Ignatian Spirituality: Set the World Ablaze
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The Fourth Sunday in Advent
December 18, 2016
Isaiah 35: 1-6, 10; Psalm 146; James 5:7-10; Matthew
11:2-11
Matthew opens his mysterious story
of the Incarnation with a great introduction: This is how the birth of Jesus
Christ came about. After reciting the genealogy of Joseph beginning with
Abraham, we expect a simple, realistic story to line up, but we get something
completely different: a virgin mother and an honorable man urged by an angel to
take a pregnant woman who was overpowered by a Spirit as his wife. Certainly,
God did not choose an easy, predictable route for Jesus to be born. It makes
for a good story that is easy to pass on through generations, but everything
had to line up correctly for the story to occur. Not only did Mary have to say
“yes” to let this happen, Joseph also had to consent, which is difficult to do
in an hon0r-shame society.
The truth that stands out best of
all is the line: “They shall name him Emmanuel, which means ‘God is with us.’” This
is the truth we must hold onto. Jesus was born into our lives to bring us
closer to the heart of God in order to understand his heart, values, attitudes,
and intentions to care for us. Most of all he wants to show us that God
desperately wants to be in our sufferings so that we can trust in God’s
tenderness.
This year is our longest possible
time in Advent – a full four weeks – and it is supposed to be a time of patient
waiting, with sprinkles of joy and gladness. When we have those moments, it is
very good for us to hang onto them because life continues to throw challenges
at us. For some people, it is difficult to really celebrate Advent and
Christmas with great joy. Those days are illusions of the past.
How does a middle-age woman who places
her father with Alzheimer’s into a specialized care facility celebrate
Christmas when her dad no longer has an identity? Or the mother who buries a
twenty-four year old son who died of a heroin overdose? Or the son who spends
every night with his mother in a nursing home knowing she will never return
home for the holidays? The absentee father, the alcoholic sister, the medicated
cousin. How do we spend Christmas with people who do not even know it is
Christmas anymore?
These are the moments Christmas
becomes meaningful. When we realize that we are sitting with others in their
darkness, we know Christ is visiting us. We cannot take away anyone’s pain or
sorrow, but we can simply be with them, which has an effect on us. We know
somehow the mood is lighter or the darkness’s veil is lifted and we are content
just to look into the eyes of another person and let them know we care for
them. Our kindness does more good that we can know.
This is the Christ story. These are
the actions of Jesus. He visits us, as we visit others. He sits with us in our
sorrow when we sit with others in theirs. This is the meaning of life. Our
whole purpose is to love one another and to give of ourselves in the most
simplistic ways we can. Christmas is the victory of light over darkness.
Continue to light those candles of kindness because it is the light of God’s
love shown by you. Our moments of caring continue to tell the world that “God
is with us” and there is always space for God. Unlike the Incarnation story, it
is not mysterious, but one that comes about through ordinary human actions of
caring, but it is the essential Christmas story. God will always find a place
in our world because God does not want us to be in pain.
Scripture for Daily Mass
First
Reading:
Monday:
(Judges 13) A barren woman was visited by an angel to receive the message that
she would bear a son. She named him Samson and he spirit of the Lord stirred
within him.
Tuesday:
(Isaiah 7) This is the sign that you will be given: the virgin shall conceive
and bear a son, and he shall be named Emmanuel.
Wednesday:
(Song of Songs 2) My lover come, springing across the mountains, leaping across
the hills. My lover is like a young stag. Arise my beautiful one. Come.
Thursday:
(1 Samuel 1) Hannah presented her son, Samuel, to the Lord. She left Samuel to
grow as a servant of God.
Friday
(Malachi 3) I am sending my messenger before me to prepare the way. I will send
you Elijah the prophet to turn the hearts of all people back to God.
