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TRÁI TIM
MẸ: NƠI CON NƯƠNG NÁU - ĐƯỜNG ĐẾN VỚI CHÚA |
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"Chúa Gięsu muốn důng con để lŕm
cho Mẹ được nhận biết vŕ yęu mến" |
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December 21, 2008
–
4th Sunday
of Advent
DAILY LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:
"For with God nothing will be
impossible"
UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):
Youth Urged to Look For
Source of Their Hope
SAINT OF THE DAY
St.
Peter Canisius
GENERAL
MARIOLOGY
"Queen of Peace, Save the Nations and
Peoples of the Whole Continent" -
1979 Homily from Guadalupe
DIVINE MERCY
On Saving Souls
Begging
God's Mercy For Every Soul
TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:
Father Cantalamessa's 3rd
Advent Meditation
Monthly Index

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DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION |
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Saturday (12/20): "For with God nothing will
be impossible"
Scripture: Luke 1:26-38
26 In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city
of Galilee named Nazareth, 27 to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name
was Joseph, of the house of David; and the virgin's name was Mary. 28
And he came to her and said, "Hail, O favored one, the Lord is with
you!" 29 But she was greatly troubled at the saying, and considered in
her mind what sort of greeting this might be. 30 And the angel said to
her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. 31 And
behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall
call his name Jesus. 32 He will be great, and will be called the Son of
the Most High; and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his
father David, 33 and he will reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and
of his kingdom there will be no end." 34 And Mary said to the angel,
"How shall this be, since I have no husband?" 35 And the angel said to
her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High
will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy,
the Son of God. 36 And behold, your kinswoman Elizabeth in her old age
has also conceived a son; and this is the sixth month with her who was
called barren. 37 For with God nothing will be impossible."38 And Mary
said, "Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me according
to your word." And the angel departed from her.
Old Testament Reading: Isaiah 7:10-14
“Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, a young
woman shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Imman'uel.
He shall eat curds and honey when he knows how to refuse the evil and
choose the good.” (Is. 7:14-15)
Meditation: God uses signs to communicate his purposes, his
presence, his righteousness, his favor to his people (Psalm 86:17), and
his assurance that he is speaking to them and that he will keep his
promises. God also performed mighty signs to demonstrate his saving
deeds when he delivered his people from bondage in Egypt (Psalm 78:43).
When God offered King Ahaz a sign, the king refused. God, nonetheless,
gave Israel a sign to assure his people that he would indeed give them a
Savior who would rule with peace and righteousness (Is. 7:11ff). The
greatest sign God has given us is his only begotten Son Jesus Christ who
took on flesh for our sake and for our salvation.
We see the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy and the unfolding of
God's plan of redemption in the events leading up to the Incarnation,
the birth of the Messiah. The new era of salvation begins with the
conception of Jesus in the womb of Mary. This child to be born is
conceived by the gracious action of the Holy Spirit upon Mary, who finds
favor with God. As Eve was the mother of all humanity doomed to sin, now
Mary becomes the mother of the new Adam who will father a new humanity
by his grace (Romans 5:12-21). This child to be conceived in her womb is
the fulfillment of all God’s promises. He will be “great” and “Son of
the Most High” and “King” (Luke 1:32-33), and his name shall be called
“Jesus”, which means “the Lord saves.” “He will save his people from
their sins” (Matthew 1:21). The promise of an everlasting kingdom to the
house of David (Isaiah 9:6-7) is fulfilled in the King to be born in
Mary’s womb.
How does Mary respond to the word of God delivered by the angel
Gabriel? She knows she is hearing something beyond human capability. It
will surely take a miracle which surpasses all that God has done
previously. Her question, “how shall this be, since I have no husband”
is not prompted by doubt or skepticism, but by wonderment! She is a true
hearer of the Word and she immediately responds with faith and trust.
Mary's prompt response of "yes" to the divine message is a model of
faith for all believers. Mary believed God's promises even when they
seemed impossible. She was full of grace because she trusted that what
God said was true and would be fulfilled. She was willing and eager to
do God's will, even if it seemed difficult or costly. Mary is the
“mother of God” because God becomes incarnate when he takes on flesh in
her womb. When we pray the Nicene Creed we state our confession of
faith in this great mystery: “For us men and for our salvation he came
down from heaven; by the power of the Holy Spirit, he became incarnate
of the Virgin Mary, and was made man”. God gives us grace and he
expects us to respond with the same willingness, obedience, and
heart?felt trust as Mary did. When God commands he also gives the help,
strength, and means to respond. We can either yield to his grace or
resist and go our own way. Do you believe in God's promises and do you
yield to his grace?
"Heavenly Father, you offer us abundant grace, mercy, and forgiveness
through your Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ. Help me to live a grace-filled
life as Mary did by believing in your promises and by giving you my
unqualified 'yes' to your will and plan for my life."
