Vigils Reading – Christmas Weekday
TO SEEK AND DISCOVER
From the book “Jesus Christ” by Fr Réné Voillaume
◊◊◊
Jesus appears in the world without giving any warning of his coming and
without making known to any neighbor who he is. Had he come into the world
in his house at Nazareth, all his relatives would have made an event of his birth
with the neighbors and the other inhabitants of the town. He would have been
heralded and celebrated. He would thus have allowed himself to behave well
enough like a true little Nazarene, but he would have been confiscated, as it
were, by his earthly family and his earthly country.
Quite to the contrary, he elects to be born away from home, on a journey,
amid an anonymous crowd; in this way, he would really belong to everybody,
and could come quietly and discreetly, with no tumult and excitement. God, if
he had so wished, could naturally have made all sorts of efforts to spread the
news abroad. And if any proof were needed of this, one could point to his having
mobilized the angels but contented himself with bringing a few poor shepherds
to the manger. It is also clear from this that he could easily have brought the
whole of Jerusalem and all the just among the Israelites with pure and upright
hearts, worshipers of God and living in expectancy of the Messiah. And there
were in fact many of them, all true friends of his, in the country of Judea and
Galilee!
But it is obvious that God did not wish to impose his Son: people must
come to him by seeking and discovering him. Even the shepherds and the Wise
Men, though warned personally, had to search for him with the help of a sign
which, rather than leading them easily and directly to the manger, was little
more than a suggestion to send them on their way. The shepherds must have
gone to many houses and stables before they found the right babe wrapped in
swaddling clothes.
As for the Magi, they had to show some initiative in order to discover, by
the normal means at their disposal, the birthplace of the young king of Israel.
Jesus was infinitely discreet; he simply waited, and such a way of appearing
could have made us somewhat impatient, had it not been proved for centuries
back that people have found in this very discretion a true sign of God.
That sign of weakness, which draws people in spite of themselves, makes
them surrender and acknowledge themselves outdone, without Jesus ever
having forced himself upon them in any way other than a certain presence — a
presence that waits, and invites, and demonstrates God’s heaven in a humble
manner which gives hope and humility, peace and love — just how, one does not
really know! God is a master who knows how to go about speaking to us with the
use of the things of the earth — these various beings, both animate and
inanimate — and the events of human history.