|
Christmas Novena
Hail, and blessed be
the hour and moment
At which the Son of
God was born
Of a most pure
Virgin
At a stable at
midnight in
Bethlehem
In the piercing cold
At that hour
vouchsafe, I beseech
Thee,
To hear my prayers
and grant my desires
(mention request
here).
Through Jesus Christ
and His most Blessed
Mother.
Day
One
God's Love
Revealed In His
Becoming Man.
Thought:
Because our
first parent Adam
had rebelled against
God, he was driven
out of paradise and
brought on himself
and all his
descendants the
punishment of
eternal death. But
the son of God,
seeing man thus lost
and wishing to save
him from death,
offered to take upon
Himself our human
nature and to suffer
death Himself,
condemned as a
criminal on a cross.
"But, My Son," we
may imagine the
eternal Father
saying to Him,
"think of what a
life of humiliations
and sufferings Thou
wilt have to lead on
earth. Thou wilt
have to be born in a
cold stable and laid
in a manger, the
feeding trough of
beasts.
While still an
infant, Thou wilt
have to flee into
Egypt, to escape the
hands of Herod.
After Thy return
from Egypt, Thou
wilt have to live
and work in a shop
as a lowly servant,
poor and despised.
And finally, worn
out with sufferings,
Thou wilt have to
give up Thy life on
a cross, put to
shame and abandoned
by everyone."
"Father," replies
the Son, "all this
matters not. I will
gladly bear it all,
if only I can save
man."
What should we say
if a prince, out of
compassion for a
dead worm, were to
choose to become a
worm himself and
give his own life
blood in order to
restore the worm to
life? But the
eternal Word has
done infinitely more
than this for us.
Though He is the
sovereign Lord of
the world, He chose
to become like us,
who are immeasurably
more beneath Him
than a worm is
beneath a prince,
and He was willing
to die for us, in
order to win back
for us the life of
divine grace that we
had lost by sin.
When He saw that all
the other gifts
which He had
bestowed on us were
not sufficient to
induce us to pray
His love with love,
He became man
Himself and gave
Himself all to us.
"The Word was made
flesh and dwelt
among us;" "He loved
us anddelivered
Himself up for us."
Prayer:
O Great Son of God,
Thou hast become man
in order to make
Thyself loved by
men. But where is
the love that men
give Thee in
return?
Thou hast given Thy
life blood to save
our souls. Why then
are we so
unappreciative that,
instead of repaying
Thee with love, we
spurn Thee with
ingratitude? And I,
Lord, I myself more
than others have
thus ill treated
Thee.
But Thy Passion is
my hope. For the
sake of that love
which led Thee to
take upon Thyself
human nature and to
die for me on the
cross, forgive me
all the offenses I
have committed
against Thee.
I love Thee, O Word
Incarnate; I love
Thee, O infinite
goodness. Out of
love for Thee, that
I could die of grief
for these offenses.
Give me, O Jesus,
Thy love. Let me no
longer live in
ungrateful
forgetfulness of the
love Thou bearest
me. I
wish to love Thee
always. Grant that I
may always preserve
in this holy desire.
O Mary, Mother of
God and my Mother,
pray for me that thy
Son may give me the
grace to love Him
always, unto death.
Amen.
|
Second Day
God's Love
Revealed In His
Being Born An
Infant.
Thought:
When the
Son of God became
man for our sake, He
could have come on
earth as an adult
man from the first
moment of of His
human existence, as
Adam did when he was
created. But since
the sight of little
children draws us
with an especial
attraction to love
them, Jesus chose to
make His first
appearance on earth
as a little infant,
and indeed as the
poorest and most
pitiful infant that
was ever born. "God
wished to be born as
a little babe,"
wrote Saint Peter
Chrysologus, "in
order that He might
teach us to love and
not to fear Him."
The prophet Isaias
had long before
foretold that the
Son of God was to be
born as an infant
and thus give
Himself to us on
account of the love
He bore us: "A child
is born to us, a son
is given to us."
My Jesus, supreme
and true God! What
has drawn Thee from
heaven to be born in
a cold stable, if
not the love which
Thou bearest us men?
