THOUGHTS FOR THE CHRISTMAS SEASON FROM ST. LEO THE GREAT[1]

LET US be glad in the Lord, dearly beloved, and make merry with 
spiritual joy. For there has dawned for us the day of new 
redemption, of ancient preparation, and of eternal bliss. In this 
annual feast there is renewed for us the sacrament of our 
salvation, which was promised from the beginning, was accomplished 
in the fulness of time, and will endure for all eternity. (Homily 
2,1.)
*****************************

You therefore, whoever you may be, who devoutly and full of faith 
boast of the Christian name, rightly weigh the grace of your 
reconciliation. By the Incarnation of the Word power was given you 
to return from afar to your Maker, to recognize your true 
parentage, from a slave to become a freeman, from an outcast to 
become a son. Born of corruptible flesh, you were empowered to be 
reborn of the Spirit of God, and to obtain through grace what was 
not yours through nature. You know that by the spirit of adoption 
you are become a son of God: you dare call God your father. (Hom. 
2,5.)
*****************************

In order that we might be recalled to eternal blessedness from the 
bonds of original sin and from all human error, He Himself came 
down to us to whom we of ourselves could never rise. For although 
there was in many the love of truth, yet the multitude of shifting 
opinions was taken advantage of by the crafty and deceitful 
demons, and in the false name of science human ignorance was led 
astray into various and mutually conflicting doctrines. To put an 
end to this fools' merry-go-round, moreover, by which minds were 
held captive to serve the arrogance of Satan, the teaching of the 
Law was not sufficient, nor could our nature be repaired solely by 
the exhortations of the prophets. The reality of redemption had to 
be added to moral injunctions and strivings: our nature corrupted 
in its very origin must needs be re-born by new beginnings 
("<novis exordiis>": i.e., the new life deriving from the new Head 
of the race). (Hom. 3,3.)
*****************************

Worthily and zealously will each of us celebrate the day of our 
Lord's Nativity if we but recall of whose body we are members, and 
to what Head we are joined. Consider well, dearly beloved, and 
with the help of the enlightening Spirit wisely bear in mind who 
it was that received us into Himself and whom we have received 
into our midst: for as the Lord Jesus was made fled, by being 
born, so we are made His body by our rebirth. Thus are we members 
of Christ as well as temples of the Holy Ghost, an I for this 
reason the Blessed Apostle says: "Glorify and bear God in your 
body" (1 Cor. 6:20). (Hom. 3,5.)
*****************************

Let the righteous exult in the Lord, let the hearts of believe 
turn to His praise, and let the sons of men confess His wondrous 
deeds. For in this work of God especially (the Nativity), does OT 
humble condition realize how highly it is esteemed by its Maker. 
God indeed gave much to man when He made him to His own image, but 
He granted him far more by the work of restoration, for the Lord 
Himself assumed our "form of a servant." And although all that the 
Creator expends upon His creatures is suggested by one and the 
same paternal love, it is less wonderful that man be elevated to 
the divine, than that God should descend to human estate. (Hom. 
4,2.)
*****************************

Each one of us by regeneration received part in Christ's spiritual 
origin (cf. "conceived of the Holy Spirit"). To every one who is 
re-born, the water of baptism is as the Virgin's womb, for the 
same Holy Spirit fills this font who filled the Virgin. Thus the 
sin which that sacred conception overthrew is taken away by this 
mystical washing. (Hom. 4,3.)
*****************************

But you, O dearly beloved, to whom I can address no words more 
worthy than those of St. Peter: "you are a chosen generation, a 
kingly priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people" (I Pet. 
2:9): you have been built upon the impregnable rock Christ, you 
have been planted into our Lord and Savior by His true assumption 
of our flesh. Remain firm then in that faith which you have 
confessed before many witnesses, and in which, having been born 
through water and the Holy Ghost, you received the chrism of 
salvation and the seal of eternal life. (Hom. 4,6.)
*****************************

Unless faith is one, it is none, for the Apostle has said: "One 
Lord, one faith." (Hom. 4,6.)
*****************************

It was for the sake of our weakness, who were incapable of 
receiving Him, that Christ lowered Himself. Because the eye of man 
could not bear to look upon the brilliance of His majesty, Christ 
hid it with the veil of a body. (Hom. 5,2.)
*****************************

In assuming our nature, Christ became for us a ladder, so that 
through Him we can now ascend even unto Himself. (Hom. 5,3.)
*****************************

