Second Sunday after Christmas
How fitting it is that we begin the New Year 2022 with a focus on Mary, the Mother of God, and. 2021 was not exactly a year that most people I know want to remember except that now it is over and we were blessed to see it end and we thank god we have come through despite all the rules and regulations the pandemic has brought to us. We also thank god for the life and the ministry of Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa who passed died at the beginning of this week whose funeral took place this morning, may he rest in peace. We are now on the countdown awaiting the arrival of the Three Wise Men on Epiphany which takes place on 6th January in Ireland.
By long standing tradition Christians celebrate Christmas as a season, with the twelve days between Christmas and the Epiphany as one long “Christmas feast.” The season ends with the Baptism of the Lord which is also the first Sunday of ordinary time.
I am certain many people out there are asking themselves the time honored question for this time of the year, why did I make such a fuss!!! So many make a fuss about the secular part of Christmas and as a result they have missed the essential message of the season. The essential message is that Jesus Emmanuel was born in the stable in Bethlehem at Christmas and that he is the reason for the season. Our readings this weekend are all about Wisdom and the blessings of God and the Gospel tells us about the word who was in fact the Son of God.
Jesus Christ, therefore, the Word made flesh, was sent as “a man to men.” He “speaks the words of God” to us and completes the work of salvation which His Father gave Him to do. To see Jesus is to see His Father. To see Jesus is to see the face of the Fathers love for all of us. Through the “least,” and the poor, Christ comes to us. That’s a lesson that we need to continually remember and proclaim in our lives and our dealings with other people. We will find Christ among the “least” and this is the message that lies at the heart of our faith It is the message that Pope Francis is proclaiming in our own time and place. May we not be afraid in the year that has just begun to seek the wisdom that God wants for us, that is the wisdom and the light of faith so that we will be able to show the love of god to those around us during the year that that has just started today as well as throughout our lives especially during this time of the pandemic..





