The liturgical season of Christmas begins with the Vigil Mass on Christmas Eve and ends on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord. During this season we celebrate the birth of Christ into our world and into our hearts and we reflect on the gift of Salvation that is born with Him and acknowledge that He was born to die for us.
The church celebrates four masses for the Feast of Christmas, each one has its own readings which help us to contemplate the birth of Christ. At the Vigil Mass on Christmas Eve we read the genealogy of Jesus from the beginning of Matthew’s Gospel. The Mass at midnight proclaims the birth of Jesus through the Gospel of Luke. The Mass at dawn on Christmas morning continues the story of the birth of Jesus as found in Luke’s Gospel when the shepherds visit Jesus. In each of these Gospel readings we hear the infancy narratives which we are very familiar with.
The Gospel for the Christmas Mass during the day is taken from the beginning of John’s Gospel and is not an infancy narrative like those found in Matthew and Luke. Instead, John starts at the very beginning and presents the Creation story as the framework for announcing the mystery of the Incarnation, “the word was made flesh, he lived among us.” John’s words echo the beginning of the Book of Genesis and they invite us to look at Jesus’ birth from God’s perspective. All four Gospels make it clear that Jesus’ birth was brought about by God’s initiative, but John emphasizes that Jesus’ birth was the divine intention from the moment of Creation.
This mystery of the Incarnation changes everything. Today’s Gospel reminds us that we can also look upon the Nativity from God’s perspective to appreciate better the significance of God becoming ‘flesh’ (human). The mystery which we proclaim at Christmas is that God, the very God who created all things from nothing and who is light itself, “the true light that enlightens all men.” Took on our humanity in order to transform us. Through his birth among us, we have encountered God, “and we saw his glory, the glory that is his as the only Son of the Father.” At this awesome mystery we adore the image we see in our Nativity Crib. That God made himself at home with us by taking on flesh and becoming a human person and by doing so light overcame darkness. We see God’s glory in Jesus, we become children of God. On Christmas morning as a family thank God for this mystery of the Incarnation and for the salvation that we received because Jesus was born among us.