Father and Son are coeternal. For brilliance born of light is not 
posterior to the light, nor is true light ever without its 
splendor. Moreover' to radiate is as essential to light as is its 
own being. The manifestation of this radiance, however, His 
appearance on this earth, is called Christ's mission. While He 
ever filled all things with His invisible majesty, He came as it 
were from His remote and exalted secret place to those who knew 
Him not, and healed them of their blindness of ignorance, as it is 
written: "To those that sit in darkness and in the shadow of 
death, a light is risen" (Is. 9:2). (Hom. 5,3)
*****************************

Let Catholic faith recognize the glory of the Lord in His 
humility; and let the Church, which is the body of Christ, exult 
in the sacraments of her salvation. For unless the Word of God had 
become flesh and had dwelt amongst us, unless the Creator Himself 
had descended to enter into communion with His creature and in His 
birth had restored the old man by a new beginning, death would 
have reigned from Adam even unto the end (Rom. 5:14), Irrevocable 
condemnation would have been all men's lot, and the very fact of 
birth would have been unto all cause of perdition But He became a 
man of our race, that we might become partake
*****************************

of the divine nature. The birth that was His from the virginal 
womb, He made available to us in the baptismal font. He gave to 
water the same power that He gave to His mother. For the power of 
the Most High and the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:35) 
which made Mary give birth to the Savior, likewise effect that 
water gives new life to the believer. (Hom. 5,5.).
*****************************

Adam contemned the command of God, and led the race into sin's 
damnation; Jesus, born under the Law, restored to us the liberty 
of justification. Adam, agreeing to the wiles of Satan even unto 
the fall, merited that in him all die; Jesus, obedient to the 
Father even unto the cross, merited that all in Him find life. 
Adam was jealous of angelic honors, and destroyed the dignity of 
his own nature; Jesus took upon Himself the condition of our 
infirmity, and raised up to heaven those for whom He descended 
into the abyss. To Adam who fell by pride it was said: "Dust thou 
art, and unto dust thou shalt return" (Gen. 3:19); but to Jesus, 
who was glorified because of His abasement, it was said: "Sit Thou 
at My right hand, until I make Thy enemies Thy footstool" (Ps. 
109:1). (Hom. 5,5.)
*****************************

On all days and at all times, dearly beloved, do the thoughts of 
the faithful who meditate on divine things dwell on the birth of 
our Lord and Savior from the Virgin-Mother. For the mind that is 
lifted up in acknowledgment of its Maker, whether it be in 
groaning supplication, in the gladness of praise, or in the 
offering of sacrifice, directs its spiritual gaze on nothing more 
frequently or with more confidence than the fact that the same God 
the Son of God who was begotten of the co-eternal Father was also 
born by a human birth. No other day, however, calls upon us to 
venerate the Nativity, worthy as it is of adoration both in heaven 
and on earth, so insistently as does the present, which reveals to 
our gaze the brightness of this wondrous sacrament, and on which 
even nature herself is radiant with new light.[2] For the angel 
Gabriel's converse with the astonished Mary and the conception 
that took place through the Holy Ghost, as wondrous because 
promised as because believed, are not merely recalled to mind, but 
as it were occur before our very eyes. For today did the Author of 
the world issue forth from the virginal womb, and He vitro made 
all natures today was made a Son of her whom He created. Today the 
Word of God appeared clothed in flesh, and that which had never 
been visible to human eyes, now became tangible to human hands as 
well. Today shepherds, taught by angels' voices, came to the 
Savior born in the substance of our flesh and soul; and thus today 
was established the form in which the gospel was to be preached by 
the shepherds of the Lord's flocks for all our preaching is no 
more than an echoing of the angelic host: "Glory to God in the 
highest, and on earth peace to men of good will" (Luke 2:4). (Hom. 
6,1.)
*****************************

Although the infancy which the majesty of God's Son did not 
disdain passed into the maturity of manhood, and although all the 
acts of humility undertaken for us ceased once the triumph of the 
passion and resurrection had been attained, yet today's festival 
renews for us the sacred infancy of Jesus born of the Virgin Mary; 
and while we adore the birth of our Savior, we find that we are 
celebrating too the commencement of our own life. For the birth of 
Christ is the origin of the Christian race, since the birthday of 
the Head is the birthday of the body.
*****************************

Though each of those who are called have his own station in life, 
though the sons of the Church are separated from each other by the 
passage of the years, yet the entire body of the faithful, having 
a common origin in the baptismal font, are crucified together with 
Christ in His passion, are raised up in His resurrection, and in 
His ascension are placed with Him at the Father's right hand-and 
so likewise are they all with Him born in this Nativity. For every 
believer, in whatever part of the world he may be, who is reborn 
in Christ, quits the evil path of his first origin, and by being 
born again is changed into a new man. For no longer is he 
considered as an offspring merely of an earthly father, but as 
belonging now to the seed of the Savior, who for this reason 
became the Son of man that we might have the power of becoming 
sons of God. (Hom. 6,2.)
*****************************

