THE joy of
Christmas springs from the fact that Jesus
Christ, our savior, is born. “Puer natus est nobis,” says
the entrance
prayer in the Christmas Mass. A child is born for us, he
is Christ the
Lord, our Savior.
This good news
should give us unspeakable joy. Whatever we
may experience in this life, and many of them will not be
good, we are
sure of our salvation because Christ, the Son of God, the
perfect
image that God has of himself, and the pattern of our
humanity, has
come to redeem us, to reclaim us as his own.
He will bear
all our burden, our sins, our miseries, and
conquer them with his passion, death and resurrection. He
will give us
everything that will enable us to recover our dignity as
children of
God, image and likeness of God, no matter how unworthy we
feel we are
of such dignity, no matter how we mess up our life.
As long as we
show some openness to God’s mercy, salvation
is assured, without prejudice to some purifying processes
that may be
necessary, and the truth about hell. But God’s mercy,
which goes
together with his justice, abounds more than our sins.
This is the
very core of our joy in Christmas. We are
given a tremendous gift—God himself in Jesus Christ made
present in
our life through the Holy Spirit. He has made himself
visible,
tangible and accessible in the Church, in the sacraments,
especially
the Holy Eucharist, in his word recorded in Sacred
Scripture, in the
lives of saints, etc.
We really have
no reason to worry. On the contrary, we
have every reason to be happy in spite of whatever. We
may not be able
to fathom the depth of his love for us, nor capture the
richness of
his mercy, but God is bent to save. He predestines no one
to hell. If
we get to hell, it is because of us, not because of him.
And sad to
say, we are capable to choosing hell rather than heaven.
The practical
consequence of this truth of our faith is
that we just have to be sport in our life, trying our
best to do what
we ought to do, although we know that we often miss the
mark. We just
have to help one another to be holy, to try to be worthy
of God’s love
by corresponding as fully as we can to his love. We have
to be patient
with one another.
We have to
learn to be like Christ who is willing to
suffer for all of us. This is the way we can attain our
true joy, and
not be deceived by the many forms of false joy
proliferating in the
world today.
We need to
train ourselves to have our sense of joy
properly rooted. In this regard, let us try to be
theological about it
and not just sentimental or emotional, though the latter
are also
important, but as expressions of the objective foundation
of our joy.
The spiritual
and supernatural foundation of our joy has
to be expressed also in a human way, through our emotions
and
passions. This is also to be learned, because many people
do not know
how to translate their interior joy externally, or to show
their
spiritual joy on their faces.
Let us try to
keep our Christmas joy alive all throughout
the year. This is the kind of joy that can be felt even
in the midst
of our suffering and difficulties. It is the joy, and the
peace that
goes with it, that the world cannot give. It only comes
from God!
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