Psalm 24:1-6
1 The earth is the LORD's and the fulness thereof, the world and
those who dwell therein;
2 for he has founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the
rivers.
3 Who shall ascend the hill of the LORD? And who shall stand in his holy
place?
4 He who has clean hands and a pure heart, who does not lift up his soul
to what is false, and does not swear deceitfully.
5 He will receive blessing from the LORD, and vindication from the God
of his salvation.
6 Such is the generation of those who seek him, who seek the face of the
God of Jacob. [Selah]
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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS |
Youth Urged to Look For
Source of Their Hope
Pontiff Sends Message to Ecumenical Taizé
Meeting
VATICAN CITY, DEC. 19, 2008 ( Zenit.org).-
In a message to the young people who will
take part in the Taizé Community's 31st
European meeting, Benedict XVI says that
such gatherings offer youth a time to ask a
fundamental question.
The Pope affirmed this in a message sent in
his name by his secretary of state, Cardinal
Tarcisio Bertone, to the Taizé encounter
that will gather some 40,000 youth in
Brussels from Dec. 28 to Jan. 1.
The Pontiff said the encounter offers the
youth "an opportunity to ask yourselves this
question: What is the source from which we
draw life?"
"You are searching for the source of a hope
for yourselves and for the world," he
explained, "by opening yourself to Christ
through praying and listening to his Word,
by sharing your aspirations with young
people from throughout Europe and from other
continents, by experiencing the Church as a
place of communion and friendship for all."
He continued: "The Pope feels close to you
in your pilgrimage of trust on earth,
launched years ago by dear Brother Roger. He
is confident that you will discover how to
communicate hope around you, by committing
your lives in a world where there is too
much poverty, injustice and conflict. God
needs your faith, your creativity, your
spirit of initiative.
"To respond to his call, he gives you the
presence of his Spirit, who will renew your
strength when you are tired or weary.
Sustained by the Holy Spirit, do not be
afraid to give an account of the hope that
he places in you. Do not be afraid to let
your hearts become larger."
"In entrusting you to the intercession of
the Virgin Mary, the Mother of believers,
His Holiness Benedict XVI grants an
affectionate apostolic blessing, with all
his heart, to you as well as to the brothers
of Taizé, to all the people who have
organized this pilgrimage, to the pastors
and the faithful who are welcoming you, and
to your families."
The Taizé Community was founded in 1940 by
Brother Roger Schutz. He was stabbed to
death Aug. 16, 2005, by a mentally
unbalanced woman during a prayer meeting.
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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT |
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December 21, 2008

St. Peter Canisius

(1521-1597)
The energetic life of Peter Canisius should demolish any stereotypes we
may have of the life of a saint as dull or routine. Peter lived his 76
years at a pace which must be considered heroic, even in our time of
rapid change. A man blessed with many talents, Peter is an excellent
example of the scriptural man who develops his talents for the sake of
the Lord’s work.
He was one of the most important figures in the Catholic
Counter-Reformation in Germany. His was such a key role that he has
often been called the “second apostle of Germany” in that his life
parallels the earlier work of Boniface.
Although Peter once accused himself of idleness in his youth, he could
not have been idle too long, for at the age of 19 he received a master’s
degree from the university at Cologne. Soon afterwards he met Peter
Faber, the first disciple of Ignatius Loyola, who influenced Peter so
much that he joined the recently formed Society of Jesus.
At this early age Peter had already taken up a practice he continued
throughout his life—a process of study, reflection, prayer and writing.
After his ordination in 1546, he became widely known for his editions of
the writings of St. Cyril of Alexandria and St. Leo the Great. Besides
this reflective literary bent, Peter had a zeal for the apostolate. He
could often be found visiting the sick or prisoners, even when his
assigned duties in other areas were more than enough to keep most people
fully occupied.
In 1547 Peter attended several sessions of the Council of Trent, whose
decrees he was later assigned to implement. After a brief teaching
assignment at the Jesuit college at Messina, Peter was entrusted with
the mission to Germany—from that point on his life’s work. He taught in
several universities and was instrumental in establishing many colleges
and seminaries. He wrote a catechism that explained the Catholic faith
in a way which common people could understand—a great need of that age.
Renowned as a popular preacher, Peter packed churches with those eager
to hear his eloquent proclamation of the gospel. He had great diplomatic
ability, often serving as a reconciler between disputing factions. In
his letters (filling eight volumes) one finds words of wisdom and
counsel to people in all walks of life. At times he wrote unprecedented
letters of criticism to leaders of the Church—yet always in the context
of a loving, sympathetic concern.
At 70 Peter suffered a paralytic seizure, but he continued to preach and
write with the aid of a secretary until his death in his hometown (Nijmegen,
Netherlands) on December 21, 1597.
Comment:
Peter’s untiring efforts are an apt example for those involved in the
renewal of the Church or the growth of moral consciousness in business
or government. He is regarded as one of the creators of the Catholic
press, and can easily be a model for the Christian author or journalist.
