Question: What does history reveal about the events of the birth of Christ (the time, the place, the circumstances, the persecution, etc.)?
Answer: Two points are shown in the event of the birth of Christ. The first is the love of God towards man, His great philanthropy, that He is, as Saint Maximus the Confessor says, both eros and the object of eros, and as eros He moves towards man and as the object of eros He attracts to Himself those receptive to His eros. The second is the tragedy of fallen man, who did not understand the benevolence of God and created many problems for Him. This is also a contemporary reality. And today there is a struggle between the philanthropy of God and the apostasy of fallen tragic man. It is a terrible thing for man to refuse and resist the love of Christ, which is offered in many ways.
Question: Why was Christ born of the Virgin Mary and why did He come from the Jewish race and not by another woman?
Answer: Christ was "the expectation of the nations" (Gen. 49:10), since all nations were expecting a redeemer, a savior. We see this also in ancient Greece, such as the trilogy of Aeschylus (Prometheus Bound, Prometheus Unbound, Prometheus the Fire-Bringer) and Socrates, as well as among the eastern peoples. But the Prophets prepared the Jewish nation better for the coming of the Messiah. The Virgin Mary became His mother, because, according to Saint Gregory Palamas, before the Annunciation she reached theosis according to Grace within the Holy of Holies. However, the incarnate Christ called all nations to His Church, He became the Savior of all humanity, and His work was universal.
Question: Christ was born in time. The second Person of the Holy Trinity was born. Why didn't the Father or the Holy Spirit incarnate?
Answer: By His birth Christ entered history and time, and in this way He sanctified history and time. The incarnation of the second Person of the Holy Trinity took place, according to Saint John of Damascus, for two reasons. The first is because the Son and Word of God was the prototype of the creation of man, that is, man was created in the image of the Word and for this reason it is through the Word that our regeneration should take place. The second reason is that the Word was born before all ages by the Father according to His divinity, and He also had to be born in time according to His humanity, that this property (of birth) may not change and remain still. Thus, the Son of God became the Son of man.
However, the incarnation of the Word of God is a work of the entire Triune God, since the Father willed it, the Son was incarnated and the Holy Spirit participated in the incarnation. And we through Christ in the Holy Spirit know the Father. Everything is triadic.
Question: We hear the phrase "He was foretold by the Prophets". Regarding this historical event of the Nativity, what was prophesied and by whom?
Answer: The Nativity of Christ was foretold by the Prophets in a clear way. The Prophet Isaiah, who is called the loudest voice of the Prophets (St. John Chrysostom) and the fifth Evangelist (St. Jerome), foresaw the birth of Christ by the Virgin. The Prophet Micah foresaw the place of the Nativity, in Bethlehem. The Prophet Jeremiah foresaw the slaughter of the infants. The Prophet Hosea foresaw the flight of Christ into Egypt. The Prophet David foresaw the adoration of the Magi. Everything was prophesied in the Old Testament.
Question: What does the hymn that was chanted by the Angels at the time of the birth mean: "Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth peace to men of good pleasure"? What "peace" (ειρήνη) did the Angels mean here, and what does the word "good pleasure" (ευδοκία) mean?
Answer: The peace of which the angels sang at the birth of Christ is the union of the divine and human nature in the Person of Christ. Christ assumed human nature in His Person and deified it, by which all of human nature was brought peace from the consequences of the fall, and in this way every person was given the opportunity to participate in this peace, by living within the Church, with her sacramental and ascetic life. The Church is the "place" in which man experiences the love and peace of God.
The word good pleasure, according to Saint Nikodemos the Hagiorite, who used various patristic texts, such as Saint Maximus the Confessor, Saint John of Damascus and Saint Gregory Palamas, means that the reception of human nature by Christ was the original/prior will of God for the deification of humanity (according to the will of His good pleasure). The deification of man could not take place if there was not a hypostatic union of the divine and human natures, the uncreated and the created natures. However, the law through Moses, the words of the Prophets, etc. were imperfect (according to the will of concession) due to the fall, but were perfected through the incarnation of Christ. This is the difference between the will "according to good pleasure" (κατ' ευδοκίαν) and "according to concession" (κατά παραχώρησιν). The incarnation of Christ was the original plan of God, His good pleasure. What was introduced after the fall of Adam, was the Cross and death.
Question: The incarnation of Christ is called an emptiness (κένωσις) and a condescension (συγκατάβασις). What do these terms mean?
Answer: The term "emptiness" was determined by the Apostle Paul, when he writes of Christ: "Who, being in the form of God, did not consider equality with God something to be used to His own advantage; rather, He emptied Himself by taking the form of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled himself by becoming obedient to death — even death on a cross!" (Philippians 2:6-8). According to Saint John Chrysostom, the term "emptied" does not mean a change, a migration or an extinction of the divine nature, but that Christ, as God, remained what He was: "Being made flesh He remained God, in that He was the Word."
Emptiness is associated with the word "condescension", because Christ assumed human nature without eliminating His divine nature, the glory of divinity, which is why He condescended to humanity, without losing His glory. In the Akathist Hymn we chant: "For it was God’s condescension, and not a change of place." Here lies the greatness of God's love, since as Saint John of Damascus says: "He humbled without humiliation His lofty station which yet could not be humbled." In this manner it is indicated to us to live our own emptiness as an expression of love for God and man.
Question: "Christ is eternally born" and "Christ is born in us". What is your view?
Answer: Christ, according to Saint Maximus the Confessor, was born once in the flesh, but He is always born spiritually in those who are united with Him. The birth of Christ within us, which is experienced as our regeneration, takes place through the sacramental life of the Church, especially through Holy Communion, when we commune with the prerequisites of prayer, repentance and the hesychastic life, which is called the neptic tradition of the Church. This is why Saint John Chrysostom speaks of the "eternal Christmas", the "eternal Pentecost".
Source: Ekklesiastiki Paremvasi, "Συνέντευξη για τα Χριστούγεννα", November 2007.
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