The observance of a special period of preparation before
the Feast of the Nativity of Christ has long been an
established part of Christian practice. In the Orthodox
Church this period is made up of the Christmas Fast and the
special days of preparation before Christmas itself, with
the week of the Holy Forefathers and the week of the Holy
Fathers. The Church services for these days of preparation
commemorate the patriarchs, the prophets and all who had
lived by faith in the Saviour who was to come and had
prophesied about Him long before His coming.
The hymns for
the Feast of the Nativity are full of the original joyful
excitement at the thought of God's appearance on earth. The
Christmas canon1 begins with a joyous
declaration, gradually swelling in volume, of the Saviour's
birth:
- "Christ is born! Glorify Him!
Christ descends from the heavens, welcome Him!
Christ is now on earth, O be jubilant!
Sing to the Lord, the whole earth,
And sing praises to Him with joy, O ye people,
For He has been exalted!" (1)
In her Christmas hymns, as in her other hymnody, the
Orthodox Church does not limit her vision to earthly
happenings alone. In these hymns she contemplates the events
of Christ's life on earth from a dual perspective.
Beyond
the birth of a child in the poverty of a squalid cave,
beyond the laying of the infant in a manger instead of a
child's crib, beyond His poor mother's anxiety and alarm
over His fate, supermundane events emerge -- events which
are outside this world's natural order:
"Today doth Bethlehem receive Him
Who sitteth with the Father for ever". (2)
This was not the first birth of the One "who lay in a
manger." First He was begotten of His Father "before all
ages" as God; moreover He was begotten of the Father alone,
without His Mother.
In Bethlehem He was born as men are
born, but in contrast to all the sons of earth He was born
of His Mother alone, without an earthly father. Having
proclaimed "Christ is born!" in the 1st Song of the
Christmas canon, the Church next calls upon the faithful to
praise
"...the Son who was born of the Father
Before all ages, and in this latter day
Was made incarnate of the Virgin
Without seed; Christ our God". (3)
In the last Song of the Christmas canon the feeling
of the human mind's powerlessness to comprehend this union
of Divine majesty and human insignificance, this glorious
mystery, is expressed even more brilliantly and
eloquently.
A dark cave had replaced the resplendent heavens;
the earthly Virgin had taken the place of the Cherubim as
the "throne" of the Lord of Glory; a little manger had
become the receptacle of the omnipresent God Who could never
be contained in space:
"I behold a strange but very glorious
mystery:
Heaven -- the cave;
The throne of the Cherubim -- the Virgin.
The manger -- the receptacle in which Christ our God,
Whom nothing can contain, is lying". (4)
But nowhere does the attitude of reverence before this
incomprehensible union of things heavenly and earthly find a
more forceful expression than in the Kontakion for Christmas
written by the greatest Greek hymn-writer, St. Romanos
Melodus. Every word in it is full of meaning and one
brilliant image follows another:
"Today the Virgin brings forth the
Supersubstantial One
And the earth offers a cave to the Unapproachable One".
Mary gave birth but remained a virgin, and gave
existence to the One who is above all that exists in the
world. And in the cave the earth provided a sanctuary for
the One whom, as a general rule, men may not even approach.
Next, the second part of this kontakion gives us two
pictures of events which unfolded simultaneously and
harmoniously on earth and in heaven. In heaven the angels
glorify God in unison with the shepherds on earth, and the
Wise Men move across the earth according to the direction
taken by the heavenly star. The meaning of all this is that
the Child whose life on earth was as yet only a few hours
old is at the same time God, who existed before time itself
and yet was born now for our salvation:
"For for our sakes, God, Who is before all the
ages, is born a little Child". (5)
What does the coming to earth of the Son of God really
mean? Above all it means that people are illumined, that
spiritual light is bestowed upon them. This idea is
continually being put forward in the Christmas hymnody of
the Orthodox Church. The Troparion for the Christmas Feast
explains the basic meaning of the Feast, there is this
direct statement:
"Thy Nativity, O Christ our God,
Has illumined the world like the Light of Wisdom".
God enlightens each of us in the way that is most
accessible and understandable to the particular person. And
when He wished to enlighten the Wise Men, whose custom it
was to observe the stars and their movements, He sent them
an unusual star which guided them to the Christ.
"... They who worshipped the stars were through
a star,
Taught to worship Thee, the Sun of Righteousness,
And to know Thee, the Day-Spring from on high".