Teachers can see in his life a passion for the transmission of truth.
Whether we have much to give, as Peter Canisius did, or whether we have
only a little to give, as did the poor widow in the Gospel (see Luke
21:1–4), the important thing is to give our all. It is in this way that
Peter is so exemplary for Christians in an age of rapid change when we
are called to be in the world but not of the world.
Quote:
When asked if he felt overworked, Peter replied, "If you have too much
to do, with God's help you will find time to do it all."
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GENERAL
MARIOLOGY |
"Queen of Peace, Save the
Nations and Peoples of the Whole Continent" - 1979 Homily from Guadalupe
By
Pope John Paul II
Pope
John Paul II, on the first pilgrimage of his pontificate, gave the
following homily in the basilica of Guadalupe on January 27, 1979.
—Asst. Ed.
Hail
Mary!
Dear
Brothers in the episcopate and dear sons and daughters, how deep is my
joy that the first steps of my pilgrimage, as Successor of Paul VI and
John Paul I, bring me precisely here. They bring me to you, Mary, in
this shrine of the people of Mexico and of the whole of Latin America,
the shrine in which for so many centuries your motherhood has been
manifested.
Hail
Mary!
It is
with immense love and reverence that I utter these words, words so
simple and at the same time so marvellous. No one will ever be able to
greet you in a more wonderful way than the way in which the Archangel
once greeted you at the moment of the Annunciation. Hail Mary, full of
grace, the Lord is with thee. I repeat these words, words that so many
hearts ponder upon and so many lips utter throughout the world. We here
present utter them together, and we are aware that these are the words
with which God himself, through his messenger, greeted you, the woman
promised in the Garden of Eden, chosen from eternity as the Mother of
the Word, the Mother of Divine Wisdom, the Mother of the Son of God.
Hail,
Mother of God!
Your
Son Jesus Christ is our Redeemer and Lord. He is our Teacher. All of us
gathered here are his disciples. We are the Successors of the Apostles,
of those to whom the Lord said: "Go therefore and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you;
and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age." (Mt 28:19-20).
Gathered here together, the Successor of Peter and the successors of the
Apostles, we ponder on how admirably these words have been fulfilled in
this land.
In
fact, scarcely twenty years after the work of evangelization was begun
in the New World in 1492, the Faith reached Mexico. Soon afterwards, the
first archiepiscopal see was established, presided over by Juan de
Zumárraga, supported by other great evangelizers, who were to extend
Christianity over very wide areas.
No
less glorious religious epics were to be written in the Southern
Hemisphere by men such as Saint Turibius of Mogroviejo and a long list
of others who would deserve to be mentioned here at length. The paths of
the Faith steadily stretched further, until at the end of the first
century of evangelization the episcopal sees numbered more than seventy,
with some four million Christians. This singular undertaking was to
continue for a long time, until today, after five centuries of
evangelization, it embraces almost a half of the entire Catholic church,
which has struck root in the culture of the people of Latin America and
forms part of their own identity.
And
with the achievement in these lands of Christ's mandate, with the
multiplication everywhere of the children of divine adoption through the
grace of baptism, the Mother appeared too. In fact, the Son of God, and
your Son, from the Cross indicated a man to you, Mary, and said:
"Behold, your son" (Jn 19:26). And in that man he entrusted to you every
person, he entrusted everyone to you. And you, who at the moment of the
Annunciation, concentrated the whole programme of your life in those
simple words: "Behold I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me
according to your word" (Lk 1:38), embrace everyone, draw close to
everyone, seek everyone out with motherly care.
Thus
is accomplished what the last Council said about your presence in the
mystery of Christ and the Church. In a wonderful way you are always
found in the mystery of Christ, your only Son, because you are present
wherever men and women, his brothers and sisters, are present, wherever
the Church is present.
In
fact, when the first missionaries who reached America from lands of
eminent Marian tradition taught the rudiments of Christian faith, they
also taught love for you, the Mother of Jesus and of all people. And
ever since the time that the Indian Juan Diego spoke of the sweet Lady
of Tepeyac, you, Mother of Guadalupe, have entered decisively into the
Christian life of the people of Mexico. No less has been your presence
in other places, where your children invoke you with tender names, as
Our Lady of Altagracia, of the Aparecida, of Luján, and with many other
no less affectionate names, not to give an unending list—names by which
in each nation and even in each region the peoples of Latin America
express their most profound devotion to you, and under which you protect
them in their pilgrimage of faith.
The
Pope—who comes from a country in which your images, especially one, that
of Jasna Gora, are also a sign of your presence in the nation's life and
its hazardous history—is particularly sensitive to this sign of your
presence here, in the life of the People of God in Mexico, in its
history, a history which has also been not easy, and at times even
dramatic. But you are also equally present in the life of the many other
peoples of Latin America, presiding over and guiding not only their
past, whether remote or recent, but also the present moment, with its
uncertainties and shadows. The Pope perceives in the depths of his heart
the special bonds that link you with this people and this people with
you. This people, that gives you the affectionate name of La Morenita.
