And while they were there, the time came for her to be delivered. And [Mary] gave birth to her first-born son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn. (Luke 2:6-7)
If there is anything more beautiful, I know nothing of it.
Swaddling Jesus, Mary is an icon of every mother who has ever loved a child.
Holding him, mother and child as one, her gaze fixed on
the life in her arms, she cradles him warm in the gentleness of an exquisite tenderness,
shielding him from the cold and the perils of living in a world that is seldom
so tender.
And all these centuries later, I sit in the chair where I
pray … and weep … at the unspeakable beauty of this mother and child, as she
wraps him in bands of love and worry, joy and fear.
I watch … and see so many others who live large in my
memory, each shimmering with a beauty far beyond my speaking. They’re all Mary,
every last one of them, and their children are all Jesus.
There are so many, like the refugee mother sitting on her
suitcase in the rough gravel of a Macedonian hillside, cradling her infant in a
thin blanket against a relentless late winter wind, wondering if they will ever
be able to go home again.
There were Somali mothers sitting outside makeshift tepees,
fashioned from corrugated tin and plastic from war-torn buildings, denying themselves
food to feed their children with what little they had, and then, especially,
there’s that other one in South Sudan, who in my heart stands for so many thousands.
Wrapping her little one in filthy rags, the only thing she
had, she hummed as she kept watch, knowing those rags would soon be a burial shroud,
so like the mothers of Gaza, today.
I see them all … others, too, as I watch Mary cradle Jesus.
For, there’s another image this night that also shimmers with
Mary’s beauty, my beloved Dixie, 20 years old, looking more like 17, dark brown
hair falling on her shoulders, just home from the hospital, holding our first
born, her smile alive with a joy I don’t think any man can ever understand. We can
only watch and give thanks that the Holy One allows us the vision of infinite
beauty.
Yes, she is there, too, as I watch Mary, her eyes gazing at
me from across the centuries, inviting me to open my arms and hold Jesus, to cradle
him near—even as some of those mothers in those troubled places invited me to
do what I most wanted to do—hold the precious lives of their children in my arms
as if I could protect them from the brutalities to which darkened hearts had
subjected them.
And here lies the mystery that reduces (or elevates) me
to tears every year.
Jesus, the Christ child, who bears the heart of God, the
soul of Infinite Mercy appears in human flesh that we, as Mary, may see and touch
and fall in love with everything he is … awakened to the Love he is … in the
unsearchable depths of our own souls.
O Come, let us adore him.
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