Saturday
(2 Samuel 7) When King David settled into his palace, he was distraught because
his Lord had no proper abode for himself. The Lord told David that this house
will be David’s.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Luke 1) Zechariah, on priestly duty, and his wife, Elizabeth, prayed
fervently. An angel visited them to announce that they would bear a son, who
was to be named John.
Tuesday:
(Luke 1) The angel Gabriel announced to Mary that she would bear a son who
would become the savior of the world. He shall be named Emmanuel.
Wednesday
(Luke 1) Mary set out to the hill country to visit Elizabeth and Zechariah.
When she entered the house, Elizabeth recognized that Mary was pregnant with
the Lord.
Thursday
(Luke 1) Mary said, “My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord; my spirit
rejoices in God, my savior.”
Friday
(Luke 1) When the time came to name Elizabeth and John’s son, they wanted to
name him after his dad, but Elizabeth said, “No. He will be called John.”
Saturday
(Luke 1) Zechariah sang, “Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, for he has
come to his people and set them free.”
Saints of the Week
December 18 - O Adonai, and leader
of the house of Israel, who appeared to Moses in the fire of the burning bush
and gave him the law 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, before you the kings will be
silenced, to you the nations will make their prayers: come to save us without
delay!
December 20 - O key of David, and
scepter of the house of Israel, 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.
December
21: Peter Canisius, S.J., priest and
religious (1521-1597), was sent to Germany, Austria, Bohemia, Moravia, and
Switzerland during the time of the Protestant Reformation to reinvigorate the
Catholic faith. He directed many through the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius.
He is a doctor of the church for his work in bringing many people back to the
faith.
December 22 - O King of all
nations, and their desire, and keystone of the church: come and save us, whom
you formed from the dust.
December 23 - O Emmanuel, our
king and giver of the Law, the hope of the nations and their Savior: come to
save us, Lord our God.
December 24: ERO CRAS
In the Roman Catholic tradition, on December 23, the last
of the seven “O Antiphons” is sung with the “Alleluia” verse before the Gospel
reading at Mass and at Vespers – Evening Prayer in the Divine Office/Breviary.
Most ordinary Catholics, however, are more accustomed to hearing these
antiphons as verses in the Advent hymn “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel.”
But the literary construction of these wonderful antiphons is arranged in a unique and surprising way: The order of the seven Messianic titles of the “O Antiphons” (and the seven verses of “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”) was fixed with a definite purpose.
In Latin, the initial letters of the antiphons – Emmanuel, Rex, Oriens, Clavis, Radix, Adonai, Sapientia – form a reverse acrostic – a play on words – ERO CRAS, which translates into English as “Tomorrow, I will be.”
So, in the silence of Christmas Eve, we look back on the previous seven days, and we hear the voice of the One whose coming we have prepared for – Jesus Christ – speak to us: “I will be here tomorrow.”
But the literary construction of these wonderful antiphons is arranged in a unique and surprising way: The order of the seven Messianic titles of the “O Antiphons” (and the seven verses of “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel”) was fixed with a definite purpose.
In Latin, the initial letters of the antiphons – Emmanuel, Rex, Oriens, Clavis, Radix, Adonai, Sapientia – form a reverse acrostic – a play on words – ERO CRAS, which translates into English as “Tomorrow, I will be.”
So, in the silence of Christmas Eve, we look back on the previous seven days, and we hear the voice of the One whose coming we have prepared for – Jesus Christ – speak to us: “I will be here tomorrow.”
This Week in Jesuit History
·
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.
·
Dec 22, 1649. At Cork, Fr. David Glawey, a
missionary in the Inner and Lower Hebrides, Islay, Oronsay, Colonsay, and
Arran, died.
·
Dec 23, 1549. Francis Xavier was appointed
provincial of the newly erected Indian Province.
·
Dec 24, 1587. Fr. Claude Matthe died at Ancona.
He was a Frenchman of humble birth, highly esteemed by King Henry III and the
Duke of Guise. He foretold that Fr. Acquaviva would be General and hold that
office for a long period.
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