I just got out of prison, thanks be to God, but there are millions of men and women in jail and prison right now suffering from depression, loneliness, and hostility. Please don’t forget the prisoners at Christmas!
Thank you for the reminder, I am glad you're out and here! I wish I could tell them they're being thought of. God Bless you, and while we may never meet or cross in comment sections again, right now (Sorry I am late) you have a friend and a sister in Christ :)
Oddly, I was told this same thing (well, almost the same) when I was in fourth grade by the nun who taught our class. She really told it like it was. I was horrified (being the oldest of 11 children) that NO ONE was willing to provide a space so Mary could have her baby in safety and even a modicum of cleanliness. The fact that it was shepherds and wise men who came to welcome him shocked me when I knew that EVERYONE should be rejoicing over this baby's birth at this time of the year. Instead, our worry is whether we will have all the "right" things for Christmas Dinner, whether the gifts we give to family members will be enjoyed--or even liked, and who is going to win the Christmas Day football games. Like you say, our priority should be reaching out to those who have LESS than we do--and sharing it with them. My parents taught me this valuable lesson every year of my youth. Since my dad was in the military, he would (with my mom's concurrence) invite 10-15 men from his platoon who had nowhere to go for Christmas (or lacked the funds to go home) to our house where they would enjoy the same food and camaraderie that we did. So not only did Mom have enough for the 13 of us in our family but also for the 10-15 who became part of our family for the day. If we could all see Christmas as the day for us to welcome the new-born Jesus along with Mary and Joseph into our lives and hearts, what a better world this could be.
What a wonderful memory to hold, and I agree with you. if we could concentrate on the meaning of God having becoming human - and all that meant - as well as on the meaning of Christian charity; what a better world this could be. :) I wish you well. :)
Thank you to you and your parents for hosting those men and women in the military for Christmas dinner. My husband was invited to dinner at one of his Officer’s houses a few times, because he was stationed across the country from where we live.
Good post, thank you. One minor point: there were no Christians around to celebrate the birth of Jesus. So only holy people and mystics would have been expected to have shown up.
As a non-Catholic I found this deeply compelling. I think in our desire to glorify God (as we should) it's easy to forget the human message in Jesus story. The fact that his life was filled with suffering and that he reached out to the suffering makes Him such a personal God for me and makes me want to care more like Him.
@@mikemcnamara3777 I actually attended a Christmas Eve mass for the first time this past Christmas. It was different than what I'm used to, but I thoroughly enjoyed it and would happily go again.
out of all your videos, this one is a keeper to meditate on. As adults, we can no longer see Christ as a baby, but a man that changed the world and is asking us to continue that change in us. Thank you... left me in tears
I think seeing Christ as a baby serves to remind us of His tenderness and humility and our call to be innocent, gentle, and meek like Him as we go into the world
For a person who is away from home and family during Christmas in a very different land in a very different situation this was a powerful message. This is not one of the most comfortable Christmas for me but makes me atleast think about those who are worse off all over the world. Merry Christmas!
I just went to my first catholic mass last week. You and father Patrick had a big part to play. I plan on (hopefully) making it through the process and getting baptized as well. Thank you for reinvigorating my interest in my spiritual health
I feel this is an important video. For me the Catholic Church in it’s pure state is the church of compassion for the poor and those who have been disenfranchised by the world . The circumstances of Jesus’s birth is important for us to understand in the truthful but painful way you have described it. Thank you Father.
This one really touched my heart, Fr. Casey. In all the joys and comforts the world gives us for this time of year, it’s a heavy reminder that there was nothing comfortable about the way Christ came into the world. Thank you for this video.
@thanhdinh3179 There was no such census. No census would require you to travel back to you ancestral home as it would have no value. A pregnant woman would not have gone of such a thing journey as such a hardship would of been very dangerous to her and her unborn. There are so many other parts of his nonsense that wrong on every level.
@@darrylelam256 clearly you haven’t studied Roman history because there were censuses conducted that required all males and their families to return to the their place of birth
@thanhdinh3179 No there wasn't. A census is use to know where people currently live, it's not use to know where people use to live. Such a census in addition to being useless, would be unbelievably stupid as it would cause all kinds of havoc. Travel was slow back then and there was a infrastructure in place to support a large number of travelers. Clearly you don't know the first thing about much of anything.
I thank my parents and the schools they put me in for always reminding me of the unfortunate truths of this world, which allowed me to be thankful for every gift I have been granted in this life. I still remember my mother reminding me what a manger was, and how poor the situation actually was.
I never thought of it as a bad thing. They may not have stayed in an inn, but they had found a quiet and private place to be. A little straw and a blanket thrown in a wooden box would make a fine bed for a baby, and let's face it, hygiene was not good anyway in those days.
I was educated by this vlog. And it gave me, an adult Catholic like myself, a spiritual awakening to the true and yet challenging message of Christimas. By the grace of God, I pray that this message of Christmas shines through in the exercise of my daily life. Thank you so much, Fr. Casey.
