Ukrainian Archbishop: Witness to the joy of Christmas amid the pandemic
By Lisa Zengarini
The head of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church, Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, has called on the faithful to celebrate this unusual Christmas so to bear witness, even in the Covid-19 pandemic, âto the most important truth of human history: that we are not alone or abandonedâ.
In his , the Archbishop Major of Kyiv-HaliÄ stresses that the Nativity of Jesus is a âray of hope and joy in the midst of todayâs dark fear and confusion.â
Ceaselessly proclaiming the good news
âIn spite of the restrictions, challenges, and human losses we endured due to the coronavirus pandemic, together, as Church, in our families, parishes, communities, and countries, we did not cease to proclaim the good news of hope, love, and joyâ, Archbishop Shevchuk notes.
This is why the faithful are called âin a special wayâ at Christmas this year âto bear witness before othersâ to the birth of Christ-God who âbecomes not just a human being, but a poor human being, a person who suffers from the beginning of His earthly lifeâ, he writes.
Reminding how God entered into history and experienced âhuman hunger and cold, pain and sickness, adversity, and the indifference of society,â the message stresses that: âThose who disregard the poor scorn their Creator.â
He also encourages the faithful to examine the recent Synodal Pastoral Letter of the Ukrainian Catholic Bishops, entitled âOnly one thing will remain yours: that which you have given to the poor!â, saying that âin the light of the star of Bethlehem, we contemplate the face of the new-born Saviour.â
All in need of God's grace
Referring to the Covid-19 crisis, Archbishop Shevchuk remarks that we are all âequally in danger of infection,â while âa new threat of poverty hangs over all corners of the globe." We, therefore, all âneed the kind of help and strength that goes beyond human abilities and powerâ.
For this reason, âeach one of us must be open to Godâs grace, which pours out on us without ceasing, even in the worst of times,â he says.
He then invites the faithful to celebrate Christmas âby acclaiming the birth of the Saviourâ, where possible, âso that even in this pandemic we might bear witness to the most important truth that we are not alone or abandoned, because âGod is with us!ââ He also urges everyone to âask for the richness of His love, which alone can restore this distressed world of ours, and grant it hope, security, and joy.â
âSolidarity with and closeness to those in need, participation in their pain and anxiety, rather than escape from the suffering that hangs over us all today: this will grant us the possibility to truly celebrate Christmas this year,â he stresses.
Finally, the Major Archbishop of Kyiv-HaliÄ sends his Christmas greetings to all the Ukrainan Greek Catholic communities in the world, with a special thought to all medical workers and front-liners, and those who are suffering physical and spiritual wounds caused by the pandemic.
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