Image credit: Jeswyn Thomas (2017), Pexels.com, CC0 Public Domain[/caption]
Jesus came to earth as an infant, not as a grown adult or an emperor, king, or some huge powerful dominating being. Instead, He came to us as an infant to show us vulnerability and dependency.
As an infant, Jesus shows us the kind of love that is incomparable to any known to mankind.
This holy love that Jesus, our God and Creator, revealed set out to prove that the things we do every day are meaningless without him.
There in the creche, the infant Lord shows us that humility is not below us. There in the young mother's arms the infant-God's tummy gurgles of dependency, and trust proves not out of reach -- and that this purest love is undefinable in its most perfect form.
This is hard to believe in human terms, especially amid all the distractions around us during this time. All the planning of festivities, the shopping, and rich foods that we invest ourselves in. Rules are bent, financially and diet-wise, too. So the focus is not always where it should be. We are swept away in the fast and furious flow of secular society. Larger and larger this season of Christmas is morphing into a 3-month calendar of black Fridays, pre-Christmas sales, and baking plans. Halloween is barely here when the Christmas decorations and the imitation trees come out on the shelves, the toy section expands, and the Halloween candy gets put on clearance.
Back to the infant Jesus and the splendor of His teachings. We are taught a lesson from a newborn, besides the fact that schedules are non-existent, rules are made to be broken, and they are the boss. Aside from these, we are taught such a large, life-changing lesson of self-donation. Our Lord Jesus, his humility and dependency is nurtured by the young Mary's love and her own self-donation from her "Be it done to me ..." yes and cooperation with God.
As a mother myself, I can see and understand the self-donation with a young helpless newborn in my arms. The sheer helplessness and dependency of this new little human is both fearful and precious. This is what our God and Creator did for us.
How can I repay or at least carry on what he did for us? What can I make of this selfless act from one who is perfect, greater, and most magnificent of all? The humble and fallen being that I am can only do as much as I know how. To do the best I can for those around me. To be generous with my blessings and to make the best of bad situations. I don't need to go too far to find those who could use some of my self-donation, patience and care.
Then I'll just sit by the creche pondering His lesson … and be in awe.
Copyright 2019 Ebeth
Copyright 2019 Ebeth
About the Author
Ebeth Weidner
Ebeth Weidner, a Master Catechist and cradle Catholic who considers herself a Catholic information junkie, writes from her heart about the faith and hope she finds in the Catholic Church. She is the author of “A Catholic Mom Climbing the Pillars” blog. She is the wife of a research science Professor and mom to 3 great young adults people living on the coastal side of North Carolina.
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