Sad part about it all is that Mary's story is very much what most people in the world are going through right now. Mary's story, Jesus said Joseph-- that's our story, too.
"Oppression" to some extent (hence the famous scene in "Monty Python & The Holy Grail"), but poverty and suffering are absolutely realities, and meaningful ones at that, and so is "injustice", the real name of the evil sometimes described as "oppression".
And yet they’re important words. It’s true that in our country they’ve overused these words, but there are legit people out there who are all those things.
Thanks for the reminder in your message that there are many people who are experiencing hardship in our communities. I volunteer at the Gateway of Hope shelter twice a week and with the extreme cold weather we are currently having the need is even greater than normal. I see so many people in terribly lost states,just today facing the cold and having no food many have nothing, many have sunk to the bottom of the pit with no way out - it is so sad but a blessing to be able help these folks Br. Deacon Rich Roberts, CJ
I think the beauty of the Nativity is the idea that Jesus' birth was such a special moment in spite of all the evil that occurred at that time. That slight ember of hope that salvation was on the horizon, even with the atrocious conditions that He was born into. That's what I tend to take away from the story: to always believe in the hope of His message, and celebrate the good in humanity.
This one way a hard one for me to watch, but you are right. I have been this whole Advent season asking myself what else and more I can do. So, I made it a point to pray more (going to daily mass 3x per week or reading my daily prayer book more, trying to give both more of my time, my ear or money to those who are in more need. And when people asked me what I wanted, I said, nothing and if they insisted, I asked that donate funds to charities that help the homeless and less fortunate kids. I am finding myself that as I get closer to midnight mass, I want to give more of myself and things. You did a good job, and I am sure this one was a hard one to make. This is reminding me of a good homily that we all need to hear and be reminded of but is often not "popular or easy to hear". But sometimes we all need to hear the open heart of Jesus, look through the eyes of his beloved, strong and loving mother, Mary and look inward. I am just very thankful for the many gifts (My Family, Kids, Wife and others), abilities god has given me and the opportunities. Now I just hope that I will always remember to use them for the good and for others less in need and on the margins. Many blessings from a cold, windy and snowing Southern WI and I hope the Friers have a good end of Advent and Warms and Welcoming Christmas Season.
Halleluiah! Thank you so much Father. This is the stuff! I have, all my adult life felt this way. The commercialization of Christmas has always irritated me to distraction. Not because I am Holy, but because I am lonely and broken and I thirst for The Saviour. Thank you for this priceless gift of solidarity at this time of year. BTW, I went to a Franciscan school and was raised by the wonderful Franciscans. Their spirituality is The Boss!
Good one. Poor, outcast, unwanted by all except his parents. Amazing. The themes are ongoing and as important today as they were 2000 years ago. I love Christmas, and look forward to it every year. But the story needs revising and truth-telling needs to happen. thanks. Have a Merry Christmas. I look forward to more of your conferences in the New Year.
This is something we read and learn about every year in our family. King Herod's order[teens we discuss the parallels between this and Exodus], the holy family fleeing, possible routes they may have taken, the dangers and life in Egypt. Obviously, we give a more edited version to the kids when they're younger but we do discuss it. We didn't always but it felt like we had to not skim over that part because that part matters too.
Fr. Casey, I wish that you would have explained the role that Advent plays in our self-awareness of the fallen world, and how Christ was born into that fallen world and manifest His victory even as a baby in such a brutal world.... and THEN we feast during the days of Christmas. The Feast Days are supposed to be filled with joy and hope, unscathed by the realities of the fallen world. This is why it is inappropriate to fast on Feast Days, even when they are during Lent. There is a time for solemnity, and a time for rest. Priests who don't give rest are burning us out. This is why I am Eastern Catholic, because we have both the Head and the Heart in our Church, and we take our Sundays very seriously as REST days. We take our fasting days seriously, and we take our feasting days seriously. You need more actual Heart (from the Spirit) rather than a secular one who is always on a crusade.
I went to a Christmas walkthrough for a number of years. Their take on the innkeeper was different. Imagine the Spring Rush in By the Shores of Silver Lake with everyone sleeping shoulder to shoulder rather than the Clueless "Rearrange some place settings" It was generous of the innkeeper to offer the manager rather than asking her to give birth in front of a bunch of strangers. We forget that it was a house not a Hampton Inn with individual rooms.
I’m sorry, but as a historian, that’s just not true. Inns had separate rooms. Think of a boarding house. It would be very, very common to share a room (and even a bed) with a stranger in an inn at that time. But it wasn’t just set up as one big room with people sleeping shoulder to shoulder. An inn keeper mostly wouldn’t want any lady giving birth in their inn, because that lady would ruin her bed and sheets with blood, the other people staying there (mostly drunk men) wouldn’t want to hear Mary screaming, and most importantly, mother and infant mortality was very, very high at that time. So I do agree with the essence of your statement, the inn keepers weren’t not letting Mary in just to be mean.
