The Gift of Freedom
Solemnity of the Nativity of the Lord (Christmas), Dec. 25, 2011
By Fr. Phil Bloom
Sunday ReadingsPodcast of the Sunday Readings Sunday Bible Study QuestionsVideo Reflections Lecturas y Comentarios New American BiblePrayer of the HoursBQ: Why was Jesus born in a manger?Bottom line: By his birth Jesus brings the gift of freedom.
Merry Christmas! Don't be afraid to say it. Merry Christmas!
I would like to begin this homily with a Christmas story from Fr. Pete Byrne - a Maryknoll missionary in Peru. He once observed a nine year old girl named Juanita selling cookies on a Lima street corner. A car pulled up to the curb and the girl ran over, hoping for a sale. However, instead of making a purchase, the woman went to her trunk, took out a beautiful doll and gave it to the girl. Juanita put down her cookies and clasped the doll to her heart. Father Byrne remarked, "The joy on her face as she looked at her doll was beyond words. The unexpected gift – isn’t that what God gave us in the person of Jesus on that first Christmas?"
By his birth Jesus gives us beautiful - and unexpected gifts: hope in the face of despair, light in a world of darkness, comfort for troubled hearts and forgiveness of sins. This Christmas I would like focus on a specific and important gift: freedom. Jesus came to bring true freedom. You know, there is a difference between superficial freedom and profound freedom. It might surprise you, but someone who understood this was Steve Jobs. When he introduced the IPad, he made the decision not to include access to pornography. A man challenged him by quoting Bob Dylan and saying that "Revolutions are about freedom." Steve Jobs shot back:
"Yep, freedom from programs that steal your private data. Freedom from programs that trash your battery. Freedom from porn. Yep, freedom. The times they are a changin', and some traditional PC folks feel like their world is slipping away. It is."
Steve Jobs was no saint, but he understood that freedom does not mean doing whatever you want, whenever you want.* Freedom means the capacity to become the person you were meant to be. That's the freedom Jesus came to bring.
To illustrate this freedom I would tell you about an incident from who is now a canonized saint: Terese of Liseux. Maybe you saw her in the Catholicism Series, which has been on public TV (as well as EWTN). Fr. Bob Barron tells about how her childhood was shattered when her mother died. Terese was only four years old. She was the youngest of nine children, her father babied her. Therese became hypersensitive – at the slightest setback or criticism, she would burst into tears. If she even imagined someone was criticizing her, she would start to cry. Then she would cry because she had cried! In spite of her extraordinary intelligence, it seemed she would always be emotionally crippled. She prayed to Jesus, but there was no answer.
Finally on Christmas Eve 1886, when Therese was almost 14 years old, the answer came. Shortly after saying a prayer to the Infant Jesus, she overheard a comment by her dad. Normally any negative word from her father would cause her to break into tears. But she didn’t. In an instant God made her more sensitive to her father’s feelings than her own. This was the turning point in Therese’s life. Here is how she described that moment in her autobiography:
"On that blessed night the sweet infant Jesus, scarcely an hour old, filled the darkness of my soul with floods of light. By becoming weak and little, for love of me, He made me strong and brave: He put His own weapons into my hands so that I went on from strength to strength, beginning, if I may say so, 'to run as a giant.'"
The Holy Child, she said, had healed her of undue sensitivity and "girded her with His weapons." It was by reason of this vision that she became known as "Therese of the Child Jesus."
St. Terese of Liseux experienced true freedom: Freedom from fear, freedom from anxiety, the freedom to become the person God meant her to be. She spent the next ten years of her life in a Carmelite Convent. To some this seems like a narrow, restricted environment. As she was dying of tuberculosis, however, she wrote a book that has influenced, literally, millions of people: The Story of Soul. Here is a great New Year's resolution - to read (or re-read) that amazing book. It speak about the profound freedom that Jesus came to bring.
Our Christmas carols often take up the theme of freedom. On one level they are charming songs about the baby Jesus. But if you listen more carefully, you will hear some challenging words. For example, we have all heard the Christmas hymn, "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear." It has lovely images of angels with "harps of gold." But, then, it addresses the darkness and misery of our world - and speaks about the hope that Jesus. I would like to conclude with a stanza from that hymn. (Don't worry, I won't sing it.):
And ye, beneath life's crushing load,
Whose forms are bending low,
Who toil along the climbing way
With painful steps and slow,
Look now! for glad and golden hours
Come swiftly on the wing:
O rest beside the weary road
And hear the angels sing.
Amen.
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*And perhaps because he was an orphan, he had a greater sensitive to family - and recognized that porn is destroying our families and making our young unfit for marriage.--