Christmas Night and Dawn 2025
Night Mass
Isaiah 9:2-7; Titus 2:11-14; Luke 2:1-14
In October 1959, my home parish welcomed a new parish priest. I was nine years old at the time, and five months into my long career as an altar server. By the time our new priest retired and left the parish, I had myself been a priest for thirteen years.
The priest in question had many good qualities, but patience was not among them. This lack showed up particularly during the great Feasts of the Church. I think that nerves were to blame: he was anxious to get things right, and consequently would work himself up into something of a cold fury. Holy Week was the worst time for us altar servers: no Holy Week was complete until Father had blown his top.
Christmas was a slightly different proposition. It wasn’t we servers who experienced his wrath, but the world in general. His homilies at Midnight Mass were notorious. I still have vivid memories of Christmas 1969, the year of the first moon landing, when US President Richard Nixon became the target of his rage.
Apparently, Tricky Dickie, as he was known to his fellow countrymen and women, had described the arrival of man on the moon as the greatest event since Creation. Admittedly, it was a fairly daft thing to say, but does anyone seriously expect politicians of any shape, size, or nation to talk sense? Apparently, Father had, and hurled darts of fire at the unwitting head of Mr. Nixon.
His real tour de force, though, came a few years later, when I was enjoying my Christmas break from the seminary. Rocking on his heels, a sure sign of an impending explosion, our priest announced, in a voice rising to a falsetto, “Christmas is NOT A TIME for eating until you are SICK, or DRINKING UNTIL YOU ARE STUPID !!” Oh, right! I am glad you told me that.
So we know what Christmas is not a time for. We might be tempted to add that it is not really a time for bellowing at the flock, but we will let that pass. Perhaps it would have been more helpful to explain what it IS a time for.
Both Isaiah and the angel tell us that it is a time for JOY. The prophet states this, then repeats it, then repeats it again. “You have multiplied the nation, you have increased its JOY; they REJOICE before you as with JOY at the harvest, as they are glad…”
The angel calls to the shepherds: “I bring you good news of great JOY, that will be for all the people”. His fellow angels reinforce the message with their chorus of praise: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom He is pleased”.
Have you got the message? Christmas is a time for joy. What is joy? It is not the same as happiness, which is a passing thing, something which HAPPens: happiness may depend on the weather, on the state of our digestion, on the form of our local team. Joy goes far deeper.
We may be UNhappy, we may be grieving, we may be depressed, but we may still have joy, because joy goes to the root of our being. Joy tells us that, despite everything, life is worth living, because ultimately God is in charge, and that He has come into our world, has taken on our human nature, with all its laughter and tears, all its triumphs and disasters, and because He has taken that nature in the child of Bethlehem, He will never be absent from the world.
Closely allied with joy is hope, as in the letter to Titus; hope, confident hope, that this God who is one of us, thanks to His Nativity in Bethlehem, will return in glory when all is made new. Life may be tough, but deep down we know that, as Mother Julian of Norwich, the great mediaeval English mystic wrote, “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well”. Christ is born, God is with us—Emmanuel, and we have every reason for joy.
Christmas Dawn Mass
Isaiah 62:11-12; Titus 3:4-7; Luke 2:15-20
Why shepherds? Why is the Good News of the human birth of Jesus, the Son of God, made known first to shepherds? After all, they weren’t considered to be particularly devout. Why were they chosen to be the first to hear the tidings of great joy? the first to encounter God in our human flesh?
I suppose that you could point out that they, at least, were awake and available to receive the message. That is more important than it may seem, because it raises a question for us. How awake am I to the presence of Christ? How open am I to receiving Him? This takes us back to the beginning of Advent, and that repeated refrain “Wake up! Stay awake!” Perhaps that is the first insight which the choice of the shepherds gives us.
Is there more to it than that? Well, the shepherds, despite carrying out an important job, were not highly regarded. We have heard, in the last few days, the Magnificat, Our Lady’s hymn of praise, which the Church prays every day at Evening Prayer (Vespers). This hymn tells us that God raises the lowly, and casts down the mighty. The adult Jesus, in His preaching and His prayers, would hammer home the same message. Are you and I humble of heart? Do we give special attention and care to the poor and the lowly?
Another thing: how often are shepherds mentioned in the Scriptures? More often than I could count, I would say. And how often is “Shepherd” used as a term for God? “The Lord is my shepherd” declares the most famous of all the Psalms: “O Shepherd of Israel, hear us” pleads another. And how much space does Jesus Himself devote to speaking of Himself as the Good Shepherd, who lays down His life for His sheep, who knows His own, and they know Him?
How conscious are we of the Good Shepherd’s care and sacrifice for us? How open are we to His desire to know us intimately and deeply? How eager are we to know Him? How much time and attention do we devote to him?
Taken together then, there is a whole raft of reasons why it was appropriate for shepherds to be the first recipients of the Good News. Having received that News, those tidings of great joy, what do they do? They hurry to look for Jesus. Having found Him, they spread the Good News which they have heard—“they made known the saying which had been told them concerning this child” says St. Luke. After that, they go back to work “glorifying and praising God”.
Does that present us with three tasks? Firstly, to look for Jesus: secondly, to make Him known: thirdly to glorify and praise God. In the evening Mass at Yealand, I hid the crib figure of the Lord, then sent the children to look for Him. I next put the question “Where do we find Jesus today?” and teased out the answer. [That is the plan. I am writing this in advance.] We find Him, don’t we, in His word proclaimed in the Scriptures, in the Sacrament and Sacrifice of His Body and Blood, in His abiding presence in the tabernacle, in other people, in the daily round.
How well do we make Him known, by the manner of our lives, by our words—not hitting people over the head with the Bible, but witnessing to Him when opportunity arises—by not hiding our identity as Catholic Christians? And do we glorify and praise God by joining with others, our fellow members of the Body of Christ, in prayer and worship, especially at Mass; and by giving time to Him in private prayer, going into our room and closing the door as He told us to? If we imitate the shepherds in these ways, our Christmas will bear fruit.