Thank you very much Father .... And ladies and Gentlemen men, this is why I am Catholic and will remain so....we face the uncomfortable truths about our Faith as it is.
This is a very good point, and it is unsettling. I’m still trying to wrap my brain around Mary’s experience; it’s part of why I like Mary, Did You Know. Everything that would be, because of Jesus, but at the same time, He’s this helpless baby that is in tremendous danger and fated to be miraculous and awesome in the original sense of the word, but to also suffer terribly. It’s a lot wrapped up in a very little bundle.
I think because people more than anything want hope, Father. So much of our society already has signs of despair, persecution, villainy, and the reality that crime does pay ... people want a break.
Reminds me think of when my eight year old interrupted her Sunday School teacher to tell the class that the story of David and Goliath wasn't over. She then announced that David beheaded Goliath. There is a long history of sanitizing the Bible for children.I suppose the teacher was planning to leave that part out.
I like the message. I also have a question, weren’t Joseph and Mary married? Why is she refer to as an unmarried mother? Young, yes; newly married, yes; unmarried, no.
The massive (orchestrated) migrant invasion many western nations are suffering with today has absolutely nothing in common with the plight of the Holy Family. And I do mean “Holy FAMILY” and not a lone, poor, unwed, pregnant teen fleeing persecution. The Holy Family was also not without means in Egypt, certainly far from the destitute/ abject beggar class. Joseph was described as a carpenter, surely able to provide a living for his family in a comparatively wealthy country that made good use of skilled labor/artisans, no matter their religion or country of origin. I also think it’s an extreme stretch to assume the love Christians have for Advent, Christmas, the Nativity, Christmas traditions/stories/music, festive decorations, and spending quality time with family and friends equates to a populace ignorant of the foundation, reason, or purpose of the blessed birth of our Savior. On the one hand Casey says he absolutely loves everything about this season, but then castigates all those who feel the same. Christians in western nations do not need to adopt a bevy of economic migrants each year or prioritize the creature comforts of those who illegally invade western nations and communities in order to truly understand the non-neutered meaning of Christmas. Father Mike Schmitz produced an interesting video recently addressing the question of whether God calls for each one of us to give away absolutely everything we have to the poor to follow Him. Christmas wasn’t the topic, but Fr. Schmitz has a somewhat more nuanced approach to God’s command regarding charity. It’s well worth a watch. God bless and Merry Christmas!
amen to this, I can only say that this fully resonates with me as I always felt this way about Christmas time.. and not only then to be honest. Many a time it has been the reason for not being (or feeling so) understood by many close around me... Though that has often saddened me deeply, it's never really changed how I felt about the Christmas concept.. I like your channel and views on the various issues even though I'm no longer practising religion; I was raised Catholic though, and the concept of Religion (any!) has always had my interest. Observe, consider carefully, learn, not judge and not follow blindly... something like that. Bless you
Thank you for this. I remember several Christmas Eve (adult time) services ago, where my childhood church had a new minister. I tended to yawn during the sermon, but not that year. I was completely engaged because the Rev told the story as raw as he could make it. He emphasized being a refugee. At the time, a lot of Serians were arriving that year. I thought, finally! This is how the story was meant to be told. So again, thank you for your video this year. It's an excellent reminder.
I read an article that stated Christians love to celebrate Christmas because Jesus appears helpless and isn't able to speak. He doesn't challenge us in the manger. But once he leaves the stable, grows up, and begins to talk there are fewer people at Sunday Mass. Your video gives us a whole other view - like St. Matthew's version of the Christmas story. Well done as always. Thank you. Gary (Cleveland)
Jesus was the most humble yet greatest among us. The world was blind to Him at the time but thanks to His church we can yearn to understand the mysteries of Him, His Father and the Holy Spirit.
Myrrh also has numerous health benefits including pain relief. The wine given to Jesus during his crucifixion had myrrh in it and that’s why he rejected it. To feel all of the pain he needed to for us. Our savior went through so much for us
Thank you for that image to meditate on: our Loving Savior denying Himself the slightest mitigation of the pains of death so He could truly accompany us in our suffering as humans. He is truly a compassionate, gentle, loving God.
I appreciate your video and the lessons it contains. It’s a necessary message, yet one that has never been conveyed to me, or one that I would have thought of even as an adult. It is indeed a wake up call for us all. You can’t sanitize reality. Peace!