What has allured
Thee from the bosom
of Thy Father, to
place Thee in a hard
manger? What has
brought Thee from
Thy throne above the
stars, to lay Thee
down on a little
straw? What has led
Thee from the midst
of the nine choirs
of angels, to set
Thee between two
animals? Thou, who
inflamest the
seraphim with holy
fire, art now
shivering with cold
in this stable!
Thou, who settest
the stars in the sky
in motion, canst not
now move unless
others carry Thee in
their arms! Thou,
who givest men and
beasts their food,
has need now a
little milk to
sustain Thy life!
Thou, who art the
joy of heaven, dost
now whimper and cry
in suffering! Tell
me, who has reduced
Thee to such misery?
"Love has done it,"
says Saint Bernard.
The love which Thou
bearest us men has
brought all this on
Thee.
Prayer:
O Dearest Infant!
Tell me, what hast
Thou come on earth
to do? Tell me, whom
art Thou seeking?
Yes, I already know.
Thou has come to die
for me, in order to
save me from hell.
Thou hast come to
seek me, the lost
sheep, so that,
instead of fleeing
from Thee any more,
I may rest in Thy
loving arms.
Ah my Jesus, my
treasure, my life,
my love and my all!
Whom will I love, if
not Thee? Where can
I find a father, a
friend, a spouse
more loving and
lovable than Thou
art?
I love Thee, my dear
God; I love Thee, my
only good. I regret
the many years when
I have not loved
Thee, but rather
spurned and offended
Thee. Forgive me, O
my beloved Redeemer;
for I am sorry that
I have thus treated
Thee, and I regret
it with all my
heart. Pardon me,
and give me the
grace never more to
withdraw from Thee,
but constantly to
love Thee in all the
years that still lie
before me in this
life. My love, I
give myself entirely
to Thee; accept me,
and do not reject me
as I deserve.
O Mary, thou art my
advocate. By thy
prayers thou dost
obtain whatever thou
wilt from thy Son.
Pray Him then to
forgive me, and to
grant me holy
perseverance until
death. Amen.
|
Third
Day
The Life Of
Poverty Which Jesus
Led From His Birth.
Thought:
God so ordained
that, at the time
when His Son was to
be born on this
earth, the Roman
emperor should issue
a decree ordering
everyone to go to
the place of his
origin and there be
registered in the
census. Thus it came
about that, in
obedience to this
decree, Joseph went
to Bethlehem
together with his
virgin wife when she
was soon to have her
Child.
Finding no lodging
either in the poor
inn or in the other
houses of the town,
they were forced to
spend the night in a
cave that was used
as a stable for
animals, and it was
here that Mary gave
birth to the King of
heaven. If Jesus had
been born in
Nazareth, He would
also, it is true,
have been born in
poverty; but there
He would at least
have had a dry room,
a little fire, warm
clothes and a more
comfortable cradle.
Yet He chose to be
born in this cold,
damp cave, and to
have a manger for a
cradle, with prickly
straw for a
mattress, in order
that He might suffer
for us.
Let us enter in
spirit into this
cave of Bethlehem,
but let us enter in
a spirit of lively
faith. If we go
there without faith,
we shall see nothing
but a poor infant,
and the sight of
this lovely child
shivering and crying
on his rough bed of
straw may indeed
move us to pity. But
if we enter with
faith and consider
that this Babe is
the very Son, God,
who for love of us
has come down on
earth and suffers so
much to pay the
penalty for our
sins, how can we
help thanking and
loving Him in
return?
Prayer:
O Dear
Infant Jesus, how
could I be so
ungrateful and
offend Thee so
often, if I realized
how much Thou hast
suffered for me? But
these tears which
Thou sheddest, this
poverty which Thou
embracest for love
of me, make me hope
for the pardon of
all the offenses I
have committed
against Thee.
My Jesus, I am sorry
for having so often
turned my back on
Thee. But now I love
Thee above all else.
"My God and my
all!"