This people, and indirectly the whole of this vast continent, lives
its spiritual unity thanks to the fact that you are its Mother. A Mother
who, through her love, creates, preserves and increases closeness
between her children.
Hail,
Mother of Mexico!
Mother of Latin America!
We
meet here at this exceptional and wonderful hour in the history of the
world. We have come to this place, conscious that we are at a crucial
moment. With this meeting of Bishops we wish to link ourselves with the
previous Conference of the Latin-American Bishops that took place ten
years ago at Medellín together with the Eucharistic Congress at Bogotá,
which Pope Paul VI of indelible memory took part in. We have come here
not so much to examine again, ten years later, the same problem, but
rather to review it in a new way, at a new place, and at a new moment of
history.
We
wish to take as our point of departure what is contained in the
documents and resolutions of that Conference. And at the same time we
wish, on the basis of the experiences of the last ten years and of the
development of thought and in the light of the experiences of the whole
Church, to take a correct and necessary step forward.
The
Medellín Conference took place shortly after the close of Vatican II,
the Council of our century, and its objective was to take up again the
Council's essential plans and content, in order to apply them and make
them a directing force in the concrete situation of the Church in Latin
America.
Without the Council the Medellín meeting would not have been possible;
that meeting was meant to be an impulse of spiritual renewal, a new
"spirit" in the face of the future in full ecclesial fidelity in
interpreting the signs of the times in Latin America. The evangelizing
intention was quite clear. It is obvious in the sixteen themes dealt
with, grouped about three great mutually complementary topics, namely
human advancement, evangelization and growth in faith, and the visible
Church and her structures.
By
opting for the man of Latin America seen in his entirety, by showing
preferential yet not exclusive love for the poor, and by encouraging
integral liberation of individuals and peoples, Medellín, the Church
present in that place, was a call of hope towards more Christian and
more human goals.
But
more than ten years have passed. And interpretations have been given
that have been at times contradictory, not always correct, not always
beneficial for the Church. The Church is therefore looking for the ways
that will enable her to understand more deeply and fulfil more zealously
the mission she has been given by Christ Jesus.
Much
importance in this regard is found in the sessions of the Synod of
Bishops held in the years since then, especially the session of 1974,
which concentrated on Evangelization; its conclusions were put together
later, in a lively and encouraging manner, in Paul VI's Apostolic
Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi.
This
is the theme that we are today placing before us for study by proposing
to consider "Evangelization in Latin America's Present and Future."
As we
meet in this sacred place to begin our work, we see before our eyes the
upper room in Jerusalem, where the Eucharist was instituted. After the
Lord's Ascension the Apostles returned to the same upper room in order
to devote themselves to prayer, together with Mary, the Mother of
Christ, and so prepare their hearts to receive the Holy Spirit at the
moment of the Church's birth.
That
is also why we have come here. We also are awaiting the descent of the
Holy Spirit, who will make us see the paths of evangelization by which
the Church must continue and must be reborn in this great continent of
ours. We also wish today and in the days ahead to devote ourselves to
prayer with Mary, the Mother of our Lord and Master—with you, Mother of
hope, Mother of Guadalupe.
Let
me, John Paul II, Bishop of Rome and Pope, together with my Brothers in
the Episcopate representing the Church in Mexico and the whole of Latin
America, at this solemn moment entrust and offer to you, the handmaid of
the Lord, the whole heritage of the Gospel, the Cross, and the
Resurrection, of which we are all witnesses, apostles, teachers, and
bishops.
O
Mother, help us to be faithful stewards of the great mysteries of God.
Help us to teach the truth proclaimed by your Son and to spread love,
which is the chief commandment and the first fruit of the Holy Spirit.
Help us to strengthen our brethren in faith, help us to awaken hope in
eternal life. Help us to guard the great treasures stored in the souls
of the People of God entrusted to us.
We
offer you the whole of this People of God. We offer you the Church in
Mexico and in the whole continent. We offer it to you as your own, You
have entered so deeply into the hearts of the faithful through that sign
of your presence constituted by your image in the Shrine of Guadalupe;
be at home in these hearts, for the future also. Be at home in our
families, our parishes, missions, dioceses, and in all the peoples.
Do
this through the Holy Church, for she, in imitation of you, Mother,
wishes in her turn to be a good mother and to care for souls in all
their needs, by proclaiming the Gospel, administering the Sacraments,
safeguarding family life with the sacrament of Matrimony, gathering all
into the Eucharistic community by means of the Holy Sacrament of the
altar, and by being lovingly with them from the cradle until they enter
eternity.
O
Mother, awaken in the younger generation readiness for the exclusive
service of God. Implore for us abundant local vocations to the
priesthood and the consecrated life.