In its truest sense, Christmas is a celebration of God made Man, who embraced the poverty of humanity to enrich and save us. Those who think that this Season is about pageantry, wealth, and pomp are limited and narrow. Is this Season joyful? Yes, of course it is! But it is not the joy that the world offers, but the heavenly one. It is also a reminder for us to seek the things of Heaven. It also a reminder to us if are hearts are open to receive Him, Who comes to us is simplicity and humility. Thanks, Father! 😇🎄🌹
Thank you! Father Casey, this video/ message really challenged /unsettled me. This is a powerful message, but It would be good if you can correct your statement that our Mother Mary was unwed. May the Lord bless you , strengthen you and fill you with his Holy Spirit. I am grateful for you ❤
I wish Fr. Casey mentioned that aside from the Christmas narratives most of us know and come to associate with our celebration of the season in Matthew 1-2 and Luke 1-2 there is the truly "unsettling" other, neglected, and missed (on our part) narrative about the birth of Jesus in Revelation 12. This visionary story in the last book of the Bible truly captures what the Friar discusses here in this video about the most forgotten people who are mostly poor and afflicted in many ways as victims of the everlasting conflict between the earthly kings and kingdoms (today's elites and empires) and the king who was born in "unsettling" circumstances.
Good points about the story. However, one significant correction: Joseph did NOT take Mary to Bethlehem as a pregnant unmarried woman. We know this for two reasons. First, God had arranged the Jewish marriage custom to come about through 2 component events: (1) the exchange of vows, after which the young man would go and prepare the new house for his new bride (this would take weeks or even months); and then (2) the young man comes to the house of his new bride's parents to escort her to his newly prepared house. The EXCHANGE OF VOWS is usually translated as "betrothed" but it was actually more than that (much later) practice that later (Christian) cultures developed of "betrothal": if the woman was found to be with child NOT by her promised one, she was considered guilty of adultery, not of fornication. Moreover, the angel Gabriel, when he comes to Joseph, says "Joseph, son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in her, is of the Holy Ghost." The angel calls her "Mary thy wife." So they were husband and wife already, but not yet living together. Secondly, Matthew then says that Joseph, when he arose from sleep, carried out the angel's instruction and took her into his home. So when the orders for the census came around, they were already living in the same household as husband and wife.
Thank you for enlightening me. I never heard the story put in it’s proper perspective. Jesus was born in humility. Again, thank you for educating me. I wish you joy.
I just got out of prison, thanks be to God, but there are millions of men and women in jail and prison right now suffering from depression, loneliness, and hostility. Please don’t forget the prisoners at Christmas!
Thanks for sharing this. What are some helpful things to do for people in prison at christmas?
Matthew 25:35-40
@@WeaverBoquist pray for them 🙏 send them/drop off some food/ gifts in the mail for them?
@chiara1194
Okay, then, but after Christmas, can prison go back to normal?
Thank you for the reminder, I am glad you're out and here! I wish I could tell them they're being thought of. God Bless you, and while we may never meet or cross in comment sections again, right now (Sorry I am late) you have a friend and a sister in Christ :)
Oddly, I was told this same thing (well, almost the same) when I was in fourth grade by the nun who taught our class. She really told it like it was. I was horrified (being the oldest of 11 children) that NO ONE was willing to provide a space so Mary could have her baby in safety and even a modicum of cleanliness. The fact that it was shepherds and wise men who came to welcome him shocked me when I knew that EVERYONE should be rejoicing over this baby's birth at this time of the year. Instead, our worry is whether we will have all the "right" things for Christmas Dinner, whether the gifts we give to family members will be enjoyed--or even liked, and who is going to win the Christmas Day football games. Like you say, our priority should be reaching out to those who have LESS than we do--and sharing it with them. My parents taught me this valuable lesson every year of my youth. Since my dad was in the military, he would (with my mom's concurrence) invite 10-15 men from his platoon who had nowhere to go for Christmas (or lacked the funds to go home) to our house where they would enjoy the same food and camaraderie that we did. So not only did Mom have enough for the 13 of us in our family but also for the 10-15 who became part of our family for the day. If we could all see Christmas as the day for us to welcome the new-born Jesus along with Mary and Joseph into our lives and hearts, what a better world this could be.
What a wonderful memory to hold, and I agree with you. if we could concentrate on the meaning of God having becoming human - and all that meant - as well as on the meaning of Christian charity; what a better world this could be. :) I wish you well. :)
Thank you to you and your parents for hosting those men and women in the military for Christmas dinner. My husband was invited to dinner at one of his Officer’s houses a few times, because he was stationed across the country from where we live.
What a great example of living what Christ came to do--to seek and to save those who were forgotten and alone. That is why we rejoice at Christmas!
You realize it is a fairy tale a not real?
Good post, thank you. One minor point: there were no Christians around to celebrate the birth of Jesus. So only holy people and mystics would have been expected to have shown up.
As a non-Catholic I found this deeply compelling. I think in our desire to glorify God (as we should) it's easy to forget the human message in Jesus story. The fact that his life was filled with suffering and that he reached out to the suffering makes Him such a personal God for me and makes me want to care more like Him.
Please join us! With love.
