FEAST OF THE HOLY CHILD JESUS (SANTO NIÑO) B
NOT YOUR HARMLESS KID
This past Christmas
season, our eyes feasted on the image of the Baby Jesus. It is so
heartwarming to behold this tiny figure on our Nativity display,
transporting our minds to the cold, dark cave of Bethlehem. The
infant sleeps so peacefully, contentedly, trustingly and just so
sweetly in the secure presence of Mary and Joseph. Today in the
Philippines, before we lunge into ordinary time again, we gaze on the
image of the Holy Child Jesus, no longer the infant but a bit bigger,
an image so dear to Filipinos everywhere.
Our devotion overflows
with sentimentality. No Filipino home altar is without its Child
Jesus statue or picture. The Sto. Nino is part of the family, a
resident in our home, a member of the brood. But many times, devotion
to the Holy Child has a domesticating effect. We treat Jesus the
whole year as a little child. We pray to him condescendingly, we
imprison him in his cute clothes and ornaments and candy offerings.
We refust to let him grow up and become the God he was meant to be.
But the Child Jesus is
not the symbol of a harmless and safe God. Even as a child, Jesus was
out to make trouble! Even Mary's life as a mother was totally
disturbed by the actions of her Son. Mary's first recorded words to
her Son (who was lost and found in the Temple) were words of pain and
hurt: Son, why have you done this to us? (How many mothers and
fathers ask the same agonizing question today to their children?) And
Jesus' first words addressed to his mother Mary seemed indifferent,
if not brutal: Why are you looking for me? Don't you know I have to
be in my Father's house? (Ouch! Was that rejection or not?)
This episode does not
mean that Jesus was a problem child of Mary and that Jesus has no
regard for his loving mother and legal father. Rather, this was a
signal that Jesus was growing up, faster than we want to, and that he
was making himself ready to turn the world on its head. He did not
only enter Mary's womb or his Nazareth home. He is now also entering
into human history and transforming it by his love and his challenge.
Mary and Joseph did not
rebuke Jesus. They welcomed his words and respected the actions that
followed them. This Child was destined to expand his spiritual
family, to cause a ruckus among the religious and political leaders,
to cultivate friendships with the poor, the forgotten and the
rejected, and to die on the cross for the salvation of the world. The
small world of Mary and Joseph will be exploded.
Standing before the
beloved image of the Santo Nino, our Christ-Child, let us ask him to
destroy the bubble of our small world, demolish the walls of our
boundaries, and lead us out to the spacious pasture to which the
Father wants to bring us.