We
are in Madison Square Garden, a place synonymous with this city. This
is the site of important athletic, artistic and musical events
attracting people not only from this city, but from the whole world. In
this place, which represents both the variety and the common interests
of so many different people, we have listened to the words: “The people
who walked in darkness have seen a great light” (Is 9:1).
The
people who walked – caught up in their activities and routines, amid
their successes and failures, their worries and expectations – have seen
a great light. The people who walked – with all their joys and hopes,
their disappointments and regrets – have seen a great light.
In every age, the People of God are called to contemplate this light. A
light for the nations, as the elderly Simeon joyfully expressed it. A
light meant to shine on every corner of this city, on our fellow
citizens, on every part of our lives.
“The
people who walked in darkness have seen a great light”. One special
quality of God’s people is their ability to see, to contemplate, even in
“moments of darkness”, the light which Christ brings. God’s faithful
people can see, discern and contemplate his living presence in the midst
of life, in the midst of the city. Together with the prophet Isaiah, we
can say: The people who walk, breathe and live in the midst of smog,
have seen a great light, have experienced a breath of fresh air.
Living
in a big city is not always easy. A multicultural context presents many
complex challenges. Yet big cities are a reminder of the hidden riches
present in our world: in the diversity of its cultures, traditions and
historical experiences. In the variety of its languages, costumes and
cuisine. Big cities bring together all the different ways which we human
beings have discovered to express the meaning of life, wherever we may
be.
But
big cities also conceal the faces of all those people who don’t appear
to belong, or are second- class citizens. In big cities, beneath the
roar of traffic, beneath “the rapid pace of change”, so many faces pass
by unnoticed because they have no “right” to be there, no right to be
part of the city. They are the foreigners, the children who go without
schooling, those deprived of medical insurance, the homeless, the
forgotten elderly. These people stand at the edges of our great avenues,
in our streets, in deafening anonymity. They become part of an urban
landscape which is more and more taken for granted, in our eyes, and
especially in our hearts.
Knowing
that Jesus still walks our streets, that he is part of the lives of his
people, that he is involved with us in one vast history of salvation,
fills us with hope. A hope which liberates us from the forces pushing us
to isolation and lack of concern for the lives of others, for the life
of our city. A hope which frees us from empty “connections”, from
abstract analyses, or sensationalist routines. A hope which is unafraid
of involvement, which acts as a leaven wherever we happen to live and
work. A hope which makes us see, even in the midst of smog, the presence
of God as he continues to walk the streets of our city.
What
is it like, this light travelling through our streets? How do we
encounter God, who lives with us amid the smog of our cities? How do we
encounter Jesus, alive and at work in the daily life of our
multicultural cities?
The
prophet Isaiah can guide us in this process of “learning to see”. He
presents Jesus to us as “Wonderful Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace”. In this way, he introduces us
to the life of the Son, so that his life can be our life.
Wonderful
Counselor. The Gospels tell us how many people came up to Jesus to ask:
“Master, what must we do?” The first thing that Jesus does in response
is to propose, to encourage, to motivate. He keeps telling his disciples
to go, to go out. He urges them to go out and meet others where they
really are, not where we think they should be. Go out, again and again,
go out without fear, without hesitation. Go out and proclaim this joy
which is for all the people.
The
Mighty God. In Jesus, God himself became Emmanuel, God-with-us, the God
who walks alongside us, who gets involved in our lives, in our homes,
in the midst of our “pots and pans”, as Saint Teresa of Jesus liked to
say.
The
Everlasting Father. No one or anything can separate us from his Love.
Go out and proclaim, go out and show that God is in your midst as a
merciful Father who himself goes out, morning and evening, to see if his
son has returned home and, as soon as he sees him coming, runs out to
embrace him. An embrace which wants to take up, purify and elevate the
dignity of his children. A Father who, in his embrace, is “glad tidings
to the poor, healing to the afflicted, liberty to captives, comfort to
those who mourn” (Is 61:1-2).
Prince
of Peace. Go out to others and share the good news that God, our
Father, walks at our side. He frees us from anonymity, from a life of
emptiness and selfishness, and brings us to the school of encounter. He
removes us from the fray of competition and self-absorption, and he
opens before us the path of peace. That peace which is born of accepting
others, that peace which fills our hearts whenever we look upon those
in need as our brothers and sisters.
God
is living in our cities. The Church is living in our cities, and she
wants to be like yeast in the dough. She wants to relate to everyone, to
stand at everyone’s side, as she proclaims the marvels of the Wonderful
Counselor, the Mighty God, the Eternal Father, the Prince of Peace.
“The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light”. And we ourselves are witnesses of that light.
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