Jan 12, 2009
Et verbum caro factum est, et habitavit in nobis. The people were arriving in droves, the priests and seminarians were hustling about making last-minute accommodations for the swelling crowds, which had burgeoned to the point that they were threatening to burst through the walls and spill haphazardly out into the street. A light rain had begun to fall in Jerusalem, which by late December reaches a state of bitter, bone-chilling cold. The atmosphere could not have been more inhospitable. The Mass was being prepared in an auditorium instead of the chapel to accommodate the multitudes of people expected in this unusually crowded Christmas season. Some groups had left in large buses for Bethlehem. Bells all over the city were sounding the call, drawing the faithful to come and adore the Lord, the God made flesh and now dwelling among us, a helpless child in the City of David. Jerusalem, the city of the Passion, was in this moment preparing to become a second Bethlehem for thousands of Christians, huddled in the cold to catch a glimpse of their swaddled savior. The Mass of Midnight commenced; the Word was made to dwell among us, and for this night, Jerusalem knew the peace of Christ.
On Christmas morning, I rose early to greet the Lord in the chapel at the Pontifical Notre Dame Institute in Jerusalem, an extraordinary pilgrim center owned by the Vatican and operated by the Legionaries of Christ. After greeting our Lord, I bundled up in my coat to head to Bethlehem, a short drive from Jerusalem. In my mind was the passage I had read just before leaving the chapel, spoken by the shepherds who had been visited by that glorious angel as they tended their flocks on that singular night some 2000 years ago: “Let us go over to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has made known to us” (Lk 2:15). Let us go, indeed! Pilgrims from all over the world filled the ancient Basilica of the Nativity, each lining up and waiting sometimes hours for the chance to kiss the spot where Jesus was born and to kneel at the site of the manger where the infant Savior slept.