O
Mother, strengthen the faith of our brothers and sisters in the laity,
so that in every field of social, professional, cultural and political
life they may act in accordance with the truth and the law brought by
your Son to mankind, in order to lead everyone to eternal salvation and,
at the same time, to make life on earth more human, more worthy of man.
The
Church that is carrying out her task among the American nations, the
Church in Mexico, wishes to serve this sublime cause with all her
strength and with renewed missionary spirit. Mother, enable us to serve
the Church in truth and justice. Make us follow this way ourselves and
lead others, without ever straying along twisted paths and dragging
others with us.
We
offer and entrust to you everybody and everything for which we have
pastoral responsibility, confident that you will be with us and will
help us to carry out what your Son has told us to do (cf. Jn 2:5). We
bring you this unlimited trust; with this trust I, John Paul II, with
all my Brothers in the Episcopate of Mexico and Latin America, wish to
bind you still more strongly to our ministry, to the Church and to the
life of our nations. We wish to place in your hands the whole of our
future, the future of evangelization in Latin America.
Queen
of the Apostles, accept our readiness to serve unreservedly the cause of
your Son, the cause of the Gospel and the cause of peace based on
justice and love between individuals and peoples.
Queen
of Peace, save the nations and peoples of the whole continent—they have
so much trust in you—from wars, hatred and subversion.
Make
everybody, whether they are rulers or subjects, learn to live in peace,
educate themselves for peace, and do what is demanded by justice and
respect for the rights of every person, so that peace may be firmly
established.
Accept our trustful offering, O handmaid of the Lord. May your maternal
presence in the mystery of Christ and of the Church become a source of
joy and freedom for each and every one, source of that freedom through
which "Christ has set us free" (Gal 5:1), and the end a source of that
peace that the world cannot give but which is only given by him, by
Christ (cf. Jn 14:27).
Finally, O Mother, recalling and confirming the gesture of my
Predecessors Benedict XIV and Pius X, who proclaimed you Patroness of
Mexico and of the whole of Latin America, I present to you a diadem in
the name of all your Mexican and Latin-American children, that you may
keep them under your protection, preserve their harmony in faith and
their fidelity to Christ, your Son. Amen.
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DIVINE MERCY
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On Saving Souls
Begging God's Mercy For Every Soul
I feel that I am being completely
transformed into prayer in order to beg God's mercy for every soul. O my
Jesus, I am receiving You into my heart as a pledge of mercy for souls (Diary,
996).
I suffer great pain at the sight of the sufferings of others. All these
sufferings are reflected in my heart. I carry their torments in my heart
so that it even wears me out physically. I would like all pains to fall
upon me so as to bring relief to my neighbor (Diary, 1039).
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CATHOLIC TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY |
Father Cantalamessa's 3rd Advent Meditation
"When the Fullness of Time Had Come God Sent His Son Born of a Woman"
VATICAN CITY, DEC. 19, 2008 ( Zenit.org).- Here is the Advent homily Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa, preacher of the Pontifical Household, delivered today in the Vatican in the presence of Benedict XVI and the Roman Curia.
This is the third and last Advent sermons the preacher wrote on the theme "'When the Fullness of Time Had Come, God Sent his Son, Born of a Woman: Going With St. Paul to Meet the Christ Who Comes."
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1. Paul and the Dogma of the Incarnation
Once again we will present the passage from St. Paul that we intend to reflect on.
"I mean that as long as the heir is not of age, he is no different from a slave, although he is the owner of everything, but he is under the supervision of guardians and administrators until the date set by his father. In the same way we also, when we were not of age, were enslaved to the elemental powers of the world. But when the fullness of time had come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to ransom those under the law, so that we might receive adoption. As proof that you are children, God sent the spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying out, 'Abba, Father!' So you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son then also an heir, through God" (Galatians 4, 4-7).
We hear this passage often during the Christmas season, beginning with First Vespers for the solemnity of Christmas. We will first of all speak about the theological implications of this text. It is the place in which we come closest, in the Pauline corpus, to the idea of preexistence and incarnation. The idea of "sending" ("God sent [exapesteilen] his Son") is placed parallel to the sending of the Spirit, which is spoken of two verses later and hearkens back to that which is said in the Old Testament about God's sending of Wisdom and the Holy Spirit out into the world (Wisdom 9:10, 17). These combinations indicate that here we are not dealing with a sending "from the earth," as in the case of the prophets, but "from heaven."
The idea of Christ's preexistence is implicit in the Pauline texts, which speak of Christ's role in the creation of the world (1 Corinthians 8:6; Colossians 1:15-16), and when Paul says that the rock that followed the people in the desert was Christ (1 Corinthians 10:4). The idea of the incarnation is, in turn, suggested in the Christological hymn of Philippians 2:6-7: "Being in the form of God, he did not regard equality with God something to be grasped. Rather, he emptied himself, taking on the form of a slave."