@@mikemcnamara3777 I actually attended a Christmas Eve mass for the first time this past Christmas. It was different than what I'm used to, but I thoroughly enjoyed it and would happily go again.
Watch the hidden true of Christmas on UA-cam you will be shocked!
out of all your videos, this one is a keeper to meditate on. As adults, we can no longer see Christ as a baby, but a man that changed the world and is asking us to continue that change in us. Thank you... left me in tears
I think seeing Christ as a baby serves to remind us of His tenderness and humility and our call to be innocent, gentle, and meek like Him as we go into the world
For a person who is away from home and family during Christmas in a very different land in a very different situation this was a powerful message. This is not one of the most comfortable Christmas for me but makes me atleast think about those who are worse off all over the world. Merry Christmas!
Great words of wisdom!!
You are far from home just like Jesus, Mary and Joseph. May you have a very blessed Christmas wherever you are.
I just went to my first catholic mass last week. You and father Patrick had a big part to play. I plan on (hopefully) making it through the process and getting baptized as well. Thank you for reinvigorating my interest in my spiritual health
Enjoy the journey! God Bless you!
Amen, Father Casey! Thank you for humbling us to the meaning of this season and encouraging the spirit of giving and love.
Just for next time, it’s Brother Casey. Franciscans called Brother. All other priests are Father. 😊
*Are
I feel this is an important video. For me the Catholic Church in it’s pure state is the church of compassion for the poor and those who have been disenfranchised by the world . The circumstances of Jesus’s birth is important for us to understand in the truthful but painful way you have described it. Thank you Father.
This one really touched my heart, Fr. Casey. In all the joys and comforts the world gives us for this time of year, it’s a heavy reminder that there was nothing comfortable about the way Christ came into the world. Thank you for this video.
Thank you for reminding us of the rest of the Christmas story! May we never forget the whole story of Christmas.
I'm a diocesan priest. I hope you don't mind if I use some of these ideas in my Christmas homilies. Thank you for your media ministry!
Sure, if you want to get everything wrong too.
@@darrylelam256clearly you haven’t gone to Bible study school
@thanhdinh3179 There was no such census. No census would require you to travel back to you ancestral home as it would have no value. A pregnant woman would not have gone of such a thing journey as such a hardship would of been very dangerous to her and her unborn. There are so many other parts of his nonsense that wrong on every level.
@@darrylelam256 clearly you haven’t studied Roman history because there were censuses conducted that required all males and their families to return to the their place of birth
@thanhdinh3179 No there wasn't. A census is use to know where people currently live, it's not use to know where people use to live. Such a census in addition to being useless, would be unbelievably stupid as it would cause all kinds of havoc. Travel was slow back then and there was a infrastructure in place to support a large number of travelers. Clearly you don't know the first thing about much of anything.
"The Christmas story is a call for repentance." Yep. Well said, Father Casey.
I thank my parents and the schools they put me in for always reminding me of the unfortunate truths of this world, which allowed me to be thankful for every gift I have been granted in this life. I still remember my mother reminding me what a manger was, and how poor the situation actually was.
I never thought of it as a bad thing. They may not have stayed in an inn, but they had found a quiet and private place to be. A little straw and a blanket thrown in a wooden box would make a fine bed for a baby, and let's face it, hygiene was not good anyway in those days.
I was educated by this vlog. And it gave me, an adult Catholic like myself, a spiritual awakening to the true and yet challenging message of Christimas. By the grace of God, I pray that this message of Christmas shines through in the exercise of my daily life. Thank you so much, Fr. Casey.
This video reminds me of how terms like oppression, poverty, and suffering have been politically abused to the point of meaninglessness.
Sadly, that is how it's become.
Sad part about it all is that Mary's story is very much what most people in the world are going through right now. Mary's story, Jesus said Joseph-- that's our story, too.
@@dawnlapka3782 Well said.
"Oppression" to some extent (hence the famous scene in "Monty Python & The Holy Grail"), but poverty and suffering are absolutely realities, and meaningful ones at that, and so is "injustice", the real name of the evil sometimes described as "oppression".
And yet they’re important words. It’s true that in our country they’ve overused these words, but there are legit people out there who are all those things.
Certainly a very sobering and thought-provoking Christmas message. Thank you, Br Casey and best wishes to you this Christmas.
Thanks for the reminder in your message that there are many people who are experiencing hardship in our communities. I volunteer at the Gateway of Hope shelter twice a week and with the extreme cold weather we are currently having the need is even greater than normal. I see so many people in terribly lost states,just today facing the cold and having no food many have nothing, many have sunk to the bottom of the pit with no way out - it is so sad but a blessing to be able help these folks Br. Deacon Rich Roberts, CJ
Fr. Casey, thank you for making the audiobook "called"! I just finished hearing it. More inspiration from God be with you!
