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|  |  | Pic courtesy Type-Writer.org |  
 
This was in our parish newsletter, gentle reader. 
It's posted because of its message about not kowtowing to fear. 
Happy Christmas! 
 
 
'Be not afraid.' Richard Leonard on the greeting we all need to hear
  this Christmas 
(published
  in The Tablet on 12 December 2018) 
At the risk of wrecking your Christmas, we have to
  clear up a few things. I know all our carols and cards say that Jesus was
  born in December; in a snow-covered stable; was wrapped in swaddling clothes;
  lay in the manger with the animals around him; that a star stood vigil; and
  was later visited by three Kings whose names were Balthazar, Caspar and
  Melchior. 
But the Gospels don't say any of this. It could have
  snowed on the first Christmas, but the Scriptures don't say that it did. No
  animals are mentioned. The star in the North did not stand still in the night
  sky because stars just don't behave like that. And Jesus probably wasn't even
  born in December. Pope Julius I declared that Christmas was to be celebrated
  on 25 December in 350 AD, after the Christians had given the pagan Roman
  calendar the thorough make-over it richly deserved. Rather neatly, the pagan
  feast of the "birthday of the unconquered Sun" became the
  "birthday of the allconquering Son" — the birthday of Jesus our
  Lord. 
The worst Christmas I ever celebrated was in Manger
  Square in Bethlehem. By the time I had finally negotiated the traffic jams,
  the security checks, and the guards on patrol and joined the thousands who
  had been packed into the church, the adventure had lost some of its appeal. 
In all the accounts
  of Christmas we have in the New Testament we hear the angel begin her
  announcement of Jesus' birth with the words: "Be not afraid." Given
  the world events over recent months, this greeting is just what we need to
  hear this Christmas: Be not afraid. 
Fear cripples us into
  passivity. It ruins our memories of past or present events and undermines
  dignified, trusting and respectful relationships. There is an important
  difference between being vigilant and being frightened, but since the 9/11 terrorist
  attacks this difference has become blurred. We have seen people become
  anxious, change their lifestyle and travel plans and worry for their future
  and for that of their children. But we don't need to look to international
  terror to explain the nature of our fear. Broadly speaking, we fear four
  things: God, nature, other people, or something in ourselves. It is usually a
  combination of these things; for some of us, tragically, it is all of them.
  But to whatever degree fear has come to rule our lives, we need to hear again
  God's greeting at Christmas: "Be not afraid." 
St Paul tells us that love
  drives out all fear. That's what — and who — we celebrate at Christmas:
  perfect love took human form in Jesus Christ the Lord. Throughout this joyful
  season we celebrate the one whose life, death and resurrection showed us the way
  out of our fears; revealed the truth that sets us free; and gave us the life
  that we can live to the full in this world, and the next. 
Christmas is the feast day
  when God calls us to be as active as we can in bringing Christ's Kingdom to
  bear in our world. Christmas is the time when our memories are joined to
  God's, who has remembered us in our fear. Christmas is the season when all
  Christian relationships are defined by the dignity, trust and respect they
  bestow on us and on those we relate to. 
As a result of the Babe of
  Bethlehem, God has shown us that fear is not our calling and that the saving
  love of Jesus impels us to take risks in how we live out our faith, hope and
  love. On any day, then, in the coming year, when we face down our fears and
  live our Christian life to the full we will discover that Christmas is a
  moveable feast. 
My favourite Advent poem is from John Bell, of the
  Iona Community in Scotland: 
Light looked down
  and saw the darkness. 
"l will go
  there," said light. 
Peace looked down and saw
  war. "I will go there," said peace. 
Love looked down
  and saw hatred. "l will go there," said love. 
So he, the Lord of Light,
  the Prince of Peace, the King of Love, came down and crept in beside us. 
No fanfare. No palace. No
  earthly prince. Christmas celebrates that God crept in beside us. And as a
  result there is no part of our lives he will not enter with mercy and love.
  So this Christmas let's invite in again the Lord of Light, the Prince of
  Peace, the King of Love and live as boldly as we can. |