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    the nativity

    Explore "the nativity" with insightful episodes like "Episode 2: Incarnation", "Day 74: The Christmas Mystery", "The Nativity 2023… a taster for next week", "The Nativity Pt.2" and "Our Daily Bread (Lk. 2:8-20)" from podcasts like ""The Anatomy of Tenderness", "The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)", "Tales from the edge of the morning sky", "Watchman on the Wall" and "The Vinekeeper Bible Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Episode 2: Incarnation

    Episode 2: Incarnation

    In this episode of The Anatomy of Tenderness Podcast we share a little bit about what’s been going on in our lives this past Autumn. We’ll be back properly in the new year with some new conversations, but for now just wanted to share a conversation about Pope Francis’ newly translated book, Christmas at the Nativity, published by Focolare Media, in time for the season of Advent.

    We found this book to be such a powerful meditation on physical manifestations of tenderness, the incarnated reality of love, and wanted to unpack what that means together. While we’re approaching this reflection from the context of our Catholic faith, we hope that whatever your faith or belief-system, this conversation can offer some food for thought on the embodiment of tenderness and the physical form it can take in our lives as we show up for each other in love. 

    Incarnation; in-carne

    "enfleshed", taking physical form in a body

    —a concrete or actual form of a quality or concept. In Christian theology, the Incarnation is the concept of God becoming human at the Nativity, or birth of Christ in Bethlehem, celebrated at Christmas.

    Some points we covered in this episode:

    • St Francis of Assisi created the first nativity scene in 1223 to help people move beyond a sanitised or abstracted understanding of the Incarnation and meditate on the physicality of the birth of Christ, and the tenderness that this requires of us in response to his vulnerability as a human baby.
    • This whole concept is radical because it turns all our traditional notions about power on its head; humanity has typically seen gods, kings, emporers as separate from the masses, invulnerable in their power, and here we have a story about the Creator of the universe stepping into the middle of muck and sweat and blood and poverty. This story breaks and remakes all of our preconceived ideas about power and puts vulnerability and tenderness centre stage instead.
    • Meeting us here, stripped of all the usual trappings of power and privilege, our maker tells us that we are inherently loveable and loved, regardless of social position, influence, money, prestige, and anything else that the world might deem important.
    • We can construct beautiful words around love and what it means; but tenderness has a highly visceral, physical side to it that the parental relationship sums up so well, given the way we’re called to offer physical care and protection to a child. Pope Francis points out that the health of a society, humanity, can be judged on how it treats its most vulnerable—its children.
    • It’s easy to be tender towards humanity in an abstract way, but the challenge the Nativity offers us is this: can we be tender even in the most unglamorous, messy, and “ugly” of circumstances?
    • If our tenderness is only theoretical, then it’s not worth much. Tenderness has to be incarnated; the word, made flesh. If we want someone to know that we love them, we have to do physical things to make them feel safe, loved, cared for, welcome in their bodies. We are, after all, a unity of both body and spirit.

    Some passages we quote in this episode of The Anatomy of Tenderness:

    “Advent is the season of the seed: Christ loved this symbol of the seed. The seed, he said, is the Word of God sown in the human heart…. Advent is the season of the secret, the secret of the growth of Christ, of Divine Love, growing in silence.”—Caryll Houselander, The Reed of God

    The Nativity scene that Houselander herself (both a writer and an artist) made is pictured in the photo that accompanies this episode on our website: theanatomyoftendernesspodcast.com

    “This is the gift we find at Christmas. We discover to our amazement that the Lord is absolute gratuity, absolute tender love. His glory does not overwhelm us, his presence does not terrify us. He is born in utter poverty in order to win our hearts by the wealth of his love.”—Pope Francis, Christmas at the Nativity

    “The child Jesus born in Bethlehem is the sign given by God to those who awaited salvation and he remains forever the sign of God’s tenderness and presence in our world… Today too children are a sign they are a sign of hope, a sign of life, but also a diagnostic sign…”—Pope Francis, Christmas at the Nativity

    “Jesus, newly born, was mirrored in the eyes of the woman, in the face of his mother. From her he received his first caresses, with her he exchanged the first smiles. With her began the revolution of tenderness.”—Pope Francis, Christmas at the Nativity

    Thank you so much for listening, and for your patience as we gather more conversations to share with you in the new year. Your enthusiasm and support truly means so much to us! We’re embracing a spirit of anti-perfectionism, and Sophie has sworn not to edit out our “ums” and “ers”, so you’ll have to hold her to this “new year’s resolution” going into 2024!

