Silent Night

cover of Silent Night book illustrated by Elena Selivanova

I have always loved to sing the hymn “Silent Night.” It is so seared into my brain that I can’t help but hum it when I see the first Christmas decorations showing up around town. But as much as I love the hymn, the words challenge my imagination a little, especially the first two lines: “Silent night, holy night. / All is calm, all is bright.”

When I imagine the night our Savior was born, the last things I imagine are silence and calm.

The only thing I have to compare to that holy night is the nights that I gave birth. I remember so clearly the doctors and nurses rushing around, the newborns crying, the occasional visitors, the buzzing of machinery, and the groans of pain. Everything was far from calm and silent. In the stable, of course, there were no doctors or nurses or machinery buzzing, but there were no doubt visitors, a newborn crying, probably even more groaning from terrible unmedicated pain, and worse, the dirty hay and restless, stinky animals rustling all around.

So, at first glance, the hymn “Silent Night” seems to sugarcoat the Holy Family’s experience. After all, in addition to the cacophony of sounds all around them, they would soon need to flee a king who wished their newborn dead. Calm is definitely not how I imagine Mary and Joseph felt. How then, do we interpret what Fr. Joseph Mohr was thinking when he jotted down these words more than 200 years ago?

Reflecting on those first moments with my oldest, I remember something else besides the chaos, the noise, and the fear of suddenly being responsible for the life of the new human being before me.

I remember the briefest of moments when I first held my son’s hand in mine, such a small gesture that indicated that he was mine and I was his from this day forward. As I held his tiny hand and watched his fingers move in mine, the chaos surrounding both of us was stilled for just the briefest of seconds before it all started up again.

“Silent Night” is a powerful reminder of the awed silence we experience when the space between heaven and earth narrows, and God comes close. This song is a reminder that again and again we are overcome by God’s presence, right here in this broken yet beautifully human world.


Silent Night illustrated by Elena Selivanova

Gretchen Crowder
Gretchen Crowderhttps://gretchencrowder.com/
Gretchen Crowder has served as a campus minister and Ignatian educator for the Jesuit Dallas community for the last 15 years. She is also a freelance writer and speaker and is the host of Loved As You Are: An Ignatian Podcast. She has a B.S. in mathematics and a M.Ed. from the University of Notre Dame as well as an M.T.S. from the University of Dallas. She resides in Dallas, TX, with her husband, three boys, and an ever-growing number of pets.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Thank you so much, connecting your experience of giving birth, and how we are so well looked after.
    I have often thought of Mary having no midwife, no doctor and not ever having had any sexual relations at that time with Joseph….and how Joseph would have been the hands that first touched .the Baby Jesus….it’s all so incredibly awesome and beyond anything we can imagine…except as when you touched your babies hand, it brought back to me my experience of touching my first born daughter…inexplainable….God became One of us…to share in all our experiences….beyond rational thinking…🙏🙏🙏

  2. Thank you Gretchen for that beautiful reflection. It has opened up a world of thought for me. Silent Night will have a special meaning for me from now on. It is all thanks to you.

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