Third Sunday in Advent
December 15, 2013
Isaiah 35:1-6,10;
Psalm 146; James 5:7-10; Matthew 11:2-11
Last
week, John the Baptist emerged as a herald to announce the coming of the
kingdom of heaven and today he is found imprisoned and he is anxious to know if
Jesus is the real deal. When news reaches him that the foretold scripture
passages are coming true, his happiness is fulfilled. The harsh conditions of
his imprisonment cannot erode the joy he feels that God is certainly at work to
tenderly care for his people. We see in the readings transformation from
hardship to promise when we recognize the great extent God is hearing us and
helping us be free from the confines of our self-imprisonment. When we cooperate
with God’s plan and open our senses to the world around us, we can clearly know
that God cares tenderly for us. God comes to save you from your hard existence.
Last
week, many Jordanians came to the first locally produced Christmas musical in
the city called Project Christmas. For two hours, audiences laughed and cried
and had their heartstrings tugged by the references to serious social issues
that beset their lives. Song and dance delighted their senses and took them
away from the harsh realities of their brutal world. They said, “Our lives are
filled with great drama. It is good to forget about it for an evening,” or “I
never laughed so hard and I needed it because my life makes me so sad,” or “We
need these types of performances to help lift our spirits and to give us hope
once again.” Everyone exulted in the Christmas spirit and recognized they need
more focus upon the blessings of life. For some of those people who are sick or
elderly, it may be their last Christmas show. For others, it might be their
first, so it was important for them to experience the wonder and magic of a
Christmas gift freely offered.
Two
weeks ago, a Lebanese woman received hearing aids and could hear her teenage
son’s voice with clarity for the first time. She wept so softly. She hugged him
and asked him to sing to her. A friend told me of a memory of her mother
receiving hearing aids for the first time. During a severe rain storm she asked
her children, “What is that sound?” and they replied, “thunder.” She stood
there in stillness and smiled because she could now begin to hear all the
beautiful and terrifying sounds she never knew she missed. A dad told me that
his ten-year old son just received a pair of eyeglasses and he was shocked when
his son looked out the car window and gleefully pointed out every tiny detail
his dad took for granted. The dad’s heart warmed to his son and he felt bad
that he did not know sooner that his boy could not see.
These
are the types of transformations we need in life to lift us from the drudgery
of the difficult existence we have so that we can experience the joy that the
Baptist did and the happiness that Jesus Christ wants for us. Isaiah tells us
the deaf can hear, the blind can see, the desert will have rains; James tells
us to be patient in belief that the Lord will reach out to us. Isaiah, James,
and John the Baptist know that God comes to save you and to fulfill your needs
and prayers through the good news God offers.
Jesus
asked the crowds about John, “What did you go out to the desert to see?” In
other words, he was asking, “What is it you want? For what are you searching?” You
might expect the answer to be given from a holy one of God like John the
Baptist, but just look around you and you have your answer. The answer is all
around you. The good news is still breaking into your world – if you choose to
look for the signs – and accept the invitations. The good news is there for
those who let their senses, heart, and imagination be opened to receive the joy
God offers.
Every
single one of us has restrictions placed on our lives by others. We all have
limitations. John the Baptist did not let his circumstances, that is, his
imprisonment and death sentence, determine his life’s actions. He chose
happiness and his heart burst open with affection to those life-giving
possibilities. We need to lift our eyes from those restrictions placed upon us,
especially the most crippling ones we place upon ourselves, so we can experience
the beauty and wonder of God’s fresh coming into our world. Do not cripple
yourself with your expectations any longer. It serves you no good and
perpetuates the drudgery in life. It keeps you lame. Instead, learn to walk
again, to see freshly, to speak with new patterns, and hear the richness of
silence. Let it surprise and delight you so that you know God’s heart is very
near to yours.
What
is it you most want this Christmas? Ask for it now. Today. Clarify and
articulate what you desire, but most of all, keep your mind and senses open to
the many ways God is reaching out to you – to fulfill your needs – to grant you
peace – to save you. It is your turn now – reach back with open palms – and receive
God’s abundance.
Themes for this Week’s Masses
First
Reading: When Balaam went into battle and saw Israel
encamped around him, the oracle of Baal told him that “a star shall advance
from Jacob, and a staff shall rise from Israel.” Jacob assembled his sons and
told them that Judah shall be praised from among his brothers and the scepter
shall never depart from him. The prophet Jeremiah declares that the Lord will
raise up a righteous shoot from David to produce a king who will govern wisely.
In the Book of Judges, Manoah and his wife bore a son named Samson who was
blessed by the Lord. Hannah was barren and had no children. In Isaiah, the Lord
asked Ahaz to ask for a sing, but he would not do it. The Lord said this sign
would be given: the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and he shall be
called Emmanuel. In the Song of Songs, two lovers profess their affection and
tenderness for one another.
Gospel:
When Jesus entered the Temple area, the chief priests and elders asked him,
“Why what authority are you doing these things? Who gave you this authority?”
Jesus answered them by asking them a question about John’s origin. Since they
were afraid to answer because of the effect upon the people, Jesus also refused
to answer. At the beginning of the “O Antiphon” days, the genealogy of Joseph
is read to show that Jesus came from the descendants of the Babylonian exile,
directly from David, and from the Abrahamic line. Matthew explained that the
birth of Jesus came about when Mary was conceived by the Holy Spirit and
Joseph, who was betrothed to her, decided to divorce her quietly until an angel
persuaded him to take her into his home. The birth of John the Baptist and his
naming is told when his father Zechariah was struck dumb during his time of
priestly service. During the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy with John,
Mary conceived a child through the Holy Spirit. The angel Gabriel announced to
Mary that she would bear a son who will be called Emmanuel. Immediately, Mary
set out in haste to greet Elizabeth, who instantly recognizes that she is the
mother of the Lord when John jumps for joy in her womb.
Saints of the Week
Saints
are not celebrated during the octave leading up to Christmas.
December 17 - O wisdom
of our God Most High, guiding creation with power and love: come to teach us
the path of knowledge.
December 18 - O leader
of the house of Israel, give of the law to Moses on Sinai: come to rescue us
with your mighty power.
December 19 - O root
of Jesse's stem, sign of God's love for all the people: come to save us without
delay!
December 20 - O key of
David, opening the gates of God's eternal kingdom: come and free the prisoners
of darkness.
December 21 - O
radiant Dawn, splendor of eternal light, sun of justice: come and shine on
those who dwell in darkness and in the shadow of death.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Dec 15, 1631. At Naples, during an
earthquake and the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, the Jesuits worked to help all
classes of people.
·
Dec 16, 1544. Francis Xavier entered
Cochin.
·
Dec 17, 1588. At Paris, Fr. Henry
Walpole was ordained.
·
Dec 18, 1594. At Florence, the
apparition of St Ignatius to St Mary Magdalene de' Pazzi.
·
Dec 19, 1593. At Rome, Fr. Robert
Bellarmine was appointed rector of the Roman College.
·
Dec 20, 1815. A ukase of Alexander I
was published banishing the Society of Jesus from St Petersburg and Moscow on
the pretext that they were troubling the Russian Church.
·
Dec 21, 1577. In Rome, Fr. Juan de
Polanco, secretary to the Society and very dear to Ignatius, died.
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