Sunday, December 23, 2018

Cycle C - Year I:  

25 December 2018: Solemnity of the Lord's Birth (Mass during the day)
(Liturgical Color: White)

Readings:
First Reading:        Isaiah 52:7-10
Second Reading:   Hebrews 1:1-6

Gospel:  Please Read  John 1:1-18

A Child is born for us.....!

The Entrance Antiphon of the Mass during the day sums up the Good News: "A child is born for us, and a son is given to us; his scepter of power rests upon his shoulder, and his name will be called Messenger of great counsel." (Is 9:5)

Today is the big day and we greet each other a Merry and Blessed Christmas 2018!

So then let us proclaim: "Glory to God in the highest! For this day the Almighty gives His greatest gift to us all, the gift of His beloved Son!

The event of the Nativity of our Lord is the reason for all the preparations during our Advent journey, and the nine-day novena Masses or Misa de Aguinaldo. Indeed, let us rejoice and be glad for our Messiah is born! We are overwhelmed with joy in the hope that lights up our darkness.

The Gospel reading for the Mass during the day is the Prologue of the Gospel of St. John. Now we now that the prologue is the very first thing one sees in opening the Gospel of John. But in reality it was the last one to be written. Because it is really the final summary of John's Gospel, only that it is placed in the beginning.

In this simple introduction, John summarizes for his audience everything that he wanted to convey about Jesus of Nazareth. John expresses the divinity of Christ. That means to say, Jesus was there in the very beginning (meaning, the beginning before anything else has been begun); in that time Jesus was with God ad He was God; nothing was made without Him because it was all created through Him; in Him is life for all men.

John writes about Jesus as God's creative, life-giving and light-giving word that has come to earth in human form. For Jesus Christ is indeed truly man while remaining truly God.

And so it is only through Jesus Christ that we can behold the glory of God. Jesus became the partaker of our humanity so that we could also be partakers of His divinity.

Let us then reflect on the significance and importance of the Christmas event in our lives. Today we continue to proclaim anew the wonder of the Incarnation.  "The Son of God assumed a human nature in order to accomplish our salvation in it.  The Son of God.... worked with human hands; he thought with a human mind. He acted with a human will, and with a human heart He loved. Born of the Virgin Mary, He has truly been made one of us, like us in all things except sin. (Gaudium et Spes)

As we gather together on this Christmas Day, the birth of our Lord, to celebrate the Eucharist around the infant Child in Bethlehem, the joy is mine to wish everyone of my family and friends a Blessed and Merry Christmas!

So let us pray:  Almighty God ad Father of light, Your eternal Word leaped down from heaven in the silent watches of the night. Open our hearts to receive His life and increase our vision with the rising of dawn that our lives may be filled with His glory and His peace. Amen.

Happiest Birthday, Baby Lord Jesus!

Again, a Blessed and Merry Christmas to everyone!


Ad Jesum per Mariam!

No comments:

Post a Comment