KENOSIS
The Word of the Father, by whom all time was created, was made flesh and was born in
time for us. He, without whose divine permission no day completes its course, wished to
have one day for His human birth. In the bosom of His Father He existed before all the
cycles of ages; born of an earthly mother, He entered upon the course of the years on this
day.
The Maker of man became man that He, Ruler of the stars, might be nourished at the
breast; that He, the Bread, might be hungry; that He, the Fountain, might thirst; that He,
the Light, might sleep; that He, the Way, might be wearied by the journey; that He, the
Truth, might be accused by false witnesses; that He, the Judge of the living and the dead,
might be brought to trial by a mortal judge; that He, Justice, might be condemned by the
unjust; that He, Discipline, might be scourged with whips; that He, the Foundation, might
be suspended upon a cross; that Courage might be weakened; that Security might be wounded;
that Life might die.
To endure these and similar indignities for us, to free us, unworthy creatures, He who
existed as the Son of God before all ages, without a beginning, deigned to become the Son
of Man in these recent years. He did this although He who submitted to such great evils
for our sake had done no evil and although we, who were the recipients of so much good at
His hands, had done nothing to merit these benefits.
St. Augustine, Sermons on the Liturgical Seasons, Trans.
Sister Mary Sarah Muldowney, R.S.M., Vol. 38 in The Fathers of the Church, ed. Roy
Joseph Deferrari (New York: Fathers of the Church, Inc.), p. 28.
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