Reading I: Isaiah 62:11-12
This passage is from what is now commonly called Third (or Trito-) Isaiah (Is 56-66). These chapters take up the themes of Isaiah 40-55, which announced the impending return of the exiles from Babylon to their homeland (Is 40), but they reapply these themes to a new situation.
It is no longer the exiles returning to their homeland but the pilgrims going up to the temple at Jerusalem for the feast (Tabernacles?).
When read at the second Mass of Christmas, these themes are reapplied to the birth of Christ. The passage now speaks of the joy of the new Israel at the advent of its salvation. |
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Responsorial Psalm: 97:1, 6, 11-12
Like the other
enthronement psalms, Psalm 97 is appropriate for any Christian
festival. A different selection of verses from this psalm
is used during the Easter season in series C. The present
selection includes verses 11-12, with reference to the dawning
of the light, imagery that has passed into the lore of the
season and is expressed in so many Christmas carols.
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Reading II:
Titus 3:4-7
This passage is
very similar to the second reading at the midnight Mass (Titus
2:11-14). Both passages speak of the “appearance” of
divine salvation and can therefore be related fittingly
to the nativity. But there is a difference, too.
The earlier
passage went on to speak of the second coming and made it
the basis of an ethical exhortation. This passage takes a
different direction.
The appearance of “God our Savior” in
the Christ-event leads to our regeneration and renewal, our
rebirth as children of God (see Gal 4:5-7). Christ is Son
of God by right; created human beings forfeited divine filiation
by the fall. But Christ has appeared to give us rebirth as
children of God.
This thought is succinctly expressed in the collect that Cranmer
composed in 1549 for the second Mass of Christmas: “Almighty
God, who hast given us thy only-begotten Son to take our nature
upon him . . . . Grant that we, being regenerate and made thy
children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by thy
Holy Spirit . . . .”
And the Anglican poet Christopher
Wordsworth, taking up the great patristic paradoxes on the
incarnation,
expressed it thus:
God comes down
that man may rise,
Lifted by him to the skies;
Christ is Son of Man that we
Sons of God in him may be.
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Gospel: Luke 2:15-20
This reading completes the narrative begun in the gospel for
the midnight Mass—the pilgrimage of the shepherds to
Bethlehem and their visit to Mary, Joseph, and the babe in
the manger.
The angelic message had told them that the things
they would see would be a “sign” (Luke 2:12). What
they see has a meaning beyond what is visible to the eye, which
can only see a baby, its mother, and her husband—a common
enough sight. But this sight is a “thing that has happened.”
The
word translated “thing” can also mean “word,” that
is, a significant, meaningful communication. So the sight of
the child is a sign communicating to the shepherds the significance
of what the angelic message had proclaimed: God’s salvation
has come to earth.
The shepherds do not see the salvation itself
but only its outward sign—the birth of the child, wrapped
in swaddling cloths.
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Reginald H. Fuller
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Copyright © 1984
by The Order of St. Benedict, Inc., Collegeville,
Minnesota. All rights reserved. Used by
permission from The Liturgical Press,
Collegeville, Minnesota 56321
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Preaching the Lectionary:
The Word of God for the Church Today
Reginald H. Fuller. The Liturgical Press.
1984 (Revised Edition), pp.
18-19.
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Thank
you to Liturgical Press who makes
this page possible
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For
more information about the 3rd edition (2006) of
Preaching
the Lectionary click picture
above. |

Art by Martin Erspamer, O.S.B.
from Religious Clip Art for the
Liturgical Year (A, B, and
C).
Used by permission of Liturgy
Training Publications. This art may
be reproduced only by parishes who
purchase the collection in book or
CD-ROM form. For more information go
to: http://www.ltp.org/
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