Nativity of the Lord (Day)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell OP
St. Albert the Great,
Irving
A
virgin gives birth to a son. That son, her son, is also the Son of
God. He is the Son of God and the Son of Man, the Savior, the
Messiah. His name is Christ Jesus, the one sent to save us from sin
and death. On the Cross, he becomes sin and death, and now sin and
death are dead, no longer masters of the Father's human children. We
belong to Him and Him alone. We can say that Christ became man and
died to save us. To rescue us. To heal us. We can say He ransomed us
from the Enemy. We can even say that He adopted us as sons and
daughters, as heirs. All true. All good and beautiful. But one of the more ancient ways of talking about what Christ did for us at his birth
comes from
St.
Athanasius ca. 318AD, “For the Son of God became man so that we
might become God” (CCC 460).
TA says this means that,
“[t]he
only-begotten Son of God, wanting to make us sharers
in his divinity,
assumed our nature, so that he, made man, might make men gods” (CCC
460).
Every year, on the Nativity of the Lord, we celebrate the birth of
the God-Man, Jesus. We also celebrate the moment, the historical
instant, that God graced us with the gift of the possibility of
becoming Christs. Each one of us becoming Christ. Our salvation is
our entry into the divine life of the Blessed Trinity.
Yes,
on this festive occasion – with the decorated trees and presents
and table-bending platters of food and Jingle Bells playing in the
background and Santa Claus – we have to talk about God becoming Man
so that Man might become god. You came to a Dominican priory for a
Christmas Mass! So, you asked for this. All the traditional Christmas
stuff is decoration for why we are here. Twinkly camouflage that
decorates an ancient and venerable take on what it means to be saved
in Christ. The birth of the Christ Child in Bethlehem is our birth
into the divine life, into the possibility of being wholly united
with God after our time here is done. As far back as St. Peter
writing to the churches in Asia Minor before the end of the first
century, we hear that our salvation is a matter of participating in
the life of God: “...he
has bestowed on us the precious and very great promises, so that
through them you may come to share in the divine nature...” Our
sharing in this life right
now
is what life in Christ is all about. Sharing in His life for eternity
is what it is to be deified. To be made gods by God Himself.
Now,
we could spend weeks unpacking what deification means for us, and the
novices will be doing just that when I get back from visiting my dad
in January. But the Cliff Notes version is this: God became Man so
that Man might become God. That's what we are celebrating this
morning. Our entry into the divine life through the birth of the
Christ Child to the BVM in Bethlehem. As I noted earlier, there are
simpler ways of thinking about your salvation – as a rescue, as a
healing, as a ransom. All of these have their place in the story of
the Church. But each one also leads us to think and speak about our
daily lives in Christ in a particular way. If your salvation is a
rescue, e.g., then you need to ask yourself: why am I constantly
needing to be rescued? Why do I keep getting lost or putting myself
in danger? If your salvation is a healing, then you need to ask: am I
healed just once for all time? If so, why do I keep getting sick with
sin and need to be healed again? What happens to your daily life in
Christ when you think and speak about your salvation as “sharing in
the divine life” of God Himself? What happens when you begin to
take seriously the truth of the Son's Incarnation and understand that
you yourself can become Christ?
Here's
what could happen: you stop thinking and speaking about your life in
Christ as if it were nothing more than a legalistic scheme of moral
purity. You stop thinking and speaking about your life in Christ as
if it were little more than conforming yourself to middle-class
American values and expectations. You stop thinking and speaking
about your life in Christ as it were limited to robotically repeating
the words of a favorite devotion, or being satisfied with doing the
absolute bare minimum under Church law. IOW, what happens when you
begin to take seriously the truth of the Son's Incarnation and
understand that you yourself can become Christ, you stop thinking and
speaking about your life in Christ as if you are the source and
summit of your salvation and solely responsible for getting yourself
into heaven! As partakers in the divine life of God Himself, you and
I are imperfect Christs being made perfect by grace. As such, our
daily job is to receive with praise and thanksgiving the graces God
pours out on us and put those graces to work for His greater glory.
Sin is our willful failure to participate fully in the divine life.
We have been given a great Christmas gift – Christ Jesus. And our
year-round task is to become more and more like him just like he
became like us – fully human in all ways except sin.
And
so, on “The Twenty-fifth Day of December...in the 149th Olympiad;
in the year 752 since the foundation of the City of Rome; in the 42nd
year of the reign of Caesar Octavian Augustus, the whole world being
at peace, Jesus
Christ,
eternal God and Son of the eternal Father...was conceived by the Holy
Spirit...born of the Virgin Mary in Bethlehem of Judah, and was made
man...” On that same day in the same year, in virtue of Christ's
birth, life, death, and resurrection, you and I were given – freely
given – the gift of our salvation: to become Christs in the flesh,
to be made sons of God, heirs to the Kingdom; priests, prophets, and
kings to bear witness to His glory in the world. Yes, we are rescued,
healed, ransomed, adopted, and saved. But by far the greater gift,
the greatest grace is our freedom to become Him whom we love. The Son
born of Mary in Bethlehem. That son, her son, the Son of God. The Son
of God and the Son of Man, the Savior, the Messiah. His name is
Christ Jesus, the one sent to save us from sin and death.
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