What is Christmas? I know that seems like a silly question. After all, today is Christmas and the signs of it are all around us. The lights, the trees, the Nativity set, etc. ad nauseum. But all of that is surface stuff, all of that is peripheral. Pushing past the obvious, what is Christmas?
Christmas, or more historically, Christ’s Mass, is the day when everything changed. I remember watching the events of 9/11 when I was in college and I knew everything had changed. And it had. The entire world has changed because of those cowardly events. But that was the world. On Christmas Day, the entire universe changed.
In the beginning, after God created Adam and Eve, He commanded that they not eat from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. God warned them that if they ate from that tree, they would die. Life would be cut off from them and not just physical life but eternal life. Up until that moment, Adam and Eve were destined to exist with God for all eternity because nothing stood as a barrier between them and God, the Source of All Life. However, to the dismay of creation, Adam and Eve were duped by the serpent and fell into temptation. They disobeyed God and their eating of the fruit caused a barrier to exist, a barrier which cut them off from the eternal life given by God. This was not God’s doing, it was ours.
But, cut off as we were by Sin, God became present to us through the Patriarchs and Matriarchs, through the Prophets, and the Priests of Israel. Like a master chess player, God spent millennia setting up the board in the exact right configuration until He made His move.
And in a move no one expected, God became one of us. In the literary world there is a device called self-insertion and that is where the author writes his or herself into the story. God is the author of our lives and on Christmas Day, He wrote Himself into the story.
God was born of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the city of Bethlehem and was named Jesus which means, God is our salvation. Jesus’ birth was heralded by a multitude of angels and by the birth of a new star. Shepherds bowed down before Him as did wise men from the east. God had begun something all together new on that Christmas Day.
The birth of Jesus signaled a metamorphosis of the cosmos and that divine change reached its fruition on a Friday when that Holy Child, now 33 years old, was nailed to a Cross. The death of Christ paid a debt that we could not pay and the barrier erected by Adam and Eve was destroyed. Through the death of Jesus we are given forgiveness of sins and reunion with God for eternity.
That could have been the end of the story, but God does nothing half-way and three days after His death, God walked out of that tomb of His own accord, risen from the dead, in glory and power.
In the secular world, after today the tree will come down, the lights will be turned off, and the memory of another Christmas will be filed away on phones and scrapbooks. But for the Christian, Christmas Day is the beginning. It is the beginning of the new thing which God did 2,000 years ago and the best part is that the salvation of Jesus Christ which was begun at the manger is still ongoing. Everyday, we exist in the reality of Christmas Day and of Easter Morning. For the Christian, those two are not mutually exclusive but are united in one symphony of salvation.
Adam and Eve took the gift that God had given them and threw it back into His Face and God would have had every right to abandon us to our own Sin but in His exquisite love and mercy, the Almighty became one of us and gifted us with salvation by His Crucifixion and Resurrection. That gift is now offered to us every day and we must choose if we are to take the gift of salvation and live into it or to reject it, much like our first parents.
Therefore, brothers and sisters, the path of salvation is laid before us once again. It is a journey that begins in the creche ends on the Cross. Let us not spurn the forgiveness given us by God. Rather, let us accept the yearly celebration of the birth of Our Lord and recommit ourselves to walk the path of righteousness and redemption. And let us rejoice, for Christ is born. Amen.
Saint Paul's is a Community of Baptized Christians who are called by God to go out and make disciples of Jesus Christ.