Vatican
City, 2 January 2013
(VIS) - During the catechesis of the first general audience of 2013,
which was celebrated in the Paul VI Hall with over 7,000 people in
attendance, the Holy Father addressed the theme of Christ's birth,
"something so radically new that it was capable of changing the
course of history", and Jesus' origin.
The
Lord's nativity, the Holy Father commented, "once again
illuminates the darkness that often surrounds our world and our
hearts with its light, and brings hope and joy. Where does this light
come from? From the grotto in Bethlehem where the shepherds found
'Mary and Joseph and the Child lying in the manger'. Before this Holy
Family another, deeper question arises: How can this small and weak
Child bring a newness so radical into the world that it is capable of
changing the course of history? Isn't there something mysterious in
his origin that goes beyond that cavern?" ...
"In
the four Gospels, the answer to the question 'where does Jesus come
from?' emerges clearly: his true origin is the Father, God. He comes
entirely from Him, but in a different way than any other prophet or
messenger of God who preceded Him. This origin of the mystery of God,
'whom nobody knows', is already contained in the stories of His
childhood in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, which we are reading
during Christmastime. The angel Gabriel announces: 'The Spirit will
come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.
Therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God'.
We repeat these words every time that we recite the Creed, the
profession of faith: 'et incarnatus est de Spiritu Sancto ex Maria
Virgine', 'and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary'.
At this phrase we kneel because the veil that hid God is, so to say,
opened and His unfathomable and inaccessible mystery touches us. God
becomes Emmanuel, 'God with us'. When we listen to the Masses
composed by the great masters of sacred music―I'm
thinking, for example, of Mozart's Coronation Mass―we
immediately notice how they linger over this phrase in a
particular way, almost wanting to try to express with the universal
language of music that which words cannot make manifest: the great
mystery of God made flesh, of God made man". ...
"This
affirmation of the Creed does not concern God's eternal being but
rather speaks to us of an action that the three divine Persons take
part in and that is realized 'ex Maria Virgine'. Without her, God's
entrance into human history would not have been achieved and that
which is central to our Profession of Faith would not have taken
place: God is God with us. Mary thus undeniably pertains to our faith
in the God who acts, who enters into history. She puts her entire
being at His disposition, she 'accepts' becoming the place of God's
indwelling."
"Some
times, even along the path and in the life of faith, we can sense our
poverty, our inadequacy in front of the witness to be given to the
world. But God chose precisely a humble woman, in an unknown village,
in one of the furthest provinces of the great Roman Empire. Always,
even amidst the most arduous difficulties to be faced, we must have
faith in God, renewing our faith in His presence and in His action in
our story as in that of Mary. Nothing is impossible to God! With Him
our existence always walks upon a safe path and is open to a future
of steadfast hope."...
"What
happens in Mary, through the action of the Holy Spirit himself, is a
new creation. God, who has called being from nothingness with the
Incarnation, gives life to a new beginning of humanity. The Fathers
of the Church repeatedly speak of Christ as the new Adam in order to
emphasize the beginning of the new creation with the birth of the Son
of God in the womb of the Virgin Mary. This brings us to reflect upon
how faith also supposes in us a newness so strong as to produce a
second birth. In fact, at the beginning of being Christians is the
Baptism that makes us reborn as children of God, that makes us to
participate in the filial relationship that Jesus has with the
Father. And I would like to note that Baptism is received, "we
are baptised"―it
is a passive verb―because
nobody is capable of converting themselves into a child of God by
themselves. It is a gift that is freely conferred... Only if we are
open to God's action, as Mary was, only if we entrust our life to the
Lord as to a friend in who we trust completely, does everything
change. Our lives acquire new meaning and a new face: that of the
children of a Father who loves us and never abandons us". ...
"There
is another element in the words of the Annunciation. The angel says
to Mary: 'the power of the Most High will overshadow you'. This is a
reminder of the holy cloud that, during the Exodus, covered the tent
of meeting over the ark of the Covenant, which the people of Israel
carried with them, indicating the presence of God. Mary, therefore,
is the new holy tent, the new ark of the Covenant. With her 'yes' to
the archangel's words, God receive a dwelling place in this world.
What the universe cannot contain dwells in the womb of a virgin".
"Let
us return to the question with which we began, that of Jesus' origin,
summed up in Pilate's question: 'Where are you from?'. From our
reflection it appears clear, from the beginning of the Gospels, what
Jesus' true origin is: He is the only begotten Son of the Father. He
comes from God. We are facing the great and disconcerting mystery
that we celebrate in this time of Christmas: the Son of God, by the
power of the Holy Spirit, became man in the womb of the Virgin Mary.
This is an announcement that resounds ever new and which carries with
it hope and joy to our hearts because each time it gives us the
certainty that, even if we often feel weak, poor, incapable of facing
the difficulties and the evil of the world, the power of God is
always acting and works wonders precisely in our weakness. His grace
is our strength".