Saint Padre Pio’s Christmas Meditation*
Far into the night, at the coldest time of the year, in a
chilly grotto, more suitable for a flock of beasts than for humans, the
promised Messiah – Jesus – the savior of mankind, comes into the world in the fullness of time.
There are none who clamor around him: only an ox and an ass
lending their warmth to the newborn infant; with a humble woman, and a poor and
tired man, in adoration beside him.
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Nothing can be heard except the sobs and whimpers of the
infant God. And by means of his crying and weeping he offers to the Divine
justice the first ransom for our redemption.
He had been expected for forty centuries; with longing sighs
the ancient Fathers had implored his arrival. The sacred scriptures clearly
prophesy the time and the place of his birth, and yet the world is silent and
no one seems aware of the great event. Only some shepherds, who had been busy
watching over their sheep in the meadows, come to visit him. Heavenly visitors
had alerted them to the wondrous event, inviting them to approach his cave.
So plentiful, O Christians, are the lessons that shine forth
from the grotto of Bethlehem! Oh how our hearts should be on fire with love for
the one who with such tenderness was made flesh for our sakes!
Oh how we should
burn with desire to lead the whole world to this lowly cave, refuge of the King
of kings, greater than any worldly palace, because it is the throne and
dwelling place of God! Let us ask this Divine child to clothe us with humility,
because only by means of this virtue can we taste the fullness of this mystery
of Divine tenderness.
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Glittering were the palaces of the proud Hebrews. Yet, the
light of the world did not appear in one of them. Ostentatious with worldly
grandeur, swimming in gold and in delights, were the great ones of the Hebrew
nation; filled with vain knowledge and pride were the priests of the sanctuary.
In opposition to the true meaning of Divine revelation, they awaited an
officious savoir, who would come into the world with human renown and power.
But God, always ready to confound the wisdom of the world,
shatters their plans. Contrary to the expectations of those lacking in Divine
wisdom, he appears among us in the greatest abjection, renouncing even birth in
St. Joseph’s humble home, denying himself a modest abode among relatives and
friends in a city of Palestine. Refused lodging among men, he seeks refuge and
comfort among mere animals, choosing their habitation as the place of his
birth, allowing their breath to give warmth to his tender body. He permits
simple and rustic shepherds to be the first to pay their respects to him, after
he himself informed them, by means of his angels, of the wonderful mystery.
Oh wisdom and power of God, we are constrained to exclaim –
enraptured along with your Apostle – how incomprehensible are your judgments
and unsearchable your ways! Poverty, humility, abjection, contempt, all
surround the Word made flesh. But we, out of the darkness that envelops the
incarnate Word, understand one thing, hear one voice, perceive one sublime
truth: you have done everything out of love, you invite us to nothing else but
love, speak of nothing except love, give us naught except proofs of love.
The heavenly babe suffers and cries in the crib so that for
us suffering would be sweet, meritorious and accepted. He deprives himself of
everything, in order that we may learn from him the renunciation of worldly
goods and comforts. He is satisfied with humble and poor adorers, to encourage
us to love poverty, and to prefer the company of the little and simple rather
than the great ones of the world.
This celestial child, all meekness and sweetness, wishes to
impress in our hearts by his example these sublime virtues, so that from a
world that is torn and devastated an era of peace and love may spring forth.
Even from the moment of his birth he reveals to us our mission, which is to
scorn that which the world loves and seeks.
Oh let us prostrate ourselves before the manger, and along
with the great St. Jerome, who was enflamed with the love of the infant Jesus,
let us offer him all our hearts without reserve. Let us promise to follow the
precepts which come to us from the grotto of Bethlehem, which teach us that
everything here below is vanity of vanities, nothing but vanity.
*Translated by Frank M. Rega, December of 2005.
Taken from: Sanpadrepio.com
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