Solemnity of the Nativity of Our Lord
Why
did you come here this morning?
Why interrupt the family celebrations, the excitement of opening
presents? Why brave the
elements? Maybe you don't have power. There are many other answers, too, perhaps as many as there are people in this church. And there is only one answer: because God wants you here.
God
wants you here like He wanted the shepherds to visit that cave where Jesus was
born. Somewhere in your hearts He
sent His angel to proclaim to you the “good news of great joy”, that, “today in
the city of David a savior has been born for you who is Christ and Lord.” And we ourselves joined in the angelic song, “Glory to God in
the highest and on earth peace to people of good will.”
God
wants you to be here because He has a gift for you, and a gift He wants from
you. The gift He gives to you is
Himself. The gift He wants from
you is yourself. His gift can only
be received if your gift is given.
God’s very life, which we call grace, is offered to you this night. It is like a bottle of wine waiting to
be poured into the glass of your soul.
But in order for the wine to be poured, you first has to offer Him your
glass, because God will not force His gift upon you.
It’s
strange, isn’t it? That our God,
who created all the exists: the heavens, the earth, and all that dwells in
them—the angels, the animals, the
waters, the mountains, the stars, the galaxies—God who created all this and who
has unlimited power, will not overwhelm us with this power, but waits for our
yes to His invitation. It’s
strange that, when our God decided to take on human flesh, He did not come as a
Roman Emperor from the West, or as a Persian priest from the East, but as a
baby. But that is exactly what
happened.
We
probably all want God’s gift. Who
would not want to receive the very life of God? Who would not want to love of God, the peace of God, the joy
of God to flow through our very souls?
We all want God’s gift. But
we are more hesitant to give God His gift from us. We all want God’s life, but we shrink back at giving God our
life. We hesitate at the idea that
we would turn over to God our time, even our focused time of around an hour
each Sunday. We falter at the idea
that God would be in control of our life and direct our actions and words. We pause when we consider that God
might take us somewhere we don’t want to go.
Fear. It can be paralyzing. Fear can stop us from doing what we
truly want to do. We all have fear
at giving our gift to God, the gift of our entire life. I still have areas of my heart that do
no belong to Jesus fully.
Why? Because I am afraid
that I will miss that part of my life if I give it away. I do not trust that God will truly be
enough for me. Yes, much of my
life belongs to the Lord, but there are still parts that I hold back. Maybe you haven’t visited your Catholic
home, the church, for a while.
Maybe it took all your courage just to come here today. First and foremost: welcome home! We love you and we have missed
you. Maybe you come every week,
but the practice of your faith ends as you walk out these doors. We love you, too, and encourage you to
share your faith with others. We
all have parts of our lives that are not fully given over to Jesus. Some of us have held back more than
others. But no matter how much we
have reserved from God, we are all called to band together, to be courageous
together, and to support each other in giving our entire lives to God. We lose nothing when we give ourselves
away. In fact, in Divine Irony, we
only lose our life when we fail to give it away.
Today
God wants you here. He wants to
give you the gift of Himself. But
He will not force His gift on you.
You and I must be open to that gift by giving God our entire life:
nothing more, nothing less. If we
are open to it, God will change us to be more like Him, which will give us true
happiness. And if we are like God,
then this world, wrapped in the double darkness of sin and ignorance, will also
be changed into a light of holiness and truth, the world in which we all want
to live.