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Christmas – ‘And the Word became flesh …’
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I think, to an extent, what goes for our human relationships is also true of our relationship with God. God, freely and out of sheer generosity decided to make himself known to us. Initially he spoke through the prophets, but even the words of the great prophets cannot fully communicate the love of God. Full communication demands full communion, therefore the Word of God became flesh, the Word of God became a human being: Jesus Christ, Son of Mary and Son of God. The love of God was revealed to mankind by a Man, by Christ’s life of perfect love, and by his death and resurrection.
Today we celebrate and rejoice at the Incarnation, at God’s entrance into the world. We also celebrate God’s entrance into our lives. Sometimes it can be easy to forget that our religion is not based on a series of abstract premises or ideas, it is based on a living person, Jesus Christ. We can be tempted to keep Christ at arm’s length, perhaps because personal relationships are so demanding. We do not feel we have the time or energy to engage in a dialogue with Jesus. In times like these i find it useful to meditate on the Nativity scene, stripped of all the sentimentality of so many of our Christmas Cribs: there we find a poor couple nursing their new born baby, who is God, in a barn – and they are full of joy.