|
|
Holy Spirit Catholic Church Third Sunday in Advent
The
Church calls this day "Gaudete Sunday."
The title, "Gaudete," takes its name from the first word of
today's Entrance Antiphon: "Rejoice in the Lord always; again I say,
rejoice! The Lord is near."
Today the Church wants us to look ahead and call to mind the joy
that the Lord's birth brings; to look to this joy so that, as we
continue to wait and prepare, it will be with joyful hearts.
Thus I wear the joyful rose vestments instead of the penitential
purple ones.
The
closer we get to Christmas, the more likely we will hear the question,
"Are you ready for Christmas?"
We are apt to gauge our readiness by whether the tree is trimmed
and the cookies are baked, whether the shopping is finished and the
cards are sent. These
preparations are all fine, but we are reminded on this Third Sunday of
Advent that there is more for us to do if we are to be ready for
Christmas. We are urged
today to add three more things to our "to do" list:
Rejoice – Be Patient – Be a Messenger
If we
are to be ready for Christmas, the prophet Isaiah tells us that we
should
rejoice.
We rejoice when God comes to save us because this means
amazing things will happen.
Isaiah paints an incredible picture.
All of nature will rejoice.
Feeble hands will become strong, and weak knees will become firm.
Frightened hearts will fear no more.
The blind will see, and the deaf will hear.
Sorrow and mourning will flee.
Isaiah was speaking a message of comfort and joy to people who
were exiled and oppressed, people frightened and weak and in great
sorrow. Isaiah assured them
that when the time of the Messiah would come, things would surely be
different. They would be
able to rejoice without end.
But
here we are . . . over two thousand years after the birth of Jesus,
getting ready to celebrate this great event yet again . . . and
suffering, fear, and sorrow abound.
We wonder whether Isaiah possibly had it wrong.
If God really did come to save us in Jesus, and if this truly is
cause for rejoicing, then why does suffering remain?
St.
James, in our Second Reading, helps us answer that question when he
tells us that we must be patient
as we wait for the coming of the Lord, patience being the second
thing on our "to do" list these next weeks.
Part of being patient is to avoid complaining about others.
Bearing our share of hardships is another part, one that can be a
real test of patience. James
tells us we should look to the prophets like Isaiah for models of
patience in the face of hardship.
But patience does not mean passivity, as we know from the
prophets. They were patient,
but they were also persistent.
And because of this persistence, prophets were often persecuted.
But they proclaimed God's message nonetheless.
Proclaiming God's message, being
a messenger, is the third way we are called to prepare for the birth
of Jesus. We hear in today's
Gospel of the prophet, the messenger, who Jesus tells us is the greatest
of any: John the Baptist.
John was "in prison for the works of Christ."
He would later meet his death because he had spoken out against
King Herod. Jesus speaks
words of great praise for John the Baptist.
Quoting the prophet Malachi, Jesus says of John: "I am sending my
messenger ahead of you; he will prepare your way before you."
Here
and now we are messengers no less than John.
In fact, Jesus tells us that when we prepare his way we are even
greater than John the Baptist.
We should not take this lightly.
We should not think that because we are unable to make the deaf
hear and the blind see that there is little we can do to prepare for
God's coming to us in Jesus.
Instead, we need to believe that Isaiah surely did not have it wrong . .
. things are different because God became human and taught us how to
live in love.
And
so we prepare for the coming of Jesus by listening to the Word of God
proclaimed . . . and then acting on the Word.
We prepare for the coming of Jesus by sharing in His Body and
Blood in the Eucharist . . . and then sharing that gift with others.
We bring comfort and companionship to those who suffer, and they
know through us that God is surely with them.
They rejoice, and we rejoice as well.
We
try to be patient in the face of suffering, but persistent in doing all
we can to alleviate unnecessary suffering.
This might mean reconciling with someone who suffers because we
refuse to forgive . . . a difficult but necessary thing to do if we take
seriously the message we hear today.
But
we have help to do what is necessary but often difficult.
Through the Word and Eucharist we are given all we need to carry
out the tasks on our Advent "to do" list:
Rejoice – Be Patient – Be a Messenger
By
the way, these are not things we do once . . . or only do the next two
weeks . . . and then cross off the list.
We are to be messengers of joy and patience all our days, until
that final day when we will hear Jesus say, "You are ready.
You prepared my way.
Come share in my everlasting joy!"
|