Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Holy Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, January 1, 2026

Holy Cross MonasteryWest Park, NY

Br. Francis Beckham, OHC

The Holy Name of our Lord Jesus Christ, January 1, 2026

Click here for an audio of the sermon

“O God, our Governor, how exalted is your Name in all the World!” Amen.

The feast of the Holy Name of Jesus is one of several observances on the Church’s calendar known as “feasts of our Lord.” Others include the Presentation, the Transfiguration, the Nativity, and, the biggest one of them all, the Sunday of the Resurrection, or Easter Sunday. Like these other special days, the feast of the Holy Name helps us to meditate on and better understand a specific aspect of Jesus of Nazareth’s earthly life and teachings. Feasts of our Lord, as well as the feasts of the saints, invite us to pause and reflect on the unique role each of us plays in fulfilling God’s vision for the Church and the world. After all, Jesus’ first-century ministry was for our benefit, not his, and his special feast days help us see how we can become partners in that ministry right now in our own time and place.

But what’s really in a name? I mean, why the name ‘Jesus’ specifically? As with all names in the Bible, Jesus’ is rich in meaning and indicative of God’s particular job for him in the greater scheme of things. In Saint Luke’s Gospel, the assignment of Jesus’ name, which means “The Lord Saves” in Hebrew and Aramaic, is revealed to Mary by the Archangel Gabriel during the Annunciation. And so, right from the beginning, the naming of Mary’s child carries an important sacramental significance, and hints about what the future has in store for him.

Jesus’ name is no less meaningful today than it was back then. As probably all of us can attest, just hearing the name of Jesus is sure to evoke some kind of emotional response. Its mention can just as easily summon powerful memories based on how it’s been used with and around us (and possibly even against us) in the past. If Jesus’ name has been used rightly to teach us about love for God and neighbor, generosity of spirit, mercy, and service toward others, the memories are likely mostly positive ones. Sometimes, though, Jesus’ name is used wrongly, and then the memories around it aren’t usually so good, such as when it’s appropriated to incite fear or justify greed, domination, and violence. These are frankly blasphemous ways of using Jesus’ name, and today’s feast reminds us of our duty to restore it to its true, divinely appointed purpose of proclaiming God’s unconditional love for everyone.

In Sermon Fifteen on the Song of Songs, the twelfth-century monastic reformer, mystic, and early Cistercian, Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, reflects on this transformative message of love inherent in the name of Jesus, saying:

“In some mysterious way the name of [God’s] majesty and power is transfused into that of love and mercy, an amalgam that is abundantly poured out in the person of our Savior Jesus Christ. The name ‘God’ liquefies and dissolves into the title ‘God with Us,’ that is, into ‘Emmanuel’ … Servants are called friends in this new way, and the Resurrection is proclaimed not to mere disciples but to [beloved sisters and] brothers [of Christ].”

As we can see in this quote, Saint Bernard marvels at God’s willingness – eagerness, even – to forgo majesty and power by dwelling with us humans in the person of Jesus. The utterly ineffable – and, ultimately, unnamable – Eternal God becomes true flesh and blood, fully relatable, and definitively namable. In short, the entire mystery of the Incarnation becomes accessible to us in the name of Jesus.

So, too, as we have heard and sung this morning, does the psalmist marvel at God’s desire to draw all of us into the fullness of creation, the source and summit of which is God’s own name; and, amazingly, to entrust us as stewards and heirs of the Divine Wonders, the greatest being the Divine Name itself. Truly, in spite of all our flaws, each of us by our very existence is shown to be utterly, undoubtedly, and unconditionally loved by God. Don’t ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

But Jesus’ name isn’t meant simply to be a statement or even a summary of deeper truth, though it certainly is both of those. Rather, just as Jesus of Nazareth Incarnates and shows forth in his person our very God, Jesus’ name in its very self is an outpouring of his ongoing ministry among and through us. Using the example of oil, a basic and multifunctional staple of twelfth-century life, Saint Bernard goes on to expound on the efficacy of the Holy Name, saying:

“The likeness between oil and the name of [Jesus] is beyond doubt … I hold that the likeness is to be found in the threefold property of oil: it gives light, it nourishes, it anoints. It feeds the flame, it nourishes the body, it relieves pain: it is light, food, medicine. And is not this true too of [Jesus’] name? When preached it gives light, when meditated it nourishes, when invoked it relieves and soothes.”