From now on Thou, O
my God, shalt be my
only treasure and my
only good. With
Saint Ignatius of
Loyola I will say to
Thee, "Give me the
grace to love Thee;
that is enough for
me." I long for
nothing else; I want
nothing else. Thou
alone art enough for
me, my Jesus, my
life, my love.
O Mary, my Mother,
obtain for me the
grace that I may
always love Jesus
and always be loved
by Him. Amen.
|
Fourth Day
The Life Of
Humiliation Which
Jesus Led From His
Birth.
Thought:
The Sign which the
angel gave the
shepherds to help
them find the
newborn Savior,
points to His
lowliness: "This
shall be a sign to
you: you will find
an infant wrapped in
swaddling clothes
and lying in a
manger." No other
newborn baby who was
wrapped in poor
swaddling clothes
and lying in a
manger, a feeding
trough for animals,
could be found
anywhere else but in
a stable. Thus in
lowliness the King
of heaven, the Son
of God, chose to be
born, because He
came to destroy the
pride that had been
the cause of man's
ruin.
The prophets had
already foretold
that our Redeemer
was to be treated as
the vilest of men on
earth and that He
was to be
overwhelmed with
insults. How much
contempt had not
Jesus indeed to
suffer from men! He
was called a
drunkard, a
trickster, a
blasphemer and a
heretic. What
ignominies He
endured in His
Passion! His own
disciples abandoned
Him; one of them
sold Him for thirty
pieces of silver,
and another denied
having ever known
Him. He was led in
bonds through the
streets like a
criminal; He was
scourged like a
slave, ridiculed as
a fool, crowned with
thorns as a mock
king, buffeted and
spit upon, and
finally left to die,
hanging on a cross
between two thieves,
as the worst
criminal in the
world. "The noblest
of all," says Saint
Bernard, "is treated
as the vilest of
all." But the Saint
adds, "The viler
Thou are treated,
the dearer Thou art
to me." The more I
see Thee, my Jesus,
despised and put to
shame, the more dear
and worthy of my
love dost Thou
become to me.
Prayer:
O Dearest Savior,
Thou hast embraced
so many outrages for
love of me, yet I
have not been able
to bear one word of
insult without at
once being filled
with resentful
thought, I who have
so often deserved to
be trodden under
foot by the demons
in hell! I am
ashamed to appear
before Thee, sinful
and proud as I am.
Yet do not drive me
from Thy presence, O
Lord, even though
that is what I
deserve. Thou hast
said that Thou wilt
not spurn a contrite
and humbled heart. I
am sorry for the
offenses I have
committed against
Thee. Forgive me, O
Jesus. I will not
offend Thee again.
For love of me Thou
hast borne so many
injuries; for love
of Thee I will bear
all the injuries
that are done to me.
I love Thee, Jesus,
who was despised for
love of me. I love
Thee above every
other good. Give me
the grace to love
Thee always and to
bear every insult
for love of Thee.
O Mary, recommend me
to Thy Son; pray to
Jesus for me.
Amen.
|
Fifth
Day
The Life Of
Sorrow Which Jesus
Led From His Birth.
Thought:
Jesus Christ could
have saved mankind
without suffering
and dying. Yet, in
order to prove to us
how much He loved
us, He chose for
Himself a life full
of tribulations.
Therefore the
prophet Isaias
called Him "a man of
sorrows," His whole
life was filled with
suffering. His
Passion began, not
merely a few hours
before His death,
but from the the
first moment of His
birth. He was born
in a stable where
everything served to
torment Him. His
sense of sight was
hurt by seeing
nothing but the
rough, black walls
of the cave; His
sense of smell was
hurt by the stench
of the dung from the
beasts in the
stable; His sense of
touch was hurt by
the prickling straw
on which He lay.
Shortly after His
birth He was forced
to flee into Egypt,
where He spent
several years of His
childhood in poverty
and misery. His
boyhood and early
manhood in Nazareth
were passed in hard
work and obscurity.
And finally, in
Jerusalem, He died
on a cross,
exhausted with pain
and anguish.
