Nativity of Our
Lord 2009
Pastoral
message from Father Robert Arida
ÒBe
watchful, stand firm in your faith, be courageous, be strong. Let all that you
do be done in love.Ó (1 Corinthians 16:13-14).
Dear
Brothers and Sisters,
Saint
PaulÕs words of support and encouragement to the Church in Corinth can be a
great benefit to us as we prepare to enter the feast of ChristÕs nativity.
Indeed, we are to be watchful as we stand firm in our faith since what we are
about to celebrate ultimately calls us to accept and nurture a creative tension
generated by the Son of God entering the world as a human being. We are to be
watchful and firm in our faith for the birth of Christ and all that is related
to the LordÕs saving work is, on the one hand, perceived as an intrusion
seeking to disturb the comfortable and smug bourgeois Christianity of our
culture. On the other hand, it is often claimed as a political or ideological
tool to promote the agendas that divide and alienate one human being from another
for the sake of worldly power and notoriety. Celebrating the LordÕs nativity
requires courage and strength to stand apart from and to correct all that
opposes or distorts the proclamation and manifestation of GodÕs kingdom in our
midst.
The
Christmas event summons all of humanity to draw near in repentance to the
living God who chose us Òbefore the foundation of the world, that we should be
holy and blameless before him.Ó (Ephesians 1:4) The birth of Christ is a cosmic
event and therefore has no boundaries but draws every one and every thing into
the kingdom of new and eternal life. For God Òhas made known to us in all
wisdom and insight the mystery of his willÉ which he set forth in Christ as a
plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and
things on earth.Ó (Eph. 1:9-10)
Proclaiming
and celebrating the ÒpresenceÓ and ÒcomingÓ of GodÕs universal kingdom is the
foundation of the ChurchÕs work in and for the life of the world. For those who
await the celebration of ChristÕs nativity there can be no other agenda for the
Church. Even the worthy causes that fall under the rubric of social justice
cannot and must not veil or replace the SaviorÕs call to repentance, conversion
and transfiguration.
All
that we do personally and corporately as the Church must be done in love so as
to ceaselessly grow in communion with God and our neighbor. Within this
interpersonal dynamic of love there is no room for the moral and political
currents of our culture to alter or reshape the Gospel of forgiveness, hope and
new life. Nor can we allow these currents to identify who we are. For when we
succumb to these currents we develop a myopic view of reality and gradually
assume a false identity destined only for death.
We
belong to the incarnate Christ in whom we are identified as sons and daughters
of the Father. In Christ we are given the Spirit who seeks to direct the work
of the Church towards putting down all the walls of division which set one
human being against another.
The
birth of our Savior brings the light of wisdom into all the world. Our
celebration of the Feast affirms that our minds and hearts are open to
receiving this uncreated divine light, which manifests the beauty and joy of
GodÕs new and everlasting kingdom.
With
love in Christ,
Father
Robert