The star of Bethlehem gave the Wise Men an opportunity to
see the rise of the Sun of Righteousness. But the light of
Christ's righteousness is not an earthly light. Its motion
was not from out of the earth towards the firmament of
heaven, but from above downwards. Shining high above the
earth, it descended thereon from the heights of heaven and
illumined the world with Divine light.
It was the Day-Spring
from on high. And all who have sat in spiritual darkness and
waited for the true light have, like the Wise Men, come to
know this extraordinary Day-Spring of the Sun of
Righteousness.
"Our Savior hath visited us from on high...
And we who were plunged in darkness and shadows
Have found the truth,
For the Lord hath been born of the Virgin". (6)
The Church addresses this prayer of praise and
thanksgiving to the Infant born in Bethlehem:
"Glory and praise to the One born on earth Who
hath divinized earthly human nature." (7)
The gifts of grace in the Holy Mysteries which strengthen
enfeebled humanity, cure men, and regenerate them to a
Godlike life, were imparted by Christ in the final,
culminating days of His earthly mission and are linked to
His death on the cross and Resurrection. But these last
things were prepared for by Christ's entire earthly life
from Bethlehem to Golgotha.
The Coming of Christ was the
beginning of the salvation of mankind. And the Orthodox
Church sings of Christ's Nativity as the morning of men's
salvation, as the dawn after a long and anxious night -- the
dawn with which the new, shining day in the life of the
human race has already started.
The triumphal hymn of the Feast of Christmas is the
"Gloria" sung by the angels to the Shepherds, to herald the
coming of the Messiah.
"Glory in the Highest to God, and on earth
peace, goodwill toward men" (Luke 2:14).
It is just as characteristic of Christmas as the hymn
"Christ is Risen from the dead" is of Pascha (Easter).
According to the text of the second chapter of St. Luke's
Gospel the "good tidings" proclaimed by the angels was not a
repetition from the heavens of things that were well-known
before. The innumerable heavenly host which appeared
suddenly in the wake of the Angel who had stood before the
shepherds of Bethlehem confirmed his "tidings of great joy,
which shall be to all people." (Luke2:10).
They also sang of
the new, marvelous act of God's goodwill, His sending the Savior to this earth. This was the meaning of their good
news: "Glory to God in the Highest; salvation had come to a
sinful earth with the birth of the Christ Child, the
loving-kindness of God had descended upon men."
The extraordinary and wondrous Birth from a Pure Virgin
is one of the fundamental themes of Christmas hymnody; at
the same time the Mother of God, whom the Orthodox Church
venerates with such pious devotion, is given in this hymnody
a special place of honor. A number of examples from sacred
history are used in these hymns in order to glorify Her
perpetual virginity, Her conception by the Holy Spirit and
Her "supermundane act of giving birth to God." The most
important of these are the prophet Jonah's sojourn in the
belly of the sea-monster and the Babylonian fiery furnace."
The fiery furnace of Babylon did not burn the young men, who
were covered with its flames, likewise:
"The fire of the Godhead scorched not the
Virgin,
When He entered into Her womb". (8)
Despite the birth Mary was preserved a virgin like the
Burning Bush on Mt. Sinai which could not be consumed but
remained green in the flames. (9) The Church sings praises
to Mary alike for Her virginity and Her touching maternal
love. Her tenderness as a mother toward Her wondrous Infant
Child, whom as Her son She held in Her arms at Her breast,
but before whom She bowed in worship as before "the Son of
the Highest," is expressed in the following lullaby which
Church hymnody assigns to the lips of the Lady Most Pure,
calling upon us men "to magnify Her without ceasing":
"O my child, child of sweetness,
How is it that I hold Thee, Almighty?
And how that I feed Thee,
Who givest bread to all men?
How is it that I swaddle Thee,
Who with the clouds encompasseth the whole earth". (10)
She who "knew not a man" and yet gave birth to the
Incorporeal God is for the Orthodox Church at once mother
and virgin.
"Magnify, O my soul, the Virgin Most Pure,
The God-Bearer, who is more honorable
And more glorious than the heavenly hosts". (11)
The best and holiest of earthly creatures, exalted above
the angels, the God-Bearer is the pride of this earth, a
fitting gift from mankind to the Creator and Savior:
"What shall we present unto Thee, O Christ,
For Thy coming to earth for us men?
