Octave Day of Christmas
Readings of the day: Numbers 6:22-27; Psalm 67:2-3, 4, 5, 6, 8; Galatians 4:4-7; Luke 2:16-21
This homily was given at St. Joseph’s College, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Readings of the day: Numbers 6:22-27; Psalm 67:2-3, 4, 5, 6, 8; Galatians 4:4-7; Luke 2:16-21
This homily was given at St. Joseph’s College, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
The LORD bless you and keep
you;
The LORD make his face to
shine upon you
and be gracious to you,
The LORD lift up his
countenance upon you and give you peace.
This prayer with which the
LORD asks Aaron, through Moses, to bless the people of Israel in the Book of
Numbers, in the reading we have heard today, is maybe one of the most
recognizable blessings in the Jewish or Christian traditions; in our Bible. But
what is peace? With what kind of peace was Aaron to bless his people as he and
Moses led them through the desert back to their homeland, Israel?
The Hebrew word for “peace” in
this Aaronic or “priestly blessing” of Numbers is, I am sure, a word many of us
have heard before: Shalom. But is shalom not one of those notoriously
difficult words from an ancient language to translate into a current language
like English? Shalom may mean
“peace,” in a sense, though, that is much richer than the absence of a dispute
or of war. It may mean anything from wishing somebody wholeness or prosperity
to a simple hello or even goodbye.
“The LORD lift up his
countenance upon you and give you shalom.”
This blessing of Aaron has several echoes throughout our Scriptures and our
Mass. In John’s Gospel, at the Last Supper, Jesus blesses his disciples with a
prayer for them reminiscent of Aaron’s prayer for the people of Israel in
Numbers: “Peace I leave you, my peace I give you.” And then, in the same
Gospel, the risen Jesus greets the disciples three different times: “Peace be
with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.”
In a few moments here, we will
echo these words of Jesus, which are in turn an echo of God’s voice through
Aaron to his people: “Peace I leave you, my peace I give you… Shalom be with you.” In this way, we
will exchange a sign of peace just before we receive communion, shalom given for us in the form of bread
and wine. And then we will be sent forth from here at the end of this celebration:
“As the Father has sent me, so I send you”… to be shalom to our world in profound need of our peace as a people of
God.
Is it not appropriate, then,
that each year, on January 1, New Year’s Day, in addition to this liturgical
celebration of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, as Church we also
celebrate this day as the World Day of Peace? We have, I think, a lot to
celebrate each year on this World Day of Peace, New Year’s Day, Solemnity of Mary,
Mother of God. Our world becomes more peaceful year by year: Fewer wars; more
respect for freedom of thought, freedom of religious faith, and other basic
human rights and freedoms; more governments and forms of government that uphold
these human rights.
Still, our world is far from perfectly at peace, much less
at shalom that is so much more than
the absence of conflict; shalom that
is peace only possible for us through God. Parts of our world still remain
mired in war; still send record numbers of people fleeing from violence and
abuse, in search of peace. Households, families, marriages still experience
brokenness; shalom still eludes us at
this most foundational level of any healthy human society.
Yet still we (rightly) celebrate
as we pray for shalom; for peace. And
we connect this celebration of and prayer for peace with a celebration of Mary
as Mother of God. So what might Mary, Mother of God, have to do with peace, in
our world, among and within nations, or within households and families? Let me
suggest that our celebration of this Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, has a
lot to do with peace; I will go so far as to say that a healthy Christian
devotion to Mary is essential for our peace; for shalom.
Our Gospel today, from Luke,
shows us this essential connection between the Blessed Virgin Mary and peace; shalom. When the shepherds first arrive
at the scene of our Lord’s birth, we might imagine their excitement and the excitement
and amazement of everybody present with them. Luke’s Gospel says in fact that, as
the shepherds “made known what had been told them about this child… all who
heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them.”
All this excitement, activity,
and even amazement is a good thing, especially this time of year, is it not?
Yet (and maybe we can all relate to what I am about to say) is this
Christmastime not one of the more exhausting times of the year? Amid all the
activity, we need time to rest; to pray; to celebrate with joy, yet still to be
at peace. So, after Luke describes the excited joy of the shepherds, everybody’s
amazement “at what the shepherds” had to say “about this child,” Jesus, Luke
turns our attention toward Mary. Luke says that “Mary treasured all these words
and pondered them in her heart.”
My sisters and brothers, let
me suggest that these two verbs, “treasured” and “pondered,” are most essential
to the Gospel we have just heard. They are essential for our peace, in its
fullest sense of shalom. Amid the
noise, the excitement, the activity, the words of the shepherds, her own probable
exhaustion at having just brought a child into the world, of all the people in
our Gospel account today, Mary is the most “at peace.” And she teaches us
something central to our own being “at peace”: Treasuring and pondering.
But to treasure and ponder as
Mary does is not to hold onto the joy of this celebration of the Lord’s birth
as if it is ours to keep to ourselves in a selfish way. The joy of this
celebration has been given to us by God through Mary, a young woman God chose
and preserved from sin in order to bring God’s own Son, Jesus, into our world.
Because this joy; this gift of God’s Son through Mary that we treasure and ponder,
has been given to us, God calls us now to hand on this gift of shalom enveloped in our human flesh to the
world around us. And how might we treasure and ponder while handing on this
gift we have received?
Again, may we look to Mary as
an example of treasuring and pondering while handing on. From the moment Mary
conceived Jesus in her womb, through Jesus’ life, death, resurrection, and
ascension, and Mary’s own assumption into heaven, body and soul, Mary allowed
the peace, the shalom of God to settle
into her very depths. Shalom became the
foundation of who Mary was, treasuring and pondering, such that then this shalom was able to flow from her. God
calls us now to the same willingness to treasure and ponder, to allow shalom to take on our human flesh and
become the essence of who we are, not only the historical event of the birth of
a child in Bethlehem two thousand years ago.
Every time our prayerful
celebration here, our treasuring and pondering before the altar of the Lord, allows
and strengthens us to act in even small ways of kindness, mercy, and justice toward
one another, shalom incarnate becomes
a little more who we are and flows from us as it did from Mary into the world.
Let me go back (briefly but to
some time ago) in history, to the Council of Ephesus of 431. There, at Ephesus, our
Church’s bishops first encouraged all Christians to pray through Mary under the
title of Theotokos, “God-bearer” or,
as we Roman Catholics usually refer to Mary, “Mother of God.” Outside the place
where the bishops of Ephesus assembled, the faithful chanted, as if as a prayer
for the unity of the bishops and the Church, which was anything but assured in
431, “Mother of God”…
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