Wow, God! Thanks!

The Nativity of the Lord - Mass During the Day

Understanding the Word

By Dr. Karla J. Bellinger

The dark night has become day. The rescue has come. God has lifted our sorrows. Have you seen it? A man emerges from the doors of the hospital when his family thought that they’d never see him again. Have you felt it? A woman hugs her son, whom she thought was lost, but here he is! Do you know that jubilation, that moment when light rises out of darkness? A little girl, who thought that she was going to drown,  finds herself safely on the shore. Have you ever been so low that rescue feels so good? The night has passed! This is the day! 

Isaiah describes the Israelites returning home from Babylon: their eyes brim with tears, seeing through prisms of joy, wondering at a deliverance so profound and so unexpected. O God, thank you! 

Has this wonderment been part of your life, too? Not just any joy, but the gut-level amazement at having been rescued? “Break out together in song, O ruins of Jerusalem,” Isaiah sings. The deliverance has come. “Shout with joy!” today’s psalmist says. 

I love to look at the stars at night, even in winter. It’s so dark,  as only winter can be dark. The constellation Orion glitters in the south. The Big Dipper shines in the north. The air smelled crisp with cold. A sense of wonder crept into my heart and shivered in my spine. It was Christmas Eve. The people who lived in darkness have seen a great light. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. 

This morning, the sun is up. Christmas is here. There is food to be cooked. There are people to see. The wonder of night has turned to the miracle of day. Baby Jesus has come. It is Christmas! “Joy to the  world, the Lord has come!” 

Consider/Discuss 

  • Look at the joyous events of your life—the holy births, the sacred deaths,  the healings, and the reconciliations. Since your experience of Christmas last year, how have you experienced light coming out of darkness? How has God lifted you? On this Christmas day, what does rescue mean to you and those whom you love? For what do you give thanks? 
  • In the midst of this Christmas day, find a moment to cultivate a sense of wonder at the beauty of creation—look, just look! The people, the sun, the  babies, the snow, the Christmas tree, and the clouds—how does God sing to you through the world around you, saying, “Look, I am here!” After one minute of savoring creation, pray this simple prayer: “Wow, God!  Thanks!” 

Living and Praying with the Word 

Take time to wonder? Lord, that’s not very grown up. I gave that  up when I became an adult. You have to get real. Do important  things. I don’t have time for awe. I don’t have time to spend in  wonderment. That’s just “fluffy” and I am not fluffy. What’s that you  say? It is Christmas? Well, yes, it is. Be childlike, just this one day,  and spend time in amazement? Allow you to fan the flame of wonder  within me? For one minute? Well, okay, if you say so. Hey, um, yeah,  by the way . . . Wow. Thanks!

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