Each of Thy creatures brings Thee a thank-offering:
The angels -- singing; the heavens -- a star;
The Wise Men -- treasures; the shepherds devotion;
The earth -- a cave; the desert -- a manger;
But we offer Thee the Virgin-Mother. O Eternal God, have
mercy upon us". (12)
In rendering "maternal-virginal glory" to Mary
Full-of-Grace the Church venerates Mary because, through Her
unspotted purity, She was made worthy to bring the Savior
into this world and Herself became the door of salvation and
deliverance from the curse of sin which had weighed upon
men:
"Magnify, O my soul, Her who hath delivered us
from the curse". (13)
Paradise is now once again opened to us. If sin entered
the world through Eve, it is also through the New Eve (the
Mother of our God) that victory over sin has come into the
world.
The Church likewise summons us:
"Let us glorify in song the true God-Bearer
Through who sinners have been reconciled with God". (14)
The Mother of God represents the point at which the
Godhead came into direct contact with Old Testament
humanity. She is in this respect the living symbol of all
the triumphant joy of Christmas, which is the celebration of
God's reestablished union with men. God, who had driven our
forefathers out of Paradise, had set them far apart from
Himself. Now, with the birth of Christ, He has again come to
men, just as He once came to them in Paradise. It has become
possible again for men to be in communion with God. The
barrier between, Heaven and earth has fallen and so we sing
along with Adam and Eve:
"The wall of partition is destroyed,
The flaming sword is dropped,
The Cherubim withdraw from the Tree of Life,
And I partake of the fruits of Paradise,
Whence, for my disobedience, I was driven forth". (15)
The underlying feeling of the Christmas Feast is one of
peace. This is a result of the reconciliation and new unity
between heaven and earth:
"Heaven and earth now are united through
Christ's Birth!
Now is God come down to earth
And man arisen to the heaven". (16)
This unity is the source of general exultation -- a note
which resounds vigorously in the Christmas hymnody:
"Today Christ is born in Bethlehem of the
Virgin.
Today He who is without a beginning begins,
And the Word is made flesh.
The powers of Heaven rejoice,
The earth and her people are jubilant;
The Wise Men bring gifts to the Lord,
The shepherds marvel at the One who is born;
And we sing without ceasing:
"Glory to God in the Highest, And on earth peace, (God's)
good will toward men". (17)
There is one solitary note, however, which breaks into
these hymns of general rejoicing like a forewarning of
future lamentations. The Wise Men -- according to the
Christmas Eve stichera -- came to worship the Incarnate God
and devotedly offered Him their gifts -- gold, because He is
the King of ages; frankincense, because He is the God of all
men; but then they also brought Him myrrh, with which the
Jews were accustomed to anoint their dead, because He was to
"lie three days in death."
The heart of the Mother of God must have been seized by a
premonition of that which awaited the innocent Child who was
sleeping peacefully in the manger. This minor note of
sadness is drowned, however, in the general chorus of
exultation. Heaven and earth rejoice together and this does
not mean simply that the angels' singing harmonizes with
that of the shepherds.
The Church does not even view
so-called "inanimate nature" as indifferent to the higher
world. The Creator has willed the existence of a special
link between them. At an earlier time man's sinfulness had
brought general disorder into nature, but now all nature
leaps for joy, rejoicing at the overcoming of this sin:
"Today the whole creation rejoices and is
jubilant,
For Christ is born of the Virgin". (18)
In the Christmas hymnody the Star is not merely the voice
which made known to the world the Savior's appearance. It
is also a sign, a symbol of this appearance, just as the
Cross is the symbol of victory over the forces of darkness.
Then, too, the Star is a symbol of Christ Himself, "the Star
which rose from Jacob". (19)
For more than 20 centuries Christ has been shining down
upon mankind as a guiding star, not as a myth or mirage, but
as the living God, who has been on earth and spoken with
men. There have been many subsequent attempts to obscure the
pure silver light of the Star of Bethlehem in human
consciousness. But the centuries of the Christian era have
not passed by in vain. And if the Christmas hymns continue
to resound each year in churches scattered all over the
world and to be sung as they were sung many hundreds of
years ago by the grandfathers and forbears of the present
generation, this means that the light shed by the Christmas
Star is deeply rooted in human hearts and shines on in them
undimmed.