Thus, then, was the
life of Jesus but
one unbroken series
of sufferings, which
were doubly painful
because He had ever
before His eyes all
the sufferings He
would have to endure
till His death. Yet,
since our Lord had
voluntarily chosen
to bear these
tribulations for our
sake, they did not
afflict Him as much
as did the sight of
our sins, by which
we have so
ungratefully repaid
Him for His love
towards us. When the
confessor of Saint
Margaret of Cortona
saw that she never
seemed satisfied
with all the tears
she had already shed
for her past sins,
he said to her,
"Margaret, stop
crying and cease
your lamenting, for
God has surely
forgiven you your
offenses against
Him." But she
replied, "Father,
how can I cease to
weep, since I know
that my sins kept my
Lord Jesus in pain
and suffering during
all His life?"
Prayer:
O Jesus, my sweet
Love! I too have
kept Thee suffering
through all Thy
life. Tell me, then,
what I must do in
order to win Thy
forgiveness. I am
ready to do all Thou
askest of me. I am
sorry, O sovereign
Good, for all the
offenses I have
committed against
Thee. I love Thee
more than myself, or
a least I feel a
great desire to love
Thee. Since it is
Thou who hast given
me this desire, do
Thou also give me
the strength to love
Thee exceedingly.
It is only right
that I, who have
offended Thee so
much, should love
Thee very much.
Always remind me of
the love Thou hast
borne me, in order
that my soul may
ever burn with love
of Thee and long to
please Thee alone. O
God of love, I, who
was once a slave of
hell, now give
myself all to Thee.
Graciously accept me
and bind me to Thee
with the bonds of
Thy love. My Jesus,
from this day and
forever in loving
Thee will I live,
and in loving Thee
will I die.
O Mary, my Mother
and my hope, help me
to love Thy dear God
and mine. This is
the only favor I ask
of thee, and through
thee I hope to
receive it. Amen.
|
Sixth Day
God's Mercy
Revealed In His
Coming Down From
Heaven To Save Us.
Thought:
Saint Paul says,
"The goodness and
kindness of God, our
Savior, has
appeared." When the
Son of God made Man
appear on earth,
then was it seen how
great is God's
goodness towards us.
Saint Bernard says
that first God's
power was manifested
in the creation of
the world and His
wisdom in its
conservation, but
His merciful
goodness was
especially
manifested later in
His taking human
nature on Himself,
in order to save
fallen mankind by
His sufferings and
death. For what
greater proof of His
kindness towards us
could the Son of God
show us than in
taking on Himself
the punishment we
had deserved?
See Him as a weak,
newborn infant,
wrapped in swaddling
clothes and lying in
a manger. Unable to
move or feed
Himself, He has need
of Mary to give Him
a little milk to
sustain His life.
Or see Him again in
Pilate's courtyard,
tied with fast bonds
to a column and
there scourged from
head to foot. Behold
Him on the way to
Calvary, falling
down from weakness
under weight of the
cross that He must
carry. Finally
behold Him nailed to
this tree of shame,
on which He breathes
His last amid pain
and anguish. Because
Jesus Christ wished
that His love for us
should win all the
love of our hearts
for Himself, He
would not send an
angel to redeem us,
but chose to come
Himself, to save us
by His Passion and
death. Had an angel
been our redeemer,
men would have had
to divide their
hearts in loving God
as their Creator and
an angel as their
redeemer; but God,
who desires men's
whole hearts, as He
was already their
Creator, wished also
to be their
Redeemer.
Prayer:
O my Dear Redeemer!
Where should I be
now, if Thou hadst
not borne with me so
patiently, but hadst
called me from life
while I was in the
state of sin? Since
Thou hast waited for
me till now, forgive
me quickly, O my
Jesus, before death
finds me still
guilty of so many
offenses that I have
committed against
Thee. I am so sorry
for having vilely
despised Thee, my
sovereign Good, that
I could die of
grief. But Thou
canst not abandon a
soul that seeks
Thee.
If hitherto I have
forsaken Thee, I now
seek Thee and love
Thee. Yes, my God, I
love Thee above all
else; I love Thee
more than myself.
