Merry Christmas!
December 24, 2017

Praised be Jesus Christ through Mary!
I wish all of you a Merry Christmas! Last year we celebrated Christmas on a Sunday. This year, however, we celebrate the 4th Sunday of Advent on Sunday and right away, on Monday, we celebrate Christmas. Please remember, we are obligated to attend Holy Mass two separate times in a short period of time: once for the 4th Sunday of Advent and the once for Christmas.
Also, remember, our celebration of the grace of Christmas Day continues until the end of the day January 1, 2018 (we call this the Christmas Octave). Our celebration of the Christmas Season extends until the end of the day, Monday, January 8, 2018 (the date we celebrate the Baptism of our Lord this year).
This Christmas Day I share with you a sermon by Pope St. Leo the Great (b. 390 – d. 461) on the Gift of Peace found in Christmas (Sermon 6 on the Nativity of the Lord):
“Although the state of infancy, which the majesty of the Son of God did not disdain to assume, developed with the passage of time into the maturity of manhood, and although after the triumph of the passion and the resurrection all his lowly acts undertaken on our behalf belong to the past, nevertheless today’s feast of Christmas renews for us the sacred beginning of Jesus’s life, his birth from the Virgin Mary. In the very act in which we are reverencing the birth of our Savior, we are also celebrating our own new birth. For the birth of Christ is the origin of the Christian people; and the birthday of the head is also the birthday of the body.
Though each and every individual occupies a definite place in this body to which he has been called, and though all the progeny of the church is differentiated and marked with the passage of time, nevertheless as the whole community of the faithful, once begotten in the baptismal font, was crucified with Christ in the passion, raised up with him in the resurrection and at the ascension placed at the right hand of the Father, so too it is born with him in this Nativity, which we are celebrating today.
For every believer regenerated in Christ, no matter in what part of the whole world he may be, breaks with that ancient way of life that derives from original sin, and by rebirth is transformed into a new man. Henceforth he is reckoned to be of the stock, not of his earthly father, but of Christ, who became Son of Man precisely that men could become sons of God; for unless in humility he had come down to us, none of us by our own merits could ever go up to him.
Therefore the greatness of the gift which he has bestowed on us demands an appreciation proportioned to its excellence; for blessed Paul the Apostle truly teaches: We have received not the spirit of this world, but the Spirit which is from God, that we might understand the gifts bestowed on us by God. The only way that he can be worthily honored by us is by the presentation to him of that which he has already given to us.
But what can we find in the treasure of the Lord’s bounty more in keeping with the glory of this feast than that peace which was first announced by the angelic choir on the day of his birth? For that peace, from which the sons of God spring, sustains love and mothers unity; it refreshes the blessed and shelters eternity; its characteristic function and special blessing is to join to God those whom it separates from this world.
Therefore, may those who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God, offer to the Father their harmony as sons united in peace; and may all those whom he has adopted as his members meet in the firstborn of the new creation who came not to do him own will but the will of the one who sent him; for the grace of the Father has adopted as heirs neither the contentious nor the dissident, but those who are one in thought and love. The hearts and minds of those who have been reformed according to one and the same image should be in harmony with one another.
The birthday of the Lord is the birthday of peace, as Paul the Apostle says: For he is our peace, who has made us both one; for whether we be Jew or Gentile, through him we have access in one Spirit to the Father.”
Through the intercession of Mary, the Mother of God, St. Joseph, and St. Columbkill may the newborn Christ-child grant us all the blessings of His peace and joy!
In Christ through Mary,
Fr. Kasel
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