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Pastoral Reflection
Advent and Christmas 2004, Diocese of Tyler
by Most Rev. Alvaro Corrada, S.J.
We are all born in Bethlehem. The birth of the Eternal Word
of the Father, according to the flesh took place in Bethlehem.
Today Bethlehem stands as a city divided by the war between
Palestinians and Israelis. In this holy season we pray for
peace in our hearts, our homes, our parishes, and throughout
the world.
The Advent Season and the Celebration of Christmas is the
reality of Jesus Christ, his Presence in our world. By Faith
and Sacrament we are born in Jesus Christ, the Son of Man.
We celebrate the birth of God into our human nature. As we
celebrate Christmas we are called to keep Christ in Christmas
and to joyfully be born again spiritually and sacramentally
in Christ Jesus.
The Holiday Season in the United States is a great event
of evangelization. The joy of Christmas is a major theme throughout
society from Thanksgiving to Christmas. In much holiday advertising
this joy is presented as being rooted in material things.
As Christians we have an opportunity to really strive to keep
Christ in Christmas. We are blessed as Catholics, to be able
to share the richness of holiday traditions connected with
living out the liturgical seasons. One way to emphasis the
focus on Christ is to really promote a sense of the traditional
Christmas season. Liturgically the Christmas Season continues
from Christmas Day until the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord.
The traditional 12 days of Christmas (from the Nativity until
Epiphany) have largely been reinterpreted as a countdown of
the 12 last shopping days before Christmas. Keeping the joy
of Christmas alive in our parishes and in our families is
a great opportunity to focus on the true gift of Christmas,
Jesus Christ. Real attention to our living out the season
of Advent will greatly enrich our ability to experience the
deep joy of the Christmas season.
The sights and sounds of Christmas are very powerful images
in our society. Christmas lights and holiday decorations call
us to look at our neighborhoods in a different light. The
sound of Christmas carols sing out in shopping malls and on
city streets bringing warmth and joy to crisp dark nights.
The giving of gifts, visiting friends, and generosity to those
in need can be events where people are open to encounter Christ
anew. As Christians we want to affirm these expressions of
preparation for Christmas. In the Liturgy, Christmas hymns
and decorations should be reserved for the Christmas season
proper, but they can be welcomed in the parish hall, decorations
on the church buildings, and caroling by youth groups or family
gatherings. Outside of the church building, the use of Christmas
lights during Advent can be a great sign of anticipation of
the Light of Christ that was manifest in the world that first
Christmas. Publicly displaying religious symbols, like the
creche, give quiet witness to the real reason for the season.
Our local Knights of Columbus do well to participate in appropriate
ways with the national effort of the Knights to keep the Holiday
Season Holy. Particularly through their program to "Keep
Christ in Christmas."
We as disciples have a great gift to give a society of consumers:
a personal encounter with Jesus the Christ. We as disciples
also have a chance to allow Christ to become more present
in our own hearts and homes in this blessed season. Special
symbols and devotions during Advent can help us as individuals
and as families to make a more generous response to God's
grace in our lives and enrich our experience of the whole
Christmas Season.
Symbols
The Creche or nativity set should have a
special place in all Churches and homes.
The Advent wreath has become a great symbol
of the Advent journey. Originally a German custom, in the
last 50 years it has become broadly used in this country.
Every Church should have an Advent wreath. Encouraging families
to use the Advent wreath as part of their family devotions
in preparation for Christmas and offering some type of Advent
prayers for the families who wish to use them.
The Christmas Tree is the other great symbol
of the season. It has become very popular to display Christmas
trees in anticipation of Christmas. This is a fine custom,
but we want to encourage people to keep their Christmas tree
up at least through the Octave of Christmas (New Years Day).
In the church proper, it is best to refrain from putting up
Christmas trees until preparing the church for Christmas,
or at least until near the end of Advent. If trees are placed
in the church before Christmas, it might be good to not use
the lights on the Christmas tree until Christmas Eve.
Devotions
We rejoice during the Advent Season in the participation
of Our Blessed Mother, the Virgin Mary giving birth to Christ.
Marian devotions have a special place in many cultures during
the Advent Season. The whole Church honors the Immaculate
Conception of Mary on the 8th of December, a Holy Day of Obligation.
The Immaculate Conception is the patroness of the United States
and of our Cathedral of Tyler. Mary's being preserved free
from Original Sin in anticipation of Christ's redeeming birth,
is an infallible dogma of the Church, speaking to the holiness
of the Church, and to our being freed from sin through the
waters of Baptism into the Paschal Mystery of Christ. Thus,
the feast of the Immaculate Conception not only calls to mind
the long anticipation of the fulfillment of the promise made
to Adam and Eve, but our own encounter with the Word made
Flesh who dwells among us.
