by St. John of Kronstadt

We are approaching, beloved brethren, the world-saving feast of the birth in the flesh of our Lord God and Saviour, Jesus Christ. For several days before the feast, the holy Church already celebrates this wondrous mystery in the spiritual hymns of her daily services, These hymns remind us of our divine birthright, and the squandering of our sonship through sin; of its restoration through repentance of our common spiritual kinship and of the spirit of love and care for one another. And in order that we celebrate this feast of God’s limitless love and His extreme condescension not in a worldly, but in a spiritual manner, let us briefly consider the following: why did God become man while remaining God? and what does God’s incarnation require of us? Having set forth these two questions, I shall answer the first one with the words of the Archangel to Joseph, the betrothed of the Holy Virgin: God became man to save His people from their sin (Matt. 1:21). For this reason He is called Jesus, which means “Saviour.” And so, it was for our salvation that the Lord came to earth and became man, for the regeneration in us of the i m a g e of God which had fallen. The Son of God became the Son of Man in order to make us sons of God who were the children of wrath and eternal damnation. In the words of the Holy Apostle John the Theologian: that we should be called the sons of God (I John 3:1); “Now God became man, that He may make Adam a god” (Stichera for lauds of Annunciation).

O the unutterable love of God! O the unspeakable compassion of the Lord! And He, the Most Holy, did this: He deified mankind in His chosen ones, cleansed them from all evil both of soul and body, sanctified, glorified, led them from corruption to everlasting life, made them worthy to stand in blessed ness before the terrible throne of His glory. And He deified us also, brothers and sisters; He gave us a new birth through water and the Holy Spirit, sanctified us, made us His sons, gave us the promise of eternal life and eternal blessings, surpassing all telling and imagining. And in confirmation, as a surety of the’ future blessings, He gave to us, still here on earth, the Holy Spirit to dwell in our hearts: God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father (Gal. 4:6) writes the Apostle.

And so, my brothers, the feast of the Nativity of Christ reminds us that we are born of God, that we are sons of God, that we have been saved from sin and that we must live for God and not sin; not for flesh and blood, not for the world which lies in evil (I John 5:19), not for earthly corruption, but for an inheritance incorruptible… reserved in heaven the Lord Himself will give you a sign; behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Emmanuel. (Is. 7:14)

(I Peter 1:4). You who are preparing your- selves to meet the feast of Christ’s Nativity, ask yourselves: have you preserved that spiritual birth from God which we each received in baptism; are you always heedful of your Divine sonship and the sacred treasure of the Spirit which you acquired in baptism; have you grown closer to G o d through faith and love, like His beloved children; have you loved one another as befits children of God; have you despised ugly, evil and all-destructive sin; have you loved truth and every virtue? Have you loved immortal and eternal life prepared in a land which will not pass away and to which we are called by Him Who now has come to our corrupt earth? These are questions which we must ask ourselves now and decide-not only with our minds, but above all, with our hearts and with our very deeds.

In general, we should not allow ourselves to celebrate any Christian feast without seriously considering: what is its meaning and what is its purpose; what is our responsibility towards it? We must know the Christian meaning behind every feast. Then the feast will become profitable for our soul’s salvation. Otherwise, the enemy of our salvation will snatch us and turn the feast of God into a feast of the flesh,, of lawlessness, as so often happens. Having resolved the first question: Why did God become man? we came also to the resolution of the second: what does the Incarnation of the Son of God require of us? It requires of us to remember and hold in sacred honor the fact that we are born of God; and if we have sullied and trampled upon this birthright with our sins, we must restore it by washing it with tears of repentance; we must restore and renew within us the image of God which has fallen and the union with God of blessedness, truth and holiness which has been destroyed. The incarnation of the Son of God requires from us, above all, mutual love, humility, that we help and serve one another; for how can we not love one an- other when we see the love that God has to wards us? How can we not be humble, seeing such humility, such voluntary condescension for our sake of the Son of God? How can we not help one another in every way possible, when the Son of God Himself came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many? (Matt. 20:28). Like the wisemen, let us, brothers, also prepare gifts fort he new-born King. Instead of gold, frankincense and myrrh, let us bring Him the gifts of faith, hope, and love.

Amen