The Second
Sunday of Advent
predmore.blogspot.com
December 9, 2018
Daniel 7:13-14; Psalm 93; Revelation 1:5-8; John 18:33-37
Having lived in the Kingdom of
Jordan for a couple years, I know from experience the geographic landscape of
this Gospel passage. The desert road about which John and Isaiah spoke was filled
with harsh conditions along its winding path. Deep valleys of parched lands and
barren hills made travel treacherous, and the beating sun and piercing sand-wrapped
wind delayed the advance on many a traveler. The road back from exile from Babylon
(Iraq) to Jerusalem was arduous and life-threatening, but the Lord assured the people
that their exile was over, and he promised to make the way home easy for them.
The valleys will be raised high, the mountains leveled, and all the faithful
can hasten home without any obstacles.
John preached a metanoia, that
is a change of attitude about living in right relationship to God and to neighbor.
He preached about our need to reform our lives in order to return from our
spiritual exile. The baptism he gave was an outward symbol, but our ongoing work
is to create a culture of reconciliation that moves us closer to type of life
to which each of us is called.
Advent is about finding our way home,
to a place of reconciliation, to a place where we are restored as our real
selves, as a people who can love freely and live in harmony with others, just
as we dreamed as children. We know that life is not as we would choose it to
be, but as we gain wisdom, we pause and realize how much we need God to make
sense of the chaos around us and within in. We need God to come close, to show
us a sign that God is near and hears us. We need God to be born anew for us,
and we discover that we need God to die for us – personally. We need that road
to be made straight once again and to see the Lord’s hand extended towards us
in welcome.
There are areas of my life that are
still filled with pain. I have not been the best spouse, friend, colleague, or
parent I intended to be. I carry with me disappointments, hurts, and missed
opportunities that still bother me, and I keep those past errors alive in my
way of proceeding. I don’t word my statements the most loving way and sometimes
my heart and ears are closed to the people who love me most, a love that I
often don’t deserve. I know I don’t measure up to the person I want to be. I
don’t ask often enough for forgiveness, and I still prefer not to forgive. They
way home is long, and as the poet Robert Frost writes, “I have miles before I sleep.”
The prophet Baruch says, “take
off your robe of mourning… your exile is at an end.” God extends his arms to
you to restore you to your glory. The Lord knows the life is difficult, and he
wants you to look at your lifetime history of love. Who had loved you – when you
did not deserve it, and who have you loved. Consider all the people who you
helped to raise up and recall all the unexpected graces you have received from
someone else’s goodwill. This is the way we need to spend our Advent. To simply
recall the good we have received in this world generates an impulse to return
that good knowing it can never be repaid in full.
With this spirit of gratitude,
we are naturally impelled to offer ourselves back to the Lord – freely as a
gift. We spontaneously share who we are with the one who loves us. We delight
in each other: each breath, the beat of our hearts, each memory, every thought
that fills our mind. Our task is to return those to the Lord. This offering is
what we call prayer, where God gazes upon us in profound respect and
admiration, and we are assured grace will be there to guide us and keep us
close. Any movement towards love, any movement towards sharing and generosity
of heart, is a movement towards God.
My Advent prayer for you is similar
to the prayer Paul gave the Philippians. I pray always with joy in my every
prayer for all of you because of your life with Christ. I am confident of this,
that the one who began a good work in your will continue it to completion,
until the day we are all restored in God through Christ. This is my prayer:
that your love may increase ever more and forever, and may God spoil you rotten
with his love.
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 9: Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin (1474-1548) was a poor, simple,
indigenous man who was visited by Mary in 1531. She instructed him to build a
church at Guadalupe near Mexico City. During another visit, she told him to
present flowers to the bishop. When he did, the flowers fell from his cape to
reveal an image of Mary that is still revered today.
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.
9, 1741: At Paris, Fr. Charles Poree died. He was a famous master of rhetoric.
Nineteen of his pupils were admitted into the French Academy, including
Voltaire, who, in spite of his impiety, always felt an affectionate regard for
his old master.
·
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.
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