Despite these passages, it must be admitted that in Paul preexistence and incarnation are truths that are still germinating; they have not yet been fully formulated. The reason for this is that the center of interest and the starting point of everything for St. Paul is the paschal mystery, that is, the work, more than the person of the Savior. This is in contrast to St. John, for whom the starting point and the epicenter of attention is precisely the Son's preexistence and incarnation.
We have here two different "ways" or routes in the discovery of who Jesus Christ is. One, that of Paul, begins from humanity to reach divinity, from the flesh to reach the Spirit, from the history of Christ to arrive at the preexistence of Christ. The other, that of John, follows the inverse path: It begins from the Word's divinity to arrive at affirming his humanity, from his existence in eternity to descend to his existence in time. Paul's approach makes the resurrection the hinge of the two phases, and John's sees the passage as turning on the incarnation.
These two approaches consolidated in the epoch that followed and gave rise to two models or archetypes and finally to two Christological schools: the Antiochene school influenced by Paul and the Alexandrian school influenced by John. Neither group was aware of choosing between Paul and John; each takes itself to include both. That is undoubtedly true; but it is a fact that the two influences are visible and distinguishable, like two rivers that merge together but are nevertheless identifiable by the different color of their waters.
This difference is reflected, for example, in the different way in which the two schools interpret Christ's kenosis in Philippians 2. From the 2nd and 3rd centuries, even down to modern exegesis, two different readings can be delineated. According to the Alexandrian school the initial subject of the hymn is the Son of God preexistent in the form of God. In this case the kenosis, or "pouring out," would consist in the incarnation, in becoming man. According to the Antiochene school, the sole subject of the hymn, from beginning to end, is the historical Christ, Jesus of Nazareth. In this case the kenosis would consist in the abasement inherent in his becoming a slave, in submitting himself to the passion and death.
The difference between the two schools is not that some follow Paul and others John, but that some interpret John in the light Paul and others Paul in the light of John. The difference is the framework or background perspective that is adopted for illustrating the mystery of Christ. It can be said that the main lines of the Church's dogma and theology have formed in the confrontation of these two schools, which continue to have an impact today.
2. Born of a Woman
The relative silence about the incarnation in Paul leads to an almost complete silence about Mary, the Mother of the Incarnate Word. The incisive "born of a woman" ("factum sub muliere") of our text is the most explicit reference to Mary in the Pauline corpus. It is equivalent to the other expression: "from the seed of David according to the flesh" – "factum ex semine David secundum carnem" (Romans 1:3).
However bare, this claim of the Apostle is quite important. It was one of the essential propositions in the struggle against gnostic Docetism from the 2nd century onward. It says, in fact, that Jesus is not a heavenly apparition; because he is born of a woman, he is fully inserted into humanity and history, "like men in all things" (Philippians 2:7). "Why do we say that Christ is a man," Tertullian writes, "if not because he is born of Mary who is a human creature?"[1] On second thought, "born of a woman" better expresses the true humanity of Christ than the title "son of man." In a literal sense, Jesus is not the son of man, not having a man for a father, but he is truly the "son of woman."
The Pauline text was also at the center of the debate over the title "Mother of God" ("theotokos") in the subsequent Christological disputes, and this explains why the Galatians text is the second reading in the liturgy for the Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of God on Jan. 1.
There is one detail that should be noted. If Paul would have said: "born of Mary," he would have been merely mentioning a biographical fact; but in saying "born of a woman," he gives universal and immense import to his statement. And the woman herself, every woman, is elevated in Mary to an incredible height. Mary is here the woman par excellence.
3. "What Does it Matter to Me that Christ was Born of Mary?"
We meditate on the Pauline text with Christmas fast approaching and in the spirit of "lectio divina." So, we cannot tarry to long over the exegetical data, but after having contemplated the theological truth contained in the text, we must draw guidance for our spiritual life from it, highlighting the "for me" character of the word of God.
A line of Origen -- taken up by St. Augustine, St. Bernard, Luther and others -- says: "What does it matter to me that Christ was once given birth by Mary in Bethlehem, if faith is not also born in my soul?"[2] Mary's divine maternity is realized on two levels: on a physical level and a spiritual level. Mary is the Mother of God not only because she carried him in her womb physically but also because she first conceived him in her heart, with faith. Of course, we cannot imitate Mary in the first sense, giving birth to Christ again, but we can imitate her in the second sense, in the sense of her faith. Jesus was the first to apply this title of "Mother of Christ" to the Church when he said: "My mother and my brothers are those who hear the word of God and put it into practice" (Luke 8:21; cf. Mark 3:31 f.; Matthew 12:49).
In the tradition, this truth was applied in two complementary ways, one pastoral and the other spiritual. In the one case we see this maternity realized in the Church taken as a whole inasmuch as she is "universal sacrament of salvation"; in the other we see it realized in each individual person or soul who believes.