I think the beauty of the Nativity is the idea that Jesus' birth was such a special moment in spite of all the evil that occurred at that time. That slight ember of hope that salvation was on the horizon, even with the atrocious conditions that He was born into. That's what I tend to take away from the story: to always believe in the hope of His message, and celebrate the good in humanity.
This one way a hard one for me to watch, but you are right. I have been this whole Advent season asking myself what else and more I can do. So, I made it a point to pray more (going to daily mass 3x per week or reading my daily prayer book more, trying to give both more of my time, my ear or money to those who are in more need. And when people asked me what I wanted, I said, nothing and if they insisted, I asked that donate funds to charities that help the homeless and less fortunate kids. I am finding myself that as I get closer to midnight mass, I want to give more of myself and things. You did a good job, and I am sure this one was a hard one to make. This is reminding me of a good homily that we all need to hear and be reminded of but is often not "popular or easy to hear".
But sometimes we all need to hear the open heart of Jesus, look through the eyes of his beloved, strong and loving mother, Mary and look inward. I am just very thankful for the many gifts (My Family, Kids, Wife and others), abilities god has given me and the opportunities. Now I just hope that I will always remember to use them for the good and for others less in need and on the margins. Many blessings from a cold, windy and snowing Southern WI and I hope the Friers have a good end of Advent and Warms and Welcoming Christmas Season.
Let us Praise God and be grateful. And choose to be happy for this season. Merry Christmas to you too and to all!
Halleluiah! Thank you so much Father. This is the stuff! I have, all my adult life felt this way. The commercialization of Christmas has always irritated me to distraction. Not because I am Holy, but because I am lonely and broken and I thirst for The Saviour. Thank you for this priceless gift of solidarity at this time of year. BTW, I went to a Franciscan school and was raised by the wonderful Franciscans. Their spirituality is The Boss!
Father Casey, the Holy Spirit is truly speaking through you, and I’m listening. 🙏🏼
"And _that,_ Billy, is why you didn't get any presents this year."
Good one. Poor, outcast, unwanted by all except his parents. Amazing. The themes are ongoing and as important today as they were 2000 years ago. I love Christmas, and look forward to it every year. But the story needs revising and truth-telling needs to happen. thanks. Have a Merry Christmas. I look forward to more of your conferences in the New Year.
This is something we read and learn about every year in our family. King Herod's order[teens we discuss the parallels between this and Exodus], the holy family fleeing, possible routes they may have taken, the dangers and life in Egypt. Obviously, we give a more edited version to the kids when they're younger but we do discuss it. We didn't always but it felt like we had to not skim over that part because that part matters too.
This hit a lot of nails of truth on the head Father, well done and thank you. God bless your hard work.
Fr. Casey, I wish that you would have explained the role that Advent plays in our self-awareness of the fallen world, and how Christ was born into that fallen world and manifest His victory even as a baby in such a brutal world.... and THEN we feast during the days of Christmas. The Feast Days are supposed to be filled with joy and hope, unscathed by the realities of the fallen world. This is why it is inappropriate to fast on Feast Days, even when they are during Lent. There is a time for solemnity, and a time for rest. Priests who don't give rest are burning us out. This is why I am Eastern Catholic, because we have both the Head and the Heart in our Church, and we take our Sundays very seriously as REST days. We take our fasting days seriously, and we take our feasting days seriously. You need more actual Heart (from the Spirit) rather than a secular one who is always on a crusade.
As a Muslim, I love your message and your whole channel! Workers of the world unite
Thank you Fr. Casey. This was just what I needed to feed on today. God Bless You!
I am in tears while listening to the video. Thanks for giving such powerful reminder of how I have to spend Christmas day.
This video sounds like a developing nation. Limited rights and corruption.
I went to a Christmas walkthrough for a number of years. Their take on the innkeeper was different. Imagine the Spring Rush in By the Shores of Silver Lake with everyone sleeping shoulder to shoulder rather than the Clueless "Rearrange some place settings" It was generous of the innkeeper to offer the manager rather than asking her to give birth in front of a bunch of strangers. We forget that it was a house not a Hampton Inn with individual rooms.
I’m sorry, but as a historian, that’s just not true. Inns had separate rooms. Think of a boarding house. It would be very, very common to share a room (and even a bed) with a stranger in an inn at that time. But it wasn’t just set up as one big room with people sleeping shoulder to shoulder. An inn keeper mostly wouldn’t want any lady giving birth in their inn, because that lady would ruin her bed and sheets with blood, the other people staying there (mostly drunk men) wouldn’t want to hear Mary screaming, and most importantly, mother and infant mortality was very, very high at that time. So I do agree with the essence of your statement, the inn keepers weren’t not letting Mary in just to be mean.
Thank you Fr Casey for reminding us the real Christmas Story..God bless you.
Great video Father! God bless you and all during this Christmas
Awesome. Excellent channel. God bless you Father Casey.
Thank you Fr. Casey for the perspective. Also Merry Christmas from Suriname
Thank you father for all you do please pray for me and merry Christmas
This video is really necessary for us all. Thank you for sharing, Father! Happy New Year.