When I stop and reflect on these words of Saint Bernard, I’m amazed at how true they really are. I can think of times when Jesus has been preached as the Way of Love, and I have seen God, those around me, and even myself in a new and gentler light; when I have managed to quiet myself in my cell or in the woods or by the river and meditated on Jesus as a devout Jewish mystic with a profoundly personal experience of God burning within him to be shared, I have indeed been renewed and nourished in my own spirit; and when I have uttered the name of Jesus the Great Physician in times of sickness, despair, brokenness, and trouble, I have never failed to feel the healing balm of Gilead at work deep within my sin-sick soul.

The name of Jesus, which is poured out by God as a source of healing, truth, and light in the world, is a reminder for each of us of our vocation to be sharers of that Good News; we are all siblings and partners of Jesus, not merely disciples and certainly not slaves, and so we are both commissioned and empowered to join in Jesus’ ministry of proclaiming the message of God’s love, and to do so boldly and joyously in the name of the one who first taught us. And, having received the Name of Jesus as our inheritance, we may, like the shepherds in Luke’s Gospel, glorify and praise God for what we have heard and seen.

But, it’s important that I add just one more thing. For as wonderful as all this may sound, we all know that sometimes it’s a lot easier said than done, especially when we’re weighed down by life, or struggling with challenging circumstances. And if that’s where any of us finds ourselves this morning (or this week, or this decade), that’s okay. When singing Glory to God in the Highest happens to feel just a bit too much, then simply doing as Mary does is enough for us, treasuring all these words as best we can and pondering them in our hearts.

As we begin the Two-Thousandth Twenty-Sixth Year of our life in Christ together, I pray that the peace and goodness of God, who indeed dwells among and within us as Emmanuel, be upon and remain with us. May each of us discover, feel, and share forth the light, nourishment, and healing beauty of the Most Holy Name of Jesus. Amen.

Monday, December 29, 2025

The First Sunday after Christmas Day, December 28, 2025

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY

Br. Bruno Santana, OHC

The Word became flesh and lived among us.


When I speak, when you speak. Our words tell us something about ourselves. What we think, what we know, what we want to do or how I feel about something.  But in a very limited way because, as a human being I can only express a little bit of myself in my words. 


Now, think about God. Who is the perfect reality, the source of all creation. God can speak perfectly about himself, utterly. God can speak a word that totally carries the truth of who he is. 

In the creed we pray: God from God, light from light, true God from true God (this is our baby Jesus that we celebrate in this Christmas season) and today in gospel Saint John says: “The word was God” the logos, this is Jesus. The son is not just an aspect of the father, not just a little bit of the father's truth. He's the fullness of the father's truth



Today, First Sunday of Christmas, our liturgy calls to reflect this prologue to the gospel of John that is one of the great theological masterpieces in our tradition that does sum up whole Christianity and certainly what this Christmas is about. 


Let’s walk through some verses and bring to our heart God’s word. 

John begins: “in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God”. It's how the whole Bible commences. Genesis 1 says: In the beginning, when God made the heavens and the earth.  The Intention of John here is to tell a story of new creation. God is starting over with something fresh and new. He is completing his creation. This is something unique and specific to Christianity.

V2 “All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being.” 

The Father, God, as great artist was looking at his son and discerning in the son, the logos, all of the possible patterns of rationality and order and made the world according to the Son , logos. the son, logos, all things are made.


