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O Emmanuel, Rex et legifer noster,
exspectatio Gentium, et Salvator earum:
veni ad salvandum nos, Domine, Deus noster.
O Emmanuel, our King and Lawgiver,
the Desire of all nations and their Saviour:
Come and save us, O Lord our God.
I apologise for the brevity of today’s message, but I have contracted a heavy cold and I’m feeling pretty rotten this evening. An early night with Lemsip is called for. I only hope I can get rid of this inconvenience before Saturday afternoon.
The final O Antiphon focusses on the word Emmanuel, God is with us, for that is who the Messiah is according to the prophet Micah, (Mic 5: 1-5), God who is with us through his Incarnation in every aspect of our lives. This antiphon looks beyond the conception and birth of Christ to his universal mission to save all nations and peoples. He is the one whom all men and women desire, who reconciles the world and all that exists in himself with the Father, as the whole of creation awaits with longing his return in glory. You might be aware of the acrostic,
O Emmanuel
O Rex
O Oriens
O Clavis
O Radix
O Adonai
O Sapientia
Ero cras being the Latin for Tomorrow I will come. Christians are always looking forward to the coming of Christ. Our life is a permanent vigil of joyful prayer and fasting, of longing for a deeper awareness and experience of Emmanuel, the God who is with us.
Today’s Gospel continues Luke’s Infancy Narrative, (Lk 1: 57-66) with the birth, circumcision and naming of John the Baptist, which prepares us for the birth of Jesus. May John pray for us in the final hours of waiting as we prepare for the birth of the Saviour.
“The time came for Elizabeth to have her child, and she gave birth to a son; and when her neighbours and relations heard that the Lord had shown her so great a kindness, they shared her joy.
Now on the eighth day they came to circumcise the child; they were going to call him Zechariah after his father, but his mother spoke up. ‘No,’ she said ‘he is to be called John.’ They said to her, ‘But no one in your family has that name’, and made signs to his father to find out what he wanted him called. The father asked for a writing-tablet and wrote, ‘His name is John.’ And they were all astonished. At that instant his power of speech returned and he spoke and praised God. All their neighbours were filled with awe and the whole affair was talked about throughout the hill country of Judaea. All those who heard of it treasured it in their hearts. ‘What will this child turn out to be?’ they wondered. And indeed, the hand of the Lord was with him.”
Fr Paul
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