Wow!!!, you bring it I love your straight up style no holding back. Thank you father, I need that to shake me out of indifference. God Bless you
I think this is the most important message you've ever given us! Thank you father! a great video.
Thanks, merry Christmas Fr. to you and you loved ones. 🙏
Thank you very much Father .... And ladies and Gentlemen men, this is why I am Catholic and will remain so....we face the uncomfortable truths about our Faith as it is.
Thank you for this reminder of the real meaning of the season.
This is a very good point, and it is unsettling. I’m still trying to wrap my brain around Mary’s experience; it’s part of why I like Mary, Did You Know. Everything that would be, because of Jesus, but at the same time, He’s this helpless baby that is in tremendous danger and fated to be miraculous and awesome in the original sense of the word, but to also suffer terribly. It’s a lot wrapped up in a very little bundle.
I love the honest forthright discussion from your heart.
Bravo Father Casey.. now that is the Christmas story we all should remember and teach our children. Blessing be upon you 🙏 ✨️
An important Christmas message. Thank you! 🙏🏻🙏🏻
Merry Christmas fr. Casey, you nailed it again
Thank you for describing the 2 ND sorrow of Mary, I have what to meditate on today.
Thank you for a real heart opening truth video🌹👍🏾🕊️🙏🏽
Good work, hope for more videos like that around Christmas
Thank you Padre Casey for this enlightenment❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I don't always agree with your disposition towards topics, but today I do. THANK YOU.
I think because people more than anything want hope, Father. So much of our society already has signs of despair, persecution, villainy, and the reality that crime does pay ... people want a break.
I think you're right too.
Beautiful explanation Father. A very Merry Christmas to you.
Thank you 🙏 for speaking the hard truth
Toronto Ontario Canada 🇨🇦 9:47
banger of an episode hit me right in my heart thank you!
No, we are not kidding you father Casey. 😆😆
I always love Christmas.
Thanks for the reflection of Christmas.
Merry Christmas Father. Best Sermon on the Nativity I've hever heard.
Reminds me think of when my eight year old interrupted her Sunday School teacher to tell the class that the story of David and Goliath wasn't over. She then announced that David beheaded Goliath. There is a long history of sanitizing the Bible for children.I suppose the teacher was planning to leave that part out.
Merry Christmas! 🌞❣️👼🏻
It was immensely thought provoking. Made me cry!
Thank you for sharing this. I hope you have a blessed and meaningful Christmas.
I like the message. I also have a question, weren’t Joseph and Mary married? Why is she refer to as an unmarried mother? Young, yes; newly married, yes; unmarried, no.
This really made an impact on me..THANK YOU!
Wow lighten up man
We are all suffering in the world the story of the nativity keeps us going at Christmas....
Every praise is to our God!!!!!!
Merry Christmas Father Casey!
The massive (orchestrated) migrant invasion many western nations are suffering with today has absolutely nothing in common with the plight of the Holy Family. And I do mean “Holy FAMILY” and not a lone, poor, unwed, pregnant teen fleeing persecution. The Holy Family was also not without means in Egypt, certainly far from the destitute/ abject beggar class. Joseph was described as a carpenter, surely able to provide a living for his family in a comparatively wealthy country that made good use of skilled labor/artisans, no matter their religion or country of origin.
I also think it’s an extreme stretch to assume the love Christians have for Advent, Christmas, the Nativity, Christmas traditions/stories/music, festive decorations, and spending quality time with family and friends equates to a populace ignorant of the foundation, reason, or purpose of the blessed birth of our Savior. On the one hand Casey says he absolutely loves everything about this season, but then castigates all those who feel the same. Christians in western nations do not need to adopt a bevy of economic migrants each year or prioritize the creature comforts of those who illegally invade western nations and communities in order to truly understand the non-neutered meaning of Christmas. Father Mike Schmitz produced an interesting video recently addressing the question of whether God calls for each one of us to give away absolutely everything we have to the poor to follow Him. Christmas wasn’t the topic, but Fr. Schmitz has a somewhat more nuanced approach to God’s command regarding charity. It’s well worth a watch.
God bless and Merry Christmas!
Amazing! What a powerful, relevant and thought- provoking talk. Thank you.
this is a challenging message, thank you Casey 🙏
amen to this, I can only say that this fully resonates with me as I always felt this way about Christmas time.. and not only then to be honest. Many a time it has been the reason for not being (or feeling so) understood by many close around me... Though that has often saddened me deeply, it's never really changed how I felt about the Christmas concept.. I like your channel and views on the various issues even though I'm no longer practising religion; I was raised Catholic though, and the concept of Religion (any!) has always had my interest. Observe, consider carefully, learn, not judge and not follow blindly... something like that. Bless you
Very compelling, Father Casey.
thank you and bless you.