Now John the Baptist enters the stage. Was sent from God as witness to testify the light.

 In the past, God has sent spokespersons, prophets, and patriarchs who speak his word. We can also think of every great philosopher, every great scientist, every great poet, every great artist. Anyone that speaks what is love, true, faith, beauty, indeed speaks the word of God to some degree. They're human bearers of his word.  


The Evangelist John is telling us: This Jesus who was born on Christmas night that I'm talking about, this logos, is not like John the Baptist, not like one of the prophets, not just another philosopher, teacher. He is something qualitatively different, not just a bearer of the word. And I think that's a message which needs to be heard today.


V10. He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him.


The church fathers said, "God became human, that humans might become God." 

That's how they summed up Christian faith. God condescended to take our nature to himself that that nature might be elevated and raised up.


Fulton Sheen, was an American bishop, talks about the hierarchy of being. He says: Something lower on the scale can be brought up higher but only through an act of condescension on the part of that which is above it. This natural law of the "descent of the higher to lift the lower" serves as an analogy for the Incarnation of Christ.

How do human beings become something higher? 


In that silent night (that we sing every year) Christ came and is not just one human being among many. He is God from God, light from light, true God from true God and now he can raise us up and share his own life. By condescending to us, he allows us to ascend into him.


Everything, especially the human beings, we are made through and for the logos (Jesus) in a very special way. We're meant for union with God. This is our own deepest identity. Union with God It's the deepest hunger of every human heart.


The centerpiece, it's verse 14 And the Word became flesh and lived among us. 

And that little detail now.  In the English translation, sometimes we miss the very important meaning of the word that we have in the original text, in this case in Greek. for example: the word became flesh and lived among us. In Greek literally says: He tabernacled among us; He made his tent among us. 


For biblical Jew though, when you say tent or tabernacle, they are thinking about the Book of Exodus when Israel is escaping from Egypt and God tells them to build a great tabernacle, a tent of meeting, a tent where he would commune with them. That's the prototype of the temple in Jerusalem many centuries later. The temple was the meeting place of heaven and earth. When earth and heaven meet, God comes down to meet his creation. 


Now, because of the holy night, because of Christmas, because of the incarnation, we have the full tabernacling of God among his people. The true temple now is Christ, the word made flesh. We now have a new and definitive place to go to meet God. Heaven and earth coming together in Christ.


 As the versus 14 says: “and we have seen his glory, the glory of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth” That little juxtaposition is fascinating. Grace and truth. 


The incarnation It's the full expression of grace, Free gift. We can't deserve this. We can't merit it. God freely gives of himself becoming one of us grace upon grace. It's full of truth because Jesus is the incarnation of God that came among us.  because the grace of God's come among us we see what we ought to be.


The demand of Christianity is higher than any religion or philosophy because God's become one of us full of grace. and therefore, we are called to this fullness of truth to be perfect as your heavenly father is perfect.  


That's the good news of Christmas. That's the meaning of Christmas.  It's about God in grace condescending to come down to us that we might become participants in his own nature and that we might realize the fullness of the truth that he is, the truth of what we can become.


That's what Christmas is about.

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Christmas Day, December 25, 2025

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, New York

Br. Robert James Magliula

Christmas Day, December 25, 2025





Our experience of Christmas changes as we do. I recently had the opportunity to see it through the eyes of my two young nieces. For them, it’s a season of gifts. At dinner on Sunday, the eldest, Artemis, sensibly suggested that we should also observe Hannukah, because it would multiply the number of gifts we received. She is correct about the gift aspect of this feast. Christmas, as gift, cannot be explained by reason or doctrine. It can only be experienced. The Child we receive and celebrate today is the sign of God’s “Yes” to us and to all, without exception. That “yes” is the pure and unconditional gift of Christmas. It comes to us as love, acceptance, forgiveness, presence. It never comes wrapped in an economy of transaction which is what we’re used to. We live in a world in which we pay for what we get. That’s not God’s way. God love and presence are not reserved for those who try to purchase it by being worthy, faithful, or acceptable.