    With much love,

    Sophie & Léonie

    Thank you to Focolare Media for sponsoring this episode and gifting us a copy of Christmas at the Nativity. If you’re based in the USA, you can get your own copy here, and you’ll also find it on Amazon

    Day 74: The Christmas Mystery

    Day 74: The Christmas Mystery
    Diving deeper into Jesus Christ as Mystery, the Catechism describes the deep mystery in the preparations for Christ’s coming—also known as Advent—as well as the mystery of his first coming in Christmas. Fr. Mike points to one of the last sentences of today’s readings—”Only when Christ is formed in us will the mystery of Christmas be fulfilled in us”—and reminds us that Jesus is the star of the story, not us. Our goal is to become children in relation to God. “He must increase, but I must decrease.” Today's readings are Catechism paragraphs 522-526. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB.

    The Nativity 2023… a taster for next week

    The Nativity 2023… a taster for next week

    The train almost left without them. They hurried into the closing gap between the sliding door and the damaged door frame. They pushed their two battered suitcases first into the already full corridor. And then squeezed on board.

    She was heavily with child. Shawl over her head, hands crossed over her baby, already kicking, feeling her own stress inside. 

    He was not used to the people and noise. She knew him already. Had already been spoken to, quietly, by the night watchers who told her it was true.

    She looked at her husband as they squeezed down the crowded corridor. So young. Younger than her. Yet her betrothed. He was kind. Gentle. A computer software engineer of some repute in Kyiv. Now without a business. Without a home. Yet like her, with the most important message to take to the world.

    She felt the message inside her. Hope being born in the life she carried within her. She smiled.

    Josef looked for a seat for her. Asked the grey, worn, anguished passengers again and again. Pointed at her belly, begged with his hands, pleaded with his eyes.

    Feel free to contact me. Be nice to know who my audience is and perhaps you can suggest some further topics or themes for my writing! And do give me feedback!
    p1964km@googlemail.com


    The Nativity Pt.2

    The Nativity Pt.2
    The Nativity was written, to help you take a fresh look at the Christmas story—to help you see beyond the familiar and find the true Spirit of Christmas. James Collins presents sort a living nativity scene with biographical sketches about those who were in Bethlehem for the First Advent. Get The Nativity and A Classic Christmas book bundle HERE https://www.swrc.com/the-first-advent-bundle-the-nativity-by-james-collins-a-classic-christmas-by-kenneth-hill.html

    Our Daily Bread (Lk. 2:8-20)

    Our Daily Bread (Lk. 2:8-20)

    The symbolism of the nativity brings us to the bread of life.

    Google Maps directions GOOGLE MAPS

    Церква Христова на Виноградарі
    Київ, вул. Сергія Данченка, 22.


    Сергій Саєнко, служитель (050) 591-9534.
    Дмитро Тимошенко,  служитель  для молоді (066) 044-1186

    Адрес церкви:  Киев,
    ул. Сергея Данченко, 22.
    Адрес электронной почты  vinogradarchurch@gmail.com   

    Our address is Serhiia Danchenka 22,  Kyiv, Ukraine

    Email: Vinogradarchurch@gmail.com
    Sergey Sayenko, Minister  (050) 591-9534.
    Dmitry Timoshenko, Youth Minister   (066) 044-1186
    English speakers, contact Marina Noyes  (050) 312-3010

    Rick Walker rickthewalker@gmail.com

    The Nativity Pt.1

    The Nativity Pt.1
    Learn Something Life Changing This Christmas! After years, sometimes even decades, of hearing the Christmas story so many times, we lose the meaning. The story of the birth of Jesus Christ as told in Luke 2 is the best-known story in the Bible. But do you really know the story? Get the First Advent bundle The Nativity and A Classic Christmas HERE https://www.swrc.com/the-first-advent-bundle-the-nativity-by-james-collins-a-classic-christmas-by-kenneth-hill.html
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