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Greeting
the Lord by Name
December 23, 2007
Readings for the Fourth
Sunday of Advent
| Reading
1: Is. 7:10–14 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 24:1–2, 3–4, 5–6 |
| Reading
2: Rom. 1:1–7 |
| Gospel:
Mt. 1:18–24 |
| Link
to Readings |
Today's
Gospel also draws our attention to St. Joseph.
In his homily for this Sunday, Fr. Ryland discusses the
role of St. Joseph in the Holy Family and the Church.
By
Father Roger J. Landry
The celebration
of Christmas is a little over a day away, and the Church,
on this fourth Sunday of Advent, gives us TWO NAMES to guide
us on this home stretch. The names are essential for us to
capture the true “reason for the season.” They
also contain within them the lessons for us how best to prepare
and respond to the realities they indicate.
The two names both
refer, unsurprisingly, to Christ. The first was chosen by
God the Father over 700 years before His Son took flesh in
Mary’s womb. The prophet Isaiah announced: “Hear,
then, O House of Israel. . . . The Lord himself will give
you a sign. Behold a virgin will be with child and bear a
son and shall call him Emmanuel” (first reading). Seven
centuries later, in describing the miraculous events of Jesus’
conception and birth, St. Matthew wrote, “All this took
place to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through
the prophet, “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and
bear a son, and they shall name him Emmanuel” (today’s
Gospel). The apostle then tells us what the name means: “God
is with us.”
“God-is-with-us.”
Since the time the prophecy was given about this name, the
Jews thought that a child born of a young woman would be a
SYMBOL that God was “with them” in the sense of
being “on their side.” The Messiah, a son of David
according to the flesh, would, they thought, be this instantiation
of God’s solicitude. They would never have been able
to fathom that God was intending to fulfill that prophetic
title LITERALLY. God, the Creator, was going to take on the
nature of His creature. God Himself was going to enter the
human race and be “descended from David according to
the flesh,” the same David He had chosen centuries before
to be anointed as King of Israel.
“God
Saves”
But there was a
clear PURPOSE to God’s PRESENCE. That is given to us
in the second name we encounter in today’s Gospel. The
angel tells St. Joseph, Mary “will bear a son and you
are to name him Jesus.” This name, Jesus (the Greek
transliteration of the Hebrew Jeshua), means “God saves,”
and the angel tells Joseph quite clearly what this infant
will save the Jews from: “he will save his people from
their sins.” God-is-with-us, therefore, for the purpose
of saving-us-from-our sins. The Son of God didn’t become
God-with-us merely to “hang with us,” as the teenage
colloquialism goes, but to hang FOR us. He took upon our human
nature so that He could give that nature as an expiation for
our sins. But not only does the name Jesus interpret the name
Emmanuel, but the name Jesus also makes possible Emmanuel,
because Jesus saved us from our sins so that we could be much
more fully WITH HIM who came to be WITH US. Our sins prevent
communion with God, and hence Jesus, in coming to save us
from them, was making possible the fulfillment of the prophetic
name Emmanuel.
This truth, however,
is not meant to be merely intellectual or merely historical.
Emmanuel means “God IS with us,” not “God
WAS with us.” Jesus means “God saves,” not
“God saved.” Our sharing in the mystery of Christmas,
therefore, depends on whether we enter IN THE PRESENT into
THIS SALVIFIC PRESENCE. The two titles point to the greatest
gift we’ll receive this Christmas, but the question
is whether we’ll receive the gift, open it up, and take
advantage of it.
The
Divine Physician
“Jesus”
indicates that God came to save us from our sins, and Jesus
founded a sacrament on Easter Sunday evening to do so, but
we need to respond to that offer of merciful love. So many
Catholics receive that gift but leave it as an unopened package
in the corners of their lives. That’s one of the reasons
why their celebration of Christmas isn’t nearly as joyful
as God wants it to be. Our appreciation for Jesus’ coming
into the world is directly dependent on whether we realize
we need Him—that we’re sinners in need of so benign
a savior.
Jesus is like the
world’s greatest oncologist walking into a cancer ward.
The path to healing is for each patient to allow the doctor
to operate and surgically excise the cancer. The path to healing
is for each patient to follow his instructions to eliminate
the various carcinogens that put one’s life in danger.
