Christmas at Greccio (1223)

(This article originally appeared in the TAU-USA Fall 2023 Issue #110)

by Bret Thoman, OFS

Greccio grotto where the first nativity scene took place

This year, the Franciscan Family continues to observe a series of eight-centenary commemorations. In 2023, we are reflecting on two important events that occurred 800 years ago: the Approval of the Later Rule and the reenactment of Christmas at Greccio.

Not far from Rieti, in the northernmost part of the eponymous valley, is the hill town of Greccio. Home to just about 100 residents, the village is famed for an event that took place in 1223. Within a grotto nestled within a cliff, here, St. Francis of Assisi reenacted the first nativity scene.

Referred to locally as the “New Bethlehem,” St. Francis desired to recreate a living nativity scene (with live animals and hay) in order to render the feast of the birth of Christ more real. Before this event, the feast of the Nativity of Christ was a minor feast in the liturgical calendar of the Church.

St. Francis had been to Greccio several times and was close to a local knight and tertiary named Giovanni (John).

Francis told John that he wished to “enact the memory of that babe who was born in Bethlehem: to see as much as is possible with my own bodily eyes the discomfort of his infant needs, how he lay in a manger, and how, with an ox and a donkey standing by, he rested on hay” (Thomas of Celano, First Life, Chapter 30).

The site was a cave on the face of a cliff some three kilometers (2 miles) from the village. With John’s assistance, animals were led to the grotto and hay and a manger were installed. St. Francis, a deacon, served at the Mass. The liturgy came to life spectacularly. The people gathered entered into the mystery of the incarnation in an entirely novel way as they saw with their eyes what Christmas meant.

Afterwards, an altar was constructed over the manger and a small church was built around the grotto. A similar Mass was celebrated the following year. In time, the practice spread to other parts of the region, then all of Italy. Soon, people everywhere began reenacting Christmas in such a way.

The hermitage of Greccio stands out prominently on the side of a cliff.

Today, Greccio is visited by tens of thousands of pilgrims each year. A hermitage staffed by OFM Franciscan friars safeguards the grotto where St. Francis recreated the first creche. Around the cave is an ancient hermitage where St. Francis and the early friars lived in the early thirteenth century. It includes a primitive refectory and dormitory. Above it is the newer hermitage (that is, from the mid-thirteenth century), built during the era of St. Bonaventure, the Minister General of the order. The small, wooden cells can be visited along with the ancient choir and church.

Next to the old church is a modern church with a display of hand-crafted creches along an upper corridor. Particularly striking are those from the school of Naples, known for a long tradition of artisanship and nativity scenes. The message is that the birth of Jesus was not an event that took place remotely in a faraway age and place; rather, our Savior is with us here and now

The grotto where the first nativity scene took place

The hermitage of Greccio stands out prominently on the side of a cliff.

https://www.secularfranciscansusa.org/2023/12/25/christmas-at-greccio-1223/

Come, Let Us Welcome Him

Tibor Kauser, CIOFS General Minister, invites Franciscans to welcome Jesus into our midst like St. Francis of Assisi did 800 years in Greccio.  He addresses the beauty of the birth of Jesus in his Christmas letter to the world’s Secular Franciscans.

Jesus became a living miracle, and Tibor encourages us to bring this miracle alive today.  “This year in this simple message for Christmas I invite you all: Let this be the real gift of Christmas for us too; let Jesus come alive for us. Jesus has become a man, the word has become flesh (Jn.1:14), so that may we come to share in the divinity of Christ who humbled himself to share in our humanity. (Ordo Missae)”

St. Francis designed his first nativity to bring our Lord Jesus to the people of his time, and we are encouraged to do the same today.

“In Greccio there was no nativity scene. There were no statues around but living people. I invite you all to experience this miracle, together with Saint Francis, being those around the ‘Christmas crèche.’ Let us be the living family, in which Jesus can be born and can find a warm family spirit,” Tibor said.

Tibor also addresses the world’s wars and suffering, encourages us to pay less attention to the material side of Christmas, and devote our prayer and attention to the miracle that occurred in Bethlehem when Jesus Christ was born.

Read Tibor’s complete Christmas letter to Franciscans.

(En Español)

https://www.secularfranciscansusa.org/2023/12/22/come-let-us-welcome-him/

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Juan de Padilla