The Shepherds, in receiving the Angel’s tidings, were a figure of watchful priests
by VP
Posted on Monday December 25, 2023 at 12:00AM in Meditations
I. They Were The First To Be Called.
II. They Were The First To Be Enlightened.
III. They Were The First To Be Comforted.
"And there were in the same country, shepherds watching, and
keeping the night-watches over their flock. And behold an Angel of the
Lord stood by them, and the brightness of God shone round about them,
and they feared with a great fear: and the Angel said to them: Fear
not."—St. Luke ii. 8, 9, 10.
1. And behold an Angel of the Lord stood by them.
The shepherds who kept watch over their flocks by night, were a figure
of Priests, who, as St. Ambrose says, in the night time of this present
life sleep not, but watch in order to guard the souls committed to their
care from the assaults of their spiritual enemies; and it was fitting,
as St. Ambrose says further, "that shepherds should be found watching,
and that they should be the first to receive the Heavenly Tidings, that
He, the Good Shepherd, the Pattern of Shepherds, was born." Therefore
all Priests who teach or direct souls, should remember that they
especially are called upon to adore the new-born Child. Venerable Bede
says, "Mystically speaking, they signify the pastors of the flock,
teachers also, and rulers of faithful souls." Let us then be the first
at the manger; let us contemplate this great mystery; let us be the
first to attract the glance of the Divine Child, and let us melt into
tears of tenderness, love, and compunction. He says to us: Come, make
haste, and buy of Me without price, at the expense of only asking, the
wine of strength, and the milk of consolation: "Come, make haste, buy
wine and milk . . . without any price" (Isa. lv. 1). "Come, eat My
Flesh, and drink My Blood; this is your food, this is your drink, and
therefore am I born in Bethlehem," that is, in " the House of Bread."
"Come eat My bread, and drink the wine which I have mingled for you"
(Prov. ix. 5). Come, you who are afflicted with misery, oppressed by the
weight of your ministry. "Come to me all you that labor, and are
burdened, and I will refresh you" (St. Matt. xi. 28). Let us go, then;
"let us go over to Bethlehem," let us imitate the shepherds, who came
with haste, and let us be the first to offer tribute to the new-born
Monarch; for the princes of the people ought to go before the people in
their acts of homage.
2. And the brightness of God shone round about them.
The light which shone round about the shepherds is an image of the
divine light with which worthy ministers of God are invested; and, as
St. Gregory says, the greater their vigilance for the salvation of
souls, the greater will be the light of grace which enlightens them; and
the more solicitous they are for the welfare of their flocks, so much
the more will they merit to understand divine truths better than others.
God, who predestined us to the priesthood, Who enlightened us with His
heavenly light from our earliest years, and gave us a clearer knowledge
of His Son than He gave to the rest of the Faithful: "He hath shined in
our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God, in
the face of Christ Jesus" (2 Cor. iv. 6). When we studied Dogmatic
Theology, we learned the treatise, De Incarnatione, in order that the
sublime teaching of this great mystery might be impressed on our minds;
we have often instructed the ignorant in it, we have confuted
unbelievers, we have defended its truth. One step more remains for us to
take, and it is this; to nourish our minds and hearts with the Faith
and sound doctrine, by imploring the descent of the divine light into
our souls, and so shall we be "good ministers of Christ Jesus" (1 Tim.
iv. 6). Therefore let us hasten to adore the Divine Child; let us study
Him, the pattern of humility, patience, and every virtue; let us say to
Him, with St. Bernard: "The meaner Thou makest Thyself for me, the
dearer Thou art to me." Let Thy grace be made manifest in us, bestow on
us abundance of light, for Thou hast "destroyed death, and brought to
light life and incorruption by the gospel" (2 Tim. i. 10).
3. Fear not. The Angel took away all fear from
the hearts of the shepherds; much more will Jesus Christ take away all
fear from the hearts of His Priests. He says to them now from the
manger, by His infant cries, what, on another occasion, He said in
words: "It is I, fear ye not" (St. Matt. xiv. 27). I am Who am, and you
are My ministers; whom should you fear? I am come, not to give you the
spirit of fear, which was in the Old Law, but the spirit "of power, and
of love, and of sobriety" (2 Tim. i. 7). Preach My Gospel without shame,
without weariness, without diffidence: "be not ashamed of the testimony
of Our Lord . . . but labor with the gospel according to the power of
God" (2 Tim. i. 8). Three times to-day you will offer the mighty
Sacrifice which is the source of all strength, which, as Holy Church
declares, was the support of the martyrs amidst their torments; three
times to-day you will eat My Flesh and drink My Blood, so that in the
strength of that food you may walk, even to "the Mount of God" (3 Kings
xix. 8). And we will answer Him: Jesus, be Thou my strength: come to me,
come to my soul, live in me; or, with St. Ambrose, we may say, For
otherwise what would Thy coming into the world profit me 1
"Say
to my soul, I am thy Salvation."—Ps. xxxiv. 3. "The Lord is my
strength, and my praise, and He is become my salvation." —ha. xii. 2.