other than pray to him: Yes, Lord,
proclaim peace today to us too, whether we are far away or near at hand.
Grant also to us today that swords may be turned into ploughshares (Is
2:4), that instead of weapons for warfare, practical aid may be given
to the suffering. Enlighten those who think they have to practise
violence in your name, so that they may see the senselessness of
violence and learn to recognize your true face. Help us to become
people “with whom you are pleased” – people according to your image and
thus people of peace.
Once the angels departed, the shepherds said to
one another: Let us go over to Bethlehem and see this thing that has
happened for us (cf. Lk 2:15). The shepherds went with haste to
Bethlehem, the Evangelist tells us (cf. 2:16). A holy curiosity
impelled them to see this child in a manger, who the angel had said was
the Saviour, Christ the Lord. The great joy of which the angel spoke
had touched their hearts and given them wings. Let us go over to
Bethlehem, says the Church’s liturgy to us today. Trans-eamus is what
the Latin Bible says: let us go “across”, daring to step beyond, to make
the “transition” by which we step outside our habits of thought and
habits of life, across the purely material world into the real one,
across to the God who in his turn has come across to us. Let us ask the
Lord to grant that we may overcome our limits, our world, to help us to
encounter him, especially at the moment when he places himself into our
hands and into our heart in the Holy Eucharist.
Let us go over to
Bethlehem: as we say these words to one another, along with the
shepherds, we should not only think of the great “crossing over” to the
living God, but also of the actual town of Bethlehem and all those
places where the Lord lived, ministered and suffered. Let us pray at
this time for the people who live and suffer there today. Let us pray
that there may be peace in that land. Let us pray that Israelis and
Palestinians may be able to live their lives in the peace of the one God
and in freedom. Let us also pray for the countries of the region, for
Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and their neighbours: that there may be peace
there, that Christians in those lands where our faith was born may be
able to continue living there, that Christians and Muslims may build up
their countries side by side in God’s peace.The shepherds made haste.
Holy curiosity and holy joy impelled them.
In our case, it is probably
not very often that we make haste for the things of God. God does not
feature among the things that require haste. The things of God can
wait, we think and we say. And yet he is the most important thing,
ultimately the one truly important thing. Why should we not also be
moved by curiosity to see more closely and to know what God has said to
us? At this hour, let us ask him to touch our hearts with the holy
curiosity and the holy joy of the shepherds, and thus let us go over
joyfully to Bethlehem, to the Lord who today once more comes to meet us.
Amen.