Blessed Isaac of Stella, a medieval theologian, made a kind of synthesis of all these elements. In a famous homily that we read last Saturday in the Liturgy of the Hours, he writes: "Mary and the Church are one mother and more than one, one virgin and more than one ...Therefore in the divinely inspired Scripture what is said, what is said universally of the Church, Virgin and Mother, is also said individually of Mary; and what is said in a special way of Mary is understood in a general sense of the Virgin Mother Church ... In the end, every faithful soul is the spouse of the Word of God, mother, daughter and sister of Christ. Each faithful soul is understood in its own sense to be virgin and fruitful."[3]
The Second Vatican Council positions itself in the first perspective when it says: "The Church ... becomes herself a mother. By her preaching she brings forth to a new and immortal life the sons who are born to her in baptism, conceived of the Holy Spirit and born of God."[4]
We will focus on the personal application to each soul: "Every soul who believes," writes St. Ambrose, "conceives and gives birth to the Word of God ... if one alone is Mother of Christ according to the flesh, all souls, according to the faith, give birth to Christ when they accept the word of God."[5] An Eastern Father echoes St. Ambrose: "Christ is always mystically born in the soul, taking flesh in those who are saved and making a virgin mother of the soul that gives him birth."[6]
Just how one concretely becomes mother of Jesus he himself indicates in the Gospel: hearing the word and putting it into practice (cf. Luke 8:21; Mark 3:31 f.; Matthew 12:49). To understand this, let us again think about how Mary became mother: conceiving him and giving birth to him. In Scripture we see these two moments emphasized: "Behold the Virgin will conceive and will give birth to a son," it says in Isaiah; and the angel tells Mary: "You will conceive and give birth to a Son."
There are two incomplete maternities or two types of interruptions of maternity: the one is the old and well known interruption that takes place in a miscarriage or an abortion. These occur when a life is conceived but there is no birth because in the meantime, either on account of natural causes (in the case of a miscarriage) or because of human sin (in the case of an abortion), the child dies. Until a short time ago, these were the only forms of incomplete maternity. Today there is an opposite form of incomplete maternity, which consists in a woman giving birth to a child that she did not conceive. This occurs with children who are conceived in a test tube and then inserted in a woman's womb and in the case of wombs "borrowed" to host, perhaps for money, human lives conceived elsewhere. In this case, the child to whom the woman gives birth, does not come from her, is not conceived "first in the heart and then in the body."
Unfortunately, these two sad types of incomplete maternity also exist in the spiritual realm. Those who hear the word without putting it into practice, those who have one spiritual abortion after another, making plans for conversion that they systematically abandon when they get halfway down the road, conceive Jesus but do not give birth to him. They are impatient observers of the word, they look at their face in a mirror and then go away forgetting what they looked like (cf. James 1:23). In sum, they are those who have faith but no works.
But there are also those who, on the contrary, give birth to Christ without having conceived him. They do many works, even good ones, that do not come from the heart, from love of God and right intention, but rather from habit, hypocrisy, the pursuit of their own glory and their own interests, or simply from the gratification of doing them. In sum, they are those who have works but no faith.
St. Francis of Assisi summarizes, in a positive way, what constitutes true maternity in regard to Christ: "We are mothers of Christ," he says, "when we carry him in our heart and in our body by divine love and with a pure and sincere conscience; we give birth to him through holy works, which should shine forth as an example for others. ... How holy and dear, pleasant, humble, peaceful, lovable and desirable above all things it is to have such a brother and such a son, our Lord Jesus Christ!"[7] The saint is telling us that we conceive Christ when we love him with a sincere heart and with rectitude of conscience, and we give birth to him when we accomplish holy deeds that manifest him to the world.
4. The Two Feasts of the Child Jesus
St. Bonaventure, a disciple and spiritual son of the "Poverello" of Assisi, took up and developed this idea in an opuscule entitled "The Five Feasts of the Child Jesus." In the introduction to the book, he recounts how one day, while in retreat on Mount Verna, he recalled that the holy Fathers say that the soul devoted to God, by the grace of the Holy Spirit and the power of the Most High, can conceive the blessed Word and only-begotten Son of the Father, give birth to him, give him his name, seek and adore him with the Magi and, finally, happily present him to God the Father in his temple.[8] Of these five moments or feasts of the Child Jesus that can be re-lived by the soul, we are above all interested in the first two: the conception and birth. For St. Bonaventure, the soul conceives Jesus when, dissatisfied with the life he is living, prompted by holy inspirations and inflamed by holy ardor, he resolutely tears himself away from his old habits and defects, is in a way made spiritually fertile by the grace of the Holy Spirit and conceives the project of a new life. Christ has been conceived!
Once conceived, the blessed Son of God will be born in the heart so long as this soul, after having made a right discernment, asked for appropriate advice and called upon God for help, puts his holy plan immediately into practice and begins to realize that which had been ripening in him but which he had always put off for fear of being incapable of succeeding in it.
