Rays of hope shine through the gloom
Despite curbs, Christmas is marked with rituals and reverence around the world
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
NEW YORK • Christmas falls on one of the darkest days of the year, coming soon after the winter solstice. This year, it also came during a dark time for humanity amid a worldwide viral pandemic.
"Here we are, celebrating Christmas, yet deprived of the greetings, hugs, kisses and handshakes that normally fill this day," Cardinal Vincent Nichols, archbishop of Westminster, said during a midnight Mass in a nearly empty Westminster Cathedral in London.
"In the darkness of this pandemic, so many of our comfortable assumptions are being shaken."
Yet the ceremonies went on, often broadcast on television or, as with the Westminster Mass, streamed online.
If the pandemic has deprived worshippers of community, these lonely acts of faith may have shed a bit of light in the darkness.
At the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, which was nearly destroyed by fire last year, the annual Christmas Eve choral concert took place without an audience and with the mediaeval edifice still under reconstruction.
The choir, organist and cellist, all socially distanced, wore hard hats and protective coveralls.
At St Reinold's Church in Dortmund, Germany, organist Gerd von der Heyde poured out his heart to the building's 13th-century stone walls.
At Yoido Full Gospel Church in Seoul, South Korea, the minister preached to empty pews and an online congregation.
At Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, on the spot where Christians believe Jesus was born, midnight Mass is usually the social event of the year.
This year, the service was limited to a few church officials, diplomats and Bethlehem's mayor.
Tens of thousands of Roman Catholics usually pack St Peter's Square in the Vatican for the Pope's annual Christmas address.
This year, with Italy under lockdown, the square was closed.
Pope Francis, speaking from a lectern inside the Apostolic Palace, said the pandemic should compel people to reflect on their common humanity, and that understanding should guide how vaccines are distributed.
"I beg everyone, heads of state, companies and international organisations, to promote cooperation and not competition, to find a solution for everyone, vaccines for all, especially for the most vulnerable and needy in all areas of the planet," he added.
While the pandemic has created untold hardship for millions this year, it has also in many places brought out the best in people.
"Have we not seen these months of difficulty marked by countless acts of random kindness, quiet heroism, selfless service, remarkable community efforts, all directed towards those most in need?" Cardinal Nichols asked in his sermon at Westminster.
Such acts, he said, had "penetrated the darkness".
NYTIMES