In no other way can God be worthily worshipped, than if we offer 
Him what He Himself has given us. But in the entire treasury of 
the Lord's bounty, what more suitable gift can we find to honor 
the present day, than <peace> that peace which was first 
proclaimed by angels' chant on the Lord's Nativity. For this peace 
it is that begets sons of God, that is the nurse of love and the 
mother of unity; this peace is the rest of the blessed and our 
eternal home; its proper task and special benefit it is to join to 
God those whom it separates from the world. Wherefore the Apostle 
urges us to attain this blessing, saying: "Being justified by 
faith, let us have peace with God" (Rom. 5:1). In this short 
sentence is summed up the effect of almost all the commandments; 
for where there is true peace, there no virtue can be lacking. 
But, dearly beloved, what does it mean to have peace with God 
except to will what He commands, and not to desire what He 
forbids.... You are a chosen and kingly race. Live up, then, to 
the dignity of your regeneration, love what your Father loves, and 
in nothing dissent from your Maker, lest the Lord should again 
declare: "I have brought up children and exalted them: but they 
have despised Me. The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his 
master's crib: but Israel hath not known Me, and My people hath 
not understood" (Is. 1:2f.).(Hom. 6,3.)
*****************************

Great, O dearly beloved, is the sacrament of this gift, and far 
does it excel all other gifts: that God should call man His son 
and man call God father. (Hom. 6,4.)
*****************************

If we are of one mind with God, if we will what He wills, and 
condemn what He abhors, He Himself will bring all our battles to 
good issue. For He who gave the will, will also give the power 
("<ipse qui dedit velle, donabit et posse>"): thus we shall be 
cooperators of His works, and in exultation of faith shall cry out 
with the prophet: "The Lord is my light and my salvation, whom 
shall I fear? The Lord is the protector of my life: of whom shall 
I be afraid?" (Ps. 26:1). (Hom. 6,4.)
*****************************

The birthday of our Lord is the birthday of peace. For the Apostle 
says: "He is our peace, who hath made both one" (Eph. 2:14), and 
whether we be Jew or Gentile, "by Him we have access both in one 
Spirit to the Father" (Eph. 2:18). It was this doctrine in 
particular that Christ taught His disciples the very day before 
His passion, when He said: "My peace I give you, My peace I leave 
with you" (John 14:17). And lest in the generic term of peace the 
particular character of <His> peace be lost to view, He added: 
"Not as the world gives do I give to you." The peace of the 
spiritual-minded and of Catholics comes from on high and itself 
leads to the heights. It refuses to hold communion with the lovers 
of this world. For "where thy treasure is, there is thy heart 
also" (Matt. 6:22): that is to say: if what you love is here below 
you will descend to the depths; but if your love is above, you 
will attain to the heavenly summits Thither may the Spirit of 
peace lead and accompany us who all will the same, who are of one 
mind, who are united in faith and hope and charity. For "as many 
as are led by the Spirit of God, these are the sons of God" (Rom. 
8:14). (Hom. 6,5.)
*****************************

That "the Word was made flesh" does not mean that the nature of 
God was changed into flesh, but that flesh was assumed by the Word 
into the unity of His person. The word "flesh" moreover signifies 
the whole man, with whom the Son of God so inseparably united 
Himself within the womb of the Virgin, fecundated by the Holy 
Spirit and destined to remain for ever virginal, that He who was 
begotten of the essence of the Father before time, in time was 
born of the Virgin's womb. For in no other way could we be 
released from the chains of eternal death, except He become humble 
in our nature who remained almighty in His own.
*****************************

The Son of God came to destroy the works of the devil (1 John 
3:8). Therefore He so united Himself to us and us with Him, that 
the descent of God to man's estate became the exaltation of man to 
God's. (Hom. 7,2.)
*****************************

