FIRST SUNDAY OF ADVENT A 2019
So, Advent begins! A new
liturgical year begins! A new Lectionary year begins anchored in the Gospel
according to Matthew.
The theme of today’s Gospel
can be summed in two words: STAY AWAKE.
Stay Awake – we preachers
like to give this good advice to you who listen to us.
In some ways, this Advent
theme to stay awake is
counterintuitive. It doesn’t mean “don’t
get any sleep.” Stay awake is certainly
not the advice parents give to children when it is time to go to bed. Staying awake doesn’t mean setting your alarm
clock to anticipate this major religious event of the coming of the Day of the
Lord. It can’t have this meaning as the
Gospel tells us we do not know the day nor the hour.
To stay awake is to stay
awake to the spiritual center that is within each one of us. To stay awake is to pay attention to that
which matters in life, paying attention to the relationships of our lives,
paying attention to our relationship with God.
Within us, there is a deeper longing that never goes away. It is the longing for love. It is the longing to experience the mystery
of God’s love in our life.
The scripture readings for
the first Sunday of Advent always look to history’s end. We look forward to the second coming of
Christ. We are to direct our minds to
the Day of Judgment. Today’s readings
invite to focus on the end, not to emphasize our vulnerability but to remember
where we are going.
The invitation of Advent is
to remember our future so that it will transform our present. As we look forward to the Second Coming of
Christ at history’s end and the end of our lives, we are to stay awake in the
present moment for the ways we encounter the Lord.
Thus, Advent is also about
now, the present moment. Stay awake.
In the Gospel, the evangelist
Matthew sharpens our awareness that if we live our daily lives actively waiting
for the Lord, we will not be caught off-guard when Jesus makes his
appearance. “For at the hour you do not
expect, the Son of Man will come.”
We are getting better and
better at protecting ourselves and our property from would-be intruders. Does your home have a burglar alarm? Our schools are becoming more and more
vigilant in protecting our students from those who would harm them. Getting on an airplane is becoming more and
more of a security event to provide for our safety. We spend millions, perhaps billions of
dollars, for the Department of Homeland Security for the safety we seek to
protect ourselves against unwelcome intruders who could come like a thief in
the night.
The Advent season is our
spiritual Department of Homeland Security to help us recognize the Lord in our
midst coming at a time we least expect.
In fact, Advent is more that a season of four weeks. Advent is a spiritual way of life lived in
watchfulness to the God who comes – not just on Christmas but everyday. The best way to get ready for the coming of
the Lord is simply to be ready.
We are to say awake – not
just for the next crisis that may or may not appear in our lives. We are to stay awake to the God who is
relentlessly pursuing us in every situation and in every relationship of our
lives.
On this Thanksgiving weekend,
we gathered with family and celebrated the blessings of our family life. Indeed, it is a precious God moment when we
recognize the presence of our loving God in the life of each and every member
of our family. We affirm our family as
our school of love. We are to stay awake as to the many ways God reveals
himself to us in our family life.
I am blessed with a family of
siblings, many nieces and nephews, even more grand nephews and grandnieces, and
my niece Jennifer is pregnant and so we look forward to another precious gift
of God to our family life.
I am also blessed in looking
forward to coming to work each and every day as your pastor. May all of us continue to stay awake to the
many God reveals God’s self to us in our parish life and ministry.
We are not to bucket God’s
presence to the heavens; rather, in the ups and downs of our daily life, may we
experience the presence of God with us.
May we have an inner resource which speaks to us the mystery of God’s
love that is within each one of us.
It goes without saying that
the run-up to Christmas is a busy time.
We as a parish hesitate to schedule activities during the Advent season
because everyone is too busy. There are
the Christmas cards, Christmas shopping, Christmas parties and decorating the
Christmas tree. There is nothing wrong
with this Christmas run-up except that it is all consuming. In fact, the demands of the Christmas season can
be merciless. There is always more to do
and not enough time to do it.
Unfortunately, this busyness
can put us asleep spiritually. The rush
of the season works against the message of the season. It is what T. S. Eliot calls living and
partly living.
I have heard the story of a
wise old Rabbi who instructed his students by asking questions. He asked: “How can a person tell when the
darkness ends, and the day begins?”
After thinking for a moment, one student replied, “It is when there is
enough light to see an animal in the distance and to know if it is a sheep or a
goat. Another student ventured, “It is
when there is enough light to see a tree, and to tell whether it is a fig or an
oak tree.
The old Rabbi gently said: “No,
it is when you can look into a person’s face and recognize him as your
brother. For if you cannot recognize in
another’s face the face of your brother or sister, the darkness has not begun
to lift, and the light has not yet come.
As the old Rabbi suggests, we
are to stay awake to the ways that indeed we are all brothers and sisters to
each other. In so doing, we are staying
awake to the presence of the Lord in our midst.
God give you peace and have a
Blessed Day.
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