I am also repeatedly struck by the Gospel writer’s almost casual remark that
there was no room for them at the inn. Inevitably the question arises, what
would happen if Mary and Joseph were to knock at my door. Would there be room
for them? And then it occurs to us that Saint John takes up this seemingly
chance comment about the lack of room at the inn, which drove the Holy Family
into the stable; he explores it more deeply and arrives at the heart of the
matter when he writes: “he came to his own home, and his own people received him
not” (Jn 1:11). The great moral question of our attitude towards the
homeless, towards refugees and migrants, takes on a deeper dimension: do we
really have room for God when he seeks to enter under our roof? Do we have time
and space for him?
Do we not actually turn away God himself? We begin to do so
when we have no time for God. The faster we can move, the more efficient our
time-saving appliances become, the less time we have. And God? The question of
God never seems urgent. Our time is already completely full. But matters go
deeper still. Does God actually have a place in our thinking? Our process of
thinking is structured in such a way that he simply ought not to exist. Even if
he seems to knock at the door of our thinking, he has to be explained away. If
thinking is to be taken seriously, it must be structured in such a way that the
“God hypothesis” becomes superfluous. There is no room for him.
Not even in
our feelings and desires is there any room for him. We want ourselves. We want
what we can seize hold of, we want happiness that is within our reach, we want
our plans and purposes to succeed. We are so “full” of ourselves that there is
no room left for God. And that means there is no room for others either, for
children, for the poor, for the stranger.
By reflecting on that one simple
saying about the lack of room at the inn, we have come to see how much we need
to listen to Saint Paul’s exhortation: “Be transformed by the renewal of your
mind” (Rom 12:2). Paul speaks of renewal, the opening up of our
intellect (nous), of the whole way we view the world and ourselves. The
conversion that we need must truly reach into the depths of our relationship
with reality. Let us ask the Lord that we may become vigilant for his presence,
that we may hear how softly yet insistently he knocks at the door of our being
and willing. Let us ask that we may make room for him within ourselves, that we
may recognize him also in those through whom he speaks to us: children, the
suffering, the abandoned, those who are excluded and the poor of this world.
~Benedict XVI, Homily for Midnight Mass 2012