VIGIL MASS OF THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD

First Reading: Isa 62: 1-5; Psalm: 89. R. v. 2a; Second Reading: Acts 13:16-17. 22-25; Gospel: Mt 1:1-25

 AWAY FROM THE MANGER

BY FR VALENTINE NNAMDI EGBUONU, MSP

Magi giving presents to baby Jesus

On this night, we celebrate the birth of the Incarnate Word, Jesus Christ. We read today from the account of Matthew how this remarkable event took place. But if you ask me, I would say that we are more familiar with Luke’s narrative regarding the Saviour’s birth because it appears more detailed and sounds more interesting. The birth of Christ according to the account of Luke took place at night in a manger which makes this vigil Mass even more meaningful and explains the early Christian’s tradition of celebrating Christmas from the sundown of the 24th to the sundown of the 25th. Matthew’s account on the other hand, did not specify when and where Christ was born but only started with a lengthy genealogy and suddenly ended with Christ’s birth.

Matthew introduced his account thus, “The book of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham.” And then went on to mention different ancestries. The tracing of this ancestral line was important because no human being existed without a lineage. Matthew’s genealogy thus explains that Christ though God, has a lineage as man. This lineage stretched across 42 generations beginning from Abraham through David to Jesus Christ. Matthew was not referring to the blood lineage of Jesus through Mary, but the legal lineage of Jesus through Joseph. So Jesus has a lineage just like any of us. And this is why he is legally called “the Son of David.”

Although the gospel of Matthew did not mention exactly where Christ was born; it however stated that a star led the wise men to a house where Mary and the child Christ was. And that the wise men entered the house and saw the child with Mary his mother and fell down and worshipped him presenting their gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh (Mt 2:10-11). Luke’s account mentioned a manger as Christ’s birth place (Lk 2:7). Matthew’s account mentioned a house (Mt 2:11). But whose house exactly? This was not disclosed. We were not told if it was the house of Joseph or the house of someone else.

The undisclosed identity of this house where Christ was born makes Matthew’s account very handy for us to leverage on. Unlike Matthew’s account, Luke’s account creates a gap between us and the child Christ. It presented an exclusive world that was not ready to accommodate Christ the new born king. Luke’s narrative took the child Christ away from the human environs and harboured him in a manger. It was as if Christ was not meant for our homes or that we refused him a home when he came. But the account of today’s gospel consoles us. Matthew narrates that Christ was born in a house. And since this house is unknown; it gives us the freedom to claim it as our own.

So, tonight, Matthew does not want us to picture or imagine that Christ was born in a manger. He wants us to see that Christ was born in a house. And that house could be yours or mine. This should make this year’s Christmas special to us. Christ was not born somewhere there in a manger but in our houses. We were the first to welcome him and not those animals in the manger. This makes Isaiah’s message in the first reading of tonight more meaningful. God rejoices over us as a bridegroom rejoices over his bride (Is 62:5). God’s divine marriage with us through the mystery of the Incarnation should be a marriage celebrated in a place very close to us. Ordinarily, a bridegroom seeks the bride in her home, not a manger.

So, as we go home tonight, let us not think that we left the child Christ by the Church somewhere in a manger. The new born king is there in our homes and wants to reign there forever. He is now the head of our homes just as a bridegroom is the head of his home. And if so, we should allow Christ to build our homes. So, this Christmas is a Christmas of love because the essence of God is love. Love should reign in our homes and from there extend to everyone. For what is the need to learn to love from God when it cannot be shared.

Don’t celebrate this Christmas with grudges, anger and hatred in your heart. This would be like shutting your door against the child Christ; for these ill feelings oppose love. Forgive whoever might have wronged you knowingly or unknowingly. Share gifts not only with friends and families but also with those in need. Check your phone contacts; you may find someone you have not phoned for a very long time. Your phone call or text message could make their Christmas a memorable one. Just use every opportunity you have to share love. Because love was the very reason Christ came to dwell among us. And this love should begin from our homes.

Have a Blessed Christmas.

PRAYER FOR THE DAY

God our Father, we thank you for the gift of the child Christ. Grant us the disposition to open our doors to him to come in and reign in our lives and homes. Amen.

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