Gospel: John 1: 1-18
"The Word became flesh, and dwelled among us." The literal translation is "pitched his tent among us." The Gospel writer chose to use the image of God's presence among the Israelites in the desert during their time of traveling between Egypt and the Promised Land - the dwelling tent of God - to speak of the coming of Jesus on earth among us.
Jesus came not to establish a religion of empire or fixed nation. He did not come to dwell within stone buildings. Jesus came to call a pilgrim people and to dwell among them in humble surroundings, leading us to our ultimate homeland where our citizenship truly lies. He came to call a people to live together in simplicity and dependence on God and one another, walking together along the way to the kingdom.
The Second Vatican Council called the Church to return to this image and model. This model calls us away from our constant desire to attach ourselves to empire and nation, to power and wealth. It calls us to radical simplicity and service, to deeper dependence on the Lord and one another. As we approach a new year, we have the opportunity to begin again to live as pilgrim people, to shed the trappings of empire and to walk humbly and simply toward our heavenly homeland.