"Be vigilant at all times"
Luke 21: 25- 28, 34-36
This First Sunday of Advent once again reminds us of the two
Christmas seasons we are yearly confronted with: one with Christ and the other
without him.
If the point of Christmas is simply an annual time of year when
we feel good about each other, when we promote peace and good will between
peoples, when we gather with family and friends to exchange gifts in beautiful
wrappings, then we have only half the story. Why would we suddenly do this?
What motivates us to this perspective in our behavior? Why at the end of
December? Why do we need a season to do so, what about the rest of the
year? A Christmas without Christ makes
you wonder about the motivation, besides financial.
While we decorate trees, houses, send cards either via the
internet or in old fashioned “snail mail” and collect food and money to give to
those less advantaged than ourselves is all good but without Christ, what’s the
point of doing so in late December? Christmas without Christ can be placed
anywhere at any time. We should be so generous and charitable all the time yet
our secular society suddenly wakes up to the real humanitarian benefits of
generosity, charity, and kindness. But
is that all Christmas is for us? Again,
it is only half the story.
The motivation for all this goodness must and can only be a
person – Christ Jesus himself. While non-Christians do celebrate Christmas as a
festival of good will and perhaps increased financial benefit we Christians
must be different. Many good faithful Catholics work hard in retail this time
of year, indeed, and their jobs are very important. Yet, the person of Jesus is
the real and only reason why we mark December 25th each year as the second
greatest feast of our Christian faith – the Resurrection (Easter) being the
greatest. Our gift giving is a reflection of the giving of God to us in sending
his Son for our salvation. While God’s
generosity can never be equaled by us, we know that our thanksgiving and
charity must continue far beyond the beauty of this unique time of year.
In this Sunday’s Gospel from Luke we hear an image that I think
may sum up what we can do during Advent to prepare and center ourselves. Jesus tells us: “Stand erect and raise your heads for your redemption is near at hand.” (Lk
21: 28).
Now picture that for a moment.
It is a posture of vulnerability.
Stand up straight with your arms beside your body then raise you head as
if looking up to the sky - you’re defenseless and vulnerable. If someone was to attack you in that posture
you would be harmed since your attention is focused on something, or perhaps,
someone else. It is spoken in the
context of Christ’s second coming. Pay
attention and be ready to receive him when he comes.
Advent, although an annual liturgical year with its own
particular color of violet, its readings from the prophets of Jeremiah and
Isaiah and figures of the Gospel story of John the Baptist and Mary, is
essentially an attitude of the heart; a kind of posture we take before God:
open, vulnerable, receptive and prepared to receive.
Receive more presents? We
are to welcome and receive Christ Jesus himself as the gift of the Father who
came once 2,000 years ago and who will come again at some future time. In the meantime, we stand open and receptive
to receive him every day as we live now in between those two great events in
human history the second of which will be the end of all. In particular during these weeks of Advent,
the Church invites us into a season of preparation to focus our attention on
who is the center of Christmas and who is therefore Lord of our lives.
If in all the stuff that brings joy during this month of
December we lose sight of why we celebrate Christmas, then our annual
"feel good season" is nothing more than an excuse for a party with no
real reason behind it other than maybe it’s good once a year to be nice to each
other. In the darkest time of year, on this part of the earth, a festive moment
is helpful but we must not forget the reason to be joyful.
So, let us adopt the attitude and the posture before God to
“stand erect and raise your heads” in this season of grace. Our celebration of the Eucharist reminds us
that although Christ has left our physical sight he remains present to us under
the signs of bread and wine to be our food to strengthen us on our daily
journey. He remains very much present to
us in the faith we share, in the kindness and compassion we show to one
another, in the scriptures we read and the time we pray, and during Mass in the
holy Eucharist substantially and in the person of the priest who acts sacramentally
in his name.
There is nothing wrong with feeling good at this time of year
but what makes this time any different from another in that regard? Rather, WHO
makes this time different and what difference does HE make for me?
Grant
your faithful, we pray, almighty God,
the
resolve to run forth to meet your Christ
with
righteous needs at his coming,
so
that, gathered at his right hand,
they
may be worthy to possess the heavenly Kingdom.
(Collect of Sunday)
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