Help me, Lord, to
love Thee always
during the rest of
my life. Nothing
else do I seek of
Thee. But this I beg
of Thee, this I hope
to receive from
Thee.
Mary, my hope, do
thou pray for me. If
thou prayest for me,
I am sure of grace.
Amen.
|
Seventh Day
Flight Of The Child
Jesus Into Egypt.
Thought:
Although the Son of
God came from heaven
to save men,
scarcely was He born
when men began to
persecute Him to
death. Herod,
fearing that this
Child would deprive
Him of his kingdom,
seeks to destroy His
life. But St. Joseph
is warned by an
angel in a dream to
take the Infant and
His Mother and flee
into Egypt. Joseph
obeys at once, and
tells Mary about it.
He takes the few
tools of his trade,
that he may use them
to gain a livelihood
in Egypt for himself
and his poor family.
Mary wraps up a
small bundle of
clothes for the use
of her little Son,
and then, going to
the crib, she says
with tears in her
eyes to her sleeping
Child, "O my Son and
my God! Thou hast
come from heaven to
save men; but hardly
art Thou born when
they seek to take
Thy life." Lifting
Him meanwhile in her
arms and continuing
to weep, she sets
out that same night
with Joseph on the
road to Egypt.
Let us consider how
much these holy
wanderers must have
suffered in making
so long a journey,
deprived of every
comfort. The divine
Child was not yet
able to walk, and so
Mary and Joseph had
to take turns in
carrying Him in
their arms. During
their journey
through the desert
towards Egypt they
had to spend several
nights in the open
air, with the bare
ground for their
bed. The cold makes
the Infant cry, and
Mary and Joseph weep
in pity for Him. And
who would not weep
at thus seeing the
Son of God poor and
persecuted, a
fugitive on earth,
that he might not be
killed by His
enemies!
Prayer:
Dear Infant Jesus,
crying so bitterly!
Well hast Thou
reason to weep in
seeing Thyself
persecuted by men
whom Thou lovest so
much. I, too, O God,
have once persecuted
Thee by my sins. But
Thou knowest that
now I love Thee more
than myself, and
that nothing pains
me more than the
thought that I have
so often spurned
Thee, my sovereign
Good.
Forgive me, O Jesus,
and let me bear Thee
with me in my heart
n all the rest of
the journey that I
have still to make
through life, so
that together with
Thee I may enter
into eternity. So
often have I driven
Thee from my soul by
my sins. But now I
love Thee above all
things, and I regret
above other
misfortunes that I
have offended Thee.
I wish to leave Thee
no more, my beloved
Lord. But do Thou
give me the strength
to resist
temptations. Never
permit me to be
separated from Thee
again. Let me rather
die than ever again
lose Thy good grace.
O Mary, my hope,
make me always live
in God's love and
then die in loving
Him. Amen.
|
Eighth Day
The Life Of The
Child Jesus In Egypt
And In Nazareth.
Thought:
Our Blessed Redeemer
spent the first part
of His childhood in
Egypt, leading there
for several years a
life of poverty and
humiliation. In that
land Joseph and Mary
were foreigners and
strangers, having
there neither
relatives nor
friends. Only with
difficulty could
they earn their
daily bread by the
labor of their
hands. Their home
was poor, their bed
was poor, their food
was poor. Here Mary
weaned Jesus;
dipping a piece of
bread in water, she
would put it in the
sacred mouth of her
Son. Here she made
His first little
garments and clothed
Him with them. Here
the Child Jesus took
His first steps,
stumbling and
falling as other
children first do.
Here too He spoke
His first words, but
stammeringly. O
wonder of wonders!
To what has not God
lowered Himself for
love of us! A God
stumbling and
falling as He walks!
A God stammering in
His speech!
Not unlike this was
the poor and humble
life that Jesus led
in Nazareth after
His return from
Egypt. There, until
He was thirty years
old, He lived as a
simple servant or
workman in a
carpenter shop,
taking orders form
Joseph and Mary.
