Vatican Media Screen Capture

Pope Francis' Christmas Eve Homily

‘Let us enter into the real Nativity … Then, in Jesus we will enjoy the flavor of the true spirit of Christmas: the beauty of being loved by God’

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

Here is a Vatican translation of the text of the homily Pope Francis gave this evening when he celebrated Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica.
* * *
Mary “gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a
manger, because there was no place for them in the inn” (Lk 2:7). In these plain and clear words,
Luke brings us to the heart of that holy night: Mary gave birth; she gave us Jesus, the Light of the
world. A simple story that plunges us into the event that changes our history forever. Everything,
that night, became a source of hope.
Let us go back a few verses. By decree of the Emperor, Mary and Joseph found themselves
forced to set out. They had to leave their people, their home, and their land, and to undertake a
journey in order to be registered in the census. This was no comfortable or easy journey for a young
couple about to have a child: they had to leave their land. At heart, they were full of hope and
expectation because of the child about to be born; yet their steps were weighed down by the
uncertainties and dangers that attend those who have to leave their home behind.
Then they found themselves having to face perhaps the most difficult thing of all. They
arrived in Bethlehem and experienced that it was a land that was not expecting them. A land where
there was no place for them.
And there, where everything was a challenge, Mary gave us Emmanuel. The Son of God had
to be born in a stable because his own had no room for him. “He came to what was his own and his
own people did not accept him” (Jn 1:11). And there, amid the gloom of a city that had no room or
place for the stranger from afar, amid the darkness of a bustling city which in this case seemed to
want to build itself up by turning its back on others… it was precisely there that the revolutionary
spark of God’s love was kindled. In Bethlehem, a small chink opens up for those who have lost
their land, their country, their dreams; even for those overcome by the asphyxia produced by a life
of isolation.
So many other footsteps are hidden in the footsteps of Joseph and Mary. We see the tracks
of entire families forced to set out in our own day. We see the tracks of millions of persons who do
not choose to go away but, driven from their land, leave behind their dear ones. In many cases, this
departure is filled with hope, hope for the future; yet for many others, this departure can only have
one name: survival. Surviving the Herods of today, who, to impose their power and increase their
wealth, see no problem in shedding innocent blood.
Mary and Joseph, for whom there was no room, are the first to embrace the One who comes
to give all of us our document of citizenship. The One who in his poverty and humility proclaims
and shows that true power and authentic freedom are shown in honoring and assisting the weak
and the frail.
That night, the One who had no place to be born is proclaimed to those who had no place at
the table or in the streets of the city. The shepherds are the first to hear this Good News. By reason
of their work, they were men and women forced to live on the edges of society. Their state of life,
and the places they had to stay prevented them from observing all the ritual prescriptions of
religious purification; as a result, they were considered unclean. Their skin, their clothing, their
smell, their way of speaking, their origin, all betrayed them. Everything about them generated
mistrust. They were men and women to be kept at a distance, to be feared. They were considered
pagans among the believers, sinners among the just, foreigners among the citizens. Yet to them –
pagans, sinners and foreigners – the angel says: “Do not be afraid; for see – I am bringing you good
news of great joy for the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is the
Messiah, the Lord” (Lk 2:10-11).
This is the joy that we tonight are called to share, to celebrate and to proclaim. The joy with
which God, in his infinite mercy, has embraced us pagans, sinners and foreigners, and demands
that we do the same.
The faith we proclaim tonight makes us see God present in all those situations where we
think he is absent. He is present in the unwelcomed visitor, often unrecognizable, who walks
through our cities and our neighborhoods, who travels on our buses and knocks on our doors.
This same faith impels us to make space for a new social imagination, and not to be afraid of
experiencing new forms of relationship, in which none have to feel that there is no room for them
on this earth. Christmas is a time for turning the power of fear into the power of charity, into power
for a new imagination of charity. The charity that does not grow accustomed to injustice, as if it
were something natural, but that has the courage, amid tensions and conflicts, to make itself a
“house of bread”, a land of hospitality. That is what Saint John Paul II told us: “Do not be afraid!
Open wide the doors for Christ” (Homily for the Inauguration of the Pontificate, 22 October 1978).
In the Child of Bethlehem, God comes to meet us and make us active sharers in the life
around us. He offers himself to us so that we can take him into our arms, lift him and embrace
him. So that in him we will not be afraid to take into our arms, raise up and embrace the thirsty, the
stranger, the naked, the sick, the imprisoned (cf. Mt 25:35-36). “Do not be afraid! Open wide the
doors for Christ”. In this Child, God invites us to be messengers of hope. He invites us to become
sentinels for all those bowed down by the despair born of encountering so many closed doors. In
this child, God makes us agents of his hospitality.
Moved by the joy of the gift, little Child of Bethlehem, we ask that your crying may shake
us from our indifference and open our eyes to those who are suffering. May your tenderness awaken
our sensitivity and recognize our call to see you in all those who arrive in our cities, in our histories,
in our lives. May your revolutionary tenderness persuade us to feel our call to be agents of the hope
and tenderness of our people.
[Original text: English] [Vatican-provided text] Copyright © libreria editrice vaticana
 
JF

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

Staff Reporter

Support ZENIT

If you liked this article, support ZENIT now with a donation