Jesus, who created us without our will, won’t save us
against our will. Each of us must recognize that need for
salvation and come to receive it in the way that Jesus himself
set it up. The divine physician will be seeing His patients
in the operating room of the confessional. The times for His
office hours are listed in the bulletin. Our Christmas joy
will be directly proportional to our REALIZATION of Jesus
as savior and our RECEPTION of Jesus as savior.
This
Side of Heaven
Jesus, moreover,
is “God-with-us,” and there was no expiration
date to His presence. In fact, prior to His Ascension into
heaven, He told us, “Know that I am with you always,
until the end of time” (Mt. 28:20). Jesus of course
is with us in many ways—through creation, through grace,
through Sacred Scripture, through His image in others, through
those He ordained to act in His very person, through His mystical
body, the Church. But there is one way above all others by
which Christ remains with us: in His Body and Blood. The Eucharist
is Emmanuel, God-with-us. The same God who was in Mary’s
womb, we receive in our bodies at Holy Communion. The same
Jesus whom the wise men traveled such great distances over
several months to adore, we have the same privilege to worship—and
all we have to do is hop in our cars and drive short distances.
The question is whether we take that presence of Jesus seriously
or whether we take it for granted.
The Mass is the
greatest privilege this side of heaven, when we have the chance
to do something that those present in Bethlehem couldn’t
even dream of. They were able to worship the God-man on the
“outside,” in the stable. We have the chance to
receive Him and worship Him INSIDE. I remember very well when
this truth struck me to the core of my existence during my
freshman year in college. After recognizing that in the Mass
we receive the Son of God within us and that there is no greater
privilege in the whole world than receiving God, I asked myself,
“Is attending Mass something that I should be doing
only because I HAVE to, or is it something I should be doing
because I WANT to?” I then made it more particular:
“If the Mass is celebrated every day, shouldn’t
I be taking advantage of this incredible gift every day?”
It was then that I started to attend daily Mass and my life
was changed forever.
Jesus established
the Sacrament of the Eucharist so that He who is God-with-us
could be with us in a communion of love. He makes Himself
present to us every day. The Church He founded teaches that
we have the obligation to come to Mass on Sundays and holy
days, but that minimum does not have to become our maximum.
No one, after all, was OBLIGED to go to Bethlehem to adore
Christ, but if we had the chance, wouldn’t have we have
interrupted what we were doing to travel to that sacred stable?
If so, then we should make the effort to head to the new Bethlehem
to adore the same infant Savior whenever we can.
Prepare
for Christ’s Coming
During the Year
of the Eucharist, Pope John Paul II called on each of us to
live an “intensely Eucharistic year,” which means
that he called us to live an intensely Eucharistic Christmas.
He called us to see the connection between the Lord who was
placed in the manger and the Lord who is placed in our hands
and mouths and then placed in the tabernacle. And he was asking
us to make Christ in the Eucharist the “magnetic pole”
of our entire lives. He specifically suggested that each of
us focus, above all, on two realities:
The first is to
allow the reality of what occurs in the Mass to assume an
ever greater influence in our lives. The second is to grow
in “Eucharistic amazement” and spend time in Eucharistic
adoration. The tabernacle lamp is called to become the “Star
of Bethlehem” in our lives, guiding us to the presence
of the “newborn king of the Jews.” Each of us
is called to ask whether the real presence of Jesus Christ
in the tabernacle has any impact at all on our lives, or whether
we live, practically, as if the tabernacle were empty or just
full of bread. If we truly believe that God-is-with-us in
the tabernacle, then our daily and weekly schedules will bear
witness to it. The joy we experience at Christmas will be
dependent upon whether we take Emmanuel seriously and strive
to come to be with God who did so much and became so humble
to be with us.
Most of us have
already prepared gifts for many people, and this is good and
a tangible expression of our Christian love for others. But
all of these good deeds should not get us to forget the need
to prepare the best gift for the divine Birthday Boy. What
would probably please Him most would be if we appreciated
and took advantage of the great gifts He has given us in the
two sacraments by which He becomes Jesus and Emmanuel to us
personally.
Jesus, Emmanuel,
is coming. May we greet Him, sincerely, by name! And through
the prayers of Mary and Joseph, may we develop the type of
personal relationship with Jesus that they had, so that we
might experience His salvation and be with Him in this world
and forever in the next. Amen.
Father
Roger J. Landry is pastor
of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in New Bedford, MA and Executive
Editor of The Anchor, the weekly newspaper of the
Diocese of Fall River. An archive of his homilies and articles
is found at catholicpreaching.com.
This
is adapted from one of Fr. Landry’s recent homilies.
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