As I’ve aged, I’ve begun to experience Christmas from another perspective. Out from behind the advertisements and through the haze of old carols and crèche scenes, I began to see that Christmas is about finding life where we did not expect life to be. Given our humanity and the times we live in, we might have mixed feelings that cause us to hesitate about even recognizing, no less receiving God’s “Yes”, the gift of this feast. Every year of life waxes and wanes. Every stage of life comes and goes. Every facet of life is born and then dies. Every good moment becomes a memory. This last year we have lived in a land of deep darkness. We look at our world and ache to hear some good news of great joy for all people. Every one of us has experienced some darkness. Every one of us has longed to hear good news, but it’s hard to hear the angel’s voice when joy is in such short supply for so many.

I find that hope dims for me, until Christmas comes again. Then I am called at the deepest, most subconscious, least cognizant level to begin to hope and live again. Christmas brings me back to the crib of life to start over: aware of what has gone before, conscious that nothing can last, but full of hope, even in darkness, that this time, finally, we can learn what it takes to live well, to grow, to get it right. I find myself drawn to Bethlehem to see this thing that has taken place and be reminded once again that it’s all true.

That Jesus’ birth happened at a specific time within a particular set of circumstances, doesn’t mean his birth is limited to that time and those circumstances. There is no single Christmas story. There are an endless Christmas stories, happening all the time. This feast is not only a celebration of what was. It is also our participation in what is and what might be. There is a child in each of us waiting to be born again. The Christ Child beckons to those looking for life, those who refuse to give up, those to whom life comes new and with purpose each day,  those who can let yesterday go so that life can be full of new possibility, those in whom Christmas is a celebration of the constancy of change, a call to begin once more the journey to human joy and holy meaning. This Child shows us the reality and truth of our lives.

Today we are invited to move from the fact of Jesus’ birth to the meaning of his birth in our lives. We can only come to the manger as we are. We’re invited to come, not as spectators, but as participants in Christ’s birth. Spectators might see Jesus born in Bethlehem, but participants will experience God born in themselves. By becoming human, God encourages us to honor the vulnerability of our humanity and the fragility of our lives. God is with us in our fears and pain, in our losses, in the cruelty and inhumanity we witness daily perpetrated by Empire. The world was no different at Jesus’ birth.

Isaiah offered his prophecy and vision of endless peace, the destruction of the oppressor’s rod, and an end to the trampling boots and bloody garments of this world. Our sadness, anxiety, and fear for the world, can leave us shortsighted and unable to see the prophetic vision of Isaiah. We can feel a sense of dissatisfaction with simply hearing the story instead of our deep longing to live the story.

The shepherds, the first ones to hear the good news, left their flocks and went to the manger and in so doing they moved from the event of Jesus’ birth to the experience of his birth. They offered themselves, their curiosity and awe, as well as their status as homeless field workers, the outcasts and despised of their society. The birth that called the shepherds away from their fields and flocks is also the birth that returned them changed to the same fields and flocks. They carried the birth of Jesus back within them and made the Christmas story their own. Today Bethlehem is more than a geographical location. Today Bethlehem is within us.

Name your hopes and fears, your thanksgivings and disappointments, the joys and the sorrows of this past year, your desires and longings. His manger is big enough to receive whatever we might bring. Whatever we offer today at the manger let it speak the truth of our life. The Christ Child shows us who we are, who we can become, offering us a new beginning. If Christ is not born in the real everyday places of our lives, he isn’t born anywhere.

Today is not so much about explaining or analyzing, but about pondering, discovering, treasuring. Allow your wonder and awe to make you attentive. Awe precedes, and is the root, of faith. That’s our Christmas work. Then Christ is born in us and the divine life lives not only in Jesus but in us too.  +Amen.