Merry Christmas! Day 3, St. John

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Image credit: Virgin & Angels Adoring the Christ Child, Luca della Robbia. 
Shamelessly pinched from Philadelphia Museum of Art


In the Son made man, God gives us nothing less than his very self, in order to “redeem us from all iniquity and purify for himself a people of his own” (Titus 2:14). Born in the night is the One who redeems us from the night. The hint of the dawning day is no longer to be sought in the distant reaches of the cosmos, but by bending low, in the stable nearby.

The clear sign given to a darkened world is indeed “a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger” (Lk 2:12). To find the Savior, one must not gaze upward, but look below: the omnipotence of God shines forth in the powerlessness of a newborn; the eloquence of the eternal Word resounds in an infant’s first cry; the holiness of the Spirit gleams in that small body, freshly washed and wrapped in swaddling clothes. The need for care and warmth becomes divine since the Son of the Father shares in history with all his brothers and sisters. The divine light radiating from this Child helps us to recognize humanity in every new life.



This morning my parish is offering the blessing of wine for St. John's day -- a tradition I've only previously read about. The priest blesses bottles of wine, which becomes a sacramental, as detailed here (scroll down). Some people save bottles of this blessed wine so the bride and groom can drink to one another with it.