“…. and the soul felt its worth…”[i]
Time and time
again the Scriptures remind us of how precious each person is to God. Not in some abstract, theoretical way as a
unit of value, but precious as a new born child is precious, as a treasured
friend is precious, as a lover is precious.
The Holy One under the name of Divine Wisdom says ‘I found delight to be
with the children of humankind’ [ii]
God keeps
reminding us of our preciousness because it is just too much for us to take
in. However the more we allow this deep
identity we have to change us the more we will know each person, each part of
creation is sister and brother
In silence as we
allow our own gaze of love rest on the crib we begin to know what Dante called ‘the
love that moves the sun and other stars’[iii] Little wonder that mystics understood Incarnation
as the marriage of Divinity to humanity so close is our life in God.
St. Francis of
Assisi loved the feast of Jesus’ birth and he always celebrated it with tender exuberance
because ‘the Lord of glory became our brother’ and everything, absolutely
everything is now sister and brother. Again,
this is not as a theory but as a living fact, a way of living. The crib of Greccio grew out of this passionate
love; he wanted everyone to understand the love that impelled God who became
poor for us.
St. Francis
frequently prayed, ‘Who are you Lord, and who am I’. Over and over again he would pray these words
which evoked tears of sorrow for his failures in responding to Love, he would
weep because ‘Love is not loved’. Then he
would break into joy that could not be contained in himself and he would
stutter with joy, he would dance with joy in the knowledge that Love keeps on
loving, that Love is relentless in tenderness and forgiveness.
So, gazing at
this baby, in the knowledge of the grown man who taught, healed, died and rose,
we become aware, even if dimly, of how and how much God loves us and all
creation. Not abstractly but from within
but flesh of our flesh. God enfleshed in
Jesus is God-with-us most truly, irrevocably and for all eternity.
In the end
words fail, only the heart can begin to savour the mystery of this Love ‘and
the soul felt its worth…’
[i] Oh
holy night!
The stars are brightly shining
It is the night of the dear Saviour’s birth!
Long lay the world in sin and error pining
Till he appear'd and the soul felt its worth.
A thrill of hope the weary world rejoices
For yonder breaks a new and glorious morn!
The stars are brightly shining
It is the night of the dear Saviour’s birth!
Long lay the world in sin and error pining
Till he appear'd and the soul felt its worth.
A thrill of hope the weary world rejoices
For yonder breaks a new and glorious morn!
[ii]
Prov. 8:22-31
[iii]
Paradiso Canto XXXIII