The Second Sunday of Advent
predmore.blogspot.com
December 10, 2017
Isaiah 40:1-5, 9-11;
Psalm 85; 2 Peter 3:8-14; Mark 1:1-8
Recently, a number of people
have approached me to ask: Will you teach me to pray? They say they cannot hear
God or that the types of praying written about in books does not suit them.
They still want something more; something personal, and they do not know how to
get it.
Silently, I say to myself: I
want them to hear this week’s Psalm – Lord, let them see your kindness. I want
them to experience God’s mercy. I want them to know God in whom kindness and
truth shall meet, justice and peace shall kiss. They search for a kind,
personal God, but they do not know how to meet this God of kindness, but we
find this loving God in our Scriptures.
The first words of Isaiah speak
of God’s kindness. God is telling the prophet to comfort the people and to give
relief to their burdens because their suffering and exile are about to end. As
a priest, I want to stand on top of Mount Zion like Isaiah to cry out loudly:
Every valley shall be filled in; every mountain made low; the path to the Lord
is made straight. Come! Listen. The glory of the Lord will be revealed.
I want to stand like John the
Baptist, meeting people in the wilderness of their lives, and declare: Prepare
the way, your pathway is made straight. Come to the Lord and do not let your
sins keep you from meeting God. No sin, no bad feelings or any guilt about our
choices, will keep us from the Lord’s kindness and our soul’s salvation.
I want to answer those people
whose sins or suffering separates them from God: God keeps the promise of
salvation, and the goal is to be united with you. While Isaiah yelled from the
tallest mountain, John met the people in the muckiness of their lives. Any way
that reaches a person is acceptable. Come, let’s learn how to pray together
because God desires this for you.
From a practical standpoint, it
is always helpful to begin prayer within the events of your regular world. Do
not make prayer something separate from your daily activities or use language
that belongs to someone else. Speak what is in your heart to God. Forget about
formulas and rituals. Simply share what is happening with your day because God
is in those details. Be as specific as possible.
Let God respond to you. Ask God
for kindness and mercy specifically for those areas where you need God’s
healing touch. Tell God of your feelings that represent the peaks and valleys
of your life. Share fully what is going on with you and then sit back and
relax. Watch the valleys be filled in and the hills leveled off. Find yourself
in that balance where you can see the glory of the Lord all around you. Know
that God is near to comfort you and to proclaim your redemption.
God comes to save you. You,
singular. Personally. God is doing it all for you. Why? Because God wants to be
close to you.
Scripture for Daily Mass
First
Reading:
Monday: (Isaiah 35) Here is your God, he comes with
vindication. The eyes of the blind will be opened, the ears of the deaf will be
cleared.
Tuesday: (Isaiah 40) Give comfort to my people. Speak
tenderly to Jerusalem and proclaim to her that her service is at an end, her
guilt is expiated.
Wednesday: (Isaiah 40) Lift up your eyes on high and see
who has created these things. Do you not know? Have you not heard?
Thursday: (Genesis 3) After Adam ate of the tree, God
called to him, “Where are you?” I heard you were in the garden, but I was
afraid because I was naked, so I hid myself.
Friday (Isaiah 48) I, the Lord, will teach you what is
for your good, and lead you on the way you should go. Hearken to my
commandments.
Saturday (Sirach 48) A prophet named Elijah appeared
whose words were as a flaming furnace. By the Lord’s word, he shut up the
heavens and brought down fire three times.
Gospel:
Monday: (Luke 5) After Jesus healed the man on a
stretcher, he forgave his sins. The scribes and Pharisees protested and asked,
“Who is this who speaks blasphemies?”
Tuesday: (Matthew 18) If a man has a hundred sheep and
one of them is lost, will he not leave the ninety-nine in the hills and go in
search of the stray?
Wednesday (Matthew 11) Come to me all you who labor and
are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from
me, for I am gentle and humble of heart.
Thursday (Luke 1) The angel Gabriel was sent to a virgin
betrothed to Joseph to announce that the Holy Spirit would overpower her and
she would conceive a son.
Friday (Matthew 11) How shall I consider you? I played a
dirge for you and you would not mourn; I played a flute for you and you would
not dance.
Saturday (Matthew 17) As Jesus came down the mountain,
the disciples asked, “Why do they say Elijah must come first?” Elijah has come
and will indeed come to restore all things.
Saints of the
Week
December 12: The feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated to remember the four
apparitions to Juan Diego in 1531 near Mexico City shortly after the Spanish
conquest of the Aztecs. Mary appeared as a native Mexican princess and her
image is imprinted on a cloak that was presented to the bishop.
December 13: Lucy,
martyr (d. 304), was born into a noble Sicilian family and killed during
the Diocletian persecution. In the Middle Ages, people with eye trouble invoked
her aid because her name means "light." Scandinavia today still
honors Lucy in a great festival of light on this day.
December 14: John
of the Cross, priest and doctor (1542-1591), was a Carmelite who reformed
his order with the help of Teresa of Avila. They created the Discalced (without
shoes) Carmelite Order that offered a stricter interpretation of their rules.
John was opposed by his community and placed in prison for a year. He wrote the
classics, "Ascent of Mount Carmel," "Dark Night of the
Soul," and "Living Flame of Love."
This Week in
Jesuit History
·
Dec 10, 1548. The general of the Dominicans
wrote in defense of the Society of Jesus upon seeing it attacked in Spain by
Melchior Cano and others.
·
Dec 11, 1686. At Rome, Fr. Charles de Noyelle, a
Belgian, died as the 12th general of the Society.
·
Dec 12, 1661. In the College of Clermont, Paris,
Fr. James Caret publicly defended the doctrine of papal infallibility, causing
great excitement among the Gallicans and Jansenists.
·
Dec 13, 1545. The opening of the Council of
Trent to which Frs. Laynez and Salmeron were sent as papal theologians and Fr.
Claude LeJay as theologian of Cardinal Otho Truchses.
·
Dec 14, 1979. The death of Riccardo Lombardi,
founder of the Better World Movement.
·
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.
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