Sunday within the Octave of the Nativity
But poverty and humility don’t only regard physical possessions or wealth. Our Lord shows us great humility and poverty in His Incarnation. And yes, the Gospels are clear that the Blessed Mother and St. Joseph did not have much wealth (they had to present the poor family’s offering of two turtledoves or pigeons to redeem their firstborn son). But the poverty of Christ comes from recognizing how much He gave up to take our human nature onto Himself. As pure spirit, before the Incarnation, Christ had no limits, experienced no lack, and existed in pure actuality. After the Incarnation, Christ could be seen in only one place, few the pangs of hunger and thirst, and would grow from potentiality to actuality throughout His life. The King of the Universe could be mocked by his neighbors. He could get splinters and feel pain while working with St. Joseph in his workshop.
But beyond that, Christ subjected Himself to the Law of Moses. Our Lord gave the Law to Moses, and knew its deeper meaning, as He would preach in the Sermon on the Mount. But, as one like us in all things but sin, He subjected Himself to a Law to which He, as Lawgiver, should never have had to follow. The Law was for children as a tutor. He needed no such tutor. And yet, He did not consider it beneath Himself to obey the law in all its commands. He received circumcision on the eighth day (as we will hear on Wednesday); His parents redeemed Him in the Temple 40 days after His birth (as we will celebrate on Candlemas), which is the earlier passage of today’s Gospel; He went to the Temple for Passover and the Feast of Booths and the Day of Atonement. He who would declare all animals clean to St. Peter in a vision, obeyed kosher laws. He would pay the temple tax, though He was the Lord of the temple and the object of its worship.
And He did all this so that He could redeem those under the law, so that we might not simply be servants or slaves (though St. Paul will still use these words from time to time), but sons and daughters in the Son of God, so that we could have the same access to the Father that He has. What great humility for the one who did not sin, which the Law was meant to guard against, to live according to the Law! What great poverty that He would live under the same rule as slaves, though He is Son.
So how do we demonstrate this humility and poverty? Or are we too important to humble ourselves and live under the rules of others, even when they seem not to apply to us (as long as they don’t go against our conscience)? Kids will often confess disobedience to their parents in one way or another. I know I disobeyed my parents when I was a child (shocking, I know!). I will often remind them that our Lord, when He was a child, obeyed Mary and Joseph, even though Christ made and redeemed Mary and Joseph. Christ, strictly speaking, owed no obedience to anyone; He is God. And yet, if Joseph told Him to wash His face, or help His mother with dinner, or join in in the workshop, Jesus would yes, “Yes, Abba.” If the Lord of all Creation can obey human parents, then we, who are not divine, can certainly give our best attempts to obey our parents and what they say.
How about when Holy Mother Church asks us to do something: how do we respond then? Some laws are man-made. They are rooted in what we believe, but they are not directly from God. Do we take time to obey them, or do we figure that we know better and don’t need to be shackled by such limiting regulations? When the Church asks us to do penance to unite ourselves to Christ on the cross on Fridays, do we do that, in one way or another? When the Church asks for some support in prayer, can we add a little prayer time to our daily habits, or do we complain that we pray enough, and are too busy to add another devotion? Certainly devotions are not necessary, but they can sometimes help.
It is so easy to think that we know best, and we shouldn’t have to do something because it doesn’t apply to us, or won’t have an effect on us. But Christ, through. His Incarnation and Nativity, shows us how to humble ourselves, and how to live in poverty, maybe not of possessions or money, but in poverty of spirit. May the humble Christ Child, whom St. Francis, il Poverello, the little poor one, loved so much and imitated, help us all to be a bit more humble, a bit more poor, so that we can be more like our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit is God, for ever and ever. Amen.