Advent Reflections for December 24 Week 4 - Monday - Christmas Eve Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, for He has visited and brought redemption to His people. (Luke 1:68) Reflection
As soon as Jesus was born, visitors began to come. First it was the shepherds.
Then the wise men. Then Simeon and Anna. Then even the soldiers of Herod were
sent to find Him. Together these visitors represent the people of every nation,
coming by every possible path and conveyance to see Christ. These words of
Zechariah’s Canticle, cited above, remind us that it was impossible to contain
God in heaven. Advent Action Thank God for the gift of His Son, Jesus. No room in the inn by Archbishop Fulton Sheen Mary is now with child, awaiting birth, and Joseph is full of expectancy as he enters the city of his own family. He searched for a place for the birth of him to whom heaven and earth belonged. Could it be that the Creator would not find room in his own creation? Certainly, thought Joseph, there would be room in the village inn. There was room for the rich; there was room for those who were clothed in soft garments; there was room for everyone who had a tip to give to the innkeeper. But when finally the scrolls of history are completed down to the last word of time, the saddest line of all will be: "There was no room in the inn." No room in the inn, but there was room in the stable. The inn was the gathering place of public opinion, the focal point of the world's moods, the rendezvous of the worldly, the rallying place of the popular and the successful. But there's no room in the place where the world gathers. The stable is a place for outcasts, the ignored and the forgotten. The world might have expected the Son of God to be born in an inn; a stable would certainly be the last place in the world where one would look for him. The lesson is: divinity is always where you least expect to find it. So the Son of God made man is invited to enter into his own world through a back door. Now we come to what our Lord said about heaven. It was the night of the Last Supper. Jesus gathered about him all his apostles-poor, weak, frail men. He washed their feet. He was facing the agony in the garden, and that terrible betraying kiss of Judas, and even the denial of Peter himself. One would think that all the talk would be about himself. Certainly, when we have trials, that is what we think about. But our Lord thought about the apostles. He saw the sadness in their faces, and he said, "Be not troubled, do not be sad, I go to prepare a place for you. In my father’s house there are many mansions." How did he know about the Father’s house? He came from there. That was his home. Now preparing to go back home, he tells them about the Father’s house and he says, "I go to prepare a place for you." God never does anything for us without great preparation. He made a garden for Adam, as only God knows how to make a garden beautiful. Then, when the Jews came into the promised land, he prepared the land for them. He said he would give them houses full of good things, houses which they never built. He said that he would give them vineyards and olive trees which they never planted. just so, he goes to prepare a place for us. Why? Simply because we were not made for heaven; we were made for earth. Man, by sin, spoiled the earth, and God came down from heaven in order to help us remake it. After having redeemed us, he said that he would now give us heaven, so we got all this: the earth, and heaven too. Source: Through the Year With Archbishop Fulton Sheen. IgnatiusInsight.com Gospel: The "Benedictus" of Zechariah (Luke) Malankara World Journal Issue 112
Hymn - The Great Forerunner of the
Morn
The great forerunner of the morn,
With heavenly message Gabriel came,
John, still unborn, yet gave aright
Of woman born shall never be
But why should mortal accents raise
"Behold, My herald, who shall go
All praise to God the Father be,
"The Great Forerunner of the Morn" by Choir of First Church Los Angeles; Words:
The Venerable Bede (673-735). Music: C. Gall, 1625.
Prayer
Rejoice, rejoice, Emmanuel shall come to you, O Israel. Lord, may we rejoice
that Jesus Christ is born anew in our hearts and in our home. Amen.
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