Christmas has come. Has it gone?
That depends on whether you have accepted the basic truth
that you have become Christ.
This is the great mystery of Christianity that is neither
preached nor practiced. But Saint Paul said it sums up everything he was sent
to announce to the world
God’s commission…was given to me
for you, to make the word of God fully known, the mystery that has been hidden
throughout the ages and generations but has now been revealed to his saints:
this mystery, which is Christ in you,
the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27).
It is the teaching of the
Catholic Church (St. Augustine, John Paul II, Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 795) that by Baptism we become Christ! Take it or leave it.
To be a Christian means to let
the Jesus who was born in Bethlehem and reborn
in you at Baptism live now in you – “made flesh” visibly, unmistakably – in
everything you say and do. Be Christ
or be an inauthentic Christian.
To be a Christian does not mean to profess the Christian
doctrines and live the Christian laws. It means to believe and live the mystery that is the “root and fruit” of them
all: the mystery that, when Jesus died, you died in him. That when Jesus rose,
he rose to live in you. That it is “no longer you who live, but it is Christ
who lives in you” (Galatians 2:20).
Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus
were baptized into his death? Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism
into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of
the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life (Romans 6:3).
In the newness of his life, his divine life. The “first
and greatest commandment” is no longer “You shall love the Lord your God with
all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.” It is “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is
perfect.” It is no longer enough to love God with our whole human heart, soul
and mind. We must love God as God loves himself. To do this we must be God – by
“being Christ” and sharing in the divine life of God “in Him.”
And the second greatest commandment is no longer “You
shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus changed it. “I give you a new
commandment, that you love one another just
as I have loved you” (Matthew
22:37; 5:48; John 13:34). To love as
Christ, we must be Christ. And we must let him express his love physically with us, in us and through us as his living, real body on earth. To every single
person we encounter. All day, every day.
If we accept this, our Christmas has just begun.
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