Though all the divine utterances exhort us, dearly beloved, to 
rejoice in the Lord always, yet today we are no doubt inspired to 
a fuller spiritual joy, since the sacrament of the Lord's Nativity 
is shining so brightly upon us. Today especially we have recourse 
to that unutterable condescension of the divine mercy whereby the 
Creator of men deigned to become man, that we might be found in 
His nature whom we worship in ours. For God the Son of God, the 
only-begotten of the eternal and unbegotten Father, while 
eternally remaining in the form of God, and unchangeably and 
beyond time possessing the same being as the Father, took unto 
Himself the form of a servant without suffering loss of His 
majesty, and thus did He advance us to His own estate without 
lessening Himself in ours. Thus each nature remains the same in 
its properties, yet such is the community of their union that 
whatever there is of the Godhead is not disjoined from the 
humanity, and whatever there is of man, is not separated from the 
divinity. (Hom. 8, 1.)
*****************************

The greatness of the divine event (which we are celebrating), 
dearly beloved, far exceeds the power of human eloquence. 
Moreover, the difficulty in speaking adequately of it derives 
precisely from the reason for our not keeping silent about it. For 
it was not only of the divine essence in Christ Jesus, the Son of 
God, but also of His human nature that the words of the prophet 
were spoken: "Who shall declare His generation?" (Is. 53,8). 
Unless faith held fast, no speech could declare the union of 
twofold nature in one sole person. And thus there is never lack of 
matter for praise, for never does the strength of him who praises 
suffice for the subject.
*****************************

Indeed, let us rejoice that we are unequal to the task of giving 
due praise to so great a sacrament of mercy (i.e., the Nativity); 
and if we are unable to express the sublimity of the manner of our 
redemption, let us know that it is good for us to be so helpless. 
For none approaches more closely to the knowledge of the truth 
than he who realizes that in matters divine there ever remains far 
more to attain, no matter how far he progresses. (Hom. 9,1.)
*****************************

The angel sent of God, Gabriel, had said to blessed Mary: "The 
Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Most High 
shall overshadow thee. And therefore also the Holy which shall be 
born of thee shall be called the Son of God" (Luke 1:35). But of 
this same Spirit, of whom Christ was born out of the womb of the 
immaculate Mother, is reborn the Christian out of the womb of holy 
Church. True peace for him lies solely in not being separated from 
the will of God, in loving those things only which are beloved of 
God. (Hom. 9,1.)
*****************************

Let us then, most dearly beloved, give thanks to God the Father, 
through His Son, and in the Holy Spirit, who "for His great mercy 
wherewith He hath loved us" has taken pity on us, and "when we 
were dead in sins, hath quickened us together in Christ" (Eph. 
2:5): that in Him we may be a new creature and a new creation. Let 
us put off, therefore, the old man and all his works. Having 
received a share in the birth of Christ, let us renounce the works 
of the flesh. Recognize thy dignity, O Christian! Made a partaker 
of the divine nature, do not dare by degenerate conduct to return 
to former baseness. Remember of what Head and what body thou art a 
member. Call to mind that thou wert snatched from the power of 
darkness and translated into the light and kingdom of God. In the 
sacrament of baptism thou wert made a temple of the Holy Spirit: 
do not by evil actions drive from thee so great a Guest in order 
once again to subject thyself to Satan's thraldom. For the blood 
of Christ is thy purchase money, and He who ransomed thee in mercy 
will one day judge thee in justice: who with the Father and the 
Holy Ghost reigns for all ages. Amen. (Hom. 1,3.)
*****************************

ENDNOTES

1 Through his famous letter ("Tome") to the Council of Chalcedon. 
in which in classical form he expounded the traditional teaching 
on the hypostatic union and particularly on the two natures in 
Christ. Leo the Great shares with St. Cyril of Alexandria the 
honor of being the Doctor of the Incarnation. The Church has 
corroborated this title by choosing Leo's first homily on the 
Nativity for the breviary lessons of Christmas. Ten of the Saint's 
Christmas homilies have come down to us (P.L. 54, 190-234). There 
are also eight homilies for the sister feast of Epiphany. Since 
the first homily on Christmas is generally known, we have 
restricted ourselves in the following selections to his Christmas 
homilies 2 to 9, except for the concluding paragraph from Homily 
1. If ORATE FRATRES readers are in favor of such translations. we 
will publish extracts from the Epiphany homilies for next year's 
Christmas number. There exists, of course no Catholic English 
translation of the works of the great St. Leo (nor of most of the 
other great patristic spiritual writers)-God forgive us!

2 The winter solstice is passed.

(Taken from the December 27, 1942 issue of "Orate Fratres".)

Copyright (c) 1996 EWTN Online Services.

-------------------------------------------------------

   Provided courtesy of:

        Eternal Word Television Network
        PO Box 3610
        Manassas, VA 22110
        Voice: 703-791-2576
        Fax: 703-791-4250
        Web: http://www.ewtn.com
        Email address: sysop@ewtn.com

-------------------------------------------------------