Solemnity of the Nativity of the Lord (Christmas), Cycle A

Homily stories

Hold on there

The "Hands Project," an unfinished collection by the late photographer Martin Lueders, contains pictures of hands from all over the world: Hands working, hands praying, hands fighting, hands creating. The most affecting photographs are of hands holding hands—little hands holding big hands, white hands holding black hands, masculine hands holding feminine hands.

Hand-holding symbolizes our greatest desires fulfilled: love, friendship, companionship, security, agreement, commitment, and reconciliation. It is the sensation of one person’s skin against another’s that is essential to capturing the emotion. It is the words of love and respect made flesh by the physical act of touch. 

Want to know what the first Christmas felt like? Turn to your neighbor and offer him or her a handshake of peace. Dry, wrinkled, clammy, sticky, dirty, it doesn’t matter. All that matters is the act of encounter and engagement: human to human, hand to hand, heart to heart. That connection is the grace and truth of Christ.


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