Solemnity of the Nativity of the Lord–Mass during the Night
Talk about irony! The first reading of the Mass that the Church calls “Mass during the Night” begins: “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom, a light has shone.” There is something beautifully still at Midnight Mass, a peace that exists as most people are asleep, but it’s also certainly dark.
But Christ came precisely so that we can have light, as this church is illumined. And the light that He came to bring is the light of holiness that casts away, not the darkness that comes from the earth spinning on its axis and certain parts of the globe facing away from the sun during times of the day, but the darkness of sin and death, which is really slavery.
Isaiah continues with that theme of slavery when he talks about the “pole on their shoulder, and the rod of their taskmaster.” Sin binds us up and takes us captive. As Jesus is born, the one who ransomed us from slavery, who bought us at the price of His own Precious Blood, is made known to us, and for that reason we rejoice. We rejoice even in the middle of the night because today is the today it happened; today the path to our freedom in Christ was begun in a backwards part of a nowhere failed kingdom, ignored by the powers of the world, but for the riots that would happen from time to time among the people.
The shepherds were awake at night, looking out for wolves so that their sheep did not get eaten. I remember my trip to Zion National Park. I had a very early flight out of Vegas, so I had to leave at zero dark thirty. Driving through Utah, where there were no towns, was something else. The moon was out, so it wasn’t that dark, but without the moon, or on a cloudy night, it would have been pitch black. On nights without clouds, the stars help to illumine the sky.
We know about darkness all too well in our lives. Since March of 2020 we have lived in the darkness of a COVID world, and no matter how you look at the virus, it has made the world dark. Our country and our world are torn by the darkness of division. Horrible crimes perpetrated by powerful men and women have come to light, only to accentuate how dark things really are. In our own City of Flint, homicides are up this year from last year, which was an increase from the year before. And lest we simply try to focus on the spinner in our neighbor’s eye, without recognizing the beam in our own, I think we all recognize the sins that plague our life, small or great, which contribute to the darkness that surrounds our world.
But in the midst of the darkness we dare to hold our baptismal candles, sometimes shining with more of the light of Christ than other times. We do not simply curse the darkness, but we call on Christ to shine upon us and upon our world. St. Paul talks about how the grace of God, which is the very life of God who is Light, “has appeared, saving all and training us to reject godless ways and world desires and to live temperately, justly, and devoutly in this age, as we await the blessed hope, the appearance of the glory of our great God and savior Jesus Christ.” The Light of Christ is ready to shine upon us and upon our world, taking our baptismal candles which were lit from Him, which, by themselves do not illumine much, but united cast away all darkness.
Just as the light of this church shines, even while surrounded by the darkness of the outside, so we, the living stones of the temple of God, are to shine, even when we are surrounded. We do not have to be slaves to sin; we do not have to stumble our way through the darkness. We have light, the very light of God that gives us true freedom and shows us the way to the day that never ends in heaven. That is why we sing “Glory!” That is why we venture out in the middle of the night in the bleak midwinter. Not because we are perfect; not because we are the light and can solve every problem. But because Christ is the Light, and is the answer to the question of every human heart, and the healing for every brokenness that exists in the world. And today He is born for us.
Don’t blow out your candle because of how much darkness surrounds you. Don’t even curse the darkness. But, to quote the country singer Thomas Rhett, “Don’t hide in the dark, you were born to shine. In a world full of hate, be a light” Or, even better, from the Prophet Isaiah: “The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom a light has shone.” That light is Christ, born for us today. “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to people of goodwill.”