
by
Dorothy Day It
is no use saying that we are born two thousand years too
late to give room to Christ… Christ is always with
us, always asking for room in our hearts.

Favoring Girls,
by David Diggs
Christ’s
History, and Ours, by Gustavo Gutiérrez
Who
is Christmas for?, by David Diggs
A
Martyr's Reflections on Christmas,
words from
Oscar Romero
Is
There Room?, by David Diggs
The Cleansing
Touch, by Shelly Satran
Welcoming the
Christ Child Among Us, by David Diggs
Christmas
Bells, Wooden Bells, by David Diggs
No Silent Night,
by David Diggs |
But
now it is with the voice of our contemporaries that he speaks,
with the eyes of store clerks, factory workers, and children
that he gazes; with the hands of office workers, slum dwellers,
and suburban housewives that he gives. It is with the feet
of soldiers and tramps that he walks, and with the heart
of anyone in need that he longs for shelter. And giving
shelter or food to anyone who asks for it, or needs it,
is giving it to Christ.
We can do now what those who knew him in the days of his
flesh did. I am sure that the shepherds did not adore and
then go away to leave Mary and her Child in the stable,
but somehow found them room, even though what they had to
offer might have been primitive enough. All that the friends
of Christ did for him in his lifetime, we can do. Peter's
mother-in-law hastened to cook a meal for him, and if anything
in the Gospels can be inferred, it surely is that she gave
the very best she had, with no thought of extravagance.
Matthew made a feast for him, inviting the whole town, so
that the house was in an uproar of enjoyment, and the straitlaced
Pharisees - the good people - were scandalized.
The people of Samaria, despised and isolated, were overjoyed
to give him hospitality, and for days he walked and ate
and slept among them. And the loveliest of all relationships
in Christ's life, after his relationship with his mother,
is his friendship with Martha, Mary, and Lazarus and the
continual hospitality he found with them. It is a staggering
thought that there were once two sisters and a brother whom
Jesus looked on almost as his family and where he found
a second home, where Martha got on with her work, bustling
around in her house-proud way, and Mary simply sat in silence
with him.
If we hadn't got Christ's own words for it, it would seem
raving lunacy to believe that if I offer a bed and food
and hospitality to some man or woman or child, I am replaying
the part of Lazarus or Martha or Mary, and that my guest
is Christ. There is nothing to show it, perhaps. There are
no halos already glowing round their heads - at least none
that human eyes can see....
In Christ's human life, there were always a few who made
up for the neglect of the crowd. The shepherds did it; their
hurrying to the crib made up for the people who would flee
from Christ. The wise men did it; their journey across the
world made up for those who refused to stir one hand's breadth
from the routine of their lives to go to Christ. Even the
gifts the wise men brought have in themselves an obscure
recompense and atonement for what would follow later in
this Child's life. For they brought gold, the king's emblem,
to make up for the crown of thorns that he would wear; they
offered incense, the symbol of praise, to make up for the
mockery and the spitting; they gave him myrrh, to heal and
soothe, and he was wounded from head to foot and no one
bathed his wounds. The women at the foot of the Cross did
it too, making up for the crowd who stood by and sneered.
We can do it too, exactly as they did. We are not born too
late. We do it by seeing Christ and serving Christ in friends
and strangers, in everyone we come in contact with.
All this can be proved, if proof is needed, by the doctrines
of the church. We can talk about Christ's mystical body,
about the vine and the branches, about the communion of
saints. But Christ himself has proved it for us, and no
one has to go further than that. For he said that a glass
of water given to a beggar was given to him. He made heaven
hinge on the way we act toward him in his disguise of commonplace,
frail, ordinary humanity.
Did you give me food when I was hungry?
Did you give me to drink when I was thirsty?
Did you give me clothes when my own were rags?
Did you come to see me when I was sick, or in prison or
in trouble?
And to those who say, aghast, that they never had a chance
to do such a thing, that they lived two thousand years too
late, he will say again what they had the chance of knowing
all their lives, that if these things were done for the
very least of his brethren they were done to him.
For
a total Christian, the goad of duty is not needed - always
prodding one to perform this or that good deed. It is not
a duty to help Christ, it is a privilege. Is it likely that
Martha and Mary sat back and considered that they had done
all that was expected of them - is it likely that Peter's
mother-in-law grudgingly served the chicken she had meant
to keep till Sunday because she thought it was her "duty”?
She did it gladly; she would have served ten chickens if
she had had them.
If that is the way they gave hospitality to Christ, then
certainly it is the way it should still be given. Not for
the sake of humanity. Not because it might be Christ who
stays with us, comes to see us, takes up our time. Not because
these people remind us of Christ, but because they are Christ,
asking us to find room for him, exactly as he did at the
first Christmas.

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