The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, December 12, was a powerful
event of evangelization and a great reminder of our Advent
journey. The Virgin of Guadalupe appeared to Blessed Juan
Diego as an expecting mother. She expressed in her black cincture
the bearing of a child, not only her motherhood of Christ,
but her motherhood to the people of the New World and of all
the human race. Mary reinforced the efforts of the missionaries
in bringing an end to the killing of babies, and the turning
away from the worship of pagan gods. This message of evangelization
points us all toward the person of Jesus Christ and the sacredness
of the human person.
Las Posadas, commemorating Mary and Joseph's search for an
Inn, is another devotion that invites us to enter into the
mystery of Christmas. This novena of prayer and song reminds
us to prepare place in our own hearts and lives for Jesus
to be born within us.
Our celebration of the Octave Day of Christmas (New Year's
Day) as a day to remember Mary's unique role in the incarnation
by honoring her with the ancient title of Mother of God, and
of calling for prayer for World Peace invites us to see the
opportunity for a brighter future. The Eighth day was seen
as the beginning of the new creation.
Children and Youth
Special attention should be given to children and young people
during the Advent and Christmas celebration. Devotion to the
Christ child, the Biblical reenactment of the infancy narratives
and the creche allow children to enter in to the Christmas
Spirit. Perhaps a celebration of the Sacrament of Penance
can be presented in a special way to reflect the joyful season
and to encourage children and young people to conversion and
a deeper sharing of the joy of Christmas. A reception for
families after the service would be important to bring this
joy to all.
Liturgy
Violet is the standard liturgical color for Advent. Advent
is a season of preparation and anticipation. The Advent season
is not as penitential as Lent, and so a softer tone can be
set by the vestments. On the Third Sunday of Advent (Gaudete
Sunday), Rose vestments may be worn. (NB: Blue is not a liturgical
color.)
In preparing the environment in the church for the holidays,
care should be taken to avoid "decorating." For
Advent a simple look in the sanctuary with focus on the Advent
wreath is fitting for the character of anticipation for the
season. For Christmas and the Christmas season, the church
should look beautiful and should invite people into the encounter
with the Incarnation. The sanctuary doesn't have to look like
a store in the Mall or like the lobby of a great Hotel. The
challenge is to prepare the environment and the liturgy for
Christmas, particularly the music and the homily, so that
the great event of evangelization can bear fruit in the lives
of people. Many people will be coming to Church on Christmas
who do not regularly come. We have a chance to help them be
open to the Holy Spirit and hear God's invitation to them
personally. When people encounter the Lord's invitation, our
Christian Initiation process has to be in place to support
them in responding to that invitation. Inviting them to encounter
Christ, and including them in the life of the community brings
forth the fruit from an event of evangelization.
The tradition of Midnight Mass has been very strong in the
United States. In the past most protestant communities didn't
have religious services for Christmas, but now many have followed
our example. Midnight Mass should begin at midnight. Having
a period of caroling before the Midnight Mass or any of the
Christmas Masses can add to the richness of the celebration.
The Vigil Mass of Christmas Eve has become very popular in
many communities. The prayers for these Masses should be for
the Vigil Mass, but the readings can be taken from the Mass
at Midnight or another Christmas Mass. (Or do PN on Page 17).
Event of Evangelization
As disciples of Jesus Christ, Catholics often would like
to do something to invite someone to join them for Mass, but
don't know how to do it in a positive way. One way to reach
out to others is for a community to get some Christmas Cards
and do a simple enclosure with the Mass Schedule and a note:
"In this Holy Season, we pray that you celebrate it with
your community of faith. If you don't have a faith community
to share the joy of Christmas with, we invite you to join
us in celebrating the coming of our Savior, Christ the Lord."
Parishioners could pray during Advent for someone in particular
and give them the card; either personalized or simply signed
something like "Blessings from the parish family at St.
Luke's Catholic Church." The family could even offer
to take them to Church with them, if they would like.
Since many people come to Mass at Christmas time, perhaps
a reception after the major Masses for Christmas would be
a good opportunity for giving them a chance to connect with
the parish community. This act of hospitality can help invite
them to respond to the grace of the Spirit. The Christian
Initiation team might work with the Pastoral Council to help
create an environment at the reception that will be fruitful
to the work of the Holy Spirit and help individuals move toward
the Sacraments and integration into the parish community.
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