NCRegister
  National Catholic Register  
11.21.09

A generous donor will DOUBLE donations to the Register up to $240,000 through November 28.

Donate Now

DOUBLE YOUR DONATION

Click to donate

GIVE BEFORE this matching offer ends!

Learn more

For information about the Register's ANNUAL FUND Drive, click here

Last 7 Days 30 Days

 
DAILY UMBERT

EMAIL SIGN UP

Receive our free email updates!

Sign up below


As part of this free service, you will receive occasional special offers.





Print Article | Email Article | Write To Us | Support Us  

3. God the Baby

Share

Posted by Tom Hoopes

Saturday, December 27, 2008 2:52 AM

For each of the 12 days of Christmas, I’ll review and fill out one of the12 Ways of Christmas” …

1. “God was a baby.”
2. “God nursed.”
3. “God was an embryo.”
4. “God was a zygote.”
5. “Mary is the Mother of God.”

These are shocking statements that are nonetheless true, because Christ is one person with two natures. The two natures were human and divine. The One person he is, is the second person of the Trinity, a divine person.

These things seem startling to us. But that’s the point of Christmas.

God is infinitely greater than us. The divine is incomparable to the human. When Muslim scholars are scandalized by the Incarnation, it’s not because they’re wrong, but because they’re right: God is unapproachable. He is, says St. Paul, an “all consuming fire.” The idea of the Incarnation would be absurd if God himself, who can do whatever he wants, didn’t do it and tell us about it himself.

Ultimately, Christmas reminds us that these sentences are just as shocking as those above:

1. “God was a man.”
2. “God ate fish.”
3. “God was a carpenter.”
4. “God was the friend of sinners.”
5. “Our actions are part of God’s plan for salvation.”

Once you’ve said all that, it’s an inch, not even a hop, to “God was a baby.” St. John, whose feast is today, is its greatest poet of Christmas: “In the beginning was the Word ... and the Word became flesh.”

Thus, our third way of Christmas: “God identifies himself with infants. Each year, we retell the stories about the great fuss made by God and man over babies, born and unborn, at Christmas: Mary is herself conceived without sin, an angel makes a pregnancy announcement to Mary, Elizabeth’s unborn baby recognizes Mary’s, and so does a star in the sky; Herod and the Magi go to great lengths to oppose and pay homage to the baby. When Catholics try to say that respect for unborn life isn’t part of our religion, they’re wildly wrong. Not only is it part of our religion, it’s the central focus of several of our biggest feasts each year.”

— Tom Hoopes

Advertisement
Advertisement

Make a Donation now!

Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.

Click here to donate

Current Issue

Important News for Register Subscribers. Click here for details.

You must login for access to articles that are marked For Subscribers Only.

If you subscribe to the print edition, register here to get a Username and Password.

Not a Subscriber? Click here to try
4 Issues FREE!

Now you can subscribe to the digital edition of the Register! Save 29% off the print edition price! Click here for details.








Click here to listen!