"And He was subject
to them." Jesus went
to fetch the water;
He opened and closed
the shop; He swept
the house, gathered
the fragments of
wood for the fire,
and toiled all day
long, helping Joseph
in his work. Yet who
is this? God
Himself, serving as
a apprentice! The
omnipotent God, who
with less than a
flick of His finger
created the whole
universe, here
sweating at the task
of planing a piece
of work! Should not
the mere thought of
this move us to love
Him?
Prayer:
O Jesus, my Savior!
When I consider how,
for love of me, Thou
didst spend thirty
years of Thy life
hidden and unknown
in a poor workshop,
how can I desire the
pleasures and honors
and riches of the
world? Gladly do I
renounce all these
things, since I wish
to be Thy companion
on this earth, poor
as Thou wast,
mortified and humble
as Thou wast, so
that I may hope to
be able one day to
enjoy Thy
companionship in
heaven. What are all
the treasures and
kingdoms of this
world? Thou, O
Jesus, art my only
treasure, my only
Good!
I keenly regret the
many times in the
past when I spurned
Thy friendship in
order to satisfy my
foolish whims. I am
sorry for them with
all my heart. For
the future I would
rather lose my life
a thousand times
than lose Thy grace
by sin. I wish never
to offend Thee
again, but always to
love Thee. Help me
to remain faithful
to Thee until
death.
O Mary, thou art the
refuge of sinners,
thou art my hope.
Amen.
|
Ninth
Day
The Birth Of
Jesus In The Stable
Of Bethlehem.
Thought:
When the edict was
issued by the
emperor of Rome that
everyone should go
to his own city to
be enrolled, Joseph
and Mary went to be
enrolled in
Bethlehem. How much
the Holy Virgin must
have suffered on
this journey of four
days, over
mountainous road and
in the wintertime,
with its cold rain
and wind! When they
arrived in
Bethlehem, the time
of Mary's delivery
was near. Joseph,
therefore, sought
some lodging where
she might give birth
to her Child. But
because they were so
poor, they were
driven away from the
houses and even from
the public inn,
where other poor
people had found
shelter.
So in that night
they went a short
way out of the town
and there found a
cave that was used
as a stable, and
here Mary entered.
But Joseph said to
his virgin wife,
"Mary, how can you
spend the night in
this cold,
damp cave and here
give birth to your
Child?" Mary however
replied, "Dear
Joseph, this cave is
the royal palace in
which the King of
kings, the Son of
God, wishes to be
born."
When the hour of her
delivery had
arrived, the holy
Virgin, as she knelt
in prayer, all at
once saw the cave
illumined with a
dazzling light. She
lowered her eyes to
the ground and there
saw before her the
Son of God now born
on earth, a poor
little Babe, crying
and shivering in the
cold. Adoring Him as
her God, she took
Him to her breast
and fondled Him.
Then she wrapped Him
in swaddling clothes
and lad Him on the
straw of the manger
that stood in the
cave. Thus did the
Son of God choose to
be born among us to
prove His infinite
love for us.
Prayer:
O Adorable Infant
Jesus! I should not
have the boldness to
cast myself at Thy
feet, if I did not
know that Thou
Thyself invitest me
to draw near Thee.
It is I who by my
sins have made Thee
shed so many tears
in the stable of
Bethlehem. But since
Thou hast come on
earth to pardon
repentant sinners,
forgive me also, now
that I am heartily
sorry for having
spurned Thee, my
Savior and my God,
who art so good and
who hast loved me so
much.
In this night, in
which Thou bestowest
great graces on so
many souls, grant
Thy heavenly
consolation to this
poor soul of mine
also. All that I ask
of Thee is the grace
to love Thee always,
from this day
forward, with all my
heart. Set me all on
fire with Thy holy
love. I love Thee, O
my God, who hast
become a Babe for
love of me. Never
let me cease from
loving Thee ever
more.
O Mary, Mother of
Jesus and my Mother,
thou canst obtain
everything from thy
Son by thy prayers.
This is the only
favor I ask of Thee.
Do thou pray to
Jesus for me. Amen.
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You may also wish to visit these sites:
•
The Vatican
•
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
•
The Diocese of Cleveland
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