But we must insist on one thing: This project of a new life must translate itself, without delay, into something concrete, into a change, possibly even external and visible, in our life and in our habits. If the plan is not put into action, Jesus is conceived, but he is not born. It will become one of the many spiritual abortions. The "second feast" of the Child Jesus, which is Christmas, will never be celebrated. It will be one of the many postponements which are the main reason why so few become saints.
If you decide to change your lifestyle and enter into the category of the poor and humble, who, like Mary, only seek the grace of God, without worrying about pleasing men, then, St. Bonaventure writes, you must arm yourself with courage, because you will need it. You will face two kinds of temptations. First, from the more carnal sorts among those with whom you associate, who will say to you: "What your taking on is too hard; you'll never do it, you lack the strength, it will be bad for your health; these kinds of things don't suit your position in society, you'll compromise your good name and your dignity in your work."
This obstacle overcome, other people will turn up who are thought to be pious, and perhaps even are pious, but who do not really believe in the power of God and his Spirit. They will tell you that if you start to live this way -- giving so much time to prayer, avoiding gossip and idle chatter, doing works of charity -- you will soon be thought a saint, a person of devotion, a spiritual person, and since you know well that you are not yet any of those things, you will end up deceiving people and being a hypocrite, drawing the reproof of God, who knows our heart.
We must respond to all these temptations with faith. "The hand of God is not too short to save!" (Isaiah 59:1) and, almost getting impatient with ourselves, exclaiming, like Augustine on the eve of his conversion: "If these men and women have done it, why can't I?" -- "Si isti et istae, cur non ego?"[9]
5. Mary Said Yes
The example of the Mother of God suggests to bring this new drive to our spiritual life, to truly conceive and give birth to Jesus in us this Christmas. Mary says a decisive and total Yes to God. Great stress is put on Mary's "fiat," on Mary as "the Virgin of the 'fiat'." But Mary did not speak Latin and so did not say "fiat"; nor did she speak Greek and so did not say "genoito," which is the word we find at that point in Luke's Greek text.
If it is legitimate to go back, with a pious reflection, to the "ipsissima vox," to the exact word that came from Mary's mouth -- or at least to the word that would be found at this point in the Judaic source that Luke used -- this must have been the word "amen." Amen, a Hebrew word whose root means solidity, certainty -- was used in the liturgy as a response of faith to God's word. Every time that, at the end of certain Psalms in the Vulgate we once read "fiat, fiat," now in the new version, translated from the original text, we read: "Amen, amen." This is also the case for the Greek word: in the Septuagint, at the end of the same Psalms, where we read "genoito, genoito," the original Hebrew has "Amen, amen!"
The "amen" recognizes that the word that has been spoken is firm, stable, valid and binding. Its exact translation, when it is a response to the word of God, is: "This is how it is and this is how it shall be." It indicates both faith and obedience; it recognizes that what God says is true and submits to it. It is saying "yes" to God. This is the meaning it has when it is spoken by Jesus: "Yes, amen, Father, because this was your good pleasure" (cf. Matthew 11:26). Jesus is, indeed, Amen personified: "Thus, he is the Amen" (Revelation 3:14), and it is through him, St. Paul adds, that every "amen" pronounced on earth ascends to God (cf. 2 Corinthians 1:20).
In almost all human languages the word that express consent is a monosyllable -- sě, ja, yes, oui, da -- one of the shortest words in the language but that with which both bride and groom and consecrated persons decide their lives forever. In the rite for religious profession and priestly ordination there is also a moment in which yes is said.
There is a nuance in Mary's Amen that is important to note. In modern languages we use verbs in the indicative mood to refer to something that has happened or will happen, and in the conditional mood to refer to something that could happen under certain conditions, etc. Greek has a particular mood called the optative mood. It is a mood that is used to express a certain desire or impatience for a particular thing to happen. The word used by Luke, "genoito," is in this mood!
St. Paul says that "God loves a cheerful giver" (2 Corinthians 9:7) and Mary says her "yes" to God with joy. Let us ask her to obtain for us the grace to say a joyous and renewed Yes to God and so conceive and give birth to his Son Jesus Christ this Christmas.
* * *
[1] Tertullian, "De carne Christi," 5,6 (CC, 2, p. 881).
[2] Origen, "Commentary on the Gospel of Luke," 22, 3 (SCh, 87, p. 302).
[3] Isaac of Stella, "Sermones," 51 (PL 194, 1863 f.).
[4] "Lumen Gentium," 64.
[5] St. Ambrose, "Expositio Evangelii Secundum Lucam," II, 26 (CSEL 32, 4, p.55).
[6] St. Maximus the Confessor, "Commentary on the Our Father," (PG 90, 889).
[7] St. Francis of Assisi, "Lettera ai fedeli," 1 (Fonti Francescane, n. 178).
[8] St. Bonaventura, "The Five Feasts of the Child Jesus," prologue (ed. Quaracchi 1949, pp. 207 ff.).
[9] St. Augustine, "Confessions," VIII, 8, 19.
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