Thank you for this. I remember several Christmas Eve (adult time) services ago, where my childhood church had a new minister. I tended to yawn during the sermon, but not that year. I was completely engaged because the Rev told the story as raw as he could make it. He emphasized being a refugee. At the time, a lot of Serians were arriving that year. I thought, finally! This is how the story was meant to be told. So again, thank you for your video this year. It's an excellent reminder.
I read an article that stated Christians love to celebrate Christmas because Jesus appears helpless and isn't able to speak. He doesn't challenge us in the manger. But once he leaves the stable, grows up, and begins to talk there are fewer people at Sunday Mass. Your video gives us a whole other view - like St. Matthew's version of the Christmas story. Well done as always. Thank you. Gary (Cleveland)
What can I say? You have been able to put into words all that I feel, see and perceive. Thanks.
Excellent wake up call that is as timely in 2023 as it has ever been.
one of the most wholesome video about Christmas. Thanks father! and Merry Christmas!
THANK YOU
Jesus was the most humble yet greatest among us. The world was blind to Him at the time but thanks to His church we can yearn to understand the mysteries of Him, His Father and the Holy Spirit.
You gave me a whole new perspective!
Myrrh also has numerous health benefits including pain relief. The wine given to Jesus during his crucifixion had myrrh in it and that’s why he rejected it. To feel all of the pain he needed to for us. Our savior went through so much for us
Thank you for that image to meditate on: our Loving Savior denying Himself the slightest mitigation of the pains of death so He could truly accompany us in our suffering as humans. He is truly a compassionate, gentle, loving God.
Wow I never heard this! Still learning, so wow, God Bless you!
I appreciate your video and the lessons it contains. It’s a necessary message, yet one that has never been conveyed to me, or one that I would have thought of even as an adult. It is indeed a wake up call for us all. You can’t sanitize reality. Peace!
In its truest sense, Christmas is a celebration of God made Man, who embraced the poverty of humanity to enrich and save us. Those who think that this Season is about pageantry, wealth, and pomp are limited and narrow. Is this Season joyful? Yes, of course it is! But it is not the joy that the world offers, but the heavenly one. It is also a reminder for us to seek the things of Heaven. It also a reminder to us if are hearts are open to receive Him, Who comes to us is simplicity and humility.
Thanks, Father! 😇🎄🌹
Thank you! Father Casey, this video/ message really challenged /unsettled me. This is a powerful message, but It would be good if you can correct your statement that our Mother Mary was unwed.
May the Lord bless you , strengthen you and fill you with his Holy Spirit.
I am grateful for you ❤
Thank you , Father Casey . You saved Christmas ❤
🌹El Real sentido de la Navidad está en ver por los demás 🙏🌎🌺 Hermoso video gracias Fr.Casey
Thank you so much for this important reminder!
I wish Fr. Casey mentioned that aside from the Christmas narratives most of us know and come to associate with our celebration of the season in Matthew 1-2 and Luke 1-2 there is the truly "unsettling" other, neglected, and missed (on our part) narrative about the birth of Jesus in Revelation 12. This visionary story in the last book of the Bible truly captures what the Friar discusses here in this video about the most forgotten people who are mostly poor and afflicted in many ways as victims of the everlasting conflict between the earthly kings and kingdoms (today's elites and empires) and the king who was born in "unsettling" circumstances.
Merry Christmas 🙏
Gave me something to really chew on this time... thanks, Father Casey.
Good points about the story. However, one significant correction: Joseph did NOT take Mary to Bethlehem as a pregnant unmarried woman. We know this for two reasons.
First, God had arranged the Jewish marriage custom to come about through 2 component events: (1) the exchange of vows, after which the young man would go and prepare the new house for his new bride (this would take weeks or even months); and then (2) the young man comes to the house of his new bride's parents to escort her to his newly prepared house. The EXCHANGE OF VOWS is usually translated as "betrothed" but it was actually more than that (much later) practice that later (Christian) cultures developed of "betrothal": if the woman was found to be with child NOT by her promised one, she was considered guilty of adultery, not of fornication. Moreover, the angel Gabriel, when he comes to Joseph, says "Joseph, son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife, for that which is conceived in her, is of the Holy Ghost." The angel calls her "Mary thy wife." So they were husband and wife already, but not yet living together.
Secondly, Matthew then says that Joseph, when he arose from sleep, carried out the angel's instruction and took her into his home. So when the orders for the census came around, they were already living in the same household as husband and wife.
Thank you for making Christmas very contextual
And Merry Christmas From Borneo🤝😃✌️🌾⚔️
You bring me back to the faith ❤
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Well said!
Fantastic navigation. Thank you.
Father Casey, you nailed it this time. There are so many themes as you said. The king of kings had trouble from the beginning.
Thank you for enlightening me. I never heard the story put in it’s proper perspective. Jesus was born in humility.
Again, thank you for educating me. I wish you joy.